The Cruise of the Branwen
PREFACE year, if all goes well, I propose to add to them a fairly complete account of the Olympic Games of 1908 in England, together with the various regulations and codes drawn up with the assent of the competing nations, and a summary of previous Meetings. By this means I trust that the public may be put in possession of an easily accessible record of the most important typical events both in the English Games and in the Olympic movement as a whole. That move– ment cannot fail to have a most beneficent and widespread influence on the immediate future of those international amateur athletics which are, in my belief, so great a factor in inter– national goodwill, in the progress, the peace, and the mutual understanding of the peoples of the world. T. A. C. CHELSEA, May 7, 1908. FRAGMENT OF ARCHAIC SCULPTURE SUPPOSED TO REPRESE T A TRIBAL E 'COUNTER PRESIDJ:D OVER BY LOCAL DEITIES l • CYLI DRICAL HEADDRESS
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