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Show rKjfrqa, 3. 4 1, : wf Hi ? DKSERET EVENING NEWS II PRINCE OF WALES Englands t , : (Special CorretpowlM-April 9. Now ) Il I ! , ' V i 1 - , t ,1 Unff j my 4' t Hi. -- a PRINCE OF WALES AXDDCKE OF CORNWALL. A Favorite' Photograph of the Prince ha His Robes a Knight of the Garter. contained ' In the documents which the prince ScruUntiee with so much rare and 'intelligence. An Extrfudve Heritage. The extent of the Duchy of Corn- wall, which includes, besides oyster beds and stud farms, extensive and valuable house property in London, tin and coal mines'ln Cornwall and Somersetshire,, several private farms and much agricultural land that is cultivated by the prince s tenantry, is upwards of ISi.idil acres. Tbs rev enuo from this estate for the ) ear just past was, roughly. 1710. WOO net, and of this goodly sum, after deductions rep resenting expenses of management, donations to charities, and outlay for the benefit of-- the estate, $150,699, was paid over to the pnnee. it is just as weii for ins rojal highness, by the way, that be has the Duchy of Cornwall to provide him with an inram . 4 tidy income, too as it happens, the heir to the throne is loft entirely unprovided for In the ctvh list," aa- - the salaries paid In the kmc. to the queen mother, and other members of the rojal fam fly, are collectively termed. As dc mo netted ii g-- the princes keen Interest in his duchy properties, and his determination to become personally acquainted with every section of It and every detail in connection with its management, I am told that he is planning an early vuut to hts house property in the Kennington district property fa the Kennington district where he owns about 12 acres This run la to be of an absolutely private nature, as the young royal landlord wants to see things for huneelf as he would not be able to do were the affair previously advertised in the press, or if any of the ordinary formalities - and ceremonials connected bw-aue- -t with his movements as a royal were indulged in. "ground landlord" the Prince has shown himself iq complete sym-patwith the spirit of the time, namely with the movement to provide decent home for the toilers nt low rentals. Instead of the hovels and rookeries which, until comparatively recently, were thought in most parts of this country to be good enough tor them. As one of the first steps in this direction, a number of empty houses in Kennington Road are at ones to be converted into flats for two families at rental of 1 190 a flat. When King Edward was Duke of scheme on Cornwall, a big the duchy easts in Kennington was begun, but it haul to be abandoned on account of the war. This scheme is now being continued by the Prince of 'Wales, and plans have been prepared for -- rebuiiding in other streets and courts where the leasee of exiaMng bouses fell In before the war, but operations en this larger scheme will have to go Ahead more or lee leisurely until more building material and labor In Edward the Seventh's time the, Duchy holdings in Keiinington were more than once referred tb derisively as "the Kings slum." and this description was to a considerable extent The derision, however, justified. was not. for the royal owner of the estate was helpless to improve matters. , It Iran officially explained to me a large number the ether day-tha- t of the leasee in tbs Kennington diswere trict granted by the crown a century or more ago, and until thane leasee revert to the Duka of Cornwall, namely the Prince ef Waled as they are now gradually doing, the bands of tho young royal landlord are tied. In some eased I was told, there are as many aa eight Intermediate tenants between the duchy and the private owner. Visit to Cornwall. While on leave from the Italian front, a year or more age, the Prince paid his first visit, as head of the duchy, to hi mining properties in Cornwall, and, warmly welcomed by the workers, made a very thorough tour of .inspection. In the course of it. down a wolfram mine at Cunnislake and, in miner's overalls, tried his band at picking god drilling. The nine manager's daughter later presented him with a model ef the Kit Hill stack In wolfram and tin, and after lunch at the mine buildings, the prince received a number of his tenants, one of whom, a resident on one farm for ft years, presented him with a ' hag of apples.""'"' " This visit waa a one. which was rather a pity because. when the Duke ef Cornwall visits his duchy in state, a series of exceedingly picturesque old world ceremonies are observed. In . oideo times as everybody knows sovereigns frequently granted estate to their henchmen en condition that the latter rendered some purely formal act of homage, and several . big estates in Forme-alare held on these terms When the head of the d u chy visits it in state, these "rents" are paid. For example, when the Duke of Cornr. wall enters the duchy, one Lord Clifden. presents him with a grey riding hood, and another landowner follows the prince around carrying this hood in the royal wake so to speak Another duchv tenant .holds land in return for presenting a greyhound to the Duke of Cornwall at the gate of ancient Launceston The Scilly Islands whence Castle. eome most of tb early spring flowers seen in the London shops, are part of the Duchy of Cornwall, and they were once held in exchange for an annual rent of 200 puffins. The he-we- semi-privat- e" l land-owne- Federation --are desirous of sulxlug their visit to this country and during to- - Allied continental countries. The extensive study of the great question of labor and its relations to capital is w one that involves so many interests ! that the commissioners who have beeq appointed, Act. work out the problem will find their work anything but a sinecure. American Industrial Cmnmbwion Warmly Welcomed in England Find They also wish to establish If posDtsporitton Everywhere to Work Out Principal Economic Problems 1 sible an international organ nation ConpkM Harmony. which wftl group together the various countries that are endeavoring at the present time to cope with the restieee left America and arrived on the (Special Coirsspeodeaca) spirit of the age. in all of the leading shores since peace negotiation have Anted a pc a s. At this countries where honest capital time in the htetory of been pending have been green a ihor and honest labor mtm is a large maor Welcome interested hearty there is every evidence that jority. when restless Britain. The fact that federation pro- they wish to establish relations on a labor see. me to assume the vides a common this basis or in other words meeting ground for fifty-fiftcharacteristics of a dog which turns capital, labor and ibe general public ft is desired to give a "square deal" to round and round and kicks up a tot is one that provides an unusual line both sides. of to busmens the British thought ef dost and dirt before he finally set- man. in England e are alt There are three men who are as ft realising tles bite peaceful slumber, the risrt that the relations between capital and were "engineering" the visit of the of the Industrial commission of the labor, now that active hostiidie have commission to tho "Old Country." National Civic Federation is particu- cased, are changing to an extraor- whose task It is to assume the ofdinary extent, and this is a problem ficial responsibility of the movement. larly apt. Few commissions that have that th representatives of the Civic The acting chairman of the visiting commission is Mr V. Everit Macy, but aa Mr. Macy was unable personally to join the expedition the Hon. Charles Mayer has been elected in htet Mead. With him are Mr. Charles 8. Barrett, of the National Farmers union, and Mr James Wdliam Sullivan. who leads the Labor section of th Civic Federation commission. Of these three eminent American citizens the Hon. Charles Mayer is perhaps best known in England generally and In London in particular. He is a familiar figwv tn the West End of London aa In the easterly direction wlth- - Making Study of New Relation Between Capital and Labor i r I Mt r 7 1 London, Beds of Bivalves Will in Time JTield Him Mach Revenue, While i Mining and Agricultural Resources May Make Him a MOHoo-aim Duchy of Cornwall is a SmaH Empire in Itself, Contain-- , ing Vast Undeveloped Wealth Edward HI Created the Big Estate, Which Present Possessor Is Learning to Manage. puffin. be It explained,! a queer little shore bird, rather like a parrot, bill which it with a sheds In exchange for quite a new and entirety different, shape one each year, just before it migrates to msre . equable elia. of the heir to It Is curious to thick Britains throne as an oyster farmer, but I am told that the beds that the Prince started three years ago In ths Hetford estuary in the Duchy of Cornwall are being developed to such an extent that, by the end of another decade, or 'so, hia royal high ness will ha one of the largest growers of the succulent bivalve In England. The Prince, as Duke of Cornwall, originally went In for oyster farming not to advance his private interests but to provide employment for the longshore hta Cornlah estate', "Who were The oyvter fishbadly hit by eries at the mouth of the- Hoi river, where the Princes, bfds are situated, were celebrated in the.jreign of Edward I; but. with the passing of centuries. the industry gradually languished through lack of energy, capital, technical knowledge and easily "accessible markets. I am told that the private company whose holdings the Duchy of Cornwall took over raised no more than $7.50 worth of oyster in the course of a year. The estuary of the Hel river, which la a huge one, is almost perfect for oyster culture, since not a single drain enters it. The Dnchy of Cornwall enterprise, moreover, Is being conducted on combined setentifle and commercial line under the direction ef Profeeeor Gardiner, F. R- - R, of Cambridge university, a recognised authority. At the outset, six million embryo oysters were "laid down," and this year about a million and a half will be taken out. representing a vahie of about llt.llt. Ths oyster. It may be explained, takes five years to attain Its fnQ growth, (that is to be ready for eating), and sue interesting fact about tho English oystqg Is that It Is the only one In the world that Is bisexual. Incidentally the English oyster Isnt anything like as sueenient a bivalve as Its American cousin. Ten yearn hesca. the Duchy of Cornwall beds are expected to produce over ten mnitoaoystCTs g year.. Royal Horse breeder. The horsebreeding Industry which the Prince of Wiles also carries out on his dnchy estate Is unique Ip many of Its features. The Duchy of Cornwall Includes some 89,90 of the 15.-0.- 0 acresef which Dartmoor, ths great granite upland In Devonshire, consists. For Americana of course, Dartmoor, snth which so many of the novels of Eden Philpotts desk has a special historical interest, since at Prtncelown. the chief center of population. stands th prison, built during the war with Napoleon, In which so many American and French captives were confined, r Daring later years, this baa been a convict prison,- - and wa such until ths beginning of the war, whet) .the criminals were sent elsewhere and the ancient gaol turned into a place of confinement for "conscientious objectors," some I of whom have been employed for the past couple ef years In the carrying out of a big land reclamation scheme which Is also a Dnchy of Cornwall enterprise. On Dartmoor, a gaunt, rocky, windswept region that even today shoes no trace of man for miles on end. half wild ponies, natives of the region, are found In great number. These pomes, which are descendants of the old Celtic ones a fact jrtalch Is Indicated by the black stripe down their bocks or and exceptionally -- fisher-meno- the-wa- wilt-hav- - -- dun-color- - - THE PRINCE'S PONIES. - Beasts Reared on the Cornwall Estate. Wild Half haust!ble in Cornwall, and large Soma threo ysars strong and hardy.Woles established a sums of money have been Invested ago the Prince of as al- by the Prince of Wales- in 'American stud farm on Dartmoor where,breed of machinery for the purpose of treatthe pative ready mentioned,with on Arab rln. ing the wolfranr and separating It pony is crossed from the tin derived from hi mines Ths Idea is to combine the flestne hardi-nsssatd The dnchy. Wolfram, in fact, has of ths Arabian steed with ths become infinitely more volnable than tntsUigeooaet the Dartmoor tin. them of inner ths whom in ponies, - Fortune in Mines. has been engendered J qualitiesreason "to had of their having Ths prince ha In hi Cornish wolfally by fend for themaeivea Ths maUtoa, ram a bug fortune within his grasp, and has th satisfaction of knowing Dwarka by vane, that is used for ponies, is that, by developing this Industry, he mating with the Dartmoor In EngArabian ths only desert bred is at the same time conferring an inland. The prince now has about a estimable benefit upon all the steel hundred ponies and eons $0 horse. industries ef bis native land, esThs ponies are sold for the most part pecially In connection with ordnance' at the annual Prlncetown fair, which and warships. Moreover. Ihs .deveia held In ths first week of September, lopment of the wolfram Industry In the exceptions being ths polo ponies In which the brad by hi royal highness which are other parts of Cornwall in London. administrators of the Duchy hope to disposed of at Tatte mall'seome of the interest private enterprise of - the The prince exhibited stud at a right type is likely, aa it promises to pomes from his Dartmoor some time be the means of bringing back to pony show held in London back and they created a great deal of their naitva county many of tho was who emigrated to various interest, especially when attention called to the fact that tins was their parts of th world when the roof. a under of first experience being industry, once the greatest In th The prince also breeds military district, virtually died in consequence horses, and another of lua experiments of the of tin nearer the in the equine direction is sn attempte. surface discovery In other parts of the world-Thi- s to reproduce the old Devon pack-horspicturesque result is felt to 1e a type of steed which carried, am ca, aa. one .of on Us powerful back, various burdens certain of.f ulf Ihnent, officials expressed It to me, in the days when, beyond Exeter, now the Duchy like the Frenchman, the center of a net work ef railways, the Cornishman. no proper roads exirted. This was the is never at home" anywhere hut tn 'case up to the year 175. when beyond Cornwall. The big land reclamation scheme this cathedral town, only the "pack horse tracks were found. On others now being carried out on Dartmoor of his dnchy farm, the prince breeds aa an enterprise of the Duchy" Of shorthorn cattle, and sells them for Cornwall is ah interesting as any of . recent time, and Its result to Brithigh price. Of all the Industrie ta which th ish agriculture are likely to be imCornwall Duke of as Wait Prince of portant. The valleys of the historic is intreied. however, incomparably moor, through which its rrvera flow, the most profitable is that represented are unusually fertile, but higher alby the extensive works which he has titude of the granite upiand.-whutartetTIn Cornwall, to the west of comprise by far th greater part of Tavistock, for the recovery of the ha surface, have for centuries demineral which t known as wolfram." fied cultivation, A legend, in fact, Wolfram in olden time was regarded runs that Dartmoor says to the agrias a nuisance by miners for tin, (it culturist. scratch my back and Ill waa so named in fact Ss being the pick your pocket, and so true has wolf" that at up the profits of the this proved that an outlay of ISM,-90- 0 metal with which It was found), and by. one Sir Thome Tyrwitt, a for many centuries it was thrown lord warden, of the Stanneries In the waa worthless. as the This case, time of the Prince Regent. In an away hi fact, until the year 10$. But wolf, attempted reclamation of part of the ram haa now become of Inestimable moof had result which today reprevalue as the basis of the rare metal, sent no 'mora than 12,500 a year In tungsten, which, many time harder the shape of produce The principal enemy to be fought hold. than steel. Is now used for high speed e la the excessive moisture of the soil, tools. , The supplies nt wolfram both above the greater part of Dartmoor being (Copyright, and below ground are virtually tn- - a vast bogjhia.dietrict. whose up-L - nd en For the Liver and Bowel druggist you want genuine Syrujp of Figs.1" Full directions ni 4oit Tor babies and children of all ages who ire constipated, bilious, feverish, ton or full of cold, are plainly printed on the bottle. 'Look for -- the name California nd accept no other Fig Syrup. Tell your California gut-coate- d, -- -- HAYDEN HI 8. by CHURCH. Edward Mar- - shall.) ent situation of Poland In Its effort to become a free and Independent state, and in this connection has been an invaluable counselor to that remarkable man M Paderewski; With whom be is in constant comthonica-tio- SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY BRINGS SURE RELIEF Mr. Mayer Is many beneficent effects have result- industry in its effort towards readjusted from the World War. On result ing the relation of the employer and of special Interest In connection with employed. t years GOLD MEDAL nar- Oil lua enabled suffering humanity to withstand attacks ot kidney, liver, bladder and stomach troubles aad U dieease connected with the urinary organa, and to build up and reature to health organs weakened by disease. These most important organ must be watched, because they filter aad purify the blood: unless they do their work you are doomed. Weariness, sleeplessness. nervoas-Uaadespondency, barkarhe. stomach trouble, pa ms m the loins and loser abdomen, gravel, rheumatism, act a ties and lumbago til warn you of trouble with year kidneys. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are tb remedy far'the purpose of bringing employers and employed into the closest poeot ble Working relationship. The members of our commission are going to make a particular study of the workings of this plan, and in so doing hope to be able to acquire Informaof the opinion that tion that will be of value to Aji'wan n. cs . -rn a. commia-worksho- '.SIM 'NS? ess dfs-pot- ol California Syrup of. Figs r- 1 flat-topp- ed the visit of our commission to this s side of th globe," said Mr. Mayer, as Mr. Charts S. Barrett, who is th h talked over tb situation recently, re prtsen tat tve of the National Farmis the realization that the major ers' union, hag since hi Arrival on economic problems are- - common to ati this aide had most interesting confer-eticgreat countries, and that there la a aU with the agricultural growing disposition to work these out leaders and officials great of th Food Conin complete harmony. For instance, sumers and other wartime organizathe wage that is paid to a coal miner tions in England. Immediately on hia in America is of direct interest in arrival In Mr. Barrett made every, other country where coal min- a hurried England to trip Paris, where he had ing is one of. the standard Induswith the British tries. It is, therefore, also of mer-e- st conferences Mr. Lloyd George, with the premier, French to all the Allies that such wages Premier M. Clemenceau. and also with should be justly balanced and that OoL House and Secy. Lansing. That I labor everywhere should be given a Mr. Barrett ha the Interests of the fair recompense. Now in Great Brit- American consumer close at heart ain there iS developing a movement goes without dish haa and saying; that must result in the reconstruction played a patriotic and splendid spirit of the reiatuffis between labor and m marshaling His productive forces capital. In my opinion," continued of the country to the of solution the Mr. Mayer, "one of th most Interest- -. ink schemes that has been put Into immensely Important food problem. ffbct tn England is known as the Whltloy Councils which, briefly stat- - j Mr. James WUttam Sullivan ia used. rands) of committees set up in j doubtedly the doyen of the and manufacturing and siou. He is now 79 years of tg but mining districts to establish a basis in the ranks of organised labor no in- dividual, wjth the possible exception I of Mr. Samuel Gompera, is better known than this vigorous and mentally virile veteran. Mr. Sullivan has been in touch for more than a of a century with the labor quarter leaders of France and During r,y 2s.--i jm theEnglahd, war ha waa at the Italy. dealings take head of th fortunes ore mods and lost with aldivision of labor and consumers' ty most as of the U. 8. food administraas They are" In T&at'a wLat thousands of stomach Wail street. tion, and was assistant to. Mr. ComMr, Mayer regards London a hW sufferers are doing now. Instead of pare on th advisory commission- - of home when away from New York taking tonics) or trying to patch up a th Council of National Defense, and Washington whore most of hia poor digestion, they are wracking the rf cause of tho Uffiajt dogged liver basinet and social Interests lie and During their visit to London th he is at present occupying his usual snd disordered bowels. ' eommimon are being elaborately enDr. Edwardj Olive Tablets quarters at the Ritx HoteL where a the tomb tertained side. 8tr Horry milts Is always T"his Ever in a soothing, healing way. When Brittain, K.on B.every who ia president of during the year round. . He Ever sad bowels are performing their the Pilgrims E. society, is giving a dinhas now retired from active business Hat iiial functions, ner in their honor,, while Mr. W. A. away goes hui.pw.oq Interema in America, but it will be Appleton;' secretary of the general remembered that tn former years he and atomarh troubles. federation of trades unions, is holding If have a bad taste In yoar yoa was chief counselor to the late E It another banquet for them. The mra th war Mr. Mayer poot& tongas coated Rt Hhrriman. appetite poet; Hon. Charts has devoted his abilities to very large lazy, dont-car-e feeling do ambition or other equally Mayer haa arranged anentertainrepresentative Altn troubled energy, movements with th philanthropic undigested food lied countries, arid he has showed his PM should take Olive Tabkt the sub- ment, and many English societies are showing them much hospitality. The remarkable gifts as an organiser by stitute for calomeL of the commission when it is his management of many developments Dr. Edwards OEve Tablets are a report finally issued, will be detailed and of war charities and philani borate, and will undoubtedly be in. vegrtabte compound mixed with thropic Schemes to which he haa been partly who are work more than usually generous con- olive 01L You will know them by their j reiuable ofive color. do the week without tributor. He was one of the first inThey fluential Americans to give frank and griping, cramps or paia Taka one or two it bedthne foe quick in connection with the relation of full recognition to the right of labor, oopkol and labor that have been creand he in frequently called Into con- relief. yoa css eat what you Idea ated Mpee th cessation of sultation by labor leaders. It is also At 20c sod 2Sc per box. AH cru&pso, interesting to note that ho has gtveo ANNE MORTON LANK. special help sod attention to the prec- (Copyright, 1919.) as " from Jim ISO feet above th has the highest rainfall in v- -, land 100 inches a year. Water ai!. comes freely upward from aura- -aa WeiTas falling from the sky remiK, the soli mainly consae i. peal, some 20 feet depth, on a subsoil of deeom posed rYiJ.i To cope with the devastating tffr w and ' wind, the scientist charge of the present reekuna'JT scheme, Mr. ndel has T: a scheme ef shelter-roans, belts, no- - ei the majority of British agrte-- j Theee shelter belts wfU conais, Z trees, and the most important o t . will be 110 feet in breadth. T) .. r chosen for this purpose Japanese - larcheu. Douglas and Norway apmees. Ko fira. ashes, beechee. , sycamore 3na willow In a few years these tee e risen up and formed walls which will serve as a prou-c,0- , for future crop. In former attempts to reclaim the method adopted wav - a -down to the bottom' of the p- -a j replace it with a soil more ausctpij,. of cultivation, but Mr. Vendelro.ni u for a lywem of drainage ah eh i. has devised after exhaustive wudv the .local .condition The present -i tf tarnation scheme is confined to acres lying close to the old prisci .64 in carrying It out S9 couacicr,-.- , objectors' have been employed cuing the past two year Needle. t aay. th dnchy. officials would har almost any other type 0r preferred laborer to thq, 'conchies as they are termed, but "ho other way waa available Meanwhile some us had tn b found for the objectors" confined til Prtncelown prison, and so they m art to wrestle with (Dartmoor. It is as Interesting commentary on the qua,, ky of their Industry that It is believed that, whena ordinary labor is again It will be soon, rx men available, will be able to replace the entre 5) conchies." Already enough has been accomplished, I am told, to make rt cousin that the reclamation scheme Is go.rg to be a success. If even the percentagp of Dartmoor can be reclaimed. and made to beer croj e t' results as affecting British aenrat-tnre- , and incidentally the royal earner Of the Duchy of Cornwall, are fary obvious The Prince of Wales is now so frethe offices of ft quent a visitor-tdpchy. in Buckingham Gate, that a room there haa been set apart fur ha private use- -. I wa a permitted to see it, and 'found It an eminently businesslike looking apartment, the principal article of furniture berg a desk. The or'y plam. embellishments of the room cone.je of three pictures, all old prints, tv o representing th Prince Regent, and" the third a gala night at old auihal Gardena the ancient site of mmeh now .forma part . of the' Duchy of Cornwall estate -- In London, tvpce Vaijxh&ll Gardena were In their her, day they were on of th favorre resorts of the Bohemian world of th print shovs, metropolis, and this old Dr. in one of the boxes. Johnson, Boswell and Oliver Goldsmith. The administrative staff of th Duchy of Cornwall consists of some 21 officials, and the prince. In tb management of hia eejatt has the advice of a council, corwistmg of tb lord warden of the Stannaries, Lord Balfour of Burleigh, the keeper of the privy seal. Lord Clinton, the receiver general. Earl Fortewuo. Isand the Hon. Sir Sidney Grevllle. who comptroller and treasurer to th prince's houseto parti-qoior- much-rapidi- Constipated Children Gladly Take ee - ! ;r. ; ;ji section-thr- Special Foreign Correspondent ' . t bo Mrlomly and performed so gallantly are ended, the Prince of Wale, heir to the Brit-ta- h throne, has lost very little time to getting .into what in bis case may quit' accurately be, termed "commercial orneas." He is now applying hlmarif with equal earnestness and enenT to getting acquainted with emery deh (1 tht of the mast bupiness Interests are his aa owner pf one of the bigge. T&lQAbk, and most histories, ty and humanly iatarerting estate in Great Britain. of tbs sswersign. the a eldesth- son aa popcJar Tr- mada-hlmae- lf prints with all ranks of the American army when he re- of cenpation in Germany a Tlatt fnot forgetting cently paid it nurses with whom h the Yankee and jaxxed and foxtrotted bBtbeiy.) whorlt said.. may make a trip to the nnrned State in the not distant future. is Duke of Cornwall He is alee .Dari ef Chester, Duke of Rothesay. Bari of Garrick. Baron of Renfrew, and a few other people, an rolled Into one emishown, nently pleasing and, as he. hasman of exceedingly capable young now cloee on 1 1 ; but it is as Duke of Cornu all that he is especially Interesting lust e at present. Being-Dukof Cornwall make Him liochy of Cornwall which weafororigithe Ill nally created by Edward. '""support of his eldest son snd which. ever since, has passed, with tin richInto the possession of ucj- revenues. , rewrite heirs to the throne. Of aU these Ibe Irioce of Wales, who looks like . proving a good a business man as i was his grandfather .the late King Ed. ? ward, has, I am told, shewn the most ! enterprise in developing his i 1 and Extending his interests in every i possible direction Almost every day he turn op the offices of the Duchy of Cosnwall. hich are In Buckingham Gate. Jnat "T-- across the street from Buckingham palace, the royal residence In London. t , and there devotes Several boors to studying balance sheets, and. with the ; assistance of the duchy officials, look- ing over statements which tell sn rx- tremely interesting story. Among oth- ef things they inform his royal high- -l ness how much he has made during , the current year from the sale of the , oysters, which he now grows In the . estuary of the attractively named 1 lei and also what , river, near Falmouth, fb pracbe derives- - from the oafe-wf tically wild pontes which he breeds on Dartmoor, and crosses" with an Arab blend from the Saharan desert. These balance sheets and state- t menta also inform his rovai highness how much ha eome to btm through "post groats, which sound like a new variety of breakfast food, but which ace really rental fees, and . also "through., what, are quaintly termed wiiiW recta.- He also learns what he has made through the eale of any have unclaimed ,. wrecks that been east up on the Cornish const, for the proceeds from all such belong to him as Duke of Cornwall, aa do also those- - from, any stranded whale or sturgeons and from any gold or silver discovered in the duchy. I The Princes profits from the courts of law throughout the duchy, that is from fines, etc, are also shown In these fascinating reporta and likewise his royal highness's "casual profits" as they ere termed, from the personal estates of deneaacd persons dying in rhe duchy without kin. This to name only a few pf the many aryl exceed -. Ingly -- plelmaaque - Rems which are 19 1919 OYSTER! AN AS- per--toif- that the LONDON, duties at the front that a 4P APRIL Worldng HardJo Develop His Cornwall Estate Heir-Appare- nt Written For The Saturday Hews by . 't SATURDAY the-worl- d Children wake up- with . 1 Clean Tongue, Sweet : Stomach, Qear Head. All Feverishness, Biliousness "and Constipation Gone! Delicious Laxative! - 35.4 , . 4 pa ar-- IE IS "few iTJ iv,vr tou.Oi.aifr we cSrai. win need. Tale three or four every dav. The healing oil soaks into tb eUs aad lining of the ktdneya and drive out tb poison. New Lfe and health wiff surely follow. When your normal vigor baa beea restored continue treatment for a while to keep yourself 10 conditio snd prevent a return of the disease. Don't wait until you Sr neaps We of fighting Start taking GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules todsy. Jour druggist will cheerfully refund your money If you are not satisfied with result. But he sure to get the original imported GOLD MEDAL and accept no substitutes, la three rtea. , Sealed packages. At all drug stores. - |