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NOTES FROM LONDON.

CARDIFF COLUMN.I

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CARDIFF COLUMN. [BY TRIBUNE. JI So Cardiff is to have a column of its own in the SOUTH WALES STAR, the organ of Young Wales. This is a compliment to Cardiff, and it is in the fitness of things that. if Cardiff is to be the future capital of Wales, it should be put upon a metro- politan footing in this respect. Wales needs a capital. Nobody fails to realise what a drawback it has been to our country in the past to have no recognised centre of national life. Even to-day we see joint-committees and other bodies representative of all Wales crossing the border to meet in the English town of Shrewsbury. Loyal Cardiffians resent that, but perhaps the rail- ways are chiefly to blame. One of the first essentials to a united Wales is a Welsh railway system. But if Cardiff is to become a worthy centre for Welsh thought and organic life, it must qualify for the position by getting thoroughly into touch with the rest of Wales. One of the tasks before the Young Wales party is the capture of Cardiff. There must be no more talk of Cardiff being an English town or a Scotch town, or anything else than a Welsh town. And it is gratifying to observe the strides that have recently been made in this direction. At a recent meeting in connection with a municipal contest, one of the speakers dwelt strongly on the national side of Cardiff's existence, and his remarks were received with hearty applause. For after all it is this which makes Cardiff in- teresting. not the fact that it has sprung within the lifetime of the "oldest inhabitants" from being a little more than Bridgewater to being a little less than Liverpool. Cardiff by itself would be merely a second-rate provincial town, inferior to Bristol, to Belfast, to Dundee, to twenty other place in the kingdom. But the patriotic Cardiffian thinks scorn of a comparison with such towns as these. His ambition is higher. He wants his town to rank with Dublin, and Edinburgh, and Melbourne, as one of the imperial cities of the world-wide British realm. That is the standpoint from which the destinies of Cardiff loom large on the horizon. Cardiff is a self-made town. It suffers, there- fore, from a certain lack of experience. It does not trust itself, and is too ready to defer to the ex- ample, and even the precept of others. The County Council cannot decide even so simple a matter as the salary of an official without elaborate investi- gation into what is done in other towns. This is, I understand, about the only place in the kingdom in which Mr. W. T. Stead's proposals for a Civic Church" have been taken seriously. Yet there are few towns which stand less in need of Mr. Stead's Church than Cardiff. We have strong and successful Temper&nce organisations, an active branch of the Vigilance Association, a branch of the Society for the Protection of Child- ren. which would be active if the Stipendiary would let it, and numerous other unsectarian bodies doing admirable work. Another weak spot in Cardiff is the foreign element. By foreign I do not mean people from other parts of the kingdom who have thrown in their lot with their new home, and loyally accepted its traditions. But there are a certain number who appear to regard Cardiff as a mere temporary stop- ping place, a place to make money in, and spend as little money on as possible. The municipal spirit is weak in Cardiff at present, and municipal life suffers accordin gly. It is true we have wrested the government of the town from Tory hands. But it would be premature to say that we have placed it on a really democratic basis. Latterlv there have been some signs of an awakening in this direction. Two thoroughly sound representatives have been put on the Council, in the persons of Councillors John Jenkins (Trades' Council nominee), and Edward Thomas, better known as Cochfarf. The recent battle over the right of public meeting has been a healthy sign, and shows that the democracy are beginning to realise their power, and are prepared to take a firm tone with the somnolent figure- heads who obstruct instead of leading the Liberal party. The battle has to be waged in the face of greater odds here than in many places. For years Cardiff was a Marquis-ridden town. John Batchelor was the man mainly instrumental in breaking the Bute yoke, and it would seem that, now he is gone, there are plenty who still hanker after the flesh-pots of Egypt—or shall we say the loving-cups ? it was a mean business, take it how you will, that selling of the mayoralty for a mess of pottage for the British Association. But I do not think it will occur again. This fortunate split over the Docks Bill, in which the Bute agent tried the old tactics of bullying the Corporation, has given just the antidote that was needed and the principal traces of the brief lapse into slavery will be another unsightly statue in our streets, and an expensive drinking" cup for our temperunce Council. However, Cardiff is certainly one of the best advertised towns in Britain. The succession of big things which have come off in our midst within the last few years is surprising. Chambers of Commerce, Church Congress, British Associa- tion, and now. on the top of them all. we art to have a Musical Festival. Mr. Joseph Barnby, the selected conductor, was in the town last week, and his remarks must have been very gratifying to the gentlemen who have succeeded in so short a space of time in floating such a big affair. To accomplish anything in the musical world without offending at least half the musicians interested, would be too much to expect. Of course there are plenty of bleeding bosoms in musical Cardiff just now, and they have found solace in the friendly arms of the Western Mail. If the festival had been started by their" Qlli Vine." instead of the Echo's Man about Town," no doubt the unfortunates would have received similar succour from the South Wales Daily News. So wags the journalistic world. Lord Halsbury has come and gone, and if it had been Lord Salisbury, it would have made no difference to the political outlook. The only interesting thing about his visit was the duel between the Lord Chancellor and Mr. Beynon Harris, a young solicitor who is coming to the front as the Randolph Churchill of Cardiff. For his somewhat daring repudiation of fossil Toryism. Mr. Harris was severely beaten and bruised by the solemn Chancellor. Why is it that the Tories always make such a dead set at a man who tries to popularise their party with the people ? Never mind, Mr. Harris may console himself with the fact that he is only going through the experience which awaited Disraeli, and Lord Randolph him- lelf at one period of their careers. So the Cardiff Corporation have borrowed £15,000. They seem proud of these small sums. Why .do not they borrow £ 150,000 at once, and put up a decent Town-hall. A respectable English country town would recoil from their present structure. Every one in Cardiff. with the ex- ception of forty inhabitants, is clamouring for some building more worthy of Cardiff's future. But then those forty happen to be members of the Council. What is the reason that they cling with such romantic fondness to their battered ruin ? Well. it is a great secret, but I think I will let the readers of the South If ales Star into it—on the strict understanding that it goes no further. The Town-hall contains the most comfortable council chamber in the world Palaces are not in it. There is a beautiful easy chair and a desk for each man there is a raised dais for the aldermen and a perfect throne for the mayor. And not one seat for the private citizens no, not so much as a wooden form! Further comment would be superfluous indeed. Quarter Sessions has been dull. Such is the verdict of those present. An occasional flash from the brilliant and accomplished Recorder has irradiated the gloom, and the legal fraternity have derived a faint excitement from watching the pro- gress of the Clerk of the Peace along a path apparently beset with pitfalls. When his pre- mature recitation of the formula Gentlemen of the jury, are you all sworn ?" resulted in an organised whisper from the Recorder's clerk There's not one of them sworn yet!" several of the young solicitors in court felt they had not lived in vain. The posters are just out for the great Labour demonstration on Monday next. The importance of this occasion, cannot easily be over-rated. The whole of the federated trades of South Wales are to be represented, with Mabon in the chair. Among the speakers who have promised to attend are the Right Hon. Mr. Stansfeld, Sir Charles Dilke, Sir E. J. Reed, and other members of Parliament, and prominent Labour leaders. It was, perhaps, a little indiscreet on the part of the committee to invite Sir Charles Dilke without giving due notice to their other friends. Without-in any way sym- pathising with the Stead persecution, I recognise that there are persons who feel conscientious diffi- culties with regard to Sir Charles Dilke. and they ought not to be placed in the false position of accepting an invitation in ignorance of what it may involve. The demonstration is to be held in the Roath Park, so narrowly rescued to the people from the Conservative officialdom of the Corporation. It is to be hoped that the working men themselves will spare no effort to make the occasion imposing, and worthy of the great interests at stake. Let there be no holding back, or depending on the counte- nance of this or that Right Honourable. If the labour classes are ever to obtain their proper weight in the councils of the nation, it can only be by using every possible opportunity to emphasise their strength, their unity, and their determination.

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