ry en ad Vv. “OO Lr- De ad 18, ry a y ne {0 ne 18 a |S eo Vou ir ot ld e e 1e 1S e J S T} nN cmap. 1] PRINCIPLES OF IMPERIAL CONTROL 1025 is valid throughout, not being affected by the demise of the Crown. The rule is, of course, rigidly adhered to in the case of military corps in the Dominions ; for them to adopt the title ‘ Royal’ without consent would be most improper—that it would be legal under an Act is of course obvious, and even if made by executive action it cannot be said that there is any means of preventing it in law—and in addition the title would lose all its value as a mark of dis- tinction unless it were derived from the throne and through the personal approval of the Crown. So, too, no institution should, without the royal sanction, assume any name signi- fying the connexion with the reigning monarch, such as King George Hospital. There also may be mentioned the case of reduction of the salary of the Governor; in the Australian States all such Acts still require reservation under the Act of 1907? as under the Act of 1842.2 but this is not normally the case in law. The Canadian Parliament in 18682 in a fit of economy, reduced the salary of the Governor-General, which was fixed at £10,000, with power to the Parliament to alter, to £6,500 a year, a remarkable figure at that time, when the great Australian colonies gave salaries of £10,000 a year. But the Act was reserved and never assented to, the Secretary of State pointing out that the reduction would reduce the position of the Governor-General to that of a third-class governorship. The various Acts which since federation have been passed to reduce the salaries of the Governors of the states have been reserved and assented to in due course, for the Imperial Government will not refuse to accept a decision to reduce the salary if it is deliberately desired by a Dominion or state. The result of a diminished salary is diminished sntertaining on the one hand. and a diminished status of the + 7 Edw. VIL c. 7. * 5 & 6 Vict. c. 76, 8. 31; 13 & 14 Vict. c. 59, sg, 18. * Canada Sess. Pap., 1869, No, 73. The Canadian Parliament in 1869 fixed the salary at £10,000 of its own authority, and the Act (32 & 33 Vict. c. 74) was assented to after reservation on August 7, 1869. See Rev, Stat, 1906, c. 3, s. 4. 1279-2