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. SURRENDER OF THE CARDIGANSHIRE…

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SURRENDER OF THE CARDIGAN- SHIRE POLICE COMMITTEE. Great things were expected of the Radical members of this committee at their meeting on Wednesday last. Bluster and tall talk had filled the columns of the local press for weeks past. The Home Secretary had ventured to I give an opinion regarding the police force, for I whose efficiency he is directly responsible, and Home Secretary Matthews must be taught to kneel before the sovereign power of twelve members of the Council. We told that the fight in reference to the appointment of Chief Constable would have to be fought to the bitter end," Mr Matthews had raised a spirit he could not lay," '\The Home Secre- tary, with that wooden stubbornness which characterises the Government official, imagines that his high-handed action will be accepted, but he is mistaken," "The representative mem- bers of the Joint Police Committee will fight the Home Secretary to the last ditch," "We have every confidence that the members of the Cardigan County Council will elect members on the Joint Committee who will meet Home Secretary Matthews and fight him until the veto he possesses is abolished." The last recommendation was certainly acted upon at the last Council meeting, when two members of the committee, who refused to bow the knee to Baal, and act contrary to their con- science, were summarily dismissed. The new blood introduced was, however, insufficient to keep the spirit of defiance alive in the party signals of distress had already had been hoisted, & the Home Secretary had been asked why he objected to the appointment of Sergt. Evans as Chief Constable. His reply gave a loop-hole for escape, and a rush was at once made for the opening. Vainly did the official organ of the party endeavour to raise their flagging courage by assuring them that there could be no doubt in the minds of the representative members of the committee as to the feeling of the masses of the people respect- ing what should be done." We detest com- promise in all its forms, and believe it is the duty of those who believe in any principle to fight for it even in the face of certain tempo- rary defeat." An anonymous writer, whose identity is sufficiently apparent, added that the rumour that the next Chief Constable would be chosen from outside the county must be an invention of the enemy that the people of Cardiganshire expected the com- mittee to take up the challenge of the Home Secretary; that they could only do so by appointing a sergeant of the same force that the rawish recruit in the Cardiganshire force was preferable to an outsider; that the ap- pointment of an outsider could only be done ,by yielding to Mr Matthews the chief points ncontended for. Ceredig's effort to stiffen the backs of the committee was unavailing their colours were already being hauled down, and their cherished principles repudiated. The Home Secretary had objected to the appoint- ment of a sergeant as Chief Constable of the force in which he had served. The committee made haste to climb down like the coon in fact, to use a vulgar simile, they felt they were" up a tree," and gladly escaped from their lofty position by "yielding to Mr Matthews the chief points contended for," and appointing Inspector Evans, of the Carmar- thenshire force. How does Mr Ab Ceredig" feel 1- W ell, we trust I A strange fact was disclosed during the proceedings of the Cardiganshire Joint Com- mittee, viz., that an official letter from the Home Secretary to the committee, and which was read/0')' the first time at the meeting on the 10th., had been disclosed by the chairman to the Cambrian News immediately on its receipt, and many days before its contents were communicated to the members of the committee. The chairman cannot be aware that the copyright of a letter remains with the writer, and that he had no right whatever to 0 intercept the correspondence and publish it. Z!1 The Chairman at a later stage, alluding pal- pably to the justices present, said he "had to deal with very indecent people." These words he subsequently had to withdraw, with very Tsad grace. The Chairman took advantage of ihis official position to vent his spleen upon the ventlemen who sit on the committee with him, but what is to be said of an official guilty of so great a breach of trust as we c have described ?

--, THE GLIMMERING OF THE…

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CARMARTHEN.

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LLANDILO.""

IMPORTANT SALE OF PROPERTY.

---..=...! CARMARTHEN COUNTY…

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_-..--'------HUNTING APPOINTMENTS.

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