Welsh Newspapers
Search 15 million Welsh newspaper articles
11 articles on this Page
---:0:-MAER CAERFYRDDIN.!…
-0:- MAER CAERFYRDDIN. Mewn cyfarfod o Gynghor Trefol Cae-r- i fyrddin, dydd Gwerter, cynygiodd yr Hew-j adur E. Colby Evans (y Maer), ac eiKodd yr Hemadtir C. W. Jones, eu bod yn nghyfarfod crnghor dydd Llun, yn cynyg fodf jt Herv adur Walter Spurrell yn. cael ei ethol yn. Faer am y Iwyddyti neael. Cariwyd hyN yn ubj- frjrdol.
-----CYFARFOD MI SOL DOSPAV-TI-I…
CYFARFOD MI SOL DOSPAV-TI-I Y I GLO CAREG. Cynaliwyd yr uchod yn Y stafeIl y Gyn> deithas yn Abertawe, ar yr 8fed cyfisol, dan lyw^ddiaeth Mr T. Daronwy Isaac. Cymer- Wy ia y gadair gan Mr David Lloyd, Trim- saran; a'r is-gadair gan Mr Thos. Roberts, Pontyberem. Yr oedd yr oil o'r glofeydd yiv bresenol, oddigerth rhyw saith o.'r rhai lleiaf, a chafwyd cyfarfod llwwddianus or dechreu i'r diwedd. Cwmpaswyd gryn lawer o waith mewn amser byr. Wedi rhoddi y Derbyn- iadau (Receipts) allan, yn, nghyda dadlen a chadarnhau v cofnodion, aethpwydi yn mlaem a gwaith y dydd yn y drefn arferoL i. Cafwyd adToddiiad o Ystradfawr, ar eu | bod wedi llwyddo i gael y 'Detonators' yn rhad. a. hyrry heb osod eu rhybuddion i mewn, Mae hyn yn golygu fod yr oil o'r glofeydd anundebol yn cyflenwi angen y gweithwy;r am y pethau hyn yn rhad, ac wrth hyni y maent yn cymeryd rhyw gymaint o'r gost ychwanegol sydd wedi dyfooi ar y mwrrr wyr yn y cylraewidjad a gymerodd le yn nglyni a'r pylorau. 2t Adroddwyd pad oe^ dim wedi ei wneyd hj'tJ yrii hyh: yh ilglyiii a IJechres newydd' ff i Onliwyn, a chamiatawyd i weithwyr y Bresen II: i osod; eu rhybuddifom i mewn er hawlio sylw priodol iddi. 3. Cafwyd adroddiad o Lofa Cwmgors ar t fod mater yr 'Ostler' wedi ei derfynu i fodd- lonrwydd y gweithwyr, drwy ei fod wedi cael [ cyflog safontol y Dosbarth, a'i le yn ei ol. II Cafwyd adraddiadi hefyd o'r lofa hon, ar fod rhai o'r gyrwyr wedi gwneyd 'contract' a'r cwm-ni, a'u bod yn cyflogi gynvyr ereill i weithio a, hur iddynt, yr hyn sydd yn doriad ar un o prif amoanion yr undeb, sef dileu is-gymeriadaeth yn y glofeydd. Pender- fynwyd nad oes neb i weithio ar hur i'r 'contractors,' a bod y gyrwyr sydd yn gwneyd hyny ar hyni o bryd i roddi eu rhybuddio-it i roeiin,ar un waith, os nad ydynt i gael rhan gyflawn a. chyfartal yn y Cytundeb. Mae pob math o i s-gymeriadaeth i'w gontdeminiio yn herwydd ei fod yn annghyson ag egwydd- orion yr Undeb y perthynwn iddo. 4. Cafwyr dl afiirodldiijadj gan ein parchus oruchwyLiwr ar fod hawl y Dosbarth i 5 y cant o godiad yn ein; cvfiogau, wedi ei gyf- lwyno i sylw y (' ;hor Gweinvddol yn Ngbaerdydd. Penderf\~nwyd fod cwestiwn y chwe' tyrni am bump hefyd i gael ei gyf- lwyno i'r Cynghor. Tra yn ymwybodol mai cael 'minimum' yn y gyflog, cael BwrdcD Cymodol, a chadeirydd annabynol, yw prif amod,au y cytundeb cyffredinol i fod, eto dymunir am i'r pwyllgor i beadio! annghofio anigenion doisbarthol, ac yn neillduol y 5 y cant a ofyniir gan Ddosbarth y Glo Careg, a'r chwe tyrn am bump i'r rhai sydd yn gweithio'r nos. 5. Cafwyd adroddiad1 o Gelliceudrim ar fod y cyflafareddiad wedi troi allant yn feth- iant, yn herwydd fod y cwnmi wedi gwrthod' canolwx, ac heb ganolwr mae'n aninhosibl i gyflafareddiiad i fod yn derfynol pan y byddo1 y cyflafareddwyr yn annghytuno. Y mae y Cwmini hefyd wedi rhoddi rhybuddion i'r gweithwyr syddl yn gweithio yn y lleoedd yr aninghytunir yn eu cylch, a/r lofa mewn can- lyniad i hyny am roddi eu rhybuddion) i fewn yn gyfircdinol cr tynu allan yn ol y cynllun arferol, sef fod y duiweddaif i fewn i fod yn gyntaf allan. Penderfynwydr cefnogi cynyg Mr T. D. Isaac i'r Cwmni, sef fod y lleoedd sydd miewrii annghydwelediadi yn y lofa i gael eu rhoddi yn hollol yn nwylaw goruchAvylivvr y Cwmni ar y naill law, ac yni nwylaw y gweithwyr ar y IIaw arall; ac os gwrthodir hynyna, eino bod yn gofyn i'r Cwmni i gytuno ar Ganolwr i'r cyflafareddwyr, ac os byddi i'r ddau gynyg hyn fyned yn; fethiant, yna, fod yr holl achos i gael ei gyflwyno i'r Cynghor Gweimddol yn Nghaerdydd. 6. Penderfynwyd rhoddi anogaeth i'r glofeydd i hawlio pob iawndal allan yn byth- efnosol o Swyddia'r Lofa. Mae yn arfer- iad! mewn rhai glofeydd i gadw'r arian hyn) yn y swyddfeydd am wythnosau ar ol eu bod yn ddyled'us, ac o hyn allaji! cymerir mesurau i dori yr arferiad yma i ffvvrdd. 7. Caniatawyd i Lofeyd l! Dyffryn Amman a Pantmawr i gael bobo Gyfrinfa iddynt hwy eu; h una in yn nglyn a'r glofeydd, a chamiata- wyd ii lofeydd y Gwenidtaeth ac Ynysygenion i osod eu rhybuddlo-n i mewn fel protest yn erbytni gweithio gydia-g anundebwyr. Daw mater anundiebwyr Ammanford gerbron y cyfarfod misol nesaf. Peuderfynwyd rhoddj anoga,eth i bob cyfrinfa, gan nad pa mor lleied y hydido ei rhif, i ddarnfon cynrychiol- ydd vn awr ac eilwanth i'r Cyfarfodi Misol, ac am ranau ereill y penderfyniadau y maent i'w gweled yn ysgrifenedig ar lyfrau'r Dos- barth. John D. Morgan, Ysg.
Advertising
.0_- !M.MJH ( J,. t t Hy; n (;4 y. Irv; -gag*, I- Anam. It Floats Ladies Like it anil is always at hanil. THE FAYOTJRITE SOAP FOR THE TOILET of its purity and delicacy. It is Dainty a a a 1 jr Children Like it to sight and touch O 1MJ II £ &■ WHITE O || fl O siTht ",Wm3r"' It is Fragrant C# W » 4 I ■ FLOATING O 8 P| lien Like it ana dehglittul to. the senses BeCaUSC )t Floats and is within easy reach. for Shavrm: purposes. Above all It is sought after by Ladies. Everybody Likes it it is Perfectly Pure. ;———————————— — • because it does all that it promises A Purer Soap is boyontt the art of Soaprnakinti LEVER BROTHERS, LIMITED, PORT SUN LIGHT, C H E h' H I R E.
RAMOTH, HIRWAUN..
RAMOTH, HIRWAUN. Nos Ferchex, Tachwedd y 4jdd, 1902, cynaliwyd un o'r cyfarfodydd lleoyddol misol gauafal ya y capel uebel, dan lywyddiaeth fedrus Mr William Jo<M<Jl Evans. Cyfeil- ydd, Abraham Watkins, A.C. Wedi araetix gampus gan y llywydd, aed trwy; y rhanleo canlynol Can agoriadol gan William Watkins, "Hen Wlad y Menyg Gwynion; adroddiad, Willie) T. Evans, "Y Glwithyn Gloew Salm 124, gan) Willie Smith; adroddiad1 gan Hannah I Jane Evans, "Children's Play"; unawd: gan Willie David Jones, "Mae Gwlad y Mynydd- ¡ oedd"; adroddiad, George Phillips, "Y Bugail"; uliawd, gan William Watkins, "Hem Gadair Freichiau fy Mam' adroddiad, 1.I. Davies, "Crefydd Bur"; duett, gan Alex- ander Davies a Willie Evans, "Cariadl Yw"; adroddiad gan Rachel Ann: Smith, "Topsy, y Ci"; adroddiad gan W. Thomas Edwards, "Gaiir o Gyngor"; unawd gan Harry Thomas, "Llythyr fy Mam"; darllen papyr gan Abraham' Watkins, A.C., testyn, ''Cerddor- iaeth." Cawsom: yma tabiiau mawrion feddyliau coethedig effeithiol, addysgiadol, yn hynod 0- naturiol. Trueni mawr na chawsali y bra.wd talentog h"n1, twy o sylw.a chefnogaeth. Nid oes amheuaeth nad seren yw yo codi yn. ffurfafen cerddoriaeth, ac y bydd ei goleu eto yn disglaerio i'r oesaui 2J ddel. Pianoforte solo gan: Mary Lizzie Williams; adroddiad gan Jennie Evans; solo gan Hannah J. Evans, "English Song"; adroddiadi gan Maggie Ann Jones, "Y Cw:pan Feddwol"; adroddiad gan Abraham WatkinlS "Y Tauchwa"; adroddiad gan Gomer Jones, "Pregeth Mr Moody." Wedi hyn canwyd emyn 01 fawl, ac yrnadawodrli bawb yn 11awen gan hiraethu cael cyfarfod cyffelyb heb fod yn; hir. Marcus.
-:0:-! i ) "YSBRYD" YN NGWAITH…
-:0:- "YSBRYD" YN NGWAITH YR HAFOD, ABERTAWE. ■- Y mae gweithwyr gwaith arian yr Hafod | wedi cael eu blino yn rhyfedd yn ddiweddar gan ryw-un) yn y ffurf o "ysbryd," pa, un ai yn y cnawd ai peidio, ni hysbysir-yr hwn sydd ynj tallu priddfeini o'r to, ac wedi creu y dychryn mwyaf yn mhl'ith y d yni on. Tystia un o honvnt iddo weled rhvwbeth. ac iddo ruthro ami ei draws, ond! diflanoddl trwy y wal I Y mae y stori ryfedd wedi gyru ofn ar luaws i fyned: oddi amgylch y gwaith wedi'r nos, ac yn mhlith y gwragedd a'r plant v mae y dychryri' mwyaf. Y mae yn syndod fod neb mor ffol ft cbredu mewn "ysbryd" neu ddrychiolaeth yn yr ugeinfed ganrif, ac y mae yn rhaid fod rhyw adyn yn y 'cnawd^ yn blino gweithwyr gwaith arian yr Hafod mewn modd cyfrwys iawn am ryw reswm neu gilydd, a goreu po gyntaf y llwydda yr hedd- geddwaid ei ddal, i roi atailfa ar ei stranciau.
[No title]
__«_ i mae yn amlwg fod Rhyddfrydiaeth y enill tir eto, ac os 11 wyddir i basio y Mesnr Addysg presenol, bernir y bydd hyny yn fwy na dim yn foddion i <ld«dy nchwelyd y Llywodraeth Doriaidd brevenoi.
Advertising
j ■■ Argraffiad Newydd I <m. o'R m- Trwmpyn,' GAN -A X-ML L 3 m c -z; PRIS, TAIR CEINIOG YR UN. Yr elw arferot i Lyfrwerthwyr Anfoner yr Archebion i Swyddfa r 'Darian.' ? Bob Owen, NEU ETIFEDD Y FFOS: I NOFEL NEWVDD GAN W, Williams, Cwmdar. GyiT.-jiiaM yi/v fjl m vn Nifil dl\ 1 d/tl>r.i!. fatwtjfrm í
'-.._'---'" THE COLLEEN BAWN.
THE COLLEEN BAWN. CHAPTER XXVIII. How the Little Lard Put His Master's Wishes. Into Action. We lost sight of Eily ater her parting with I her uncle. She wasted no time on her juumney homewards, but yet it was rtcar'y dusk before the pmy had turned in upon the ori little craggy road which led upward through the Gap. The everting was calm and frosty, and every footfall of the animal was echoes from the opposite cliffs like the stroke ot a I hammer. A broken covering of crystal was t thro" across tUg streas; that Rubbled down- J" wmls through the wild valley; and the r .cks and leafless trees, ia those corners of t;ie glen which had escaped the direct influ- ence of the sunshine, were covered with drooping spars of ice. Chilled! by the nip- ping air, and tearful of attracting the atten- tion of am- occasional straggler in the wild, Eiiy had drawn her blue cloak amiiad her luce, and was proceeding quietly in the di- rection of the cottage, when the sound of voices on the other side of a hedge, by which ..Kc passed, struck on her ear. "Seven pound ttn, ao" a pint o' whisky!— the same money as I had for the dead match I of her frami Father O'Connor, the priest, eastwards in Castle Island. Say the word now—seven pound tin, or lave it there." "Seven pound." "No; seven pound tin." "I will not I tell you." "Well, then, being relations, as we are, I never will break your ward, although she's worth that if it was between brothers." In her first stare c." surprise, at hearing tnis well-remembered voice, Eily had drop- ped the mantle from her face-. Before she could resume it, the last speaker had sprang up an the hedge, and plainly encountered her. At this moment, far away from home, for- jaien, as it appeared, by her chosen, her 1 cnrm accepted love, living all alone in heart, and without even the feverish happi- ness of hope itself-at this mournful mo- ment it would be difficult to convey any idea of the effect which was produced upon Eily by the sudden apparition of the first, though not the favoured, love of heT girlish days. Both came simultaneously to a pause, and both remained gazing each. on the other's face with a feeling too sudden and too full for immediate expression. The handsome, though no longer healthy, countenance of the mountaineer was expanded to a stare of pleasurable astonishment, while that of Eily was covered with an appearance of shame, sorrow, and perplexitv. The pony, like- wise, drooping hit; head' as she suffered the rein to slacken in her hand, seemed1 to par- ticipate in her confusion. At length, Myles of the Ponies, keeping his eyes stiU fixed on Eily, advanced towards her, step after step, with the breathless sus- pense of King Leontes before the feigned statue. "Eily!" he said at length, laying c. tie hand upon the shaggy neck of the little animal, and placing the other against his tnroat, to keep down the passion which he felt gathering within, "Ob. Eily O'Connor! i-, it you I see at last?" Eily, with her eyes lowered, replied in a whisper, which was all but utterly inaudible, Tis, Myles!" A long pause ensued. The poor mountaineer bent down his head in a degree of emotion which it would be difficult to describe, otherwise than by adverting to the causes in which it originated. He was P.ih's first declared admirer, and he was the cause of her present exile from her father's fireside. He had die roughness, but at the same time the honesty of a mountain cottag- e r; and he possessed a nature which was capable of being deeply, if not acutely, im- pressed by the circumstances just mentioned. It was long, therefore, before he could re- new the conversation. At last he looked up and said:— "Why then, when you were below at the Lake, where I seen you, although I coudn't see a bit of you but the cloak, I wondhered greatly what is it made me feel so quare in myself. Sure it's little notion I had who was in it, for the cloak. Little I thought—(here he passed his hand across his eyes). Ah, what's the use o' talking ?" Eilv was still unable to articulate a sylla- tle. "I saw the old man last week," continued Myles, "still at the old work on the rope- vvalk." "Did you-speak to him whispered Eily. "No. He gave me great anger (and justly) the next time be saw me afther you going, in regard it was on my account, he said (and ju-stly too) that you were driven to do as you had done. Oh! then, Miss Eily, why did you do that? Why didn't vou come to me unknownst to the old man, and says you, 'Myles, I make it my request (/ you, you wont ax me any more. for I can't have you at 3,11?' And. sure, if my heart was to split open that minute, it's the last vvord you'd ever hear from Myles." "There is only one person to blame in all this business," murmured the unhappy girl, "md that is Eily O'Connor." "I don't say that," returned! the mountain- eer. "It's no admiration to me you should be heart-broken with all the persecution, we gave you day after day. All I'm thinking, '>% I'm sorry you didn't mention it to myself r.nkn wm.:t. Sure it would be betther for me than to be as I was afther when I heerd vou wor gone. Lowry Looby told me first (f It. when I was eastwards. Oh, vol such i. life as I led afther 1 Lories'm^ as the mountains looked before, when T used to come home think in' of you, they locked ten dmes lonesomer afther I heerd that story. Th • ponies, poor crathurs, see 'em all how lhe\ "re look in downi at us this moment, thev didn't hear me spring the r8tt1e on the mountain for a month afther. I suppose chev thought it is in Garryowen I was." Here he looked upward, and pointed to feas herd, a great number of which were col- lected in groups on the broken cliff above the road, some standing so far forward on the projections of rock, as to appear magni- tted against the dusky sky. Myles sprung tfce large wooden rattle which he held in his band. asad in an instant all dispersed and cfisappeared like the dad of a Highland chief, at the sound of their leader's whistle. "Well, Myles," said Eily, at length, col- lecting a little strength, "I hope we'll see some happy days in Garryowen yet." "Heaven send it. I'll pack off the boy to-night to town, or I'll go myself if you like. or I'll get you a horse and truckle, and guide it myself for you, or I'll do anything in the whole world that you'll have me. Look at this. I'd rather be doing your bidding this moment than my own mother's, and heaven forgive me, if that's a sin. Ah! Eily, they may say this, and that o' you, in the place where you were born, but I'll ever hold to it, I held to it all through, an' I'll hold it to my death, that when you darken your father's door again, you will send no ] shame before ^pu 1" "Yf>U are right in that, M vies." ''Didn't I know I was? And wasn't it that that broke my heart ? Look. If one met after you flitted away, an' saw me walk- in' the road' with my hands in my pocket, and my head: down, an' 1 thinking; an' if he sthriick me upon the shoulder, an' 'Myles/ says he, 'don't grieve for her, she's this. an' that 1' and if he proved it let me1 why; ra look up that minute and I'd smile in his face. I'd be as easy fronj that ht}\if, as H I I never crossed your threshold at Garry- Owen. But knowing to my heart, and as my hea.rt told me, that it never could be that j way, that Eily was still the old girl always, an' hearing what they said o' you, an' know- ing that it was I that brought it all upon you,—oh, Eilv! Eily!—oh, Eily O'Connor! there is not that man upon Ireland1 ground that can tell what I felt. That was what kilt me! that was what drove the pain into my heart, and kept me in the doctors hands till now. "Were you ill, then, Myles?" Eilv asked, in a tone of greater tenderness and interest than she had ever shown to this faithful lover. He seemed to feel it too; for he turned away his head and did not answer for some moments. "Nothing to speak of," he said at length; "'nothing, 'Eily. that couldn't be cured by a kind word or a look o' that kind1. But where are you going now? The night is falling, and this is a lonesome road. The Sowlth* was seen upon the Black Lake last week, and few are fond of crossing the little bridge at dark since then." 0 "I am not afraid." said Eilv. "Are you going far a-past the Gap? Let me guide the pony for you." "Ka, Myles; where I am going, I must go i. alone." n "Alone ? Sure, 'tisn't to part me you will' now!?" | "I must, indeed, "Myles." | "And' what will I say to the old man, when I go and tell him that I saw Eily, an' spoke to her, an' that I know no more ?" "Tell him, if you like, that Eily is sorry for the trouble she gave him. and that be- i fore many days she hopes to ask his pardon on her knees. Good night, and heaven be with you! Myles, you are a good man." "An am n't I to know where you stop it- self ?" "Not now. You said, Myles, that you would' like to db my bidding. My bidding is now, that you would neither ask, nor look after, where I'm going, nor where I stop. If you do either one or the other, you will do me a great injury." "Say no more, a-chæe I" said Myles; "the word is enough. Well, Eily, good night! your own good night back again) to you, and! may the angels guide you on your road. Cover up your hands in your cloak, an' hide your face from the fro„t. I do your bidding, but I don't like the look o' you that way, going up this lonesome glen alone, and a winter night coming on, an' not knowing where you're steering, or who you're trusting to. Eily, be said! by me, and let me go with you." Eily again refused, and gave her Jjand to Myles, who pressed it between his, andl! seemed as loath to part with it as if it were a treasure of gold. At length, however, Eily disengaged! herself, and put her pony to a trot. The mountaineer remained gazing after her until her figure was lost among the shadows of the rocks. He then turned1 on his path, and pursued the road which led down the valley, with his eves fixed heavily on the ground, and his head1 sunk forward in an excess of deep andt singular emotion. Eily, meanwhile, pursued her journey to the cottage, where, as the reader is aware, no news of her forgetful husband' had as yet been heard. Some days of painful sus- pense and solitude elapsed, and them came Danny Mann, with his young masters note. A gloomy spirit. it. (To be Continued.)
-:0:-NODION AMERICANAIDD.!
-:0:- NODION AMERICANAIDD. Y Parch. Isaac Thomas, Horatio. Pa., sydd wedi ymneillduo o'r weinidogaeth; ac yn cartrefu gyda ei fab yn Ninas New York. Parch. Caleb Sampson sydd wedi rhoddi ei ofal gweinidogaethol o eglwys Oak Hill, Ohio, i fyny. Pairch.'J. Volander Jones sydd wedi gorphen ei ymrwymiad ag eghvys N wcastle, Pa.. ac wedi cymeryd ei edyn tua'r Gorllew- in. Parch. T. A. Humphreys, Sharon, Pa., sydd wedi dyfod i Plymouth Church, Scranton, Pa. Parch. J. Twvson Jones. Ph.D., Elens- burg. Pa., sydd ar vmwellad a Chymru y dyddiau hyn brawd Sirhowy, a brcdor o Sirhowy ydyw ef. Parch. D. M George, Pittston. Pa., sydd wedi vmsefydlu yn Waterville, N.Y., ac efe vw bugail v ddeadell yno bellach. Mae ei frodvr vn Pa. mewn galar M golli o'n plith. J Lloffwr.
-:0:-PENYBONT-AR-OGWY.
-:0:- PENYBONT-AR-OGWY. Sadwrn, cynaJiwyd trengholiad ar gorff Thomas Bryant, labnvr, Newcastle, 56 oed, yr hwn a gafwydt ynl farw mewnt ystabl. Dywedai ei briod ei bod yn arferiad gan y trancedig i aros neu gysgu allan yn y nos, ond nad oedd wedi gwneyd hyny yn ddi- weddar. Henry Lord, 66, North street, Penybont, a ddywedai ei fod yn adnabod y trancedig, ac iooOl ei weledi nos Sadwrn. Nid oedd Bryant yni sobr, a diywedodd y tyst wrtho. am fyned adref. Boreu dydd Gwen- er, aeth i'r ystabl, a gwelodd, y trancedig yn farw yn yr ystabl. Dywedodd y Dr. Thomas fod: marwolaeth Bryant wedi cael ei achosii gan "syncope,' yn herwydid cysgu all an, ac yfed' i ormod- edd. Dychwelwyd rheithfam yn unol a'r dystiolaeth feddygol.
--:0:-PONTYPOOL.I
-0:- PONTYPOOL. I Dydd Gwener, bu farw y Parch. J. Wil- liams, gweinidog eglwys Fedyddiol Crane street, Pontypool, yn Caerleon, yn 63 mlwydd: oed, ar ol pythefnos o nychdod. Yr oedd Mr Williams yn hanu o Dyddewii, ai derbyniiodd ei addysg yn Ngolieg HwIfFordd. Ordeiniwyd ef yn Ponthir, yn 1863, lie y gweinidogaethodd yn llwyddianus am 15 mlynedd. Symudodd1 oddiyno i Bontypool, yni 1878, yn olynydd i'r Parch. T. Thomas, D.D. Prof odd Mr Williams ei hunt yn bre- gethwr o'r radd! flaemaf, ac yni llawn brwd- frydedd a sel grefyddol. Ymneillduodd: o ofal yr eglwys j mis diweddaf, a chafedd dysteb anrhydeddos.