Welsh Newspapers

Search 15 million Welsh newspaper articles

Hide Articles List

21 articles on this Page

IHK FLEET RUNNING THE GAUNTLET…

[No title]

THE VICTORIA CROSB AND ALBERT…

THE TOWNELEY FAMILY.

[No title]

News
Cite
Share

HOBBES FOB THB ARMY.—It has been deter- mined in Cabinet Council to purchase a large number of hones for military purposes, and a special com- mittee was appointed last week to superintend the transaction, officers under the control of that body being despatched into various parts of the country to treat with breeders and dealers. The total number required is stated to be 21,000; and Lord Arthur Somerset, of the Hone Guards, who has arrived at Bristol on this special mission, stated that he was authorised to select 5000 in the western district, of which that city is the centre. We also learn from Barnsley that at the annual fair there on Wednesday a number of horses were purchased on Government account, at prices ranging from X40 to XW. Each officer upon this special service is accompanied by a veterinary inspector, by whom all the animals must be passed. We quote the conditions and price offered from an advertisement in a county paper. The borses required are for artillery or transport purposes, as follows: Age, rising five or six years height, from 15 2 to 16 bands; mares or geldings, any colour; stamp of borse required, a light van or strong 'bus horse. Price to be given, from X40 to £ 60." It thus ap- pears that out of the celebrated "six millions," over a million is to be spent in horse flesh.—Live Stock Journal. SERIOUS FIRES IN AMERICA.—Several serious fires have occurred in the United States. A ware- house in Savannah, containing 4000 bales of cotton, was destroyed by fire on the 18th of February. The cotton and warehouse were covered by insurance amounting to 8240,000. The large oil warehouse of Messrs. Chess, Corby, and Co., Mobile, was destroyed on the same day. The less includes 6000 gallons ot oil, 15,000 cases of kerosene, and 500 barrels of tur- pentine. A great conlfagration occurred at New York on the 17th ult. A magnificent structure, known as the Excelsior Building, in Twenty-third-street, erected in 1871, at a cost of half a million of dollars, was burnt down, together with two churches, one belong- ing to the Presbyterians and the other to the Cove- n-nters. Tie Excelsior Building was used for different purposes. Two floors were occupied as a furniture factory, and the basement and second storey werl used as the quarters of the 8th Begiment. When the fire reached this part of the building the reports of exploding cartridges were heard. The losses are set down at three quarters of a million of dollars. THE SALMON FISHING SEASON.—The salmon fishing season has opened most auspiciously. In nearly every district where fishing has commenced the capture has been remarkably good, and in many in- stances the lessees have been fortunate enough to take a sufficient number of salmon on the first few opening days to pay for the working expenses for the whole season. The effect of this plentiful capture has been to bring down the price of salmon to a figure lower than we ever recollect it to have been at so early a period of the yew Heretofore salmon during the first weeks of the season fetched, as a rule, from 2s. 6d. to 3s. 6d. per lb. This year the prime fish has been selling in great quantities as low as Is. 4d. per lb., and even in the more fashionable West-end shops, which generally secure the pick of the market, has seldom ranged higher than 2s. Not in London alone has this comparatively low price prevailed, for we learn that in most of the large towns throughout the country salmon has been plentiful, and has been selling at a correspondingly low figure. As far as the metropolis is concerned, we can from the returns published weekly in Land and Water readily com- pare the condition of the salmon' supply this year with the supply during the corresponding period of the previous season. From the figures published we gather that for the three weeks ending the 23rd of February last the number of boxes of salmon which reached Bilingsgate from Scotland amounted to 1022 boxes, as against 398 boxes received during the corresponding period of 1877. Ireland this year furnished 117 boxes, as against 56 boxes in 1877; while Bngland sent 39 boxes, as against 25 boxes last year. If other markets have shown a proportionate increase (and we btlieve they generally can), it will be clearly seen that the spring salmon fishing this year has in the three countries been remarkably productive. From Berwick it is reported that the net fishing in the Tweed has been very satis- factory. The largest takes are made in the upper waters, but the lower waters are, for the time of the year, pretty well fished. Salmon are more plentiful than trout. HYDROPHOBIA.—A Saxon forester, named Gastel, now in his 83rd year, publishes in the Leip- ziger Gazette the particulars of a method which he has successfully employed for more than fifty years to preserve men and animals bitten by rabid dogs trom hydrophobia. The wound is to be first well washed with a mixture of warm water and wine-vinegar and carefully dried, and then a few drops of hydrochloric acid are to be let fall into it. The mineral acid is said to destroy the poison of the saliva, and so obviate the fatal effects of the bite. In connection with this subject a Parisian veterinary surgeon is widely adver- tising an "infallible cure" at the modest price ef fifty francs a bottle. The Journal de l Agriculture wtrns its readers that this expensive remedy is nothing more than common sDints of ammonia. THE DISTRESS IN SHEFFIBLD.-It is satisfac- tory to find that the distress which so largely pre- vailed amongst the working classes at Sheffield a few weeks ago is now more or less rapidly diminishing. A meeting of a relief committee, having charge of a district in which the distress was heavier than in any other part of the town, was held recently, when it was stated that 54 families, representing about 500 persons, had ceased to require relief since last week. A great deal of distress, however, still prevails, and large numbers of men are employed in levelling land in one of the outskirts of the town be- longing to the Duke of Norfolk. These for the most part are men who were employed in the Sheffield trades, and they now prefer to do labourers' work rather than remain on the list of the relief committees. I Up to the present time the necessary means for the | relief of the distress has come from the mayor's fund, 1 which now amounts to upwarda of .MOOO. |

COLLIERY DISASTER IN SCOTLAND.

THE VALUE OF THE CLEOPATRA.

[No title]

THE CAT TAX.

BOAT RACE ON THE TYNE.

[No title]

SCENE AT THE SIGNATURE OF…

[No title]

EXTRAORDINARY DIYORCE CASE.

THE VOLUNTEERS AND THE NEW…

A PRESTON WILL CASE.

[No title]

THE^QUEEN AT THE ROYAL TAPESTRY…

REMARKABLE BREACH OF PROMISE…

CHARGING AT FOOTBALL.

[No title]