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:.:-,-.--Clerical Changes.'
Clerical Changes. The many friends of the Rev. H. P. James; formerly assistant curate at Tre- cynon, will be glad to learn that he has been appointed vicar of Mynyddislwyn, with Maesycwmmer and Abercarn. Mr. James is at present in charge of Garw Valley. The rev. gentleman is an ex- cellent preacher in both languages. The Rev. G. K. M. Green, vicar of Norton with Lenchwiek, has been ap- pointed vicar of St. Paul's, Blackheath, Birmingham. Mr. Green is a brother to the vicar of Aberdare, and has preached at St. Elvan's on several occasions. 0: —
A WORD TO LADIES.
A WORD TO LADIES. Send two stamps fur our new líüd origins, illustrated Booklet, containing plain and practical advice how Irregularities, Sup pressions, etc., may be prevented or rk moved by simple means in a few hours* Recommended by eminent PhyBioiane and thousands of Ladies, as being the 0111., Genuine Bemedv. This is not a quae* medicine. Established 80 years. Leelii M.artvn, Ltd. Chwaiata, 84, Dfrlafceoa Ion* London.
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r co ol-9 ¡ ¡ I I YEARS r-t oven Err.GAcr. AN EVER READY HOUSEHOLD REMEDY!. | REME LOOSENS PHLEGM. ALLAYS COUGt-f_ j f GIVES IMMEDIATE RELIEF. ■> I LINUM CATHARTICUM PSLLS. | j. FOR INDIGESTION & ITS EVILS. k ) •» fx SICK-HEADACHE BILIOUS DERANGEMENT. Sc, AN- AGREEABLE APER IENT. J) f\KAY5 TIC PILLS" •> •> *u/r\ < i-CURE FACEACHE & NEURALGIA. 1 'A f REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.. J *■ I D'èŸ ALL. CHEMISTS THROUGHOUT GREAT BRITAIN & THE COLOWlES^jl
A Scathing Sermon.
A Scathing Sermon. THE RErv. CYNQG WILLIAMS AND TRECYNON CURIOSITIES. "THE ARCH-BLASPHEMER ROBERT BLATCHFORD." On Sunday evening the pulpit of Elim Congregational Church, Cwmdare, was occupied by the Rev. W. Cynog Williams, the well-known pastor of Mill-street Baptist Church. He delivered a very vigorous sermon, taking as his text the narrative in II. King's, 6, which tells us how the eyes of the pessimistic young man in Dothan were opened in response to the prayer of his master, the prophet. In the introductory part of his sermon Mr. Williams: explained that Israel had made a truce with the enemy, and the result was that the enemy now attacked Israel. If the church would not attack the enemy, then the enemy would attack the church. In these days the church did not .assume the militant attitude to the extent it should. Its policy was Live and let live." Once the church abandoned its militant course it lost the main object of its existence. If, while corrupt habits were rampant and scep- ticism poisoned the country, the church did not raise its voice in protest, then it had no purpose of existence. It was the fighting church only that deserved to live. As in the days of the Kings of Israel the prophet was the mightiest power to-day. The ambition of the Syrian king was to capture Israel's prophet, then Israel would be at the mercy of the enemy. They had all sorts of religious curiosities in Trecynon to- day, and all of them attacked the prophet. In the text the servant had been surrounded and frightened by the enemy. He knew not that the forces of God and the resources of heaven were on his side. He could only see the hosts of darkness. Considering the number of the enemies and the wiles which they practised to ensnare the young people of to-day it was a wonder that any of them escaped. The preacher then enumerated some of the foes that assailed the young people of the present day. Firstly, the patrons of the liquor traffic. The most successful agencies in destroying the young people of the day were the capitalists and shareholders in the drink traffic. Many clergymen held shares in brewery companies. Again adultery destroyed thousands of our young men. Women who led a, life of shame were on the increase, and the temptations that beset our young people in this direction were appalling. Another destructive force was gamb- ling. This evil was second only to drunkenness. Statistics showed that gambling was alarmingly on the in- crease. To-day there, were public-houses in Trecynon that were mere gambling dens, where young men gambled all their earnings. Scepticism and Sabbath breaking formed another great evil force. The in- fidels had inscribed on their banners such words as "Equality, Liberty and Fraternity." They assumed that they were sacrificing everything for the work- men. But who were they? The disciples of the arch-blasphemer Robert Blatch- fcrd. Let us beware of enemies who approached us under false colours. The enemies were very clever, and adopted very attractive means of allur- ing young people. They enticed them to the public-houses by means of billiard rooms, skittle alleys, pianos, grama- phones, etc. Also they engaged the smartest young ladies available as bar- maids. I entreat you in the name of God," said the preacher, raising his voice, not to allow your daughters to become barmaids in public-houses." This fervid appeal was greeted by a chorus of Amen by the congregation. Continuing, the preacher affirmed that no young man could parley with the enemy and emerge from his deadly camp with his soul unscathed. They could not remain in the company of in- fidels on Sunday night talking Secular- ism without poisoning their minds. To the young man who was now in the grip of the enemy he would say, Don't despair." He was still able to escape from the snare. What was he to do? Go to the prophet, who could give him advice which was based on his own experience. Once he (the preacher) heard a famous preacher and temperance orator make the remark, I don't know but that I may again die a drunkard." Was that professed teacher qualified to direct a young man in the way he should go? Certainly not. A Salvation Army lass would have been a much safer guide for him. The preacher in his peroration exhorted all young men to seek the I prophet and the church. The church was. far better than the company of men who denied the existence of God and the responsibility of man. Let the religious people of Cwmdare get up like one man and assail the enemies that were at their gates.
: O : Cwmbach.
O Cwmbach. MUSICAL STTCCESS.-We are pleased to note the recent success of the young musician and composer, Mr. Thomas John Morgan, Cwmbach, in passing suc- cessfully the A.C. examination in con- nection with the Tonic Sol-fa" College, London. We learn that Mr. Morgan is preparing for the diploma Licentiate of II the College (L.T.S.C.). Hearty congratu- lations to him,
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WHITCOMBE HOUSE, g, GLOUCESTER ST., ABEEDABB. MORCA MORGAN, )I Auctioneer, Valuer, Accountant, House and Estate Agent, Fire, Accident and Plate Glass Insurance Agent. RENTS COLLECTED. -M. M. personally attends to collecting also holds Certificate to levy distress for rent. Late 6, Whitcomhe Street Jeff Jones, ACCOUNTANT, Also holds Bailiff's Certificate for levying Distress for Rents, &c. ■^ro,desmen's Debts Bought or Collected. Rents Collected. Prompt Settlements, BUSINESS PERSONALLY ATTENDED TO. Address—64, Moq. Street. (late 14, Highland Place), ABERDARE. Constitutional Hall, ABERDARE. TO BE LET FOR CONCERTS, LECTURES, DANCES, &C., &C. FOlt TERMS. APPLY— Z. ANDREWS^ New Theatre, Aberdare. ANXIOUS AIOTHERS ay relieve themselves of much anx- lety and trouble brought about by child- ren suffering from such distressing ail- ments as Wirut, Gripe, Convulsions, and the like. These complaints are not Ranted, but what is required is just a°se or two of RED DROPS yhich will give instant relief to the little j^fferer and ensures to the mother a good, night's rest. A bottle is yours for and is obtainable from the Proprie- tors \lONES and SONS, Chemists, LLANIDLOES. If from all Up-to-Date chemists. ^let sen<^ ^s- Pro" 4geJ?rs and it will be sent by return. tear), wanted everywhere where not al- represented. Sold ■ bottles 1/11 and 2/9 from the following agents:— «OARE—MR HARRIS, CHEMIST. ^be Emrys Evans, Chemist, ^mau—Mr I. E. Thomas, chemist. Ash—Williams, chemist. ,kb ce.t er-Mr A. M. Jones, chemist. tiIf cYnon-Mr W. G. Wiilia ms, chefnist. £ l ^nydd—Mr Dance, chemist. ^nypia—-Mr Richards, chemist. T^0J-ypridd—From all chemists. ypandy—Mr Emrys Richards, chemist. Mr Davies, chemist. ger °'esale Agents London—Messrs San- (ad Co. Liverpool—Messrs Evans and ('\ Sons, Messrs Lescher and Webb. vr d' lrect from the manufacturers on receipt *5 stamps (1/3) post free. dNES & SONS, Chemists, Liaqidloes tah & SONS are also the sole propri- rs of the t,* BRAND GLOSS SOAP >&Mng your Linen Cuffs and Collars Io\ l°ok like new. +u f6 ^rom Chemists and Grocers p' Volets or 3 sent post free for Is. from °Prietors S a SONS, Chemists, Lianidloes, hqont. I{ w You are troubled with CORNS, 0HB or INGROWING NAILS, 1 On D. JAMES, v e VIMYslwyd St., Aberdare. ^6 V, scores of testimonials from treated by him, ^9it. fji *1* Ael. 0146. ^otnas Bros., LAG PROPRIETORS, ABERDARE. J).. a'^6s for Private and Picnic Parties. Va,te address, 60, Pembroke Street. Private Cappiages. The Taff Vale Goal Co., fWj. Goal Merchants, 'ture Removers & Genera! Hauliers. mo$j§e$steam, Qnfl SMALL COALS ALWAYS IN STOCK. £DW/:N JOfiES GW N ABER, MOUNTAIN 1 ASH. a Officc8* 22, Oxford Street. PRINTING 'Of y description executed at the ader Office, Market-street. Aberdare,
Aberdare and District Photographic…
Aberdare and District Photographic Notes. This week I should like to point out one or two advantages of the use of Colour-sensitive Plates for general work. To the worker who has never used what are generally named, Iso-chromatic plates the results are a revelation, probably not quite noticeable in the negative itself, but in the print that is taken off it. The gradation scale is (or should be, if the exposure is fairly correct) of much more marked area and extensive length than is at all possible with the best ordinary plate made, either slow or fast. They have also the property of rendering more correctly the range of tones existing in the origi- nal subject in monochrome, and that in itself is a distinct advantage. How often when we have composed the landscape view upon the ground glass of our camera has the most devout wish arisen in our hearts that we could but obtain that exquisite picture, in all its coloured radiance, upon our future print; but we know the wish is futile, and the very best we can hope for is that our plate will give us sufficient contrast between the various lights and shadows so that the ultimate print shall make an effective and harmonicas whole. How is this to be obtained? By using a, good Orthochromatic Plate we shall reach as near to our desire as it it pos- sible with the materials that are ready to our hands and turned out by the various makers of this class of goods. They rarely or ever send out anything that has not the merit of being all that science and skill can make it. It has been discovered that there are various dyes, known to chemists, that are, when incorporated in the gelatine film of a Photographic plate, sensitive in various degrees to all the colours of the spectrum. Some of the dyes are of a, fairly expensive -nature, while others are proportionately cheap, so that in actual use it is not at all evident that the makers are bound to charge more for the plates; for, in fact, most of the makers turn out fast and slow plates of this kind at the same price the ordinary plates are, procurable at. Therefore price cannot be any objection to your taking up the use of chromatic plates. The word" Isochromatic" need have no terrors for us either, for it only means "colour sensitive," and the only strain we are likely to feel is upon our memory. Now to obtain the very best results that our Orthochromatic Plates will render unto us we need tlte assistance of a screen, for which there is a very good reason, viz., that though our plate will give us a more correct rendering of the subject than is possible with an uncor- rected plate, still our lens passes all the light that is reflected from the said subject. Without going into scientific detail, which is not within the scope- of these weekly notes, this light contains rays of more activity than the others, and therefore affect the plate in an un- dupe proportion. To counteract these rays and even up the speed, so to speak, we interpose In their path a. coloured screen, either of glass or gelatine, which has the property of holding back the activity of the most powerful rays, and thus allows the less active rays to do their work, affecting the plate in their relative proportion. Unfortunately, the use of a properly made screen, and one that is suited to the plate that we are using, causes a change in the exposure, making it some- what slower than is ordinarily the case. For instance, one of the very best plates that I know, and one that I have used since their introduction, is the well known Barnet Extro, Rapid Ortho- chromatic; these plates are very fast, Wynne's speed being' F118. Now sup- -io, posing that the exposure for a given sub- ject was a quarter of a second. If we were using the makers' screen, which is especially made to suit their plates, and is of small cost, the exposure would be four times as long-or one second. All screens are not the same speed. They range from a three times to ten times, covering all classes of work, from brilli- antly lit landscape to many coloured oil- paintings. But for general work, and work that comes most within the reach of the amateur, a three or four times screen is the one to use. All subjects do not require a screen, so that if occasion arises, and we require ja plate for a quick exposure, then the plate mentioned is quite fast enough for any subject that has movement. I have used them upon races in a good summer light and found the speed ample with a focal-plane shutter that has a guaran- teed speed of 1-600 part of a. second, the plate being fully exposed of l-15th of a second. SLirely this should :be fast enough for everyone. There is only one word of warning. Your dark-room light must be safe, as these plates are much more sensitive to red light than the ordinary ones, but I trust that all my readers are using safe lights in their dark rooms. So the only point I need press is the one I mention- ed a. few weeks ago, and that is to adopt Time Development, and keep the dishes covered during the time the plate is in the solution. These notes being of a general nature, we cannot hope to go very deeply into any subject of a highly technical kind, but if any of my readers care to obtain a more extensive, knowledge of this sub- ject I strongly advise them to write to Messrs. Elliott and Sons, Ltd., Barnet, Herts, for their little book upon the use of Orthochromatic Plates, which will be sent post free on application, and the small outlay of time and postage will be amply repaid. We are looking forward to a good entry in our Postcard competition, and trust that none of our readers will fail to send in. The writer has recently per- fected quite an easy and novel way of producing and making postcard masks of a personal nature; and it is my inten- tion in the New Year to describe it in this column with the hope that it will be a fresh spur to producing better results without much trouble. We all do love obtaining perfection without doing very heavy tasks to obtain it. By the time these notes reach the eyes of my Photographic readers the Christ- mas festivities will be almost over, but I take this opportunity of wishing them a Prosperous and Happy New Year. I trust that you will all make a vow to do better with your Art than was done in the departing year. ROLLO.
:o: è:}'/l.\,":!7;.c.i(\.,.J:;{.;;:);;;"":.\,..)t'\:.,.;,<>:::>L:,:\{,,…
:o: è:}' /l.7;.c.i(\J:;{.) ..) t' ,<>> L:{,, Tabernacle Aberdare. SALE • or WORK AND CHRISTMAS- TREE, On Thursday in connection with the Sunday School of Tabernacle Congrega- tional Church, a. Xmas-tree and Sale of Work was held at the Vestry. The Sale was opened by Mr. J. Morris, Cartref, in a brief, appropriate address. On the motion of the Rev. J. M. Jones, pastor, seconded by Mrs. D. M. Richards, Mr. Morris was heartily thanked for his ser- vices. The stall-holders were as follows: Small Fancy Stall: Misses Sarah Davies, Ethel Lloyd, Elsie Warrilow and H. Francis. Dry Goods Stall: Mr. G. Morgan, Mr. B. Lloyd and his Sunday School Class, Mr. B. M. Griffiths. Fancy and General Stall: Mr. D. Fhillips. Xmas-tree: Misses B. Hopkins, May Hopkins and ,Al. Lawrence. Fancy Stall: Mrs. (Rev.) J. M. Jones, Mrs. Morris, Cartref; Misses Lottie and May Morris; Mrs. Griffiths and Miss E. E. Griffiths, Mrs. Williams and Miss Alice S. Williams. Refreshment Stall: Miss Phillips,Miss Davies, M'ss Jennie Richards and Mrs. Richards. Fruit Stall: Miss B. M. Richards, Messrs. W. Phillips, F. Morgan, S. Mor- gan, H. Cummings, Ivor Griffiths and P. Francis. Bran Tub: Misses Flossie Lee, May George and Queenie Morris. Electric Battery: Mr. T. Lloyd. Model Engines: Mr. T. Nichols and Mr. Cummings. The door-keeper was Mr. D. Lawrence. There was quite a run on the various stalls, and by the evening their contents were nearly exhausted.
[No title]
0 Alas," sighed the poet. "We can no longer keep the wolf from the door." "Oh, I don't know," rejoined his wife. "You might sit on the front step and read one of your poems aloud." I-
---READERS AND WRITERS.
READERS AND WRITERS. At the moment of writing the booksellers are busy selecting gift-books for their customers, chiefly for the young ones, of course. Their pre- decessors of sixty or seventy years ago were doing exactly the same at this season. But what a difference ihere is between the juvenile litera- ture of that time and ours! One realises it very vividly by a reading of Mr. E. V. Lucas's For- gotten Tales of Long Ago," tales unknown to- day, but popular when people still remembered Nelson and Napoleon. Mr. Lucas gives an extract from one of these forgotten tales. The title was "Ellen and George," and this is the quotation: "I am afraid you will never get any pennies for read- ing well," said Mrs. Danvers in a few minutes, for again Ellen's eves were off her book. The kitten had frisked into the room it was playing with a cork under the sofa, and Ellen laughed aloud as she saw it turn round and over and over. "If you like the kitten better than George," said Mrs. Danvers, you may continue looking at it, and stay at home and read when your father and I go into the fields bv-and-bve." Then pray, mother, put the kitten out of the room," said Ellen Mr. Lucas would have us understand that here we have one of the first examples of inde- pendent, almost revolutionary, thought in a, child recorded by a writer for children in the early days. To say such a thing to a mother eighty years ago was indeed a feat. For the most part children then were to accept all that was said to them by their elders as gospel, and neither meditate nor utter criticism. The principal dif- ference between the children of those days and the children of these is their present liberty of criticism. To-day every child has his own opinion; a hundred years ago children had no opinions at all. Tandng of books for the young. I see the Publishers' Circular deplores the lack of humour in the juvenile literature of the day. I quite agree. There are plenty of exciting adventures, of interesting stories, of attractive illustrations; but one may scarch long and search in vain for much humour, though we have plenty of bois- terous "funny books," not always free from vulgarity. If it is almost revolutionary for a child of eighty years ago to say to its mother: "Then, why don't you take the cat away? what would that mother have thought of the picture of Buster Brown pouring blacking into his mother's hair-oil and glue into his father's bath? But the kind of humour the Publishers' Circular wants, and is sure children appreciate, is that of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland." And that kind of humour is as rare as 1848 port. Mr. Lucas says that for all he knows an amus- ing book called The Academy is the first real boys' book ever writtten, and, with its com- panion, The Rector," describes a school a hun- dred years ago, with ail the escapades and errors of the boys and all the homilies of the school- master. But there were plenty of other gift- books a hundred and more years ago besides these moral stories for children. Messrs. Picker- ing and Chatto have some handsome large pre- sentation volumes of Dr. Johnson's time which, for beauty of print, paper, binding, and colour- ing of the illustrations, are not behind the best of the "books for the drawing-room table" of the Victorian era, or the latest productions of the three-colour process. We are peculiarly interested in writers of boys' books to-day because so many authors are now claiming to be the successors of Henty. In my own young days we swore by Marryat and Mayne Reid, by Kingston and Ballantyne. How I revelled in Ballantyne, the most gentle and lovable of all boys' writers, in-iself a fur trader in the service of the Hudson Bay Com- pany. He had felt the mystery of the Great Lone Land, the awe and grandeur of the Arctic snows, the transport of the boundless prairie, and he put it all into "Ungava," "The World, of Ice," and "The Dog Crusoe." Ah! if one could only enjoy these books again as he enjoyed them when all the world was young! Marryat we loved too. He was a true sea- rover had fought in over fifty actions under the command of the great Lord Cochrane; and he wrote from the heart of the things he had seen and felt. Therefore boys believed in him, and held him as among the select band of their hero authors. And Mayne Reid, too. Shall I ever forget the sensation that accompanied the read- ing of his "Scalp Hunters" and "The Rifle Rangers"? Do boys experience these sensations now? I hope they do, but I doubt It. Reid had fought as a soldier in the United States Army, just as Fenknore Cooper had fought in the United States Navy, and. therefore, knew at first hand the life which he so graphically de- scribed. Kingston was the son of a merchant who traded abroad. He seemed to inherit the spirit of the merchant adventurer of the olden time. As if in obedience to the poet's exhortation, "Keep not standing, fixed and rooted; Briskly venture, briskly roam, Head and hand, where'er thou foot it, And stout heart are still at home. In each land the sun does visit We are gay whate'er betide; To give room for wandering is it That the world was made so wide," Jie wandered much and wandered wide, and so gained inspiration for those tales which enriched the lives of so many boys. With Henty it was the same. As war corre- spondent, he learnt to know war in all its grim- ness and all its fierce joy. He had endured the hardships of the Crimea, and undergone perils innumerable in Spain, in the Franco-Prussian War, in India, in Africa, and knew well what it meant to stand face to face with death. Thus, in his many stories of military history, Henty wrote from full personal experience of the grim realities, not from mere book knowledge of the art of war. The adventures of his heroes are not mere imaginings, but just such moving acci- dents by flood and field as had befallen himself. Boys. as a recent circular of Messrs. Blackie (to which I am much indebted) puts it, are quick to know the true from the false, quick to dis- tinguish the real adventure from the counter- feit, and they have affectionate homage in plenty to pay to the author whose story comes from the heart as the natural florescence of a life's experience; little for the narrator of bor- rowed adventures whose whole knowledge of life in the open has been got up from books and newspaper-files in the close atmosphere of the study or the museum library. Their favourite hero-writers mast be men who can appeal to the imagination out of the fulness. or their own per- sonal experiences, men who have themselves been through the fray. Talk about books for the season To many book-buyers, I suspect, the mo? suitable work will be Hesba Stretton's The LS on Old Age." Has Hesba Stretton herseii grown old? That is the question asked by one reviewer, whose first and only remembrance of her dates back to a time long before she wrote Jessica's First Prayer." That was a time when she was young. We can hardly picture her as an old lady of seventy-five. If she has lived all these years in the charming old village that bears her adopted name, her old age may be attributed, partly at least, to the pure and invigoratinsc air of that en chanting oasis among the hills. Those who have got far on in life's journey may still find pleasure and comfort in reading the" Thoughts" which she has so judiciously selected, as well from the sa ?es of thousands of years ago as from the thinkers who have just left us. Mr. Peter Kearv, of Pearson's Weekly, has been trying tó arrive at the huge sums lost in papers that have essayed to copy the success of Tit-Bits and Answers. He has gone through the Press guides for the last twenty-six years, and made out a list of all the Pearson's Weekly kind of papers that have been published since Tit Bits started. Many of them never figured in the Press guides at all, because they did not live long enough to get there. And Mr. Keary made out a list of 478 distinct papers. -=.
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--,..:t""-C,"';'b.-'.------_wmdare.!
-t"C,b. wmdare. fiop's Is* ',iout standi a'rjue u the best Temper- stimulant. Try it as an re. aid to digestion. Sole agent, H. McLaren, Trecynon.
Hirwaifii
Hirwaifii Are you in need of a real good dressing- ease? Then go and inspect the new stock just arrived at Emrys Evans', 10, Victoria Square, Aberdare. Kop's Iskey Stout stands alone ai the best Temperance stimu &nt Try it as an tid to digestion. Sole agent, H, Maclaren,
---,--Cwr??dat*e.
Cwr??dat*e. GENEROSITY.—Last week Mrs. P. Harrison distributed the attendance prizes given by the Aberdare Education Committee to the scholars attending the Cwmdare Infants School. Each of the little ones ov#r one hundred in number —was presented by. Mrs. Harrison with. 3d. each.
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