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ITHE WEEKS NEWS. —-

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rEEI{" S NEWS CONTINUED.

DESTROYING THE BEAUTIES OF…

WALES AND WELSHMEN.

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WALES AND WELSHMEN. Mr Beirs H. Thelwell, coroner of Kast D->n- I j bighshiie, which office he had hdd for upwards' of forty years, died at his residence Rossett, on Thursday night. On Wednesday afternoon the famous North Wales watering place, Colwyn Bay, was en fite, the occasion being the formal opening of a new and magnificent road approach to the beach, con- I structed at a cost of nearly £ 3,000. Mr John Vaughan, solicitor, of Merthyr Tydvil, bas offered to contribute 2s a week, f nine others do thp same, towards the support of "Llew L.wyfo," the distinguished Welsh bard, who ha een prominently associated for many years pas' with the Welsh Eisteddfod, and who is now an inmate of the St. Asaph Workhouse. On Monday morning two girls named Robina Fraser and Florrie Bedell were drowned at PenmaeDmawr while bathing. Oneoftbevielim- w s the daughter of Mr Bedell, J.P., Wilmsbw, Cheshire, and the other of Mr Alexander Fraser, B.)wdon, Cheshire. It is surmised ihat they were c; rriej off their feet by the force of the waves. A shocking gun fatality was cn Thursday. reported from Llandilo, where the body of a well known young sportsman, Mr Robert Davies, the only son of Mr David Davies, Rhydarwen, was found dead in Cwmddu Wood. Mr Davies had gone out for a day's sport, and it is believed that he stumbled with the loaded gun, which exploded, and the contents entered his heart. Mrs. Foulkes, of Rhyl, widow of Archdeacon Foulkes, who at one time held the living of Llandyssil, in this counfy, was crossing the pro- menade of that town on Wednesday morning, when a bicycle, driven by its rider at great speed, knocked her down. Mrs. Fculkes was rendered insensible, and was carried to the Alexandra Hospital, where she remains, suffering from concussion of the brain. A shocking accident is rpported from Rhondda Valley, where a new church dedicated to St Illtyd is in course of erection at Penycra-g. The masons were working near the belfry during the high winds, when a portion of the chancel gave way, precipitating the workmen amid the debris A father and son named James and a mason named Bryant received serious injuries, and were con- veyed hoaie in an unconscious condition. A terrible railway fatality occurred between Bangor and Aber stations, on Monday. Mrs. Williams, a Liverpool lady, in passing over a rail- way crossing was caught by a train and her body was cut in two. It appears that Mrs. Williams (whose two little children were with her and must have witnessed the accident) strolled in the direc- tion of the crossing, and that she was reading a newspaper when the train bore down upon her. The general impressililn is that, owiug to the hijih wind, she failed to hear the sound of the train's approach, and that, in a bewildered state, she committed the mistake of jumping on to the down line. Addi- tional evidence given at the inquest, shows that the above account -was not the CDrrect one. It appears that the deceased had been very despondent of late and the account of her movements as detailed by her cousin induced the jury to bring in a verdict of Suicide while temporarily insane." THE LIBERAL FEDERATION AND WELH Drs K8TABLI8HM:ENT.—Mr Schnadhorst and Mr Hudson, secretary and assistant secretary of the National Liberal Federation, have written to the General Purposes Committes of the Welsh Dis- establishmeniCampaignCommittee,congratulating the committee on the remarkable results of the elections in Wales, reaffirming, as they do, with increased emphasis, the demand of the Welsh people for Welsh Disestablishment and Disendow- ment, and assuring the committee that the Federation will take every suitable opportunity to promote the carrying into effect of the declarations in favour of Welsh Disestablishment, which the National Federation has repeatedly made. MEETING OF WBJLSH MEMBERS.—A Welsh correspondent states that on Saturday week, an important meeting of what may be described as the cabinet of the Welsh Party was held in London, the members present being Messrs. T. E. Ellis, M.P., Sam. Evans, M.P., and Lloyd George, M.P. Mr Stuart Rendel, M.P., was also present as chairman of the party, and was accom- panied by the whips and secretary, viz.:—Messrs. D. A. Thomas, M.P., J. Herbert Roberts, M.P. and Herbert Lewis, M.P. The object of the meeting was to prepare a scheme of policy for the party in the coming session. The drafting of bills on various subjects affecting Wales was allocated to different members of the committee. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF WALES, ABERYSTWYTH. —The University of London, has just issued the Honours lists of successful candidates at the Intermediate Examinations recently held. Seven students of this college obtained Honours, VIZ:- Mr A. J. Grieve obtained first class honours in English, and Miss Jessie W. Holland and Miss E. M. Moulton obtained second class honours in the same subject. Mr H. M. Atkinsoa obtained second class honours in Chemistry, and Mr W. H. Barker obtained third class honours in the same subject. Miss A. M. Hughes obtained third class honours in Botany. Miss M. L. Newbigin obtaiaed second class honours in Zoology. Twenty-six students of the college in all have been successful in the recent Intermediate and Preliminary Scientific Examinations. Mr A. J. Grieve was educated at the Collegiate School, Pembroke Dock. He entered college in September,1890, and passed the Matriculation Examination of the Univera ty of London in the first division, June, 1891. THREE BODIES UNEARTHED AT LLANDUDNO.— Considerable consternation was caused at Llan- dudno last week, by the unearthing of three bodies in a house which WHJB undergoing alterations. Medical evidence was at once obtained, and the opinion of chree or four dootors who examined the remains was that they had undoubtedly lain in the ground for many years, probably forty or fifty. It is said that the building, which is one of the oldest in Llandudno, has stood for nearly that length of time. No suspicion of foul play is enter- tained, and for this reason,that, according to some of the oldest native fishermen, it was a common custom until thirty or forty years ago, to bury all bodies washed ashore in unconsecrated ground, and instead of being taken inland for interment they were carried up the beach in a straight line from the spot where they had been found, and were inhumed under the first green sod. The site length of time. No suspicion of foul play is enter- tained, and for this reason,that, according to some of the oldest native fishermen, it was a common custom until thirty or forty years ago, to bury all bodies washed ashore in unconsecrated ground, and instead of being taken inland for interment they were carried up the beach in a straight line from the spot where they had been found, and were inhumed under the first green sod. The site of the house may at that time have been an open shore and thus a mystery which was invested by the popular fancy with startling proportions is amply explained. SERIOUS STABBING AFFRAY IN ANGLESEY.—At the Llangefni Police Court, on Monday, Daniel Morgan, a young labourer, residing in Mill-street, in that town, was charged with having stabbed Owen Hughes, of Penygarreg, Llanddyfnan, on the night of the 9th inst. The complainant and five companions were returning home after being to a menagerie, where they met the accused, who, aocoeting them, demanded to know their names. Words taking place between them, Morgan offered to fight the lot. He had a knife in his hand at the time, and made use of expressions about meeting "acountryful of people" as long as he had "something" at his side (meaning, it was alleged, the knife). Hughes advised him to go bome, whereupon Morgan struck him, and after- wards stabbed him in the wrist, cutting him to the bone, and severing the tendons. One of the arteries was severed, and Dr. Fraser, who dressed the injuries, described Hughes's condition as being at one time serious. A large number of witnesses were examined, their statements, at tivaes, being rather conflicting. The accused, who pleaded Not guilty," was committed for trial, bail being accepted.

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r "IT Fi: iT-S NEITHER ARMY…

TERRIBLE FIRE AT TREDEGAR.I

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