Welsh Newspapers
Search 15 million Welsh newspaper articles
17 articles on this Page
Advertising
Gostyngiad yn y Pris. | MAP Y RHOS, Ã Q. Llvfr Achau o 73 MLYNEDO YN Ol. Msf- y Lap BIT N iawa i EM aycN yn rTj llfeos a'i risanes Ilea PrtS y Map a'r Llyfr. 1/6. Y Map yn unig, i Tw cael yn S W Y FAR II l E,R. "1)\) BIBLE SOCIETY'S 'IlIA PUBLICATIONS English and Welsh Bibles and Testaments Bold at the raarvellouslly Cheap prices of the Society. » A Large Stock always on hand at R. MILLS & SONS, Herald Office, Rhos. -EETHINC TO MOTHERS. ^1 isjaaBjii MRS. WINSLOWS Soothing Syrup FOR CHILDREN TEETHING SwlMnnwd -or 50,I%r. ky millions of mothers for tfaeir child rai while teething with perfect Kncerss. It acwrmss the child, coftpno "ho gamp. allays all PAIN, carea wiaii COLIC, and is tb* W«t TPnlPiI:- fnr riAEKHffiA. Said by &U Chemists at t 1 per tottffl. TO JOG YOUR MEMORY. A GOOD PRINTING Is sua essential to-day. Yor ape measured by the quality of your OFFICE STATIONERY, CIRCULARS, and Advertisement Matter generally. Have you ever thought of this ? -=:t+- E. MILLS & SONS PRINTERS &c., Herald Office, Rhos. y 7 A I ^lilFiSTIifr 13 MOTHERS! K IH) Etrerj^trtnhcr »ho valae? t&o Health and aM 'WT Ck&»!u2.«ss ot her cni.d shauU use Wr A HARRSSOM'S A Y "RELIABLE" JR A MUX SEN Y POMADE, A Ur One »p&c&iion JciHs a'i N"ts aud VefSin, 9w » iseaif.ifie* £ nd strength-ns tut Hair. r >» la Tsaa, *.V u. I'ustuge id, JsL V'cav KMUUSCM, GHfMJST, ST., R £ AQ!KC. (jm D. Evans, Chemist, Rhos Rowlands & Co., Chemists, Ruabon .4:
EPITOME OF NEWS.
EPITOME OF NEWS. The Master of Hlibanl tary of State for India, bus d Mr. E. A. Gowc-rs, of the India Oif ot his private secretary.. TIic death took place al •>. if Mr. Wil- liam Thompson Grifiths, fv ars head- mss.:3i' of the Ipswich Sc'io. -science, and Art. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. H; -s country from South America, .mi* whilst motcciaar near Leicester by vn' of a whoel on the car. Th-r ilav. A. N. Guest, vie*?.' of nfonbury, Riu' > ia Td^ch 1 xsr ii t1. • ;<? «13 h h; d irk i'U:: r ie 1 :i- <• xv' i-ic j«.s lf',» jears -.••• ;h i g to a teciinicality, has just pul: ot hj'mHS. hYIDTIs. The British Consul at Nice f. 31 e I of the Alpcs Maritimes and MOl" l(>i» o y I the chiof corninp.r.ciai i < t>«' shine attracts British l^io -t> i^de j aiilotsaiicaily follows. aiilotsaiicaily follows. In a farewell sermon at Christ C'; Wiiles- d written sh: hoped :>;h, preach aglln. 'L in Entering a builder's office,, near Burton-on- Trent a cow irfounted the s+afm, r-1> afier look- ing through the balcony >yind:; -.s, r 1 r, ¡" g two glass doors it descended !n .ti'-d left the office. I Elected preslcbnt of the 1 ,.al ¡ Association by th oriTcil I Is j sei.ior sureoon of -'i a Bojr ii;.1; -rrp, with which the late president. Dr." Mn. "■ vna i also rssocic.ted. Qneen's Hall was packed to tin <. s by a vast: audi'fsee anxious to heai en ant Shacldeton's first lecture to tke public, on his South Polar expedition. { A ^rg man who went out alor.o in a boat fro'R, V'R near Greenock, V.J-S found in. ihe boat ''ri g the night dying from a bullet wound in his head. | The museum of the -Odontology-al Section of { the Royal Society of MedieiVe. in ITannv^r- square, has been accepted as a i rust by the j council of the Royal College of SttrgcoRS. J The London County Council is to pay £ 184,471 j as compensation to the Weshrb's'v-r Elec+rie Supply Corporation for the acquis;'ion of their I generating station under the Council sekenv-. I An anonymous Lancashire donor has crf-n-ed £ 2,000 to the central fund orgc. d by the Con- grcgaticnal Union to raise iui« stipends to year. Replying- to Mr. Essex in the House of Com- 'mons, Colonel Seely staged jChiness labourers remaining in the Transvaal on April 3Gth was 7,734. The last of them .were due to return next January. | The Court of Appeal in Dublin cor firmed a decision of the King's Bench grantrng -d Cianricarde a writ of prohibition resnicting the Estates Commissioners from compulsorily j acquiring a portion of his County Galway estate. I Sir Frederick Banbury, M.P., proposes to amend the Wild Birds Protection Acts, 1880, so that Section 3 shall be read viih respect to snipe and woodcock, as if the words "first day of February" were inserted instead of "first day of March." | "Young men ought not to waste their money being shaved," said Judges Emden at Lam-lieth. "It is laziness.. They ought to share ilicm- i selves. I have done so ever since I had to shave at all." II. M. cruiser Philomel arrived at Suez from Aden. The health of the crew, among whem there has been an outbreak of.scurvy, has con- I siderably improved. The vessel is proceeding I home. I A coroner's jury at Chester returned a verdict I of felo-de-se after investigating the circum- stances in which Henry James Fuller, aged j sixty, a retired tradesman, while suffering great i pain, poisoned himself with coal gas. j Alice James, aged twenty-three, a domestic servant, lately living in Ringford, West Wands- I, worth, was committed for trial from the South- Western Police Court charged with the murder of her child, Reginald Jack James', aged six months. The accounts of the Central Unemployed Body's Hollesley Bay farm colony show the net cost of carrying on the colony as £ltí))88, repre- senting an average of tl 8s. 2iJ. per man and family per week. 4 The Colonial Secretary has appointed Mr. Reginald L. Antrobus, assistant under-secie- tary in the Colonial Office, to be a Crown agent for the Colonies, in the room of Sir Ernest Ed- ward Blake, retired. Alice James, a domestic servant, was com- mitted for trial by the South Western magis- trate charged with the murder of her baby. It is alleged that prisoner choked the child, and then cremated its body. Mr. James Johnson bought for <33,600 at New- castle a colliery with a daily output of 250 tons, all the buildings and plant, and eighteen lease- hold cottages for miners. A Charles I. half-crown, minted at Exeter in 1643, and found in the thatched roof of an old cottage near Bovey, realised = £ 20 at the sale of the Rashleigh coins at Sotheby's. Mrs. Perry, of Aston, sentenced to death at Warwick Assizes for the murder of Agnes Sum- mersbv, and Sarah Visick, sentenced to death at Cornwall for the murder of her child, have been reprieved. "There are some piles, (for ooring) in the River Thames which were driven in during the reign of Charles I. said counsel in a naviga- tion case at the City of London Court, "and I they are still good." Mr. James R. Fielding, of Douglas, Isle of Man, has resigned the treasurer&hip of the Victoria Lodge of Oddfellows aft&r being seventy-two years a member of the order. He is j ninety-two years old. The Paris papers publish a telegram stating ( that a special messenger, with an escort of J four soldiers, has left Constantinople for I Salonika, carrying a make-up box and a box of wigs for. Abdul Hamid. The Town Clerk of Belfast has received an intimation of the arrest at Buenos Ayres of David Porter, assistant rate collector, who, it is alleged, absconded with over 25,000 belonging to the rates department. The death of William Lindsev, a skin- dresser, of Bermondsey, was declared at a South- wark inquest to be due to anthrax, "contracted during emplbyment by coming in contact with Chinese and other hides." Taken ill after eating a bloater for break- fast, a woman named Elizabeth Jenner, of Queen's-buildings, Borough, died two days later, death being attributed by the coronfer's jury to ptomaine poisoning. ;J. iaJri.
OUII LONDON LETTES. c
OUII LONDON LETTES. c [From Our Special Oorrespondent.) Not for many years has London been eo profoundly stirred as it has been by the terrible crime committed at the Imperial Institute. Indian residents in London have lost no time in expressing their abhorrence of the deed and repudiating the assassin. There is no proof at present that the assassi- nation was the outcome of any deep-laid con- spiracy, but thei 3 ismbtedly a strong belief that the student Dhinasri was hut the tool in the hands ()1.}¡""3 ho remain in the background. Dninh-pri. it s-eems fririy eer- tain, had fallen .J bid T mpany ir, London, and the theory h -c'; put forward that the real instigators of i,i e crime had made him drunk with hh, > it him out to kill, providing him with an cy of weapons. The murders may to a serions consideration of the sy-.tem u der which students are sent fro- .• i -;dia to this country. That many of th ja.pressionable and enthusiastic youths, 11 under seditionacy and anarchical i; n is eortainly true, and it is a danger brii.ish rule in India. London already li:v- n good many bridges, but it wants yet ci :>.<•?, and it is proposed to construct ere ii 7: Blackfriars and Southwai^t Bridges, ihe new bridge, which it is expected will be christened St. Paul's, will be 'approached by a viaduct over Thames-street, frr the East end of St. Paul's Cathedral, ->•* no doubt the City Corporation will tint the new structure shall be worthy of its site. For a long time the need for an inraro e:nent in the means of communication the north and south sides of the river h bouts has been badly needed, and the in r has been occupying the attention of a ..unittea of the City Corporation since J9);). Southwark Bridge was no doubt con • .-d a dandy sort of a, bridge when it was built, but it is held in very little regard cither as a thing of beauty or of us f Its approaches are difficult, and the i gees another way, with the result that t-outhwark Bridge is very little used. It is estimated that the new bridge will cost over a million and a half. All night sittings are a weariness to the fl-sh, and Parliamentary oratory is mostly dull at the best of times, while, prolonged after midnight, it is apt to become of a de- cidedly somniferous order. It is not surpris- ing, therefore, that the other night in the House of Commons some members should have gone to sleep while the dreary stream of budget talk flowed on. And one or two of the sleepers actually snored. Laughing at this kept the other members awake, but the member who was holding forth at the time when the trumpet-like. sound was first heard, thought this was a new dodge of the party opposite to interrupt his speech and to spoil its effect. He said some very scathing things indeed about opponents who were capable of such meanness. Other members shrieked with laughter, and at last the sleepers were awakened. One of them immediately denied that he had been asleep at all, and as for snoring—well, he was positively certain that he had not been guilty of such unparlia- mentary behaviour. Though this member was not of the number, there are some mem- bers of the House c: Commons who, be it whispered, would never be heard in Parlia- ment if they did not snore occasionally. One of the schemes for a repertory theatre in London has died, before being born. Mr. Herbert Trench has made important changes in his plans for the Hay market Theatre. He had intended to divide, the week into two parts-the first to be devoted to plays which, though excellent in themselves, would not be likely to draw big crowds, and the second to be filled by a play of a more "popular" kind, to run as long as the public wanted it. It has been decided to drop the first part of the scheme, for the present at any rate, and to let each play run as long as the receipts at the box-office justify it. At first, therefore, there will be no difference in this respect be- tween Mr. Trench's theatre and the other houses. There will be long runs while the public pays, and short ones when it does not. The repertory idea, however, is to be only deferred. Its financial success, it is argued, must depend upon the support of a strong body of subscribers, and this support is yet to be secured. Not long ago the Duchess of Albany was made the depositary of a sum of Ril,ooo, which was entrusted to her for distribution amongst such charitable. institutions and de- serving persons as she might select. Un- fortunately the news leaked out, with the result that her Royal Highness has been in- undated with applications for money from all sorts of persons, societies, and institu- j lions. All the applicants, it is quite certain, cannot be satisfied, and the task of selection which now confronts her Royal Highness is j one of considerable difficulty. j What will happen to the Empire if, when j the officers and men of the Navy are junket- I ing as the guests of the City, and enemy I ¡ were to arrive and blockade the greater part ¡ of our effective fleet in the Thames? That is the question which has been' agitating the mind of one or two noble lords since it was announced that London is to have a visit from the Navy. Our admirals were playing bowls on Plymouth Hoe when the news came i I that the Armada was sweeping upon our i tight little island. But there was plenty of 1 time to finish the game and get the ships to ¡ sea to meet the invader. Things are dif- ferent now, and London is not Plymouth. It would be a nice thing if a messenger were to rush breathlessly to the Guildhall between the soup and the fish with the news that another Armada had arrived. It would pro- bably be impossible to get the ships down to the Nore in time to give battle, and the officers would have sacrificed their dinnel without saving the Emgirje.^ v í To date the Test match record of the Aus- tralian cricketers now visiting this country ÍS-Dlaytd three, won two, lest one or in other words we must win the two remaining games of the series to recover those mythical "ashes." The word "disgusted" about euTrup the general feeline, in regard to our latent defeat. It is net so much the fact that we h-eve been beaten, but that we have beaten ourselves which engenders the feel- ing. When we lost at Lord's we blamed the selectors, but for the Leeds game England's host eleven had been chosen, men in whom would be.- found that pluck and grit for which Englishmen are famous. But what a rude awakening! True, Jesse p was injured and u.iaalc to bat—but all the mere reason for fiphtin with set and backs to the wall. Tie occasion, how: ver, was tco gr^fit for our re-e The veterans have been given their opportunity; as iliey have f i lc cl-, ih 1 only ee. Sci open s?cn?.s to be to the younger men a chance—the possibili.: *> of a youth- ful side are great. E. M. _r.1!>=
PARACHUTIST'S ADVENTURE.
PARACHUTIST'S ADVENTURE. Great excitement was caused at Edmonton on Monday night by the narrow escape of a para- chutist named Voukes. He ascended from the grounds of Alexandra Palace during the course of the annual Post Office sports. When in the air, however, he found it impos- sible, owing to the ripping cord failing, to i liberate the parachute, and he was; carried over Tottenham and Edmonton. In the latter dis- trict the balloon was just over the houses, and finally it collapsed on to a roof in Brettenham- avenue. Voukes dropped into the street, but fortu- nately he was not much injured, although he was badly shaken.
GLASGOW FAMILY TRAGEDY.
GLASGOW FAMILY TRAGEDY. A tragic discovery was made in Clarke- street, Glasgow, on Monday. A widow named Ann Adams (or Anderson), a hawker, was found to have murdered her two children and to have committed suicide. During Sunday the neigh- bours heard the screams of children, but as they thought that the mother was chastising them no more notice was taken of the incident. On Monday the door of the house was forced open, and on the floor of one of the rooms was the woman dead with her throat cut, while 011 a bed lay the two children, Jane and Janet, nine and four years old respectively, who had met death in a similar manner.
DIAMOND - MAKER SENTENCED,
DIAMOND MAKER SENTENCED, Lemoine, who defrauded Sir Julius Wern- her by pretending to make diamonds, re- ceived his sentence at Paris on Monday. The volubility and airy -impudence which have charmed the Parisian public during his trial failed altogether to have effect upon the Bench. The "diamond maker" was con- demned to six years' imprisonment, five years' banishment from France, and to the payment of a fine of £ 120. Sir Julius Wern- her, who lost E64,000 through Lemoine, was awarded L400 damages as an instalment.
BROOKLA N DS: ^l^TO ii A CO…
BROOKLA N DS: ^l^TO ii A CO ID ENT. An alarming aeeident occurred at Brookhnds to a Napier mow -ar di iven bv Mr. q, Wiggles worth, accompanied by Vr. Wright. Trlisifcy Coik-g< Cam- bridge Attk!t.- gosng round the tFlW1: the car entered the *t' _;ht. passed the paddock at 70 to 80 miles an hoc, ai-d taking the risn without any apparent diinin iion of sir ed, Went >fci-ui..h: up the steepest pad: of the bank and- nfler running some distance the top, fell orer the edge and crashed into a n-tn-e at the bun <» of s he .-lope, becoming a cmqJlde wreck. Both o"ttVUI: S of the car were h 1 out, the r]ri v»r «. with apparently minor" liui-t- while lr. \\ir;f,i1!; sus- tained cnncuIIsioa a'ui-other serious i s The managers of the truck-stae thaft the IlCci- dent was entirely owing to the drivers disregard of their strif>g« r?t rpgnlatious.- -r-
ATTRACTED BY THE LIGHT.I
ATTRACTED BY THE LIGHT. The white glare from an engine's head- lights attracts 11 ost birds that don't go' to roust early, as a lamp attracts sea-fowh and a candle a. mcth. Sometimes an awl, sitting on a tree branch near the line, his round eyes on the look' out for prey, sees a locomotive come tearing along. The bird gets confused and silly, and like as not runs up against the engine. An owl once charged the windows of the cab of an engine. Tile glass was pretty thick, but the train was going at a mile to each minute, and the owl cut clean through the pane! It was picked up alive, but it was not sur- prising that one of. its. legs was broken.
BACILLI IN BOOKS.
BACILLI IN BOOKS. To guard against insidious bacilli, physi- cians are recommending the sterilising of books in public libraries to destroy noxious germs existing in their leaves and* bindings. That disease has frequently been trans- mitted by the circulation of books has longl been suspected, and the belief has recently been verified. The most careful work in this direction has been done by the Chicago Public Library, e id the doctor in charge reports that he found a large number of bacilli, representing nearly a hundred different poisons and disease germs. Fifty books, selected at ranclorii, werfe examined, and all were found more or less injected. Dry sterilising is re- commended.
[No title]
Children do not know how to play, but spend their time loafing about the streets, and the Children's Happy Evening Association exists to obviate this, said Lord Northcote at the associa- tion's meeting in London. J The Clyde Shipping Company's steamship Tusker, bound from Waterford to Plymouth, with a large number o'f passengers, went ashore off Cheek Point in Waterford River. Specialisation, says the Earl of Crewe, is the defect of our ordinary education for intending Colonists, as it puts men at a disadvantage with others, of inferior education and ability but with general knowledge. v 11 Mr. G. O. Giles's painting of the King's horse Minoru winning the Derby was submitted for the King's inspection at the Jockey Club, New- market, and the lung said that it was a very good painting, addling: "It should engrave trpll." f'r(Í"
BARONETCY ROMANCE.
BARONETCY ROMANCE. By a decision in the Law Courts on Monday, I the Rev. John Francis Twiscl-en, of Braclbourue Hall, Mailing, Kent, becomes entitled to ft baronetcy. The point at issue was whether Lieutenant- William Twisden, an ancestor of Mr. Twisden* was lawfully married in 1762 to Marv Kirk. Most of the evidence consisted of old love iettera and other documents, which had bsen carefully preserved for generations, for legal record of the marriage could be discovered. Mr. Justice Bargrave Deane ""t in his letters Lieutenant Twisde i Kirk ao his wife, and she had him as. her husband. Short of a n certificate, there could be no stronger < i.hn': tne two were married than the evidc L i 1 a 1 been produced. He held that the had been established. There was no doubt that the lieutenant's family prided itself on its p~ • and took great umbrage at his connect i' e daugh- ter of a petty officer. Yet t i i wrote' openly and bravely or the i a witn whom h6 had lived fo>* v The new laT.'ex was *cch V d a< Trinity College, Cambridge, and was wrangler in 1848. He was formerly pi of mathe- matics at Sandhurst, and held curacy of Minley, Hampshire, from i to 1:(;8. No property is involved in the decision. L:r.
BOUND, GAGGED AND ROBBED.
BOUND, GAGGED AND ROBBED. I Miss Margaret Leyland, an elderly lady, of •Tulketh-road, Ashton-on-Kibble, related at the Preston Police-court on Monday how she was gagged, bound, and robbed. A well-dressed youth named William Sumner, aged eighteen, was charged with stealing from her a gold watch, valued six guineas, and a sovereign, and with attempting- to strangle her. Prosecutrix, who seemed very weak, said pri- soner, who was a distant relative of hers, called at her house, and said her daughter had sent him for a geography book which she had left in a bedroom. Sumner followed her into the kitchen, seized her by the throat, and thrust a handkerchief into her mouth, dislodging a tooth, and cutting her lips. Then, placing her face downwards, he tied her hands and feet with stout cord, and ransacked the house. Whilst prisoner was upstairs witness released a hand, secured a knife, cut the cords, and ran screaming into the street. Accused, who denied the charge, was com- mitted for trial, bail being refused.
SAVED BY THE SEA. I'---
SAVED BY THE SEA. An extraordinary means was adopted at West Usk Lighthouse, South Wales, to save a girl from being burnt to death. Miss Clarice Duckham, who had driven over in a pony-cart, was making tea when her dresEt caught alight In a moment she was enveloped in flames, mm Her friei?#; seizing the only way Which seemed possible to save her, pushed her into the- sea. It was only just in time, and even this; drastic rescue did not prevent Miss Duckhani from being terribly burnt, and when she came out of the water was in great pain. There was then another difficulty, for Mis9 Duckham's friend did not know how to drive, f and they were a long way from home. So MislJ: Duckham, despite the terrible pain she was suffering, pluckily took the reins and drove home to the local doctor.
A ROWDY MEETING.
A ROWDY MEETING. Scenes of some turmoil were witnessed at Nottingham when an attempt of the non- militant suffragists to hold a mass meeting was- frustrated by a hostile crowd. The meeting was organised by the National js Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. The j* speakers were continually interrupted, and weret ] pelted with orange peel, paper, and other t missies. A rush was made at one of the waggons* f which was in imminent danger of being tipped, and the speakers had to beat a hurried retreat. The intervention of the police prevented any personal damage, and the meeting had to be brougnt to a sudden close.
A PRISON BREAKER.I
A PRISON BREAKER. I Johann Witer, the Belgian waiter, who, 1 escaped from Winchester Prison in April, I pleaded guilty at Hants Assizes on Monday to j various burglaries. It was explained that Witer j got out of his cell with the knife used for making nosebags. He cut out a clean slice from a door jamb and replaced it neatly with the aid of suet pudding and bread. After the tools were removed he took a piece of the iron venti- lator and dug down to the lock. Finally he used the leg of the table to force the door open. Warder Wright, who was attacked, is no longer fit for service. Witer was sentenced to ten years' penal ser- vitude.
LAW OF DISTRESS AMENDED. -——■/']
LAW OF DISTRESS AMENDED. -—— ] There came into force on July 1st, an Act of Parliament amending the law so as to protect the goods of under tenants and lodgers in -he event of a superior landlord levying a distress for rent. This Act provides that if a supci ior landlord shall levy a distress for arrears of rent due by his immediate tenant on the gouds of aw under tenant* paving his rent not less often than quarterly, or a lodger, such distress shall be Ipgal if the under tenant or lodger claims the goods and at the same time undertakes to pay to the superior landlord an-. rent due to the immediate or future instalments of rent, until tll" ai rears in respect to which the distress was levied are paid off. A superior landlord levying a di.-tress in face of such a declaration and undertaking shall be liable to an aefc'ou at law. Where the under t-nai)t or lodger pavs rent to the superior landlord he may deduct tii" amount from any rent due to.the immediate iandl-erd. The Act, however, shall not to live stock, or to good", belonging to 'he husband or wife of the tenant whose rent is in'an ear, nor to goods com- prised in any biii of sale, or hue purchase agree- I uient.
[No title]
A carp weighing 12.1Ihs. 11113 oe-en caught by 11 an angler in the Perm Ponds, Richmond-park. The Centenary Chapel at Boston, one ot the largest and finest Weslwyau churches in the country, has been totally destroyed by tiro. The chapel was built in IF-a') and had recently been re- j stored at a cost of E2,000. I I "you will have to take my word, said Mr. 'St. John Brenon in the Dublin Law Courts to Mr. Healy, K.C. "Take the emanations of your 1 tongue ? ifenjanded the eminent lawyer. My tongue, sir, does not emanate. Ifc talks," replied Mr. Brenon.