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Undeb Cymdeithasau Diwylliadol Cymreig Uundain Llywydd Parch. G. HARTWELL JONES, M.A., D D. ——— CYNHELIR ——— CYFARFOD TERFYNOL yr Uncleb uchod yn y Tabornad Cymreig, King's Cross, NOS SADWRN NESAF, -EBRILL 3ydd, 1909.- Traddodir Anerchiadciu gan Syp D. Bpynmop clorros, H.C., .s. Hepbept laeWis, VsSxr.9 .s. Papch. G. MsPt\lrre11 clones, D.D. ac ereill. Datgenir gan Gynrychiolwyr y Gwahanol Gymdeithasau. (Danteithion o 6 i 7.45.) ———— (Cyfarfod Cyhoeddus am 7.) Mynediad i mewn trwy docynau, Swilt yr un. I'w cael oddiwrth Ysgrifenyddion y gwahanol Gymdeithasau, neu oddiwrth Ysgrifenyddion yr Undeb. W. EDMUNDS, 11, Vere Street, W. (Ysgrifenydd Cyffredinol). D. THOMAS, 7, Charterhouse Square, E.C. DAIRY OUTFIT CO., LTD., I KING'S CROSS, LONDON. SPILL = NOT CHURN. PATENTED AND REGISTERED DESIGN. SPLASH PROOF as well as DUST PROOF and RAIN PROOF. "P The only Railway Churn we have seen which is perfectly Splash Proof, Rain Proof and Dust Proof.
Notes and !News.
Notes and News. "TOMMY BOWLES" is mentioned as a probable Liberal candidate for Swansea. MR. KEIR HARDIE delivered an address to his constituents at Merthyr last Saturday. CROYDON spoke for the nation on Monday, but Denbighshire will only reflect the opinion of a few poor Welshmen on Friday NEW ZEALAND is going to present England with two Dreadnoughts. Wales has done better than this she has presented her with Mr. Lloyd George, who is as good as eight Dreadnoughts. n THE influence of music upon the people will be the theme of Mr. A. J. Balfour's ¡ address at the Eisteddfod in London. He will be president on the opening day of this great National event. THE Chancellor of the Exchequer in these days, is busily preparing his Budget, and it will be presented to the House immediately after Easter. It is anticipated that a deficit of eleven millions will have to be faced; an amount that will necessitate a large increase of taxation. RETRENCHMENT and Reform" are two Liberal watchwords, but we fear that little will be heard of them during the present administration. Our annual expenditure is increasing so rapidly that for every million that is saved, an opening for two more to be spent is arranged for. IF some of the statements that were made during the recent navy scare are to become true, we shall have to enlarge the North Sea in order to find enough water to float the German navy and as for England she will have to send her ships somewhere in the far Pacific before they can be properly manoeuvred. At Croydon a speaker patri- otically exclaimed, "for every 50 Dread- noughts that Germany will build we must be prepared to build 150 THE English Church pageant, which will be held in June next, in the gardens of Fulham Palace, will be an elaborate affair, and preparations on a large scale are already in an advanced stage. Among the many episodes that will be included, the following will be of up-to-date interest- "The Alleluia Victory" (specially inserted in view of the Welsh Dis- establishment Bill). Would it not be more appropriate to call it "The Lansdowne Reformation." MR. KELT EDWARDS is not only an artist but a good subject for an artist's pen. In an exhibition of Drawings by Mr. Geo. Belcher (the new Phil Mav), which is being held at the Leicester Galleries, there is a sketch of Mr. Edwards in a Roman helmet. It is a highly artistic, as well as a humorcus sketch, and has been purchased by the Princess of Wales. IN an address on Votes for Women at Pontypridd recently, Miss Abadam said that wherever Celtic blood was, there was found an element of refinement-refined taste in music, art, poetry, and literature. There was also found devotion and respect for womanhood. It had been observed that this was the case with Britons many centuries