Welsh Newspapers
Search 15 million Welsh newspaper articles
4 articles on this Page
"" ™~ TO CORRESPONDENTS.
™~ TO CORRESPONDENTS. No notice can be taken of anonymous communication* Wha ever is intended for insertion must be authenti- cated by the name and address of the writer; Dot necessarily for pablication, but as a guarantee ofgood faith. We cannot undertake to return rejected communicat on
HAVERFORDWEST MARKET.
HAVERFORDWEST MARKET. Saturday, June 6, 186S. Ueef, 6d to 8d Mutton, 7d to 5d; Lamb, 7d to 9(1; Veal 5d to 7d, Pork 6d to 7d; Butter, Os IUd to IsOd; Eggs, !6 for Is; Fowls, 3s Od to 4s 6d per couple; Ducks, 4s Od to 5e Of1 ditto; Geese, Os Od to f s Od, Turkeys, 08 "d to Os Od each; Checs", 3d to M per Ib; Bacon Pigs, Os Od to Os d per score; Potatoes I IS lbs for Is. New potatoes, 2d. and id. per lb.
Advertising
MR. EDWARD RIBBON, PIANO-FORTE, VIOLIN, 4ND VIOLONCELLO TEACHER, PI A N 0-FOR T £ S TUNED, ORGANS and HARMONIUMS tuned and repaired by ex- perienced workmen. RESIDENCE-6, MERLIN'S TERRACE, HAVERFORDWEST WILLIAM H. BAMKIN, TEACHER OF NAVIGATION AND NAUTICAL ASBTONOMY, HAKIN, MILFORD, STEAM COMMUNICATION BETWEEN LIVERPOOL, MILFORD, SWANSEA, & BRISTOL For the Month of JUNE, 1868. Ho Liverpool and Bristol Channel Steam Navigation Company's Steam Ships SfiVERMTfijj Cnr)t Giubs WINDBBHEBE, Cain. J. Barren JOKTAGU, Cap I Speakman AnNUtVEanoN.Capt.Rouinon BACON, Capt. Old. 3. KKNNJSPY, C,apl Capt. Tallan. AGNES JACK, Capt. Morns ^EWELIA'.N, Capt. Beckett The above, or some ot&er suitable vessel, is intended to sa "ïth Goods and Passengers, (unlessprevented by any unforeseen *»urrencc) as follows, with or without pilots, and UbeUjte tow vessels;- From Liverpool to Milford and Bristol. Ending passengers for SWANSEA, atthe Mumbles, (weather r»ermitt:ng.) 2»turday June <5 ..10 morn Saturday 20 9 morn 13 2i after Saturday 27 6 after From Milford for Bristol. Undine Passengers for Swansea at the Mumblee( weather permitting) JUNDAV June 1 4 MORN SUNDAY T'L ••• „ MO?N Sunday' 14 9 morn Sunday 28 9 morn From Milford jor Liverpool. ^turningfromBristoleveryTuesday, andfrom Swanseaevery Wednesday. Wednesday June 3 9 night Wednesday 17 7 even Wednesday 10.. 2 alter | Wednesday 24 1 after F A R K S J— (Return tickets available for two voyages.) t Cahm. Deck. Eeturn to or from Liverpool 13s Od "s Od 8s or from Bristol 8s 6d 7s Od 18s Wiiforcl to or from Swansea (Mumbles) Ss Od 3s Od — Passengers are landed and embarked at Milford (weather per- F mitting) free of charge in the Steam Tender GIPSY. For iurttier particulars Bee small bill, or apply to John Bacon Co., Managing Owners, 14, Water-street., Liverpool; G. H. 5*ans, Bristol; Charles Lamb, Swansea; John Ken worthy and Manchester. R. D. HORE, AcijLov MILFOBB. 1 -vS)1$ F1&$§,ILIFE THE GRAND PROMOTERS OF HEALTH. HOLLO WAY'S PILLS. 1 He grand secret of attaining happiness is to secnu it8 M8°Qd health, without which life is stripped of all vUre8' The first irregularity of any function oftbp becheoked and set right by an appropriate nose by fine purifying Pills, which strengthen the system Thev °r°ophlv cleansing the blood from all impurities, (j'stn balance disordered action, remove the cause of eyerv ance' nD(^ restore 't# normal and natural power to tiranDk0rRan> without inconvenience, pain, or any other w&ack. Determination of Blood to the Head. Th* • t))e 18 *s generally occasioned by some irregularity oi to ^nautili aii(j boweis, which if not quickly attended 1'' treqnently terminates fatally. A few doses of these iari °us Pills never fail to give ton5 to the stomach, regu» iiih 'he secretions, and purity to the fluids. Veiti.co, J^hess of sight, and other indications of approaching M p.le*y. are entirely dissipated by a course of this ^irable medicine. Scrofula and all Shin Diseases. all skin diseases, however inveterate, there medi- thn<* are a sovereign remedy. While the Pills act upon K6 blood, which they purify, the Ointment passes Uf°u8h the pores of the >kin, and cleanses every struc- a« water saturates the soil, or as salt penetrates meat, Whole physical machinery is thus rendered healthy, s^lar, and vigorous. Coughs, Colds, and Asthmas, <5 0 ttiedicine will cnre colds of long durntion, or such ki,te s<ttled upon the chest so quickly as these famous 8- Even in cases where the first stage of asthma has geared, these Pills may be relied on as a certain and Ita^'failing remedy, particularly if the ointment be Kj-U'taneousiy well rubbed into the chest and throat 1 and morning. Indigestion.—Bilious Headache. It complaints are sometimes considered trifling, but W be borne in mind that, by inattention and neg- V>a'ley often end most seriously. Give early thought ^lekranged stomach, take Holloway's Pills, rub hie Mil Ointment over the pit of the stomach, and you portly perceive a change for the better in your W>n, spirits, appetite, strength, and energy. The VM iVenaent, though it may be gradual, will be thorough ay' slills are the best remedy known in the worldfortli W following diseases Hfhtoa Dropsy Liver com- Ticdouloureus Dysentery plaints Tumours com. Erysipelas Lumbago Ulcers Femaioirregu- Piles Venerealaffec- vtljg on larities Rheumatism tions *61 n Fevers of all Retention of Worms of al f,Plau. °°m. kinds urine kinds 8 Fits Scrofula, or Weakness, Gout King's Evil from what- no^ Head-ache Sore throats ever cause, Indigestion Stone& Gravel &c &c. u lhu u i Inflammation Secondary .v Jaundice # symptoms 'he Establishment of PKOFESSOR HOLLOWAT, 244 >??8i»inoar Temple Bar,) London, also by all respectable A '8 and Dealers in Medicines throughout the civilised »^s«ac^e Pricee:—9d,4»6d, lis,22s, i«es. ction8f°r theguidaneeofpatientsin ever: Msorde affixed to each Bo*. Pills and Ointment can be had of all Chemitss sgists, with Welsh Directions without extra expense. VISITORS TO HAVERFORDWEST, AND OTHERS WHO WiSH TO EXPEND THEIR MONEY TO THE BEST ADVANTAGE ARE RESPECTFULLY INVITED TO CALL AT P. P. ELLIS'S G ROC E RY E ST AB LI S H M E NT, HIGH-STREET, HAVERFORDWEST, WHERE they can select goods of choice quality. At suitable prices to meet their requirements. The Teas W and Coffees now on sale are unusually good. Reduced Prices charged on quantities. Orders by letter have particular attention PLEASE OBSERVE-LOWER DOOR FOR RETAIL DEPARTMENT. ESTABLISHED 1812. H. DFC T. PRO C T O N Invite the attention of Agriculturists to their. SPECIAL BONE MANURES, Which are of a superior quality, and the most economical that can be used. PROCTOR'S TURNIP MANURE I PROCTOR'S WHEAT MANURE PROCTOR'S MANGOLD MANURE PROCTOR'S BARLEY MANURE PROCTOR'S POTATO MANURE I PROCTOR'S GRASS MANURE BONE SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME. I FULL PARTICULARS SENT FREE BY POST ON APPLICATON TO MESSRS. PROCTOR, OR THEIR AGENTS. ADDREss,-H. AND T. PROCTOR, AETIPICIAL M ANTTSE AV" OEKS, CATHAY, BRISTOL. WoRKs,-BIRMINGHAM, CHESTER, WARWICK, AND BRISTOL. AGENTS- Mr W. VAUGHAN, Fisbguard I Mr JOHN N. EVANS, Aberoyron Mr D. P. SAER. Seedsman, Pembroke Dock Mr C. MORGAN, Llandewi-brefi Mr T PARRER, Cardigan Messrs. DAVIES BROTHERS, Drefacb.LIanybythet PRIZES OPEN TO THE AGRICULTURALISTS OF WALES, T. vVHICHER DAVIES BEGS TO ANNOUNCE THAT HE HAS JUST RECEIVED A LARGE CARGO OF BURNARD LACK. & CO'S. CELEBRATED. MANUKES < which are unequalled for b igh agricultural value, and which during the past year have carried off the principal prizes at the leading public competitions in England. These Manures, which consist of the CORN AND ROOT MANURE, AND DISSOLVED BONE MANURE, have been received in excellent condition, and are now ready for immediate delivery, at moderate rates for cash. T. W. D. begs to siate that he intends offering TWO VALUABLE SILVER CUPS f (or eompetilion by the Purchasers of the Manures sold by him. These Prizes will he given for the best Crops o ) Swede Turnips grown in pieces of not less than five acres in extent. The Cups have been purchased at first hant r in one of the principal manufacturing establishments in the Kingdom: FIRST PRIZE, value JE10 10s. SECOND Ditto, value £ 6 Os. [ A constant supply of the Manures will be kept at North Hall, St Ishmaela, as well.as at the Warehouses in Haverfordwest. Deliveries to the Railway Station free of charge. AGEICULTURAL SEEDS i of all kinds on Sale, and warranted to be of the best quality. i TEAS. supplied wholesale and to families, in chests, half-chests, and 201b caddies, not to be surpasssed by any house in the trade. I ENGLISH ALES & IRISH PORTERS j OF THE FiNEST FLAVOUR. BEST WILTSHIRE AND GLOUCESTERSHIRE FLOUR, PURE AND UNADULTERATED. 1 —————^————— MIL FOR D BREWERY. (7IARMERS and others can be supplied with good Jt; Harvest Beer at lOd. per gallon, in quantities oi not lesi; than 41 gallons A reduction of 2d per gallon to those taking it away in their OWN CASKS, and paying cash. Fresh yeast at all times. STAR BUCK. & CO. "PEMBROKESHIRE AND HAVERFORDWEST INFIRMARY. CONTRI BUTIONS, 1868. 'PHE Honorary Secretaries beg .most respectfully to L acknowledge the receipt of the following sums, and would at the same time respectfully urge upon the atton. tion of those Clergyme,n and Dissenting Ministers in the County who have not yet made collections in behalf of ttiis Institution for the present year, the pressing and many claims which it has on their sympathy and support. jC s. d Collection in Jefferston Church, per Rev. J, D. Palmour 2 3 0 Ditto in Manorbier Church, Offertory," per Rev J, H. Lamb 1 1 0 STEAM COMMUNICATION WITH THE SOUTH OF IRELAND. 'HE New Milford (Milford Haven) and Waterford JL Daily Service (Sundays excepted). The Milford Haven and Waterford Steam Ship Com- pany's Royal Mail Steamers will sail, weather per- mitting- FROM NEW MII.FORD, At. 7.45 .p.m, on arrival of the 9 15 a.m. Express, and 6.0 a.m. third class trains, so as to enable passengers to proceed by the 6.0 a.m. train to Limerick, Cork, &c. FROM WATERFORD, At 4.0 p.m, on arrival of the tram from Cork,Limerick,&c so as to enable passengers to proceed by the 8.35 a m, first and second class Express train, reaching London about 6.0 p.m, and third class, arriving in London at 9.45 p.m. For further particulars apply to any of the Railway Stations, or to Messrs Jackson & Co, New Milford, South Wales. See Bradshaw's and Irish Guides, and Railway Time Tables. (
[No title]
MIDNIGHT ELOPEMENT FROM A RECTORY,—The inhabitants of an usually quiet village near Stoney Stanton, Leicestershire, were thrown into intense excitement on Wednesday mornine by learning that in the course of the night Miss B-, who was under the care of the venerable rector of the parish, had eloped with a stocking-maker or frame-work knitter. It was discovered that they bad taken a conveyance to Leicester, where a license was obtained, and by eight o'clock they were married at the office of the registrar. They were pursued and captured, and by the mail train taken to the village from whence they had flown, the young lady being again safely lodged under the roof of her Venerable guardian. It is ex- pected that the youth will be prosecuted for having made false statements before the regitras-.—Leeds Evening Express. THE FFNIAN O'FARRELL.—A correspondent of an Irish paper states that O'Farrell, whose parents were so independent as to be almost accounted wealthy, was educated for the legal profession, and that at the age of about 22 he expressed a desire to take holy orders. Tl is inclination seeming to be real and sincere, he was sent by his friends to this country, where he remained for some time, and received minor orders, but at this period the growing disease of the brain seems to have commenced to develope itself, and he suddenly disappeared from the college without making any commvnication to the Superior, and unexpectedly made his appearance again in Australia. The idea of entering the church was abandoned, and O'Farrell soon after went into business, but his eecentricities having been increased by tendency to intemperate habits, produced, as a natural con- sequence, failure in business. From this period he was under particular supervision, when the full development of the madness took place in the terrible attempt made on the life of the Prince. Go AND Do LIKEWISE.—A teachable woman, with bright eyes, who 'improves each shining hour,' not only has many chances in the year of finding a suitable husband, but has many years to do it in. She grows old so much more slowly than the flirt; her mind brightens as her complexion fades. Indeed the power of mind over matter will go farther than this. I have known girls who were positively plain at twenty grow comparatively good looking at thirty; but then they had been making themselves agreeable in the very best fashion alt their lives. I have in my memory especially one dear contemporary of mine, whom I had the wit to love and value, though not the wisdom to imitate. She was almost ugly in her youth; more- over, she was shy and awkward. She had a painful consciousness of her plainness, which she got over as she ceased to think or care about her looks; for nature had gifted her with a mind and heart as beau- tiful as her features were plain, By the time that I was become an angular old maid, her inner woman had so got the better of her out ward that she was really an attractive woman and I have heard an eminent painter say that her face was almost the loveliest he had seen. She married a man of con- siderable distinction when she was near forty, and I am convinced they wert! as happy ever afterward" as any prince and princess in a fairy tale. Hundreds of people loved her—men', and women as wpjl. Women did not resent her popularity with men, fpr for it was an attraction perfectly clear of all personal vanity and conscious flattery. She was as modest as Burns's daisy.' I never saw her make an eye' in my life, I believe firmly that she enjoyed more happiness in one of her least happy years than I did in ten of my best. But she deserved happiness, ar.d I didn't. My dear, I hope you will follow her example and not mine. She was a virgin and I was a silly flirt.—St. /'aid's.' COLLISION IN THE CHANNEL.—Theiron-bulltscrew steamers Gibralter, Harris, master, from London,boiand to Lisbon and Gibralter, with a cargo of Government stores and private merchandise, and the Blonde, Catmur, master, fiom Ibiail and Falmouth, bound to Antwerp, with a cargo of grain, arrived in Portsmouth harbour on Monday morning with each of their bows smashed in from collision with each other on the previous evening, in the channel. Both vessels had a hole in their bows near the stem piece large enough for a good-sized boat to go through, the iron plates round the apertures being bent and twisted in all kinds of eccentric forms. The figurehead and buU warks forward of the Gibraltar appeared to have sustained but little injury, but below the level of the upper deck her forebody was utterly destroyed. The Blonde's damage was exhibited more in the upper part of the fore body. The remains of her bowsprit; lay thrown back on the forecastle, and a V piece of the Gibralter's fore body remained sticking up through her upper deck from the gap below in her bows, where it must have broken off at the time of the separation of the vessels after the collision. From the reports made by the masters of both vessels it appears that the collision occurred about 10 30 p.m. on Saturday, during a thick fog, off Selsea Bill, the Owers Lightship bearing at the time N.N.E. from the vessels, at a distance of ten miles. The speed of each vessel at the time of collision has been differently estimated, but it has been stated to have been seven knots, and that it cannot have been much less than this is evident from the tremendous effects produced upon each vessel. They met nearly as possible stein to stem, the Gihralter's stem entering t'^e Blonde's port bow, 2ft. fiom the stem edge of the latter. Being the higher vessel of the two, the Gibraltar's bows, or rather their wreck, after entering those of the Blonde, rode over the latter, and the two thus became interlocked in a tangled mass of iron plates and framing. Luckily, the sea was perfectly smooth, with no wind, and both vessels had good sound water-tight compartments about 20 ffet inboard from their stems, but for five-and-a-half hours they lal thus grappled and grinding each other in the grim solitude of a still foggy night at sea. As the fore compartments filled with water, the Gibraltar settled down still firmer upon the Blonde, and nothing then remained but to throw overboard the cargo, which was chiefly beer, from the forehold of the former vessel. This was at length accomplished, and then the vessels were separated, and remained afloat. The water flowed freely in and out of the bows of each vessel through the huge gaps, but the fore compart- ments held out, the sea continued in its most amiable mood, and the two disabled ships, with their pumps going, commenced their course along the land in company for the harbour of Portsmouth, where they arrived soon after 9 a.m. on Monday morning, No lives were lost, and only one man was injured by the collison. He was one of the crew of the Blonde, and suffered a slight injury to the shoulder joint. The escape of the crew of each vessel from any further injury at the moment of the collision is something extraordinary, as the sleeping berths in each vessel were in the part smashed ia.