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-y' f,litst OIXT.ME\T.—Measles, Scarlatina.—These i^ct. at trials after birth to which our children ■tJudi^'th diseases are very infectious, and both :V -thrv management. In one the chest, in the i, 'Il fijid^ most likely to suffer, but the mother or H e dist 111 Holloway's Ointment a sovereign remedy aL^egt es*ing complaints. When rubbed upon the tr bw,Hnd back, it is absorbed, the respiration im- li)^°mes more tranquil, the cough less trouble- K inSrow less livid, the eyes brighten, and the assSa "l68 ^lat anxious gaze which often forebodes f, °.n the constitution and nervous system, 'lisi Ointment not only cures the urgent symp- Pels all dangerous sequents.
TIPYN 0 BOB PETH.
TIPYN 0 BOB PETH. A club called the Grosvenor Bicycle Club has been formed at Chester. The Cardiff building strike, after lasting twelve weeks, ter- minated on Monday, July 2, the masters conceding to the men the extra halfpenny in dispute. Mr. Horatio Lloyd has sent to prison a bailiff of the Mold County Court for not paying into court money which he had re- ceived for that purpose. At a recent meeting of the committee of the Conway Liberal Association, it was resolved to carry on vigorously the work of registration in the Conway, Colwyn, Caerhun, and Llandudno polling districts. At the Crewe Police Office on Monday, June 25, William Warburton, a member of the Crewe Police Force, was charged with a robbery with violence upon the person of a married woman named Eliza Foxley. At the close of the investigation the magistrate (Mr. T. L. Boote) dismissed the case, and said he had no doubt that the accused was innocent of the charge. The annual Festival of the Choral Union of the Archdeaconry of Carmarthen took place on Tuesday, June 26, at St. Peter's Church, Carmarthen. Mr. Radcliffe conducted. There were upwards of 600 singers. The sermon was preached by the Yen. Archdeacon Lewis. The dead bodies of two children, named Sarah Pullen, fifteen years of age, and William Edge, seven years of age, of Newtown, Chester, were discovered floating in the canal near the City Baths on Sunday morning, June 24. It is supposed that the little fellow accidentally tumbled into the canal, and the girl in endeavouring to rescue him was drowned with him. At Shrewsbury, on Thursday, June 28, William Neville, who gave his address as Liverpool, was charged with stealing a silver watch from his lodgings. The prisoner first described himself as an actor, but now said he had been a surgeon on board a steamer trading between Liverpool and Africa. The magistrate sentenced him to three months' imprisonment, with hard labour. An instance of the survival of an old superstition was dis- closed in an application made to the Chester magistrates, on Thursday, June 28. An elderly lady, residing in Castle-street, possessed a Skye terrier dog, which the other day bit a child in its hand. The parents of the child, believing that if the animal was not killed the child would go mad and die, effected a for- cible entrance into the house of the old lady, assaulted her, and having obtained possession of the dog, destroyed it. The magis- trates granted the lady a summons for assault. The following is from Trllth-" The experiment in wine grow- ing, which the Marquis of Bute in carrying out is the neigh- bourhood of Cardiff, is said to be not without considerable promise so far. His vineyards at Castle Loch have just been visited by an expert from the department of Cote d'Or in France, and pronounced to be in excellent condition. The Marquis in- tends, at the end of the summer, trying his hand at the manu- facture of avowed English wine from his English or rather Welsh grown grapes. There has been a gradual decrease in the number of cattle attacked with disease in Cheshire, since October 1875, when the number amounted to 6,106, to the present time, when for a month there has not been a single case of foot-and-mouth or pleuro-pneumonia reported. For 30 years past the county has not been free from the last mentioned disease for so long a time. On Friday, June 29, the Chester Town Council passed a resolu- tion rescinding the cattle plague orders lately put in force. The chief excursion of the season of the Chester Society of Natural Science was held on Tuesday, June 26, when a visit was paid to Haughmond Abbey, near Shrewsbury, the founder of which was William Fitz Allen, on whom William the Conqueror bestowed the Castle of Oswestry. A paper was read upon the subject by the Rev. A. Thursby Pelham, of Cound, near Shrewsbury. The party subsequently visited the museum on College Hill, Shrewsbury, and inspected the interesting collection of Roman relics found on the site of the ancient city of Ureconium. At the Central Criminal Court, on Tuesday, June 26, a young man named Morgan Lewis, who is stated to be the son of a clergyman in North Wales, was indicted 'for unlawfully neglect- ing to deliver up the whole of his estate after he had been ad- judicated a bankrupt, with intent to defraud his creditors. The prisoner came to London a few years ago and began business as grocer, but subsequently went upon the stage. The jury found the prisoner guilty, and he was sentenced to two years' imprison- ment with hard labour. On Friday, June 29, a festival of the choirs of the diocese of Chester was held in Chester Cathedral. There were 26 choirs and about 750 voices in all, divided as follows :—Treble, 380: alto, 60 tenor, 120 bass, 190. The Rev. E. L. Deacle (the late precentor) intoned the service, and directed the singing throughout. The anthem was "Praise the Lord, 0 my soul," by Sir John Goss. The hymn before the sermon was Handel's Rejoice, the Lord is King," and that after the sermon, "Angel voices ever singing," by Arthur Sullivan. The sermon was preached by the Rev. Canon Tarver, from Psalm lxxi., 20-21. The Rev. J. Hylton Stewart, the precentor, played the organ. The third annual encampment at Rhyl of the First Adminis- trative Battalion of Flintshire Rifle Volunteers, including the Corps of Carnarvon and Portmadoc, was brought to a close on Monday, June 25, when the volunteers were inspected by Col. Cooper, commanding the 23rd Brigade Depôt, who said he should have much pleasure in making a good report to the War Office. The Lord Lieutenant of the County (Mr. Hughes) also ex- pressed the great pleasure he had had in witnessing their manoeuvres, and fully endorsed the praise bestowed upon them by Colonel Cooper. The camp numbered over seven hundred men. Not a single instance of misconduct was reported. On Wednesday, June 27, a silver salver, a gold watch and chain, and a purse containing £ 84 19s. were presented to the Rev. Lewis Price, R.D., vicar of Llywel and Rhydvbriw, by his parishioners and friends as a token of respect as well as of their high appreciation of his energetic labours and faithful ministrations for the benefit of the parish of Llvwel since his ap- pointment in 1862." During his incumbency Mr. Price has by his personal exertions secured the erection of excellent school- rooms and minister's residence, and a handsome vicarage at Tre- castle, and the restoration of the parish church, the total cost of these works being £ 4,000. In January last, Mr. J. Howell Thomas, of Starling Park, near Carmarthen, was thrown from a dog cart and seriously hurt in consequence of the negligence of the local authorities, a deep drain having been opened in the roadway and left at night with- out anything to warn passengers of their danger. Mr. Thomas, upon public grounds, claimed damages to the amount of t500 of the Carmarthen Town Council. The Town Council for some time resisted the claim and repudiated their liability, but they subsequently offered Z200 as a compromise. Mr. Thomas has not only accepted the offer but has returned £ 100 to the Council, at the same time stating that the moiety he has retained would not cover the actual losses he incurred in consequence of the accident. Mayfair has the following comment upon a recent case at the Oswestry County Court:—"It seems that Dr. Kenealy, in the shape of Answers to Correspondents," gives the subscribers to his inestimable Englishman the full benefit of his legal know- lege on any practical points of law in which they may have be- come involved. This valuable piece of information transpired the other day in an amusing case in a provincial County Court, in which a newly-married husband was sued for payment of the cost of his bride's wedding dress. The husband, as witness in the case, stated that he had the' opinion of 'an ex-Q.C.' that he was not liable for the dress. The Judge having elicited that the ex-Q.C. was our umbrella-carrying doctor, who had answered the inquiry in the columns of the Englishman, said he was afraid the opinion of the ex-Q.C. mustprevail!' So the husband and his friends swear Kenealy to be a bigger boon [and blessing to men than ever." The Gardeners' Chronicle says-" Those who have given atten- tion to the subject of the longevity of Oaks could not fall to assign to the Cressage Oak a greater antiquity than that of the Venison Tree in Bagot's Park, which is known to have been standing at the Conquest. One half only of the Cressage Oak remains, con- sisting of a massive skin' of timber eighteen inches thick. The circumference of the tree, above the projecting base, would be about thirty feet, is it were complete, the measurement of the remaining half being fourteen feet. Part of the standing portion of the shell was so much injured by a fire mischievously lighted many years ago in the hollow trunk, that its envelope of liark is now dead, as well as the crown above it. In the re- mainder of the crown life still remains, and a crop of small branches is still fed by the bark below. The tree is in fact a natural pollard with an overhanging rugged crown." At the Carnarvon petty sessions, on Saturday, June 30, before Lord Newborough, and other magistrates, Thomas Ryan and J. (1. Pritchard, quarrymen, from the neighbourhood of Ebenezer, were charged with brutally assaulting Police-constable Evans. Thomas Roberts and G. Roberts were also charged with resist- ing and interfering with the constable, whose head and face were considerably scarred. From the evidence, it appears that in a drunken row on the previous Sunday night the prisoners Ryan and Pritchard attacked the constable, the former dealing him six running" kicks in different parts of the body. A special warrant was issued for the apprehension of Pritchard, who, on being captured, again kicked the officer in a savage manner. The other prisoners made a "desperate attempt to rescue him from the custody of the constable. Several letters were handed to the Bench complaining of the ruffianism preva- lent among some of the quarrymen in that neighbourhood. Mr. Allanson (Carnarvon), and Mr. T. Roberts (Bangor), appeared For the prisoners. The Bench sentenced Pritchard to four months' imprisonment with hard labour and Ryan, six months' with hard bbour. The other prisoners were each fined 40s. and osts. We referred last week to the reports of the Medical Officer md Inspector of Nuisances of the Llanrwst Rural Sanitary Authority, on the extremely bad sanitary condition of Llanrwst. [t appears, however, that the village of Penmachno, which is within the jurisdiction of the same Authority, is in an even more filthy and disgraceful state. At the meeting of the Authority on Tuesday, June 26, Dr. Rees, the County Medical Officer of Health, reported the results of a recent visit to this tillage, which he described as a veritable sink of abominations. riie water supply was polluted, being obtained from pumps .vhich were within a few yards of choked up drains, or from the iver, into which all kinds of decomposed animal and vegetable substances are thrown, and into which the contents of several trains and privies are discharged. At the upper part of the 'illage the sewage flows in an open gulley along the side of the •oad, and in warm weather is, of course, a dangerous misance." All the drains have been long since choked up, and converted into a series of elongated cesspools," and the con- sequence is that as the soil is porous, it has become saturated ivith sewage. It is said that other villages in the district are in ilmost, if not quite, as bad a state. The work of sanitary im- provement seems to make extremely slow progress in some Kirts of Wales. The tenth annual festival of the parish choirs of the Lichfield Diocesan Choral Association was held on Thursday, June 28, in Lichfield Cathedral, when morning and evening services were leld. About 1,600 choristers took part in the Festival, and tbout 200 clergymen were present in their surplices. Mr. Beds- nore presided at the organ. The sermon in the morning was weached by the Bishop of Manchester. In the course of it his ordship remarked that in small churches, where the musical resources could not possibly be very ample, it seemed to him ,he height of absurdity to try to imitate the ritual of a great cathedral, and he ventured to think that anthems would hardly sdify an ordinary rural congregation. The Bishop made iinne very sensible remarks with regard to church hymns, which clergymen and others, whose duty it is to select hymns :or congregational singing, would do well to lay to heart. He ,aid that for edification it was necessary that there should be a careful choice of hymns. He felt that there was a strange inreality of language in many of our popular hymns, and that ;hcre was just cause for complaint of the material, mystic anguage of many of them. The material language of a great ?any hymns was most marked. Let them take, for instance,— Ihere is a fountain filled with blood," as though it were the ;hemical fluid of the Redeemer's veins that washed away the iinsot the world. Then there was language teaching Christ's presence in His sacrament, which went beyond even the -neological tenet of transubstantiation as that was theologi- ally accepted. °
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^ FROMITHE PAPERS.
FROMITHE PAPERS. The Bishop of Ripon has returned to England in considerabl: improved health. The new Justice of Appeal, Mr. Henry Cotton, Q.C., took hi seat on Friday, June 29, in the Court of Appeal. It is proposed to erect a monument in Edinburgh, in memor of the late Mr. Russel, editor of the Scotsman, and about £ 1,00< has been already promised towards the object. A poll of the inhabitants of Banbury has been taken—95' against compulsory vaccination, and 109 for it, 407 being neutral The population is about 10,000. The French residents of Biene, Switzerland, have resolved t( present M. Gambetta with a gold watch worth 500f., in acknow ledgement of his services to the Republic. Alice Rhodes, one of the prisoners charged with the murder of Mrs. Harriet Staunton, has given birth to a child in the Kent County Prison,Maidstone. The definitive design for the great Exhibition cascade at the Trocadero, in Paris, has been completed. The work will cost nearly 1,000,000f., and the quantity of water used daily will be 35,000,000 cubic metres. The Prince and Princess of Wales have consented to honour Wantage with a visit on the occasion of unveiling the statue of King Alfred, which has been presented to the town by Colonel Loyd-Lindsay, M.P. The ceremony will probably take place about the middle of July. The Archbishop of Canterbury has licensed the Rev. G. E. Gardner, senior curate of St. Pancras, to be curate in sole charge of St. James's. Hatcham; and has endorsed on the back of the license that his chaplains, the Rev. Crawford Tait and the Rev. T. Davidson, shall be assistant curates. Mr. Arthur Adderley, the third son of Sir Charles Adderley, who has just attained his majority, was drowned on Sunday, July 1, by falling over the falls of Bruar, Blair Athol, a depth of about one hundred feet. Late on Wednesday evening, June 27, the family of Mr. Hard- wick, J.P., West Combe, Wimbledon, were alarmed by hearing a noise in the dining-room. It was found that a bullet had entered the window with considerable force, damaging a marble mantel-piece. It was supposed to be the result of rifle practice on Wimbledon Common. The Athenaeum says that Messrs. Sotheby, Wilkinson, and Hodge, have for sale during the present season a remarkable copy of the First Folio Shakespeare, with the correct title and verses by Ben Johnson. Although both are inlaid, the volume is unusually large, being both taller and broader than the "Daniel" copy. Three men and a boy were drowned on Sunday, July 1, in the Bristol Channel, a, mile from the Flat Holmes. They were in a punt, and one of the party upset it. Three sank at once, and were drowned; the other floated on the punt for twenty minutes, when he sank. Two others of the party were picked up about two hours after. The Pall Ifall Gazette is informed that at a meeting of the society of the Holy Cross, to be held in a few days, the book, The Priest in Absolution," will be withdrawn. This result will have been obtained owing to a friendly conference between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London and the Revs. F. H. Murray and C. F. Lowder, and other members of the Society. Sir Henry Thompson says:—"I have visited rich and poor, high and low, all my life, and I solemnly declare that the great bulk of the diseases with which I have had to deal arose from the drinking of intoxicating liquor. I do not mean what people call drunkenness, but the regular steady customs in which most of us indulge every day of our lives." Several men were tried at the Berkshire Assizes, on June 29, for defrauding the trustees of the Grand Stand at Ascot, during the Ascot race week. They got into the ring with a rush, with- out paying, and afterwards obtained pass-out checks, which they sold. They were sentenced to terms of imprisonment varying from three to twelve months. Good news for sportsmen comes from the French departments, game being abundant year. The first broods of partridges were undisturbed; the second will perhaps have suffered from the mowing time, but the young birds from the more advanced nests got clear away before work with the scythe commenced. Hares are numerous, the winter having been mild and favourable for them. The School Board Chronicle hears from Stockport of the first case of a child earning the right to an "honour certificate" under Lord Sandon's Act. He is under eleven years of age, has passed the fourth standard, and has made 350 attendances per year in the last two years. He is, therefore, entitled to three years' schooling, for which the fees will be paid by the Educa- tion Department. At the first meeting of the General Committee of the National Federation of Liberal Associations, which was held at Birmingham on Monday, July 2, Mr. J. Chamberlain, M.P., presiding, Mr. William Harris was elected chairman of the committee, and Mr. F. Schnadhorst secretary of the Federation. Sub-committees were appointed for organization, finance, and publishing. The subscription list was read, and resolutions were passed providing for the special action of the Federation in certain contingencies. The Whitehall Review hears that the clerical leaders of the Church League for Disestablishment have invited Mr. Gladstone to address its members, as also Canon Carter, of Clewer. The e h same journal says: "Though Mr. Gladstone sympathises with the movement, and has privately commended it to perplexed parsons, he is not as yet prepared to accede to Mr. Mackonochie's wishes, and will decline the invitation. On Saturday, June 30, the annual meeting of the Metropolitan Drinking Fountain Association was held at Grosvenor House, the Duke of Westminster in the chair. The report stated that thirty-three drinking fountains for human beings and fifty-eight troughs for animals had been erected during the last twelve months, making a total number in London at the present time of 324 drinking fountains and 342 troughs. A telegram from the Paris correspondent of the Observer says it is stated in Government circles that the Due Decazes has ex- pressed a strong wish that the elections should be pushed for- ward, as he anticipated that very grave diplomatic questions will soon have to be discussed by the European Powers, and has received an intimation from abroad that Europe will be un- willing to allow France a deliberative voice in these discussions unless the Government has an Assembly at its back. The election for Huntingdonshire was very closely contested. The result of the poll was announced on Saturday night, June 30, and Lord Mandeville, the Conservative candidate, was declared to have been elected by the narrow majority of 50 votes. The num- bers were—Lord Mandeville, 1,468 Hon. H. Fitzwilliam, 1,418. As the county of Huntingdon has been under Conservative re- presentation from time immemorial the result must be regarded as gratifying evidence of the progress of Liberalism. At Feltwell, Norfolk, on Thursday morning, June 28, a man 82 years or age was married to a woman 77. Both were inmates of the almshouses in that village, and they were by no means strangers to the marriage service, for the present was the third time they had each gone through the same interesting ceremony. The bride carried with her to the church a basket containing the good things intended for the wedding festivities, and they were both received with showers of rice and slippers by the parishioners. The Exeter Town Council have for a long time been negociat- ing with the Gas Company for the purchase of their works one of the conditions of the purchase was that the Town Council should secure to the original shareholders ten per cent. in per- petuity. The Town Council have now, however, virtually de- cided, by a majority of 20 to S, to break off the neociations, mainly, as set forth by the mover of the resolution (Mr. Alder- man Follet) on account of the success of the electric light and the probability of its superseding ga.s. Mr. C. H. Collette, solicitor to the Society for the Suppression of Vice, applied at Bow-street, on Thursday, June 28, for a summons against Mr. Duncan, publisher of the Living Age, for libelling him in an article which accused him of having caused the notoriety acquired by the Bradlaugh pamphlet, and increas- ing its sale" from 700 copies in a year to 90,000 in a fortnight," by prosecuting the work on behalf of the Society—the fact being that the Society abstained from the prosecution of Mr. Brad- laugh in the dread of giving the work increased publicity. The application was granted by Sir James Ingham, who suggested that Mr. Collette might recover heavy damages by an action; but the latter said he only desired to clear his character. In the Queen's Bench Division, on Friday, June 29, judgment was given in the case of Sargent v. Dale. This was a proceed- ing in prohibition by the Rev. Thomas Pelham Dale, of St. Vedast, Cheapside, London, to stay proceedings against him under the Public Worship Act, by which his living had been se- questrated. The substantial ground was that the Bishop of London, being the next Datron interested in the avoidance of the living could not intervene. The court held the whole pro- ceedings void, and the rule was made absolute with costs, though the court expressed opinion that this fact had never entered the bishop's mind. The judges in the Queen's Bench division on Saturday, June 30, (Mr. Justice Mellor and Mr. Justice Lush) have ordered a mandamus to issue to the Principal and Fellows of Hertford College, Oxford, directing them to examine, with a view to ad- mitting to a fellowship, Mr. Tillyard, who had been refused on the ground that he is a Nonconformist. The judges gave their judgments (which were written) on somewhat different grounds, Mr..Tustice Mellor being of opinion, apparently, that it is not allowable now to found a Church of England endowment; and Mr. Justice Lush basing his judgment rather on the particular terms of the Hertford College Act and Statutes. But they both arrived at a result adverse to the restriction sought to be set up. The proceedings in connection with the Caxton celebration on Saturday, June 30, commenced with the opening, by Mr. Glad- stone, at South Kensington, of a loan collection illustrative of the origin and development of tlie art of printing. A dedicatory prayer was offered bv the Archbishop of York and Sir Charles Reed, chairman of the Executive Committee, gave a brief history of the exhibition. A dejeuner, presided over by Mr. Gladstone, subsequently took place in the conservatory of the Royal Horticultural Society, and was attended, among others, by the Emperor of Brazil. The memory of William Caxton was proposed by the Chairman, who remarked on the fact that the father of English printing persevered in his business at West- minster at a time when the Church was disposed to regard with jealousy the spread of knowledge. At the annual banquet of the National Union of Conservative Associations at Portsmouth on Saturday, June 30, the Solicitor- General, in responding for her Majesty's Ministers, remarked that at no time in the history of the world had such momentous issues been hanging upon the discretion, the wisdom, and the disinterestedness of those who had charge of tliedestinies of this country. The Government recognized, he believed, as one of the leading principles of their foreign policy that they would do right and observe justice, remembering also that there was such a tiling as truth when they were dealing with other nations and it was the distinguishing feature of English diplomacy above all other diplomacies that English ministers, when they spoke or wrote, were known to mean what they said. The policy of the all other diplomacies that English ministers, when they spoke or wrote, were known to mean what they said. The policy of the Government was one by which peace and happiness, truth and justice, religion and piety, might be established amongst us for all generations. Ex-President Grant was on Thursday, June 28, entertained at a banquet by the Mayor of Liverpool, in the Town Hall. In responding to the toast of his health, General Grant said that the reception which he had met with in England had far exceeded in cordiality anything he had expected. Alluding to a remark made in the course of the evening with respect to the English army, the general observed that he had seen more soldiers at Aldershot than there were altogether in the United States; but that country depended upon its volunteers, of whom General Fairchild and himself were samples.—While at Windsor castle on Tuesday, General Grant received the follow- ing telegram from Governor Hartranft, of Pennsylvania, the commander of the grand army of the republic, an association numbering a million of men, and composed exclusively of those who fought in the national armies during the war of the rebellion "Your comrades in national encampment assembled in Providence, Rhode Island, send heartiest greeting to their old commander, and desire through England Queen to thank England for Grant's reception." At Wolverhampton on Friday, June 29, a plasterer named Henry Rogers murdered his wife in a most deliberate manner. Between four and five o'clock in the morning Rogers presented himself at the police station, stating that he had cut his wife's head off, and that her dead body was lying beside a hayrick, near the Whitmore Reans, where they had passed the night. The man's blood-stained hands and clothes corroborated his confession, and at the spot indicated the police found the body of the woman. Her head was nearly severed, and she was be- sitles fearfully gashed on the head. face, and hands, showing that she had struggled for her life. Wrapped in an apron, and peacefully slumbering, close by lay their female infant child. Hogers is twenty-seven vears of age, and deceased was a few years hisjunior. They have lived very unhappily, and roag about the country, sometimes being separated for weeks together. It is known that the prisoner was jealous of his wife.
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The old medicine still remains in name and quality and go forth to bene- fit humanity, so if anyone is troublml with INDIGES- TION, and its long train of diseases, use JONES' TRR.UAnoc PILI.S, To be had of all chemists, or per post from the pro- prietor, Cambrian Pill Depot, Tremadoc, North Wales. H stamps for the Is. lkl. lkox, 33 for 2s. (xl., 6tJ for 4s. 6d. The l'U5 will sent per return of post. I EDUCATION. -V'- Y THE ACADEMY, T O W Y N s NORTH WALES. ) PRINCIPAL MR. EDWIN JONES, M.R.C.P. Assisted 7 BY QUALIFIED [CLASSICAL, MATHEMATICAL, AND FOREIGN RESIDENT MASTERS. ) THIS School affords the most thorough training F -L in English, Mathematics, Classics, French, German, Music, Science, Drawing, &e., together with constant supervision, and every home comfort. SCIENCE and ART CLASSES are held (in connection with the SCIENCE and ART DEPARTMENT, S. Kensington,) in CHEMISTRY—fully illustrated by experiments—ACOUSTICS, LIGHT, and HEAT LINEAL and GEOMETRICAL DRAWING. Pupils are prepared for Examinations connected with the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge, London, &c., Aberystwyth and the Denominational Colleges, the Army, the Law and Medical Preliminaries, the Pharmaceutical Society, Civil Service, Banking, and all Commercial pursuits. The premises are new and very extensive, most healthily situated, and perfectly adapted for the accommodation and tuition of Boarders. There are a few Vacancies to fill at the Re-opening on the 22nd of January. FOR TERMS, &C., APPLY TO THE PRINCIPAL. LLWYNNONN GRAMMAR SCHOOL, PORTMADOC. Conducted by Mr. J. H. Lewis, London University (First B.A.), (Late Assistant Tutor at Bangor Training College.) CANDIDATES prepared for the Universities, for Professional and Commercial Pursuits, and for the various Training Colleges. Terms and prospectuses on application. Young men whose Education has been neglected will find special ad- vantages. School re-opened, Jan. 15th, 1877. THE HALL GRAMMAR SCHOOL, ABERYSTWYTH. MR. T. HUGHES, of the University College of Wales (Reading for Degrees), receives pupils at the Hall Grammar School, Aberystwyth. Subjects taught:—English, Classics, Mathematics, Phonography, Book-keeping, and Drawing, in which 16 pupils took prizes. The school is examined carefully every half- year on the above subjects. The discipline is strict but kind. The next term commences on Wednesday, the 1st of August, 1877. rl errns moderate. Application to be addressed as above. 23, MARINE TERRACE, ABERYSTWYTH. MISS JONES (late of Boulevard House) begs to IVi- state that the next Term will BEGIN on Tuesday, May 1st. Terms on application. ABERYSTWYTH GRAMMAR SCHOOL FOUNDED IN 1812. HEAD MASTER Mr. EDWARD JONES, First B.A. (and in honors of the University of London.) SECOND MASTER Mr. A. HUNTER, M.A. (Gold Medallist and Scholar.) This school is examined yearly by gentlemen not con- nected with the masters, among whom may be mentioned the Rev. Dr. Charles, D.D., the Rev. Professor Grimley, the Rev. Professor Lewi and the Rev. James Cornford, M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge. During the last year several pupils of this school were successful in examinations for the Banks and the Law and Apothecaries' Hall preliminary examinations. One, who was five years pupil at this school, took a scholarship of £80 a year at Oxford, and another one of £50 at Cambridge. Also two who entered the University of Oxford direct from this school took their M.A. degree, and one matricu- lated in London University (first division) in January last. The Head Master receives a few Boarders. Inclusive terms, jE40 per annum. LADIES' COLLEGIATE SCHOOL -LJ BELSIZE HOUSE, ABERYSTWYTH. Principal, lrs. E. Marie Jones, (F. C. College, Glasgow, and wife of the Rev. E. P. Jones, M.A.,) assisted by masters and a staff of qualified English and foreign teachers.—Pupils prepared for the Oxford and Cambridge Local Examination, and the Civil Service Examinations. NOTICE OF REMOVAL. Ladies' Collegiate School removed from Queen's-road to Belsize House, 26, Bridge-street. The commodious pre- mises with Croquet Lawn. lately occupied by the Rev. Llewelyn Edwards, M.A., Irwell House School. Next term Commences APRIL 9, 1877. IRWELL HOUSE SCHOOL, ABERYSTWYTH. THE REV. LLEWELYN EDWARDS, B.A., of -L Lincoln College, Oxford, and Graduate in Classical Honours, receives Forty Boarders and a few day pupils, to prepare for Matriculation at the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Aberystwyth, and London, or to fit them for professional and commercial pursuits. Special arrange- ments made with students reading for degrees. b SCHOLARSHIPS.—One of £20 to the best boy who enters the University College of Wales from this School; and one of jSo to the best boy who enters the School at its RE-OPENING ON MONDAY, JANUARY 15TH, 1877. BRIGHTON HOUSE, ABERYSTWYTH. PREPARATORY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG BOYS. LADY-PRINCIPAL—MRS. H. N. GRIMLEY, Assisted by Resident Masters and Governesses. THIS School has been established to supply a want -L which has long been felt in this attractive Watering-place. of a First-Class School for Little Boys, Sons of Residents, of Visitors who make a lengthened stay, and of Parents inland who desire for their Children a good Education at the sea-side. The Education given is preparatory for the higher Schools and for the ordinary pursuits of life. The School year is divided into three Terms, which will usually commence respectively on January 20th, May 1st, and September 20th. Prospectuses may be had on application to Mrs. GRIMLEY, Brighton House, Marine- terrace, Aberystwyth. The Second Term for 1877 ends on July 31st. Boys re- ceived at any time. CAERLEON HOUSE. SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES, ABERYSTWYTH. MISS TRUBSHAW informs her friends and the public that the duties of har School will be RE- SUMED (D.V.) on Wednesday, August 1st, 1877. Pupils prepared for the Oxford and Cambridge local ex- aminations. A resident French Governess. MAENGWYN GRAMMAR SCHOOL, MACHYNLLETH. THIS School is conducted by Mr. J. Owen, certifi J- cated teacher of fifteen years' experience, and late tutor at the < government Training College, Swansea; the course of study comprises the usual branches of a commer- cial, professional, and classical education. The methods of instruction are the most modern and approved, and are based on thoroughly scientific principles. Suitable apartments found for pupils residing a. dis- tance. Terms and prospectuses maybe had on application. School RE-OPENED on Tuesday, August 15. DOLGELLEY GRAMMAR SCHOOL. MASTERS:— REV. S. S. O. MORRIS, M.A., Oxon Classical Ex- hibitioner of Christ's Hospital, London, 1866 Mathe- matical Scholar of Jesus College, Oxford, 1866 First Class Mathematical Moderations, 1868 Third Class Mathematical Finals, 1870 Sixth in Honours, London University Matriculation, January, 1876. G. R. MORRIS, ESQ., London University, 1876. THE nature of the education given at this school JL may be learnt from the fact that during the last four years three pupils have taken open scholarships at Oxford and Cambridge three have passed the London University Matriculation two the preliminary examination of the Pharmaceutical Society one the preliminary of the Faculty of Surgeons, &c., C lasgow several have taken first and second classes in Chemistry, Physics, and Mathe- matics in the examinations held by the Science and Art Department, and several have enterad banks and other branches of business. Pupils prepared to compete for scholarships at Oxford and Cambridge for the London University Matricula- tion, 1st B.A., and 1st B.Sc.; Oxford and Cambridge Locals; Medical and Law Preliminaries; twid a thoroughly sound education given to pupils who wish to enter on a businef'1s life. The Chemical and Physical Laboratories are now fur- nished with every requisite for the highest stages of study in Chemistry and Physics. The next quarter begins (D.V.) on Tuesday, the 7th August, 1877. No boy admitted for that quarter after hat day. THE LL AN DY SSUL. GRAMMAR SCHOOL, CARDIGAN SHlltE. Conducted by the Rev. WILLIAM THOMAS, 1.A. ADDITIONAL nOAIIDERS can be received. -jUk. Locality salubrious. Examination Lists a^d Pro-, spectuses o-a. application. LESSORS ON the PIANOFORTE, HAR- JLJ MONIUM,. aad in SINGING, by W. R. WHEATLEY, Portland! House. Aberystwyth. Terms 'ne Guinea per Quarter. ORDERS FOR PRINTING AND BOO K BIN DIN G RECEIVED BY I J. GIBSON, 3, Queen's-road, Aberystwyth. I RAILWAY NOTICES. CAMBRIAN RAILWAYS. TOURIST ARRANGEMENTS, 1877. FIRST, Second, and Third Class Tourist Tickets, -t- available for two months, will be issued from Mav 14th to the 31st October, 1877. For particulars see time tables and programmes issued b.y the Company. HENRY CATTLE, Oswestry, May, 1877. Traffic Manager. CAMBRIAN AND LONDON AND NORTH WESTERN RAILWAYS. SUMMER EXCURSIONS, 1877. EVERY SATURDAY in JULY, cheap excursion J'J bookings from the undermentioned Stations to LIVER- POOL (via Whitchurch and Crewe) and CHESTER (via Whit- church and Tattenhall Line), returning the Monday following Liverpool (Lime- Chester a.m. street) 3rd class. 3rd class. Pwllheli dep. 6 20) Criccieth 6 40 f 9s. Portmadoc 6 53") Penrhyndeudraeth. 7 4 1 Harlech 7 18 f 88. Dyffryn „ 7 33 j Barmouth „ 7 46) Dolgelley. 7 20 Penmaenpool 7 25 6s. 6<1. 60s. Od. Towyn „ 8 16 f Abenlovey 8 24) Arrangements for Return.—Holders of Tickets return on the Monday following from Liverpool (Lime-street Station), at 12 noon, and Chester at 1.10 p.m. EVERY SATURDAY in JULY, cheap excursion JLj Bookings from the undermentioned Stations to LIVER- POOL (Via Whitchurch and Crewe) and CHESTER (Via Whit- church and Tattenhall Line). Returning on Monday following. Fares for the Double Journey. Liverp'l (Lime St.) Chester. 3rd class. 3rd class. FROM a.m.. s. d. s. d. Aberystwyth dep. 8 0Ni Bow Street 8 12 Llanfiliangel 8 17 Borth „ 8 24 l- 8 0 6 6 Ynyslas 8 30 Glandovey 8 49 Machynlleth 8 0) Cemmes Road. 8 12 7 6 6 0 Llanbrynmair 8 26 "J Carno „ 8 46 „ „ Caersws „ 9 2 f 7 0 5 6 Llanidloes 9 50; Newtown „ 9 21 > „ „ Montgomery ,,9 41f Arrangements for Return.—Passengers return on Monday following, from Liverpool (Lime-street Station) at 12 noon, and Chester 1'10 p.m. EVERY SATURDAY and MONDAY in JULY, fJ Cheap Saturday to Monday, and Day Excursion Bookings on Monday to LIVERPOOL (Via Whitchurch and Crewe) and CHESTER (Via Whitchurch and Tattenhall Line). Fares for the Double Journey. (Liverpool,Lime Chester. St.) 3rd class. 3rd class. — t o X- jio 0 5- O c £ *W Lm S e £ -23 O ° -c S hod From a.m. Welshpool dep. 6 40"\ Buttington 6 471 Four Crosses 7 1 Llanfyllin 6 25 Llanfechain 6 49 —— 5s. 6d. —— 4s. 3d Llansaintffraid 6 45 Llanymynech 7 8 Llynclys „ 7 16) Oswestry 7 35) Whittington 7 39 Ellesmere „ 7 53 „„ „, n, „ „, „ „, Welshampton „ 8 0 13s" 5s" 2s-3d- 3s- 3d- Bettistield 2 4 Fenn's Bank 8 12) NOTE.-Arranements for Return. Holders of Day Tickets must return on Monday evening from Liverpool (Lime-street) at 7'0 p.m. Chester, at 8"30 p.m." Holders of Three Days' Tickets must return on the Monday following from Liverpool (Lime- street) at 12 noon, and Chester at l'lO p.m.' CAMBRIA N H A I L W A Y S SEA SIDE EXCURSIONS. O^N MONDA\ JHIV 9th, Cheap Dav Excursion Bookings to TOWYN, ABERDOVEY, BORTH, and ABERYSTWYTH, at the following, times and fares:— To To To To FROM Towyn. d^ Borth. a.m. Pwllheli dep. 6 20 s. d. s. d. s. d. s. d. Avon Wen <5 3u Criccieth 6 iO Portmadoc. 0 3 0 3 G 4 0 Minffordd 7 0 I Penrhyndeudraeth 7 4| Talsarnau 7 9^ Harlech 7 18) Pensarn 7 25 Dyffryn „ 7 33 )-2 3 2 6 3 0 3 C Dolgelley 7 26 Penmaenpool ï 25) Barmouth 7 46, Arthog. „ 7 40 3 0 3 6 Bannunth Junctiun.. 7 5'2) 1,1 wvnjrwril « 2 ) Towyn „ 8 16) 2 3 2 9 Borth an-. 9 13 Aberystwyth 9 40 Returning from Aberystwyth at 6 0 p.m., Borth at 6 22 p.m., Aberdovey at 7 4 p.m., and Towyn at 7 12 p.m. CHEAP Day Excursion Bookings on MONDAY, \J July 9th, 1877, to BORTH, ABERYSTWYTH, ABERDOVEY, TOWYN, and BARMOUTH, at the following times and fares :— FROM A M. 3rd class. Oswestry dep 6 15 Llynclys 6 24 | Llanymynech 6 29 0, Four Crosses (i 33 j b Pool Quay e 42 Buttington 6 47 Welshpool „ 7 1 I „ Forden „ 7 11 3s 0(1 Montgomery. 7 16 ) AbernlUle 7 26 Kerry „ 6 50 ) Newtown 7 41; Llanidloes ï 20 V 2s 9d Dolwen 7 25 Llandinam 7 32 Moat Lane 8 0 Caersws S 5) Pontdolgoch 8 20 2s Cd Carno 8 53 j Llanbrynmair ,,95) o r ] Cemmes Road 9 27 > Machynlleth—Dep. for ) _A Borth & Aberystwyth) 9 o0 ls 6(1 Dep. for Aberdovey,&c.. 9 55 Borth arr 10 15 Dep. for Aberdovey,&c.. 9 55 Borth arr 10 15 Aberystwyth 10 45 Aberdovey 10 30 Towyn 10 40 Barmouth ,,11 0 The Return Trains leave Barmouth at 5 28 p.m. Aberystwyth .at 6 20 p.m. 3 Berth 6 40 Aberdovey 6 13 KiiT Passengers from Barmouth, Towyn, and Aberdovey, on the return, travel by the Ordinary Train to Machynlleth, where they must change into the Excursion Tmin. EVERY SATURDAY in JULY to ABERGELE. -LJ DENBIGH, ST. ASAPH, RHYL, and HOLY- WELL, returning on the following Monday. Fares for the Double Journey. From a.m. 3rd class. 1st class. Oswestry dep. 10 50 4s 8s. Returning on the Monday following, from Abergele 3 0 p.m. Rhyl 3 15 „ Holywell 3 50 it-fr Passengers to and from Denbigh and St. Asaph travel oy ordinary Trains on the Branch Line. Tickets and small bills may be obtained from the Booking office. CHEAP TICKETS TO ELLESMERE. ON and after Saturday, Juno 23rd, and during-the Summer Months, Cheap Day Return Tickets will be issued from the ullllermentioned StatioHs to ELLESMERE by the Ordinary Trains on Week Days, to parties of not less than Six First Class or Ten Third Class Passengers, at the following fares :— Welshpool ) First Class. Third Class. Llanfyllin f 5s. 2s. &1. Llanymynech >_ Llynclys ) 3s. ls. M, Oswestry )_ Whitchurch t" 2s. Is. Children under twelve half-price. First Class Tickets issued at double the Third Class fares. Tickets not transferable. Luggage under 601bs. free at passen- gers' own risk. No luage allowed by the day excnrsio.n- The Companies cannot many 'WlY be responsihle fol." detention on the line; at the same time 4very exertion will be made to ensure punctuality. Tickets and hills, and every information, to be kall at the above named stations. HEX iY CATTLE, Traffic Manager. Oswestry, July, 1877 THE BLUE BOOKS. FOR TOURISTS IN NORTH AND MID WALES. Just Published:—Popular Edition, Is. 6,1., with small maps; Half-crown Edition, witA.small maps, Routes,and PANORAMA of SNOWDON, 2s. (ill. and Crown Editi.M., with 12 maps, Panorama, and additional chanters (supcri1' per), 5s.. th& GOlPIXG G U I D E TO W ALES, \JT ASKEW ROUKRTS,. "We have not seea. a book about Wales, more useful than this gay aiU clever j^uitlft"—P-ublie Opinion. FaU of il1tere.tillg an.1 intelllent g.l,6Sip.Spect.-¡tor. By far the most amusing guide we "have seen.St'iuiard. Not only amytang, but instructive.Era. "-Remarkably accurate."—Figaro. This admiim,ble g-uide book Certainly one if the most accurate aI)lI¡;.>lllplète text books far ourists Ùl. Vrincipality we have eve*-seen."—Manchester .Sjc-aminer. Suppliewall thjllslIeedful ttvijsfcranger."— Li*i-pool Courier. Chatty amusing as well as useful."—.Tj-ji&trr Hour. As a whole,, beyond comjwisoa the best tourists' handbook to Wales yet published."—CUnter Chronicle. J land- Stox>ni*'</> VernMex t SHIPPING. "v' ALLAN line SHORTEST OCEAN PASSAGE TO M E R I C A COMPOSED OF TWENTY FIKST-CLASS ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS. SAILING DAYS — from LIVERPOOL, every TUESDAY and THlRSDA Y to CANADA, and every ALTERNATE TUESDAY to HALIFAX and BALTI- MORE, forwarding Passengers on easy terms to all parts of CANADA and the UNITED STATES. Surgeon and Stewardesses provided free for all classes of Passengers. Passengers who secure their Tickets before having home are met at the Railway Str.ti,.u i.. Li.vrpool bv an appointed Agent of the Company, who takes dlarge of them until they go on board the Steamer, i „ The Canadian Government grants ASSISTED PASbAGtS by the" ALLAX" LINE. For Rates of Ireight or Passage, apply to ALLAN BROTHERS and Co., Alexandra Buildings, James Street, Liverpool; Or to the Agents— EVAN JONES, Builder, Bala. I. T. PARRY, The Bazaar, Cross-street, Oswestry. r' WHITE STAR"' LINE. NOTICE.—The steamers of this X JJT- line take the Lane Routes recommend- ed by Lieutenant Maury, on both the Outward and Home- ward passages. UNITED STATES MAIL STEAMERS. 5,000 tons burthen. 3.000 horse-power. Sailing from LIVERPOOL for NEW YORK every THURSDAY. From QUEENSTOWN (CORK) every FRIDAY. Forwarding Passengers to all parts of the rnited States and Canada. RETURNING FROM NEW YORK EVERY SATURDAY. The well-known Fast Mail Steamers of this Line sail as under:— FROM LIVERPOOL: GERMANIC .July 191 BRITANNIC Aug. 9 ADRIATIC Aug. 2 FROM NEW YORK. GERMANIC June 30 ADRIATIC July 14 These new and splendid Vessels reduce the passage to the shortest possible time, and afford to Passengers the highest degree of comfort hitherto attainable at a. Average passage 8 days in Summer, 9- days in Winter. Each Vessel is constructed in seven water-tight compart- ments. The Saloon, Ladies' Boudoir, State Rooms, and Smok- ing Rooms are amidships, and are luxuriously furnished and fitted with all modem conveniences pianos, libraries, electric bells, bath-rooms, barber's shop, &c. Saloon Passage, 15, 18, and 21 guineas Return Tickets at reduced rates. The Steerage accommodation is of the very highest charac- ter, the rooms are unusually spacious, well lighted, ventil-ated, and warmed, and passengers of this class u-ill find theiroom- fort carefully studied. An unlimited supply of Cooked Provisions. Medical comforts free of charge. Stewardesses is Steerage to attend the Women, and Children. Steerage fare at Reduced Plates. Drafts issued on New York free of charge. For Freight or Passage apply to ISMAY, IMRIE AND 10, Water-street. Liverpool, And 37, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Or to the Agent— J. D. HUGHES, 7, William-street, Aberystwyth. T R A X SAT L A K- TIC LINE. NEW YORK. SHORTEST, CHEAPEST ANj) SAFEST ROUTE Average Passage i days. The General Transatlantic Co.'s Mail 3,000 horse-power, classed 100 A 1 in English. Lloyds, LEAVE PLYMOUTH FOR NEW YORK HVERY SATURDAY. Fares from any railway station to York, Boston., or Philadelphia. Cabin. 14 to 21 guineas. IntèrmeL1iate. £ 8 8 0 STEERAGE Bedding and all necessaries found. Apply to LUSCOMBE, BELLAMY, iz Co., Plymouth. Agents wanted in all unre; .resented districts. E:T_iLl;í-i1I) 1SS0. T J-I E CELEBRATED CAMBRIAN MEDICINE. TONES' (TREMADOC) APERIENT and ANTI- 0 BILIOUS PILLS. A Preventative and Cure for all Disorders resulting from a disordered state of the Stomach and Liver, and Impurity of the blood, &c. Patronised by the Faculty-, Nobility, Clergy, and Public at large. The practical trial of the above Professor for Half a Century, with the more general test of Thirty-seven Years by the afflicted public, has now established the reputation of these Pills. Containing no Mercury, but composed of the most rare and expensive Vegetable preparations of the British Pharmacopoeia, combined with a valuable Snow- donian Herb, forming a mild, laxative, tonic remedy, admitted by those who have tried them to be superiorto all other similar preparations. Those who suffer from habitual Costiveness will find them particularly useful as a safe, mild, tonic Aperient, and should always keep them by. CAUTION.—See that the Genuine Pills are in a turned Wood_ Box, wrapped up in Green Paper, sealed with the Proprietor's Seal, and bearing the signature of ROBERT ISSAC JONES on the Government Stamp. Sold by all the Wholesale Houses, and at the Cambrian Pill Depot, Tremadoc, North W ales. Retailed by. all re- spectable Medicine Yendors in every town in the United Kingdom, in boxes at Is. lid., 2s. (id., and 4s. 6d. each. Great saving in procuring either of the large boxes. *$3 Should anyone fail to obtain the Pills in his own neighbourhood, if 14 postage stamps for the Is. lid. box, 33 for 2s. Cd. or 60 for the 4s. 6d.. be posted to the Cambrian Pill Depot, Tremadoc, North Wales, the Pills will be sent by return of Post. free. TO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. 'VTOW discharging a PRIME Cargo of PITCH PINE the logs are fresh, clean, and sound. SELECTED CURLY LOGS FOR PANELS, &c., APRIL, 1876. Our Brig "Martha" has arrived with a very good Cargo of Red Pine Deals, Battens, Red and White Floor 1: MAY, 1876. The above cargoes, added to our former stock of PITCH PIXE, RED PINE, YELLOW PINE. OAK. ELM BIRCH, MAHOGANY, RED AND WHITE FLOOR BOARDS, will be found an excellent Lot from which to make selection. Windows, Doors, all sorts of Mouldings, Angle Beads, &c., manufactured on the Premises. JONES AND GRIFFITHS, ABERDOVEY, YNYSLAS, AND MAOHTNLLETH. SST Orders te be sent to Aberdovey.. Saw Mills at Y nyslas. We are now yarding a cargo of RED and WHITE Prepared FLOOR BOARDS. July, 1870. JOHN BAKER, Rhydypenau Farm, Bow Street. BY tlie request of numerous friends has been in- duced to take a VALUER'S LICENCE, and he will be happy to attend to the commands of gentlemen leaving their farms or requiring a Valor's services con- nected v.ith land or stock. J. REES AND SON, WATCH AXD CLOCK MAKHRS, SILVERSMITHS, JEWELLERS, &C., Maengwys Street, Madrynlleth. Old Gitld and SP-rer-Bought. ALAR < > E variety of Fishing Tackle, Rods, Baskets, &c. Local Flis supplied and dressed to any pattern.—A Choice Sto-fk of Single and Double- barrelled Breach And Muzzle-loadiag Guns. Old Guns. Bonght or Exchaed. EVAN "REES, AUCTIONEER AND APPRAISER Sales of description arraiiged and conducted. VALUATIONS MADE. The marked supesiorifv o'. 'h^L&uiidry BHie o^er aU landed by the usual result, jz a f100d of imitations 1 he ió.)" n merit of ths latter mainly con- fxi g sists in the ingenuity exerted, 53 not simjjy in imitating tbe eS E i|i B™ square :.h i'v- lmt making the 58 Bl Klj general appearance of the wriip- SUE Vvn pers resemble that of tbe genuine rN SQUARES. %rti- ie. the Manufacturers be™ therefore to caution a!! I buyers to see 4 Ueckitl s Par's on each packet. BEWABt OF WORTHLESS 1 IMITATIONS,
ST. DAVID'S COLLEGE JUBILEE…
yflfe., Say to the candidates from the English Univer- ( a* I can only say that I wish there were more of |l that the College was twice as large, so that we (j be obliged to go to the English Theological in (heers)Colleges which had done real good VrA r 'lay- but which, I am inclined to think, have eneficial to the Principality. That satisfactory it)) JD of things is owing to the good work which has "W rried on in the College for the last half 11 rV I will not anticipate what will be the sub- jl Vij. pother toast. My present object is to j^L* Principal, who has borne the labour 2 the day, and the Tutors and Professors f »e- As they are at present—(cheers)—and ) 't'rin to say a few words about my dear old friend j ^y. 01Pal. (Applause.) I have known him, not for jj 'tL ^ut for about a third of a century, and during 7 | 1 have met with uninterrupted kindness at his f 'jj* fact, I am sure there is no one present who will < of the Dean as a warm-hearted, kind-hearted pi WL°ud applause.) During the last fifty years— il to. k, rertiember, ladies and gentlemen, that it is fifty i ^ii»iCailSe it is a remarkable fact—he has been the !< C, this College. (Applause.) Fifty years ago to we were told, camii down to this wilder- nt in the seeds of education Those two j| are now on my left and right, ihe Bishop of i °-g one side and the Dean on the other. (Ap- ia^v, I do not know whether so remarkable 'Ffc R ttiat bas happened in the history of any other 'iJfto'at its first principal and first vice-principal are ISm S-C*e by side at the same table fifty years after ti dation of the college. (Cheers.) You will exouse me i £ tl,e Sa little. I must go back to the Dean. I have j. ^win during the last_ half century has filled 4? hfo P°rtant post in this diocese. He lias been for j){*^i3the head of this great educational institution. sTVk', He has been for thirty-seven years the head of church of this diocese. (Cheers.) He has tilt¡e hrtY-four years vicar of this parish and during 1 hi as done hardly what any other vicar has—re- iCttiiJrCYUircli t'.viec, (Laughter and cheers.) The very < b stands there now as a meiporial to him. He TV domestic chaplain to three Bishops of this is tlie chairman of the Lampeter School active county magistrate, and I add, a very good farmer. (Laughter and ap- Jn'ly say to him in words with which he is ifVjov?~~9uum tot sustineas et tanta negotia solus; l%tota11 the Dean is a kind-hearted, Christian man, O0w *s to love. (Applause.) Let me add that Coiripletely supported in the present staff of (Cheers.) Unless a very great change has (JStf6 *n the universities, in one of which I was g^il °r a quarter of a century I do not think any of r colleges to Lampeter, with an equal number of tlfre are at St. David's College, had so efficient a ,ere here at the present time. (Applause.) I med of taking up so much time, but I ven- yjon i,e one more remark. I think it is a very great Colt t we should have here the earliest workmen other former workmen in it, pupils who 3S, jj, it. Bishops, Archdeacons, and distinguished the Bishop of Llandaff said, clergy from this pstw^joi^i^S diocese, leading laity who take an e- e work of this place, young men who have lllg educated here, now assembled in this tent bill I will not say the fiftieth anniversary of the .Jldu tthe fiftieth year of the College, and I think m!? taI1,a1Very great pity if there were not some visi- » Vofijpble result of your meeting left to promote thj e College. (Applause.) I do not attempt to tv^ti1111 it shall take, but I throw it out for.your We were compelled to-day, and under any of should be compelled, to worship, not in the H ^ea e ^Heye, but in the beautiful parish church in ,hfqbl gernble(I but it had this disadvantage, that it is jk"fjll6(> e that some of you now present have not seen •, c"apel. I only wish you will all go to see it. Jly a N'o doubt it is dear to a great many of you, ion the place in which you received early spiritual ui' nevertheless it cannot be denied not only that tl 4 Soir^ 01 tby of a great institution, but also it must ?v°y0n e,vybat damping and depressing effect upon If 'V1'- feelings of those who worship in it. (Hear, uf .-f°re, you ask me what would be the most reS4-Sllltable, and useful memorial I should say, as j.0r,atjon of the chapel, but the re-habilitation ta^ich ° ir'g it into agreement with present feel- >o. /rV^re somewhat different to those held fifty lll^k i; beers.) Others may suggest different things. u2^d8..tl»at something may be done. I think it p^iderei!lrab]e that some committee should be formed the best best means of providing a memorial of a, ilee. (Cheers.) And now, Mr. Dean, my of 4.ireutlenien, I will conclude by proposing the V^'8 fVii Principal, the tutors, and professors of St. ,jv ge- (Applause.) CTI'AT., IN responding, said the heartiness with iwi6tiesaiue ,lla(l been received made amends for all Wr l)asseci through during the fifty years Ji Visci\l.v^ tbe head of that institution. He had Q Wl r1. Uc'es °f various kinds. He, with his col- l^d v, 'lUentlj- been at the top of the waves, as he it'" do\"SOll-S cieseribe a ship crossing the Atlantic, a^11. i'1 an immense valley of water, but they gain on the other side, and there they were v uger than ever. (Cheers.) They were sur- tljgj a galaxy of kind friends, all of whom ex- r.,lute)'est in the College by their presence. e meeting very much for the way they had ir' toast. (Applause.) tjkr8 (jp'lTns. of Llandeilo, then proposed the "Past il 0..the College." He referred to the suggestion ^i0i; by the Bishop of St. David's, and expressed |H 7> ^bat Lampeter should be made the nucleus of !Jthl' cflversity. He believed if all the Welsh Bishops w1"8 of Jr>rc^. dignitaries present, together with their tj'ers ^'liament, landed gentry, municipal bodies (asib!e iptitioned Parliament for further endowments, 5a it « V f ri"uent could refuse the appeal. He °f i a g°0(l thing to establish memorial i^Ieao occasion. (Applause.) t) a past officer of the College, ac- l| ^ctio .c°mpliment, and in doing so dwelt upon tf ^cess with the institution, and his lasting interest V't proposed the toast of the "Past and t- fei^bers," in a brief speech. F' f °f ST. ASAPH (Dr. Hughes) said he felt a l^leo-g gratitude to the Principal and Professors of be did not sufficiently profit by their in- Was his fault and not theirs. He felt with his I-WtBish >p of St. David's, that it would be a j 1 %<> Vet that occasion pass away without some- f 'JW to meinorialize it. (Hear, hear.) There uj'Vt-'i'sal impulse being given to the cause of W'1 itiHf-i thought there never was a time when 0f!ti,ms were endeavouring to do so much for | the country as at the present day. The de- Idfi er éducatioll was spreading throughout Eng- i e AV, ((i]^Vas happy to be able to add also throughout bt tadeeer.) The quarrymen of Festiniog, noble f.f" and artizans, had betaken themselves j :° Providing better means of education. There s l?" T}'1 sucb a movement as they had lived to i y- seemed to be a determination to have i t l'e a, IOn for the Principality, and he thought if 1 )lJ.iOll WISe they would bear in mind the great truth f.r of N'V,tg strength. In every period of the the Welsh they had suffered from disunion. j fcj at hat had made them what they were as a i a,te present time. They were behind every i Jri t!l,i kingdom. Ireland was far in advance of c f fv. l!'bicational institutions and advantages to it u°m them and if they looked at Scotland, at j be early monopolized the literature of the whole j tnaUse the Scotch had advantages which they i I-o t by. He was thankful, however, that i Q ear)jl) ed the advantages of St. David's College. ■' It fct tL;' As he had always expressed himself, he ( iy tria, Voicing at it with regard to the provision ] '• there and the curriculum of the College, lr'v for ^ai'cely find any similar institution more r Urt/t. T)„ Work which it was intended to carry on a rijja'Co1.(]Vl(i's College. The Yicar of Llandilo had that would reverberate in the hearts of all r ?ers of the College. He (the speaker) thought f.')llbl not remain any longer what it had been °f tl •Vcara' but that they should act upon s t}|(. • e Act of Parliament, which was carried out Ci ^strr.mentality of Mr. Thomas Phillips. He :1 Id' M o I e had come when the scheme, a part of itii been executed by the endowment of St. wben they should fully realize all that ] VoLc'bythat scheme. After mentioning the name I Vtri(;tl A-16 Pevre as a person worthy the gratitude of 1 e(!,tuse he bad been seeing after certain sums •' l,1 to promote higher education in Wales, his 1 t)lri»<W0Pfcd the former students of St. David's College { OS'tit,, a committee of themselves-for the purpose of r ttNio! 00nsideration the best means of utilizing any t ^vbich persons interested in the College would 1 i W to gjve towards a memorial. (Applause). < tKT'UNcir.vL, proposing the Examiners," re- s iudepundent position in the College. The ) Were sent down to the College, from the two vHt, pities, Oxford and Cambridge, and thus !$• U °n was brought into connection with them, i aslced the meeting to bid farewell to Mr. t'la W+r ^erm expired, and welcome Mr. Collett, r the time that year examined the College. > It* r Kl4' ar1V'.T-V!n, M.A., St. John's, Cambridge, re- fV, of III doing so referred to the list of honour- If'v the examiners who had preceded him, be- S^'OvfV'he Pev. E. Michael, B.D., of Lincoln t) 0t(^> praelector of logic and public orator and 'Raines of the Rev. W. II. Humphrey, S r \dsean lecturer and examining chaplain to London, the Rev. John Grote, M.A., pro- a' Philosophy at Cambridge, and others. He „ eferred to the hurtful as well as the beneficial ■1| It! v,l:nation.s. then proposed the toast of the Visitors, t» ••TrJv. r- £ ,sPonded to in an eloquent speech by Mr. "\rl Axs- Jj1! tbe toast. "Prosperity to St. David's Col- t and heartily received, and the proceed- ed.