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UNITY IS STRENGTH.

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UNITY IS STRENGTH. BY S. TKEVOit-JONES. To every Welshman who has the welfare of his country at heart, the petty sectarian differences which have so long dominated the national spirit as to present an almost impregnable barrier to the cause of progress, both socially and politically, must indicate a most regrettable state of affairs. The absence of national unity has undoubtedly had a very detrimental effect in the spheres of advancement and power, for there is no greater impediment to a nation's welfare than lack of unity and cohesion in the various departments of its public life. It is true the condition of things is not quite so bad at the present time as it was twenty years ago, but there is still room for great improvement. If Wales is to take her place in the fore- front of the nations to-day, she must at all costs be a UNITED country, with cohesion and fixity of purpose as the dominating factors of her public life. The truth of the old proverb Union is Strength," is vividly portrayed in the annals of Welsh history especially so in the time immediately preceding the rise of Glyndwr, a period which furnishes a striking parallel (though, of course, in a different sense) to that of to-day. In that age Wales had apparently drifted into a state, more or less, of resignation and submission to the Saxon influence, occasioned by years of internal strife and disunion amongst her leaders. The effects on the national tem- perament of the" Statute of Wales" were disastrous in the extreme. Absorbed in their own trifling differences, the Cymry of that day were in imminent danger of losing their very nationality. Freedom, language, and tradition, all were being sacrificed on the altar of National Dissension. But suddenly an outburst of enthusiasm rolled back the tide of disunity and in- difference, and at the call of Glyndwr the Cymry rallied to his standard. Petty differ- ences were cast aside, and in their stead rose up a UNITED Wales, immeasurably strengthened thereby, and zealous for the preservation of her national independence, customs, and language. This, in a lesser degree, fairly represents the conditions prevailing in Welsh public life to-day to the detriment of the well-being and well-doing of the people and especially is this the case when viewed from a political standpoint. When the representatives of our country realise to 1he full that their duty lies in the furtherance of Welsh interests and welfare, and bring UNITY to the front; then, and not till then, can Wales hope that her national needs, politically and socially, will be justly recognised by the Powers that be." It is therefore to be earnestly hoped that those whom we elect to safeguard the true interests of Welsh nationalism in the various departments of public life, will, irrespective of political tendency and creed, work together harmoniously for the progress of the little country, of which we are so justly proud.

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FOOTBALL NOTES.

The Welsh Club.

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