ano. N)" Seqtta--A "when! on we witty otrehnattto has b0.- formed in Nova Sums. with und. qmnen hon, which will head " “I tho a“ circle: in the wow/rm Eggs and dulled poultry from t on duh! will In shipped to a central "who†and, in order to Mm overhaul u- C_fromGonatterCoaat - the munch. of the product- will bl undertaken in diminution with thou of tho New Brunswick " and Poultry Exchange. Tho tmin can. from the tsidittg. The manner mun» bar; They wind the Ion of Wanda Fredericton. Now Brunswick. - Russia is tn become In important cu- tomu of (:an for homes, mooni- ine to Dr. J. H. Grind-b. '06.") Deputy lining! of Agriculture. A. order for 1.000 general utifity hon-o has been remind by the Live Stock Branch of the Dominion Donut-oat of Amman. warding to Dr. Grin: Quake, -.--N-1, foam hundred my}. were added to Can- "" fuming Pograitstion during the mutant]. when tho steamship. "Em- prm " Franc." Old the "Monte'a"o" ducked hon. Tho newcomers won . perm 'IIarly fine lot with Scotch, Eng- lish ian,1 Irish prodolninnnt Whit with ' goodoprinkiintt of rations]! frorr Norway, Denma'k and mild). Euro , m countries. The mum-u of tw '. ship. $50.06 an mummy; Int-p â€nah" of IMO] parties,. 'tndi their destinations "and nil tho way' from New Brunswick 10 Britilh Col- umbia. l Who-o Mule book on "Selene. and Lite' vu- Nn ot tha treasure. of tha nu. Ind when: made further In- vestigation. In the numn' oi cosmic ms. tha nou yoga-ml known to man. dug-Ind the Son.- uouto ho shipped to Manual early this fall. They are now being saw Tho bird In. from an coon-rd. The trauma or the loam _ Thor to" not "Bur, since here you Stay when your item‘- " no...“ o, W"), I my not wander; Yet. Hurt. I claim Dido; I so Ina (nay through th. thnds. With wonder an tho this. Tho “tinting! thought: can. hom- ill. Hero to the hoe-skepo' row: Why should I m. I -ett tad. Whoa butâ€. awum any [of “Am" you min: to practice tm dart" am a wmmer board" to the to. ot a mid.- life-“Hug crow. "Not today. stir." replied the hero. "Wtr not?" . "What! in my. run!“ Pembroke, thstsrio.---'rher town of! Pvmbrdhv will “debate. in was. tttel mammary of the first elmsrintr d tho! virgin {and which, In Meir, stoodi when the m of Pembroke now MUTT AND JEFF-B, Bud Fisher. â€undo: “Awâ€! Away'. .'" Dr. Robert A. Mllhkcn . Canada from toast to Coast Too Wet. Dougla- Slum fhsesr_. Beginning to a labor town, in which industry it "$22 both n p'mmimnt place, Pembroke has to. duy a population of approximawa 10,000 people and has become the in- dustriai centre of the Ottawa Valley. Queen Victoria much preferred I lump to gas or electricity tor her own use. and thereby haug- u tale. She was read-lug one evening, with several of the household in atteudunm. when n.) lamp near by bag-n to smoke. To me horror and astonishment of the company, the queen raised her august hand and 'lnrned down the ttttttte. "Your majesty." said the lady in wait. ing, "why did you trouble to do that yourself?" "Bvcausa." will the queen, “if I had called out, "This lamp I: smoking: one of you ladies would have said to the equerry. ‘See! the lamp is smoking" and the equerry would have called out to the nearest servant. 'The queen's lamp in smoking? and that servant would have called out to a footnian to nttend to it. and all the time the lamp would have gone on smoking; so I preferred to turn it down myself." Douhtlees the queen could have found a great many other yeremoniale that could be abolished with equal advantage. Winnipeg, Menitotrtc--Pr-tior" are being made by the Him†to hundfo tho 1926 crop of tho Pnirio Provinces, which i. expend to begin to move about the and of August or tho first port of September. Eighty thousand box an no now being as- nembled at strnwglc points. Some 2,000 locomotives will be required to handle this number of cars. Prim Alba-t, Saskatchewan-Hogs; to tho "in. of $400,000 were shipped: from the Prince Albert district in; 1926. This sum ms far lnmdvanco of that received the previous yen; and the increuo was due to I eortsid-, cubic extent to the activities of the.' Agricultunl society boosting hog pro-i duction. This year the hog rnlurl'. slogan is one million dollar, worth of l Victoria. Emir}: Caambu.--As rangomentn for the export of Vol-go quantities of British Columbin seed potatoes to California Ire being made this year by a potato grower of that state. The British Columbia pota- toes are desired in California for seed purposes because they introduce new strength into the southern strain. Ex- perimonta were mode with Canadian growu need but your in Caifomin and grower: were well satisfied with the reunite. The Forge. The cold white wlnd blows over Bent tree, bare heath and stones Through 3 hide lean and tattered The earth jut: up her bones. Yet to thls hungry country Men came and wrought and died; The earth Wu the dull lover Who drew them to her “do. Here In her secret forges Grows stern tttrough storm and cold Tho will tor the world masters Ot aeons yet. uni-oiled. ua, and from present indications thin mark in more than likely to be nttdned. _ - Uthtrrrlgo, A1bqrtn.-Aoutherrt Al- bertis wool clip this you will be npproximtely 2,000,000 pounds. It is stated that never before have the f1eeeq. been so heavy. Now leap- tho Sun Out of the sea: King or the Eu: Thu. is done; King of the We". rot to be. He abouts over mace And tho western no.1. What People shall rise And look on his flee, tad road In Ms eyel Their empcry. Ho tbttalies his hair Over the Vlvvl. Whore nor the tynntn gun. Who Inrded it more In Tyre, in Babylon; Whare are my “Aves? ONTA3Ff Ceremonial Abolished. TORONTO Richard Church. (‘uriuusly enough, within a few miles or these unstable lands. vast tract. aro’ being rechlmed from the sea. These are well below high-Water mark amr enormous dykes protect them trom that; sea and the river- or canaln which pani thmush them. _ Opposite the island of Tholen, " the mouth of the Owner Scheidt. is A light- ship. It indicates a dangerous "rock" on which vessels had previously been wrecked. Actually it is the spire ot the church at Rommersvaal, a prop» wroue town which subsided into the waters one night centuries ago. very soluble material which. when once the water penetrates into it, is converted into quicksand. Fur I man to write well, there are required three necessaries: to read the best authors. obuerve the beat vpeukers. and much exercise of hi! awn sty'ar.---Ben Jonson. Lime lady, qualntly made From a moonlit bit of jade. Was it In the realm of dream. In some faerle, Lethean strum. That you plucked that lotus there, FYetted in your chiseled hair? White " snowfall tttlung down is the whitenesu of your town. White as mist trom bra-this†lips To your taper ttiger-tips. Not tho faintest emerald tint Here or there. No verdant hint Mars your purity and grace. or the wanness of your taco. With Four any band. duped so. Patient little curio. You are like a moonbeum strayed Prom the lovely land of jade! Long and patient study has taught the Dutch engineers when they may expect the, "Val" to appear in I par- tinn!nr neighborhood. Bo a apocitl kind ot dyke is constructed with foun- datinns and outworks ot wicket-work and clay to prevent water from trick. ling through into the subsoil. Red Lake prospector. the second mu to (at tis the famous mining district by airplane. who expressed continued faith in the north country. Wholo provinces of Holland are as much as six feet below sea. level. but these districts do not can†such anxiety to Dutch engineers " the pro- vince of Zeeland " the mouth of the Scheldt. a great. part of which is well above tiM level. The land is subject to a dreaded dia- onse known as the "Val." Sometimes. without warning. acres of soil, includ- ing farmhouses. pastures or even vii. lattes, sink away, leaving In their place a sheet of water many fathom: deep. Caressa Crosby, in "GUIVNI Imago; Menaced by the Sea. To Write Well. White Jade. J. I. Glick Sir Wnltor Scott talk us in his pro- fm to "Kenlrworth" that tn nil youth tho am suns: or "Cumuor Hall" had a peculiar encttarntment tor his our which was new: loet In hits years of maturer note. It has, indeed, taunted many a neophyte ttitttre:- _ "The dawn of summer aight did full-5 The moon, sweet regent of the sky. Silvered the wing of Cnmnor Hall And many an oak that new them. by." In the ear at a boy, in the ear ot a girl, that verse is beautiful. It baa I sort ot magic that mingle. at once with the magic of youth, when south begins to dream. It is a perfect ex- ample, I think. of that clan ot poetry which is good to begin' with, because It awakens the fmling for poetry. Who, then, among the meta, are the best awakeners? I believe that in Eng- land very tew poets take higher rank in this kind than Longfellow. To mil- lions he has been the genial and inspir- ing doorketyper of the temple. Hie easy and satisfying rhythm, his rich yet simple suggestions of things venerable and picturesque, and a certain unction in all he wrote, combine to make his works the very tuck-shop of poetry tor young readers. Which of us does not remember with gratitude and recovers ed Joy the moments when he tirtrt read these lines?-- “in the ancient town of Brugea. in the quaint old Flemish city, " the evening shade: descended. Low and loud and sweetly blended, Low at times and loud at times. And changing like a poet's rhymes, Ttang the beautiful wild chimes From the beli'ry in the market L Ot the ancient town ot Bruges." Glam waves and baby waves Roll in and break on the sand, Sending up a cloud of milky spur. Never resting, Never hurrying, They play togethe'r. Far away I can still see them, All coming closer and closer to me. Each wave. large or small. Wears I white can. V All the ocean ls covered With tiny white dots- Ther are all snowy foaming caps. -Marr Virgirths Harri; sky. Wind-bins and white with clouds, or Jright of trees Against ajhield of stars. or breath ot scent You cared to use. or any little thing At all that we enjoyed comes back again. These lines give to a young dreamer Just his own kind ot thought, his own kind of mood, and]: much magical ex- pression as he needs ‘or can receive. I have never seen the moon rise over the towers and bridges of the lovely Flemish city, or watched the lamp- lighters gather in the dusk under the trees near its Place du Bourg. without recalling Longtellow's lines. - Prom "Unpostod Letters," by John O’Lon- don. Weighted belts are sometimes used by tho London "tough." A an: at Lambeth was known as the "Now Girdle Gang." immune Its members were armed with this type ot weapon. Underworld Weapons. A London magistrate recently com- mented on the numerous razor assaults committed by hooligans. He said the razor is a distinctly un-English weapon and that It belongs really to the Ameri- can negro, who specialises in throw- ing It. The dosperadoes of Italy and Spain! favor the stiletto Ind knit". woman»! ly. The knife of the Spaniard is a deadly implement; it consists ot a sharp. broad blade that folds into the’ handle and can be drawn and openodi In one movement. I can forget the peace of noiitude, The calm ot two alnne with quiet rain, Alone, with tin, shadows atammerlng Acton the ceiling ct the room; not! I Am Able to restrain regret that these Ara gone . . . until a night of any CHminaIs are known by their weap- ons and their methods of attack. In Londoit the meta', knuckle-duster is I fairly common weapon. The Paris anache use: a knife, and generally car- ries a revolver as well. An Amkener. White Caps. Fragments. --Urrd sum. l hi." i, Bombaatie blowing of the horn my -be a characteristic of the owner who is operating his car for the, first few times. There may be some excuse for the somewhat nervous beginner who does not feel quite aura of his con- trol. He has reason for “knitting that people who any b0 walking on the highway will be more certain to get out of his line of procedure if ho given his horn plenty of exerciu. The novice " driving can be excused for over taming. becomes. In me respects the story of the'boy , cried, “Wolf! waif!" when this was no wolf nppiiel to the use of tho automobile horn. If motor- iste, trenerCly blow their own horn. excosdvdy folks will become so med to the diit trer will bacon imme- tivo mum of waning when than in real danger. - On the contrary, the motorist who: conserves hie horn exoeuivoiy musti use judgment when varying from “mi custom. For insulin, nuppooe a pa, destrian is wniking along the highway , ahead of an nppmehing cu. If the: driver nhouid give " horn a sharp; blast LLmny startle the walker, cause him to become confined and jump di-, rectly in the path of the "protuehintt, machine. But, if the driver does not| sound his born, the man on foot, not( reaming his denser, may suddenly; change his direction and put the' driver to the severe teak of avoiding an accident. The matter can best be; hand'ed by bIowing the horn mild1r) and before getting too nest to the} man on foot. I Ono of the most essentiai pans of an automobile is the horn. But the less it in used the more important it AUTOIST MUST KNOW WHEN 'ro," public school just Too' HIS HORN many pupils. nigh More experienced drivers sometimes fail to sound their horns when they ought to. They think when they me their horna it advertises them as ama- teurn in operating n ear. The best form in horn blowing lies in foilowing the happy medium between too much horn noise and not enough. There are certain times when moLorists ought to sound a wrrning in the Zn- tcrest of safety. This is a moral ob- ligation. In general, the driver of an automobile should exercise common sense when it comes to the use of his horn. If there is any certain time when one can blow his horn with unre- stricted freedom it ie when next-inn ~~Forxot Idle $05st yam are In for I tot ot worry. '.. l knelt by the window at nuhttall, When the world lay dark and still. And the thought or 1 thousand llttlo lives Cattle drifting over the sill. I thought or the lives of the forest, And the lives of the field and trea, And I felt the force of that silent Love That created them . . . and mo. _ Smile when there Isn't any joke you have no sense ot humor. Merit the cotttidesttee of your own Ion‘you cannot claim to be succesutul. -Keep your spending below your earning you will be on chum; u lusty. I thought of God as a Father. And I felt the mystic bands Of that brotherhood of living thing- Which was mouldud by Hll hands. Till the rabbit in his burrow, And tho robin on her neat. And I, who knelt by Ihe window Below I went to rest, Seemed one in my sight for A second. And Henna filled the spnce Where I knelt by the window at night. With the night-wind on my taco. “Ellen Frnhcls Gilbert. --Mttster your own tunguo you will need a lot of new friends. Rule your own spirit you will " ways have trouble with the help. wMako yourself useful you will Bl. ways be unnecessary in any busing“. Unless You Can--. Sign of the Amateur. The Automobile Unison. 15W; l In the main. the horn should be gustad a. sparingly " possible consis- ;tent with safety and good some. When 'the other {snow blows his horn heed lthia simul. You will want him to do gas much for you. On this basis will be buiit up a normr1 horn-blowing philosophy for motorists. !The mu brook lulu. ,nceuunt slam, .Fomn-{nlhloned on " rattle- breast iAnd when ha wade: m water-bars 'yts song is blown. . . . If he is slert and if his direction and speed of true! nre such that those ahead Ire muonsbiy sure to be onto! the wsy before the driver arrives at the spot. there is no need of urn-king n lot of noise. If there is the but possibility of danger instinctively the horn should be sounded and instinct- iveiy the driver's foot should so to the brake pedal st the - time his hsnd goes to the horn. Care in Posting Vehicles. When one is driving in the country and desires to peel another car going in the some direction. it is both cus- tomary and ssfer to sound the horn once so that the driver of the our ahead can judge as to when and when he will give the follower his best chance to pass since he can see the road before him better and knows what obstructions sre to be “voided. Uausily he will give way when sir noted. If he does not give way and there is my doubt about his having heard the sigml, it in itood praetiee to sound the horn again for it is usually undesirable to pass another car unless the driver desiring to pass u certain that the driver ahead knows of tho follower', intention 'v-uqqu-V I " Wu d.out-ett in the I-r----'-- trttthrMket at wood "to In tho no aGiuriusr-otreor.ti8 cont "tabtiaht-t at a Gammon “in! 'mgriis' 'hero m other ‘37." tttost for u- pmdmlon of haul-tin: when . driver should bo mg." lumbar nude from uwdult, coarse thoughtful not to blow mhch. " when (in. â€mint! from pulp milk, thu- going by boapitaU, ?ff'l','f than“. in and mill wasâ€. on Sundays "d other Ht'""' whore In tho procu- of nunufnctun the peopie have a right to quiet. P,,? st wand m 1. thorottgttty reduced to night is 'mother time. when than†fibrous pulp in “.hmmu' Tho is golden and u treaty appreciate? pulp “than cookod in than" to re- 'gd,'."" who d-ve I good nighta'mo" wood juices and mrsirm, the p. . are." moisture, The driver who "m other mo- eta,,',,'),',', 211 'gTc,",',g Into 5 solid torUU “d pedrstrUns â€rowdy "m bond under mun pressure by likely develop tt stTcr?tr.n ".'.°"'.‘,“" huh...» Inn-111ml The board in It is not 3 bad idea for a motorist to sign-1 Just More reaching the top of a hill, particularly if the road is narrow. If anyone ls coming up on the other side he may be guided ac- cordingly. Likewise, the horn should be blown before coming to k cross- mud unless there in a plain View of both roads for a sufficient distance to make sure that I collision in not likely to occur. And the horn abou‘d be sounded before taking dungeroul curves in the road. Jewels of Podnetleu Romans Delight Excavators in England Lomiort.--T't" carelessness of sn- clont Romans ls daily the onus. tor thunktulnoas among the excsvuors ot the entrance to the Roman amphl. lhestre at Curlew. Mottmouttuittre, “wording to meessor Myers, ot Ott. ford. in charge or the work. In! coins and articles ot "'ru.irr are " In; found at the 5st. where the early conquerors of Britain entered tor games and meetings. Five links ot I mull bronze chain are the latent and. Professor Myers attributes the ctreleuneu to the {not that the Roman hnd no when In their clothes. which folded over their bodies, and which held broochea. studs turd girdles. som- ot which dropped at With one hand-arched he looks into The morning's moo, then turn- away With schoolboy Net, all wet with dew Out tor . hamâ€. The wood-thrulh knows and {alluv- him, Who whintios up the birth Inl bee; And round-him nu tho portatnea swim Ot woodland loam and "can. In the crowds His touch is a companionship His word an old authority: He comes. a lyric at his lips, L'urmdfed pcosy. --Mtutuon Cumin, in "GI Dre-ml.“ Gum“ ot In tho process of mumhclure the ,rotriLamato le thoroughly reduced to than pulp in diahttagrators. Tho pulp is than cooked in duster: to n- Imovo wood juices and losing, the fibres {nod from - moisture, “WM Ind tor-cod Into 5 solid board under mu pres-um by ttrdmuue ranchingâ€. The board in i To perform the trick, ttrtielsan an“; .bo mt In the pockets. ant-1n ru- ‘I. ..: ithe pocket: awfully raw-:34, 7" In: any now in mum! mum.- â€2:0. [l' GGG,.' of times, and I: will app "' !be empty. ttrdmtrlie mum. The board in finally [)an to: tho mnrket by baking for com-l hours in ate-m heated kilns. This lumber is mod for haul-don. sound deadening and in non. can. manic-1 correction and is usually sold in large sheet: dutch my be an and nailed like ordinry lumber. Por certain put-pone in building ooesatrtretion it my be used to replace Ember and lath, releasing In equal amount of lumber for other purposes and than unble- n " per cent. groan or utilization to be undo. of the rim her cut. Over four million feet of this “men made" lumber' was used in the Canadian Building at Weblcy. A noteworthy end practical ex- ample in {can WVItion is thug Inc!“ in the produetion of this use» ful Muriel which I: nude Ptstirely from wqtrd was“. As pointed out I); the "Rural Resources Inte inn-non Service. at an. tithe of the yea r, when forest fine are ruthlessly outing in to our timber names it in scnwwhal comforting to feel that industrusl science is "eoenr1Uhirtit momethnut w, curb that mid ("at destructive AIM“. of our foe-td-waste. Dlnwlch. Thsmaad.---'rho "tight Inâ€. Inland" become- tlchter erh yuur The silent. laces-ant warfare lmtwmm the no. sad the coat has again Mun broad". into prominence by the mm, on slogan of the cont of Esau wk in: “can.†the rqottutttruethm at Hm London h Northa0tern Railway PM tween Frinwn ind Walton. The hm Is to be placed further Inland, but my til this work in oom'pletod the prhMrHI' "no will continue to be and ttritnin's Eastern Coast Crumble. Before the Other parts of the East Coast am being tgatett away by the 3rd. M Hun viola the so: has worn inland 3.. far that the â€milling porticu of tlm fa Inoc- Dunvich church taller has hp m removed for G,iGit.fin, and the raw of the old town lies beneath the wa‘: 'A At Holdmou the land Is figh'.ine a In!“ battle with the sen Parts at gogttiraat England are dinnpxwuriux, Ind Sane: is Inning some 400 " um out! your At Seine: a hm. 'mg house that “I built only I few man: Mo now stands derelict. the, waws hula. encroach“! Into the garden Non mks a number of mm- :‘m l eta. wtth cover: to them, which mm tte hatched down by I human and 'y' w Pinon than packet: about vwn in .',, $, I'llrt. between {ha two mum. F,'", m one “do of the pocket to “.m- hâ€: -v.1 tho other to the other. Now maku _ 'i througtt,troth but. Inset! v-n'r “nu-w“ and ttttttar through the bin, an! at p, the pockets. Emma’s 96-Yeir0ld Gmndstnnd is Doomed or Nurse. " In nwsumy to as 'H low {not from tho audknm. T' th t ' mentor: may not no tbr.' hum-n.- Wt fhe cams. You my mum to W... Ind disappear any mum-9r M tttt' for the Amusement ot the oomymm The Innu- Mud of a bu Mu h» ,', and tor many yours. by oroteetsi.n 2 musicians. in perfornduu their "Em; In; Twatâ€- Bronx’- noooourno. where the wmm Eamon. Derby his been run aun'mli; lilo. 1780. in to Iowa its "1mm r,h you-4M grandstand after um )‘rur'-. no. on Juno 2. The old and. v i, s,) hold. only 6.000 persons. in lo 1.» n- placed " one accommodating 20 m While plan. have bern drawn “I." 4-2» an “Ind. a movement has been qt ','t ed to It“. the “sanctum the Luv , 3nd aunt in the worm " II pointed out that the Fln-m : -' ton It“! In Attgtrttlia ttcttntttpool." 10,000 90mm. and an! as the .:":~::! moo at the Derby "ttrt18tett 30mm: [ 500.000 mu. Epsom should 1m OIO Beating at loll! 100.090 permm Any clout bay may umusu w,tisat In onnlu nthorlng, by w! HI known as the "Eu-bu: Trick." XII. two ttao' than! on.- foot Luv: and Ill Incheo wide. of mmn- dark 'i:,4 “rm. and - them tsire-ttter. 'it “an? on. may I). iatatd. the ulnar, MM At that the two may look like .m.‘ mu; when turned holds out. A Warning ttt Women. “Women in) milk); "immanent: by -dtteatitttt and too much mm ., - l Well-known manor. nuamw. "Ther cm wearing lhomselv. out. at their dew-o for manna! he Matt--", Ilka to ha Home with my thought." Tho 'eaid--"Dtt.'t you gut-107:.‘v Madmen?" ta-tRa-m-Bl" 311:3“; The Mysterious Baa HI. Few. :QI'H J Itt Yee, tt's music We haw in I husk and murmur-ul- of mush . The home llmuld not be "a " it "" trom"; it should be, u - "a place to the and n pl 'hu.†and much.- "lu ndd to t .1 when and mutant-tel III“ be found an eA0r9 ho- -. helm! factor mum " home “to. It hm- been and tlm b the “may.“ unit We then." that this I Ora-um (in truth II ft luiurally follows th will tend to make a In III, more ttttmotte i to than In, but to dwu only tor . Ihelwr. bu nonra- ot toy .- Illa worthy of tho homo In on the Floor. lure are no mm In I an! manna". mm his (mod to PM 'iiiiiiG.oot-tttoet That's I some “he. isn't It? m “tract attention with it a though consider-non. "I have r " wanted ot them, on "Mon." person. new not: I mm! the local palm ditterettt pose The photo; met. tn a we rooeivod the f ouch will little Wan Mr. Barr I'll a water. u I been lax-luring hmtlnx and hope the 'speak be Odd. the rent (room an! ot (banks In: Mr. B said. 'H knee-n1. l but proud: On mom MM 1 brid hands. the with the he: mu; The, "Mi - HP. I. (chin; um pie from all demand that hurry them, "The OHM ring ll dem. Ian A numb On I.“ Wat-Inner Behoot,i at York being prone-t and H Bo "scandal - the e and“! by the In In a dam low "that. ‘eonnolu-d that more otrqtst to be non damn lint-I. The tunmq can. In tho tank. It I. held at New Roman] the hum-nu of in! uned to “who“ bola; Rum-d for 1 A inn ot (moon-n: look " thing to do with 'opetiter. a: nun have to do in to e ulna. There na- 'ttlt or , (Dom seventeen to nineteen 1 800 drawn from an urea: ( work: of the klnldom and _ the public schools Ewry I ot twenty boys I: mind up 1 together. neighbors hum: mad In; the name'- itt alphabetic]! The Home: Too 0ft . Longer a Home. Tho Mb Camp. The Duke of York's Cam can of the net-ha. New wu III Ion tron “new puts not on term of lquIIlla l“ very few of the can: Iodine that the hwy “on I tr tho Duke's own. Some can the boyI' tum from n n In South Wales won their Inc Why. AM u I celebrulc cum were "1mm!" to I " Son. Here a much wu- Mn. My. No cuter In My for the th The Brfliul story, wt avitteton Wand Y: STORIES OF W! KNOWN PEOPI " tor mum an eon-om be heâ€! No Ha" Menu gtitt tr (In I "tttent all an ylh pe