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GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PTLLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S rILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS A HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL REMEDY IS j §1 IrlLE^IRMLlP Jpr jf pii 6 C J git *? f*V~ T .?v Wy rxlzk i| (1 I| «!VKC fjg || i 3 f ? | PROMPT in action, ij I ccpgOTiJAL ;» results. I! !9 I i FOR UPWARDS OF FORTY YEARS THESE PILLS* T-IAVE HELD THE FIRST PLACE IN ¡ I TTTTi TI7/ f)T "Pi CI A rj T' T. T T7" T\^7 TrT\Ti i -Lia »» v/ jlujiJ nij xr\. in^jiuiyx v^lt j i P., -6 «. M |! £ ? 2? — «. 3T* •*> S 11o? rill the Common Plsoptfops of the I Stom;th stowess. Live" .¡rh.1 Hidnaysa Suck as Piles, Gravel, Pain in the Back and Loins, Constipa-! tiftB. SnnnrPissior r?r.ir.r.tinn r,f TT Irritation of the' Bladder, Sluggishness of the liver and Kidneys, -Biliousiicss Flatulence, Palpitation, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Dimness j _e of Vision, Dcpiuooi^ii i/i uii i. aniir iLt-ioiiig from; Indigestion, &e. I I TRElh t'AJta; IS AS WIDE AS CIVILIZATION. i { m rnmm* *2 a 4 «r 4 « » # —• • J 1 H I I" i 1. f if j There is no necessity to despair of relief even £ jj j \i I fnilrrh T> uiuugii j o~' j —- v-—; p j. ( Bead the following:—-After having* been under #* i I medical treatment for some time and suffering jj j acute pain, I ^v £ is mc ucc d to try your Pills. One j1 j } box relieved rne *»r>d the second completely cured II me. I gave what Fills I had left to a friend of I, I 4w mine-a sea captain, and he has also been cured j I I, If after long suffering. • 1 T. WOOD. I S J Wood Street, Middleshro' 1 Hi I THE CONTINUED DEMAND FOR THESE PILLS j IS THEIR BEST RECOMMENDATION j The Three Forms of this Remedy 1 No. 1.—GEORGE'S PILE AND GRAVEL PILLS (White label), j No. 2.-GEORUE,3 GRAVEL PILLS (Blue label). I No. 3.—GEORGE'S PILLS FOR THE PILES (Red label) I | Sold Everywhere. j L: In Boxe3 1/3 and 3/- each By Post, 1/4 and 3/2 each. W- Proprietor. I.GIIIGI, J. E. GEORGE, W.R.P.S., I Hirawin. kbstim, I v • • GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL FILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL TILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL •■■•LLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS "-J_ I GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S TILE & GRAVEL PILLS Gil'J-aCE'S FILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS I GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILL3 GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS GEORGE'S PILE & GRAVEL PILLS 1
INtW IN A INUTSttfcLL.
INtW IN A INUTSttfcLL. Sir Arthur Pearson has arrived at Hali- I fax, Nova Scoiia. Paul Margneritte, the French novelist, I has died, aged fifty-nine. The Australian Federal Parliament has UUJOUIILWU LCIV I Nine hundred thousand tons of Shipping I will be available shortly in Australia. j ^ing Victor has awarded Signor d'Aimunzio a gold medal for his Cattfiro | raid. j A series of Commonwealth Cabi::et meetings will be lieiu etvrly in the year id consider repatriation. consider repatriation. I Negotiations are in progress to establish I an aerial postal service between Paris, Brussels, and London. It is proposed in Jamaica to invite an English cricket team to visit the West Indies during the season 1919-20. The death is announced of the Rev. I Frederick Courtney, Sufiragan Bishop of the episcopal diocese- of New York. u,Guu were iaiiucd aL Hali- I fax by the Carmania, and within five and I a-half hours all were entrained for their destinations. I An official telegram from Vienna states that Count Alexander Festetics has been í appointed Minister of War in the Hun- garian Cabinet. An Investigation its to be made into the complaints of returning Canadian soldiers regai ding the poor food. and accommoda- tion on transports. A 4. I resigned +1, r*t i-v,„ ;# t 11 College at Newport, Rhode Island, until nis oversea duties end. ) .^Advocates of aerial transport are press- l'xti L'oimiuon Government-to ^stphiish i I", nnT, ft1rn.v 04- T,1.c t ^«wtounf!l»nd, and the Pacific Slope. I Two deaths have resulted from the col- i^e water tower at Alexandra Jiliu, Olaliam, on Monday night." Superintendent Patrick Quinn, Chief of the Soeeial Sranrh at. Scotland Yard, has retitvu, aiter forh-nve years' service. Lord Verulam hai been elected to the chairmanship of St. Albans Division I Quarter Sessions. Surrey :r; 1"'T(r(.n:rl("1 :0 '¡nT'" the necessary legal formalities for separat- j ing Morden from the Croydon, and adding it to the Wimble'don Petty SewonaJ area. I Lieutenant W. F.llprp^nf -ninp+pori i T r < w. iiuiiiuuil, tWtllbV, Wfeie j both killed on Tuesday -night near Horn- church aerodrome as the result of a collision in the air. f n r» ixixjouciA uuaiUiUiiS lic*V6 Op611tiCi tWO higher ¡!0 :c:c1 :C:1.(;3 cd.tr children, the foster-mothers being paid salaries rising to £ .50 a year, exclusive of j residential allowances. I Wvvwvo OA •• t4A.LU.WO 1U *Wi lil X \Jk ML" | sliiro unrlfr Hr»f| the rivers aro overflowing their banks, owing to the I recent heavy rain. Work on the Land is atI a standstill in parts of the district. j XiMbO .uU Vt'UI,"V" oJ U1V/ ,dtuöJ..ü!S Uli- | siderable uaina^e Lo ugrieulture in Not- ) rat catchers arc demanding £ 4 a week. J 1f„ n T71 CI T> 1 £ «■> l' L I .u. -& _.LV" IAITt('HH7 nmnnutrtr jowl prtitop of t'ho t (?.-r()rnry s J T-*» rtl rliorl cnrlri-^n 1T7 i-n p r: don express irain at Worthing Station on Tuesday. He had been staying at Worth- ing for the week-end. and had iu«t taken his eiL iu the train "when he died. j Alderman H. P. Carier, oi Holbeach, a i well known and extensive Lincolnshire I fsr mer, wbo is cVitti^rnf1! of Holland, War Agricultural jDxeeuuve committee, ) states tiia; i- Zr- Countv Council have 100 s.-r;-? of bir best j land for the disabled men ;Jn they urc j reaJv for 11. j General Paraskevopoulos, Commander- i ili-OXliCA w 3 j i/AiC CliJlX UC OLIOAAV; W Uil/ to General Bri^zs '"and General Wilson, C0TT1TT1 ^^1 Tlf* th Infn ÜrtLish t Armv CV>rna. j Going to Swansea, the U-boat 91 col- lided off Barry with a steamer, which had to put bieli for replirl. Heating a»i pi'i-Jo ay o'.er r NNRY POFL OF70O 4*4 OCQ TC,*>«' ^IRVJVV^U, J Wm.^ __U j hou5« in k TV» n I XXI — nursing home a woman mental patient "be- } 4w<3€tt s*Vciiuy 4*0 iOa^u CiaHJ- i ing to a post in midstream at Cherteey Weir. j The Silver Medal for saring life at oea j bas been r»wardod to three Dutch sailors who reseu wounuou mtri £ nuiil a motor-]ioat which was afire ofTTerschellin^. It is reported tnat on monmty "11.Ï1I!, i number of Scots Uwvelliiig on the i roofs of railway eaiviagco bclvrccn ?7s.mur and Liege were swept off by scaffolding in j a QovpTTf^vpri wdrp killed. I It is ofBciallj' anno»!n'ir? rbltt on T-t,Ali gn I fronts during L, ?C0,(?CC men were Anri 947-000 wounded. On other fronts Italy's losses were .1 killed and I 1.5,100 wounded. j Holland tHI.. informed foreign Govern- I ment4 uiat tucic u uv 11 L-V LL <oou. port by way of the Scheldt and the Rhine j provided that such transport is ittacia under the commercial flag. (Itjuujeia Ut'liVed iu j Spanish 'v- t.-> take charge of German Bubmari: ed there. | Q uc- sent a special mes?sge thanki len of India for their work, auoeess to reforms for j tueu A arrived at Wallsend on i leave front, found that hia J mother died, and that an elder j brother nod -iterwards haxxged himself. I A hrst eneque ior has i>een nanded to thv T?r:i:«-b Cro«s fls a re- • suit of th-e I.'i" TVfnynr'fi City of London j appeal, launched in October last, this be- II p:33 the Inr^ct '.vv.'rJe yet received t by the Red Cro»<». j At Buckingham Pa»lfM3e on Tuesday morn- | ing the King pinned the V.C. on the i b"! "» • ;ft; ii'n Carmdiaa Mouuted Hint: Lttllttlioii, who is only nine- teen years cf aga. VVac>iiii)gu>ii leooiiiineiMitt lone ti"xw i tion of over 3 ,('.ri RwmiHna .;tnd Auxtrians interned in the U.B.A. During a demonstration in Buda-Pesth Bolsheviks fired on ^oi.'iiers, who replied, i killing six pc-ieons and vvounding fifteen, Two Swedes found as stowaways on board a Butis.i -.osi-ei at iiiyth said they. oounld neitlier get work norfood in Sweden, j .40
IBRITAIN AND AMERICA.
I BRITAIN AND AMERICA. 'I Vvre are remiacloJ fey an esteemed correspondent that probably many people in Breconshire have not seen the remark- tribute to Britain which appeared in the ''New York Times in the form of an editonal a sliOi't miie a^o. ?so doubt lie 11 is right, and because of the striking character of iiie tribute ami also because of the evidence it offers of the beginning of a true and permanent friendship between this country and the United States, we reproduce the main portion of the article :— From the minds of the great democratic nations that have, fought side by side to save freedom and democracy the recollection of ancient, Vms lacicd. Wneu we remember the secular wars of England and France, that the beginnings of friendship, founded on self-interest and the common danger ircm Goirnaiiy, arc cnl-y ronrtccn years old, the tempest of plaudits with which Loudon has just sSMited Foch and Clemenceau tells us what a dissolvent of national jealousies is comradeship in arms, the communion of peoples in valor and suffering and disaster and victory for a common cause. It is difficult to be moderate and at the same time do justice to the multi- larious energy ana power w nwn Ul\jètIJ iiiiUun iius ueveiopett 1U me war. inu Bntisn i.>avy was 11e pnuie guaiauieo of the Entente, condition precedent of itb bUCc-v^js.s. It swe¡;L the eixeuiy Wiir- tr^rle trom t h., <1R!HI It, patrolled the sea roads of commercc. Because of its protection supplies reached the Allies. The British fleet W!1. the elemental, basic, constant, controlling factor of the military and economic situation. It strangled Ger- many with the blockade. At the beginning of the war British naval tonnage was 2,500,000. Before the end of the war it was 8.000,000. Trans- portation, convoy, patrolling, mine sweeping, submarine hunting—who can write the achievements of the British Navy ? t, "11tLJ Cd" CAlC VVWiiu XU&gOu luiiVu *,V.>1A- temptible little army of 160,000 which reached France two weeks after Great Britain came into the war, stopped the right of the German advance, fought un- flinchingly, and perished ior the most part ? That an unmilitary people, accustomed to look to the sea for its --r I' Isles an army of 6,250,000 men, nearly one in seven of the population that the Dominions a Dependencies should v„n fcjenL PQQ 000 jvmv1 • that the British Air Force, negligible at first, r-V rj "n m r\ 1" 4-Vioti 4" n f of any of the Allies tlmt some 4,000,000 men and women shouid have worked on t.1 ="I.i-t:01J.: ¡v: -tiz: :s:: fiirbtinir in a dozen countries that Great Britain should have greatly helped her allies with money and supplies that sho should have L-ept her :i! J"<:tTY1 sound in spite of the innumerable un- precedented demands upon it that the tank is due to her inventive genius that HiJ.J. .&i'i. t\u.) .o .t.H..i 6.¿.i.o \V- "t '1 l't' l' 1 .c :j U'}" ¡'; (,( t¡li.. Marshall were bringing about the down f,iii of Turkey in Mnsopomnna. and Jfalcfltme and Syria—these are trot chap- ters of British achievement in the war. Thp> KdO Oil" Hritisti rled teli the story best Thehe, in the klol-loili juoming OL their days, For England's sake lost all but Eng- land's praise, Or-at J3rH:1;il l t8 o 'let' yoiitb and strength in the war. The ,.1: .r ,1,1. r1l- acious British zpirit, cheerful in disaster, .,1 ,r 1. t weakened. It is the great deeds of a comrade in arms and in democracy that Americans are to remember on Britain's Day.
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s N'W •so 'Wala ø 1J!ii:qíiíf:S;¡' .1' BETTER BUTTER makflt letter Break- fn* aftd tb"e WMt tttle "I STI.VFR t.kJ,KN prove By me xxxuivcaioc.u SALBS that the public appreeiirte the deli- cate CeweltÐ Tint olua the unitorm QUALITY which "SfLVER CHURN" .wu W every pauu «u«u. "SILVER CHURN" POINTS 1. It costs Lit" than any other nvake 2. It requires-No Preparation S Ii; imi>rO»«s ih«—QUALITY 1*. <—< t,—rsj!AJJTITY S, it ""1" not c«>our «««« iiuttor MUk e. It le p-Arely-VEOCTABLE SILVER CHURN Incana incccascd and permanent BUTTER SALES. Obtainable from Cbemkis and Dairy Supply hleA in 1td., 1,'X an<^ Iwjer beittes. L>o you u»e «">n,V!R CHURK ? 'II i: ¡.¡ lill;1 :1UlIIIIII111tl'ltnI1tlnt1rnrtltT:I: r f:"I!!ttH!l",mltt.. F-rr !JrrmJol!J ftHJOtt n." ■ ■- ;1,'cfl4r.r8. «»PFISH» PATTIWsr. CO., iIIIÜ¡IIIIIIIIUU!lIIlmlUlII:2.:=.ttlttll,
I-! BLESSING BY CANDLESTICKS,
BLESSING BY CANDLESTICKS, One of the most remarkable cerc-monies of the Greek Church is that of blessing the congregation. This is done by the aid of two candlesticks. Standing before the people, the bishop takes in his right hand a three-branched op«d3esi,ick nnd in his left hand a two-branched candlestick, each containing lighted car,dies. This is the reason given. It is believed that all grace and blessing d.c-enc1, npon tbp. flock through the two great rnystpries of the. Trinity and the twofold nature of Jesus Christ, God and Tlie triple lights springing from one svem, M'c tiie double lights coming uoui one stem, are therefore symbols of these great truths.
i COVENANTER'S LONELY GRAVE.
i COVENANTER'S LONELY GRAVE. j scociaiid iiab many menioiiuls to Coven- anters, but the loneliest is that in the heart of the Pentlands, over the grave of one WHO tooit part in the battle of Ruaion | orp^n in After the battle the j Covenanter found his way to a cottage among the hills, wounded and weary, but could not* be dissuaded from pressing on towards his home in Ayrshire. His strength failed him, however, for about a mile from the cottage he was found in a | dying conditio.1. The nameless Coven- anter asked that he should be interred in i sight of his native shire, and, therefore, he | was buried as he was found on the crest I of Hw WaoV Vlloidn in TW^HMTI R'nri. I About a hundred and seventy years after ) his remains, wotioeFiuiiy preserved irom having lata in wtie discovered und j reburied. A suoue now marks the spot. Or, -a r!r.r rb:y, fbr.-ngb ar> op-nicg* in the j 1.1IL, A icv. wi'cL -.vLich ♦ L..L..i.Li uuvvuautoi t:) "I..L\UI.L4.U.1.J..a.tÙ, can ue seen from the lonely graveside. Thus hia last wsh is abundantly fulfilled.
. NAVY'S WESTMINSTER ABBEY.
NAVY'S WESTMINSTER ABBEY. j St. Nicholas, Deptford, is sometimee caiied, from the many memorials to naval heroes, the Westminster Abbey of the j Navy." Among them is a quaintly-worded monument to Peter Pitt, the Noah of his age," and cherished by friends of j I tipja, wuo iuveabcu the frigate, which iu j the days of sailing ships was the cquiva- lent of a modern cruiser. Preserved in I the chiira is a superb piece of woodcarv- iT'gj rep^e^cntirg ^z^ki0! in his valley of uiy uoiitito, viumu is do"e1iueu LoU vjioboiiS, j who was "discovered" at Deptford by j John Evelyn. The church register r«- i cords the burial of Christopher Marlowe, | oiaiuc uy j7i'uucio The p0€^t I (i ct >1 r, j OJ ,» i-Xi. a. brawl with a serving-man at a neighbour- ing tavern at the early age of twenty-nine in May, 1593.
! Ó, YANKEE DOODLE."
Ó, YANKEE DOODLE." I Theories conce-rning the origin of the air 101" Yankee Doodle have been almost as n!7ino!TC,i5j a<: t1-(' 1}:rt!;p!r.ce I UL j-ioiiiei. j» ouiiitJ L-lild tune is atiiu Lu have appeared 111 America about tfie time | 4otJ..A: uatuc vi xJUiAivcx J.1..L.L.L vv ao iou^ilt. i.ii that battle, it appears, the Americans I TOOI'TIT h: rrf FHP T?NRRLICV» J-nt TIOKA^V 1I"ti t- iWv xded \tlieiiCu iuc Eü¡.:JJ. ubtaliicU lLt. I One authority has identified the tune as ¡ the national air of the Basques, a people I whose origin is unknown. Years ago, it is said, an American was visiting the city of San Sebastian, tte seaport capital of Cruipyzooa. He made the acquaintance one Gu«hille,. tlie Vice-Consul of the j United States. Sefior Guchille had been u; ) J;L it 'r'; F1i;.L:U tt/j hsd known 1, tune from infancy as the j iiatioisKl •" Bascpre-s.
| REMALi^.vi5LE FREEHOLDS.
| REMALi^.vi5LE FREEHOLDS. ->» < Vi tUHujJCJ ttt WO'»V- | l.u.u', OUtlW D¡JJu;ul.1¡J.t;, Vviiicil cil o.ùe tiaic belonged (and some still belong) tn no one mt the nrtuft) holder of the ) key. Many years ago, sayi a London cou- temporary, a. pereon named Brothway left certain lands in trust for the poor of Clpwland, and as soon as a labourer had j ;¡a"uol- vA. ",} 0 ÎJ..1J. «* UQUSC he j applied for permission, which was printed M- r.. „ 1. „ It V r j eauw he ifc# and brep.tise iie held tive I jhev* ^HmirfA/1 Kim fr> if h*3 ( deaih, if Its left a widow in possession, the j h '.v.v^ If the owner died with- I out, relatives, the person who was for- j tun ate enough to step in and take posses- sicn became ihc owner. The tenants in ) many instances haye taken advantage of 1" l.w-. nt ,an: n,lt1.4IitontAnt h. 'Hh,1-, fú a fi.nall sum, they are enabled to tflke out a deed, which shows the property to be ttierr own freehold. ^—
) OUR OLD FOREST TREES.
) OUR OLD FOREST TREES. It is curious to realise that many of the j trees standing in those little bits of aHewn foreet which still remain in this country have been witnesses to the history I (.J.u.u"i"L.J.¡ Oi ji-ula "0v/. iJuc U..1\50 ex, fnresteos declare-oaks still stand- in^' which stood in the days of Robin R-YRY R?Y^. C T vpflrq j old. Ash IN known to live for three or four centuries. Wolsev may have medi- td t!dei- some of ash tree;, Tll-é splendid elms that grace our parks may nave oeeii pianieu oeiure Hie days of Guy Fawkes. Oldest of all, the yew tree i ending to-day may have been the witness of a thmt?ftn<l y<?ar? of English history may have shaded-Alfred the Great himself, I
! i ti.11, vv ivAi aisli-fti-ijttlsh'L'…
i ti.11, vv ivAi aisli-fti-ijttlsh'L' LEECH. i A icccl. kept in a glass jar of water is an I excellent weather-prophet. The jar should j coiiLain about three gills of water, which j should be changed ooce a week in aum- j mcr, cncoi a fortnight in winter. When t-ne leech lie™ at the bottom cf the jar, and | curled up in s> spi:*nl form, you may I reasonably rely on fine weather. If, £ rer, it crccp., i:p to the tap of the jar and remairr there, rain is coming. When the leseh darts about its lodging with gTeat swiftness, it- is not sufTeii-ig from a pain, UHll j I'Jit" villi tu J(t.t"" o..t, Mti- WtJtH. It I a bilinear.e is on its way the v. 11 be TTinfo (-mf "f the vrnfnr tlinn i1, rrd will 1.2 C8:J:c. :ü'C.4t Tl jj:, b.y the way, should be oniv partially filled v. ;'1! r- r 1 LXA«. iuu >Jl4UUlU Ijt —ci ~h m'-Ii- When Jack Frost j, to pay nf. ft visit th-e ieeeh <>e]>aves as when forevdimg fine weather—i^e., he lies at the bottom of the jar 5 but v. hen snow is eomin<? he c-im'b^ v;A1'< up to the moutb of iiie jur RUckc- Liierc.
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I BOROUGH OF BRECON. I Shops Act, 1912. '-=- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Town Council of Brecon have made a Cl Closing Order, of which a copy is annexed hereto, and have submitted the Order to the Secretary of State for confirmation. A copy of the Order may be obtained by any person whom it may concern on application at the Town Clerk's Office in the Guild Hall. If any person desires to make any objections to the provisions of the Order he FT should address a written statement to the Secretary of State, Home Department, London, within one month from the date hereof, i.e., before the 5th day of February, 1919. Dated this 8th day of January, 1919. G HYATT WILLIAMS, Town Clerk. ORDER. The Coumcil of the Borough of Brecon fn pursuance of the powers con-ferred upon them by the Shop's Act, 1912, and after due compliance with its provisions do hereby order as follows :— 1. This Order which may be ctled a* the Brecon Closing Order applies to all shops in which any of the trades set out in Article 2 hereof is carried on. Ail shops to which this Order applies shall be closed for the serving of customers o. the several days of the week at and after the following hours resnectiyelv :— Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday. Friday. Saturday. Textile Trade 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m- Grocers 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p. in. 7 p.m. 9 p.m. "Rii-nvc. ï IT. Tn. 7 p.m. 7 n.m. 7 run. q n.m. Trnnmonwrs 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 D.m. 8 1). Ya. Music and Musical Instru- 7 p.m. 7 p.m. Weekly 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m. ment Dealers Half- Butchers 7 p.m. 7 p.m. Holiday. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p.m. 7 p.m. t p.m. Shops 7 p.m. 7 T). Tn. ft P.m. Boot and Shoe DealeKS 7 p.m. 7 p.m. Cloxeil 7 7 iul. p.in. Jewellers 7 p.m. 7 p. ra. at 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m. Decorators 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m. Hairdressers and Dealers in 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p.m. Toilet Requisites Stationers and Fancy Dealers 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m Provided that where the occupier of a shop elects to close his shop fir the weekly half-holiday on Saturday instead r of a Wednesday the closing hour on Wednesday shall be 7 p.m. 3. Where any trade or business other than the trades set out in Article 2 hereof is carried on in any shop to which this Order applies sucti shop may be kept open after the closing hour mentioned in the said Article for tho purpose of the first mentioned trade or business alone, provided that (a) after the said closing hour there shall be exhibited in some conspicuous places on the exterior and in the interior of such shop notices in letters of the size of not less than two inehes containing the following Nrords Shol)s Act, 191 i. This shop is closed for to-day except for (the sale by retail of ) or (the trade or business of ) (b) so far as is reasonably practicable no goods in connection with the trade or business for which the shop is required to be closed shall be exhibited either inside or outside the shop. 4. Nothing in this Order shall apply during the week preceding Christmas Day in any year. 5. Nothing in this Order shall prevent the sale at any time of implements ILI; li 'v_=i'md.l;.te U3C f:¡,rwmg C'i:;81'i.)' -=--c- I '¿, -< FO k I 1 § E E SB gj H SB B S i 11 wolu 1) I ii A | ii Kin I H/\liLll1U. I I -¡ j Immediate Delivery j | 2-3 TON 1 USTSnl GK&S^S &T&O. I ,I RICH AND SONS, Motor Engineers, ECON. I Tel. 23. Telegrams: Rich, Brecon. I I i I GWILUM'S I CONDITION POWDERS for HOUSES- Tins 2/- cach GWILLIM, Chemist, Brecon. siBiiUiiifi utlFOS, 'J I Call and see the BOftlitlfj. Oesigfrs In endless Variety at the COUNTY TIMES OrKICE BRECON. ALL K!.PA.DS OF EFFECTED. CLAIMS PROMPTLY SETTLED Firot.Cl(-,o Compaitif-t,. WiLLIArAS, Aoconns Iiearanoe, and Cerersl Ac rut EKNTBBlBGK No. 9, Secnybriflge. Office- rrres R UILDIKG8, BbECCK.
------BERMUDA'S RAIN CATCH.
BERMUDA'S RAIN CATCH. The rain catch is a notable incident of the Bermuda landscape. There is no other good water. All that is gained from wells is brackish. So the people either use their whitowaaiied roofs as a means to catch rainwater or they build a lpib OA catch on the hillside, with a eavered eistern at its foot into. which the rain, Omc collected, runs and is stored. The adil ie acraped away from a large sur- face of the wilite coral rock that unfterlies all the island. This surface is cemented and whitewashed, and a low wall built on three sides with the reservoir or tank at the bottom.
INtW IN A INUTSttfcLL.
A telegram rrom inew tory. utinwui,.u, the sudden death on Chri*tmm T)P.v of tlie RGï. Dr. J. Wilbnr Cnspman, who last vear was Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in America. Dr. Chapman was in his sixtieth year. Commissioner Higgins is to be chief of staff, Salvation Army. Mr. John Hodge, Miaister of Pensions, has undergone a delicate throat operation. The price of bread in Brussels, Ant- werp, and most of Belgium is now 4d. per lb. While Mr. Balfour is at the Peace Con- fere nee, Lord Curzon will take charge of the Foreign Office.