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NOTES OF THE DAY

We-The Llanelly Council.

RE-ISSUE OF RATION CARDS.I

- - - . I IPWLL GRAND FETE.…

First Concrete Ship I¿

Effects of the Drought

LLANELLY NURSE'S POST. I

[No title]

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IBurry Port Boys.

j SUCCESSFUL FURNITURE SALE…

Long walks for Water.

[No title]

The Welsh Church Act

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The Welsh Church Act LETTER FROM MR. LLEWELYN WILLIAMS. The Welsh Church Act Amending Bill is even worse than I had supposed. It is admitted that the Church in Wales has profited by the war by .tl,000,000. (The Church's gaiiu are at least twice as much, but let that pass). The Church therefore will be richer after disendowment than she was before the war. It is true that she will be dises- tablished, but she will be paid for allow- ing herself to be disestablished. The county councils will be "compen- sated" for having to pay too much to the Church by a grant of £1,000,000 from the British Treasury. In other words, the Government, instead of re- dressing the grievance in the only just way-by refusing to allow the Church to make an illegitimate war profit-seek to bribe the county councils to allow them to re-endow the disestablished Church. In addition, the Government are go- ing to "compensate" the Church for the "lapsed benefices" to the extent of about £ 400,000. The matter is perhaps of little interest to Englishmen, but it is worthy of their consideration as an example of the Machiavellian genius of the Prime Minister at its best. The proposal, which we are told has already been accepted by the majority of the complaisant Welsh members, has many advantages:— (1) Churchmen used to assert that what they were fighting for was not the endowments, but the connexion of the Church with the State as a "na- tional recognition of God." They aban- don that principle for so much cash. (2) Nonconformists used to assert that it was wrong for any Church to be subsidized by the State, especially for one out of several Churches to be singled out. They are asked to abandon that principle for so much crush paid to the county councils. "There is money in I it," Sir Ellis Griffith used to sny. He was wrong. He never thought in those days that Mr. Lloyd George would be- come supreme in the State. (3) In order thus to scrap these frag- ments of "pre-war shibboleths" (there were no such things as "principles" be- fore the war!) the British taxpayer will have to find £ 1,400,000 more or less. What is he for but to minister to the spending genius of Mr. Lloyd George? (4) Now that no "principle" divides Church and Dissent, all parties can now join the new Centre Party i "Very clever, isn't it ?" said some- body to Mr. Gladstone after relating one of Mr. Disraeli's amusing tricks. "Do you call it clever, Sir?" roared the Lib- eral statesman. "I call it devilish." Mr. Lloyd George never admired Mr. Gladstone. Yours etc., W. LLEWELYN WILLIAMS, K.C. Temple, Aug. 6th.

"Dropped."

MUSICAL SUCCESSES. I

I New Works -for Llanelly…

NEW MAGISTRATES. I

IAN EXCELLENT SOAP.

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ASTERISKS. —.——

Coal for the Winter

I HONOUR FOR A LOCAL NURSE.

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