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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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r "IT Fi: iT-S NEITHER ARMY…

TERRIBLE FIRE AT TREDEGAR.I

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TERRIBLE FIRE AT TREDEGAR. MODEL LODGING-HOUSE BURNED. ELEVEN INMATES KILLED. A destructive and calamitous fire broke out between twelve and one o'clock on Wednesday morning at a new model lodging-house situated in Red Lion-square, New Tredegar, Monmouthshire—a scene memorable owing to its being the place where the riots in 1882 broke out. The house was considered the most per- fect in South Wales, and at the time of the outbreak contained at least seventy persons, though, aa the records were burnt, there is great difficulty in ascer- taining the exact number, and this difficaltv is accentuated by the fact that most of the inmates were of the tramp class. It is suggested that the fire originated through the indiscretion of one of the inmates smoking in bed. Whether this was so or not, the fire spread with such rapidity that before the alarm could be given to the whole of the occupants the place was enveloped in flames. Many of the inmates managed to make their escape just as they were aroused, but ere the whole could reach the street the lower part of the structure was so completely engirt with flames that escape was impossible. Two of the inmates, named Twigg and Thomas Davies, jumped from an upper storey. Twigg broke his neck in the attempt to escape, and Davies sus- tained such severe injuries that he died soon after his removal to the hospital. A man named Jackson, who essayed the same feat, is in the hospital, but hopes are entertained of his recovery. For over an hour the shortness of the water supply made it diffi- cult for the fire brigade to do anything more than prevent the flames from spreading, and at the end of this time the lodging-house itself had been entirely consumed. The inmates who managed to esoape quitted the scene of the disaster as quickly as pos- sible, many of them being received at the union workhouse, and others being taken in by pitying neighbours. It is impossible at present to estimate correctly the loss of life, bnt the firemen, when they were able to commence an examination of the debris, discovered nine corpses, which, with the two who were killed in their efforts to escape, made eleven and it is feared that others will be discovered buried beneath the ruin9. Owing to the panic which pre- vailed and the class of occupants, representatives of the Press have been unable to ascertain the names of the victims. There were several gallant rescues by members of the fire brigade, who carried out of the Duilding several inmates who were too stupefied by their danger and the smoke to make any effort to save themselves. An adjacent storeyard was tem- porarily used as a mortuary, and, owing to the lack of accommodation, the injured had to be treated in the same place.

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