Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

18 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

j JOTTINGS BY THE WAY.

Newyddion
Dyfynnu
Rhannu

JOTTINGS BY THE WAY. The sudden change in the weather has de- lightfully surprised all people. It seemed at one time that we were going to have no spring this year; so persistently did the winter cling to us. However, one day, the thermometer suddenly went up, the rain came down, and now all the snow is pretty well cleared off the mountains. The change, although so pleasant, was so sudden that many invalids have been heard to complain of the serious effect it has had upon their health. This is quite natural. A sudden transition from cold to warmth is quite as dangerous as from warmth to cold. There was a long sitting at the police-court on Tuesday, although the cases were of a com- mon place character. If all people found em- ployment as easily as policemen the times would be pretty good. When people find it so hard to pay regular expenses it is wonderfully strange that they risk having to pay a fine at the police-court. There is no beating wisdom into them on this point, however; it all goes in at one ear and out through the other. Some individuals must have their little glass and their little fight even if their families are starv- ing at home. # The times are advancing. From what we hear, some juvenile inhabitants at Mountain Ash have discovered that sausages do not re- quire cooking. After helping themselves to some of these commodities from Mr Webster's shop, it is said they devoured them in a raw state. There is a saying to the effect that people are not particular when they are in a hurry, and it seems to be a true one. We trust that they did not liei v«ry heavy upon the chests of those youngsters. The birch-rod, no doubt, took all the effeots away. The presentation of a saddle and accoutre- ments to Major Phillips took place at a very in- teresting meeting on Thursday last week, and was followed by a well-attended dinner at the Armoury. The toasts were given and respond- ed to in good style, and there was some enjoy- able singing. The volunteer movement seems to be thriving in our midst, despite the half- alive state of other things. • • It is said that the cumulative vote system ,rather puzzled some of the candidates at the school board election. It is, in short, with a slight difference, another word for the plumping which takes place when at a poli- tical election a party is trying to secure one out of two seats. Supposing it were the Conserva- tives who were running this one candidate against two Liberals although voters would have two votes by virtue of there being two members, those who wished to support the Con- servative would not be allowed to put their two votes opposite his name. So they would merely give him one, and leave their other vote go. It is just the same in a school board election with the difference that you can give as many votes to one candidate as there are seats upon the board. This is what we call "school board plumping," and it is the reason why there is so often such a wide difference between the num- ber of votes accorded to successful candidates. Talking about elections-and we have had enough of talk about them the last few days- it is rumoured that there is to be another poll for members of the sliding scale committee; it being alleged that some of the collieries voted twice, and therefore recorded a double number of votes. If this be true, Mr David Morgan may yet secure a seat. • The removal by death, of two familiar figures from our midst has taken place since the begin- ning of the year. On the seventeenth of January, the Rev. John Evans, M.A., at one time the minister of St. David's Prebyterian Church in this town breathed his last; while on Wednesday last the Rev. Henry Griffiths, whose voice was so well known as pleading so eloquently for the sending forth of the Gospel among the heathen was quietly buried in the cemetery at Brecon. Mr Evans, whosefhealth had long been in a weak state, went to Australia in the hope that he would benefit by the change. But this was not to be, and a hard-working and Christian life has come to an end. • • The attempt which it is proposed to make to prohibit the employment of womem on the surface at collieries should be resisted to the utmost. Many hundreds of young girls who at present contribute no small amount towards theksupport of their families, or, in many cases, wholly" keep" themselves, would then be thrown out of employment. We are sorry for the circumstances which make it necessary for women to do work of that kind; but such cir- cumstances exist, and it would be cruel and unjust to deprive these young girls of, perhape, the means whereby they can earn their liveli- hood. hood. • • A committee of selection" met at the House of Commons last Tuesday, and decided that the Mountain Ash Gas and Water Bill should be considered by another committee which sits for the first time on Tuesday after- noon next. Now, what on earth is a committee of selection, and what are its powers! We presume, from its decision that it is for deciding when certain bills shall come on, and who shall hear them. There are so many committees and other formalities and delays that we are quite bewildered as to the meaning of them all. Then, after this important committee came to its importanttdecision the bill is delayed another week f Oh, forthe dajrs of local government! A writer in a recent number of Chambers's Journal says, with regard to choosing eatables, that in a case where the freshness of an egg is in doubt, a certain test is the following,— Dissolve one ounce of salt in ten ounces'of water and drop,the egg in. A good egg will sink, an indifferent one swim, and a bad one will float, even if the water be perfectly pure." In case, again, it is suspected that there is too much water in the milk, we have only to do as the Germans do, and lo and behold, we can at once buttonhole our milkman For the same water tells us that a German test for watered milk consists in dipping a well-polished knitt- ing-needle into a deep vessel of milk, and then immediately withdrawing it in an upright position. If the milk is pure a drop of the uid will hang to the needle; but the addition of even a small portion of water will prevent the adherence of the drop." • -A A good deal has been said from time to time with regard to the injuriousness or otherwise of tea-drinking. A correspondent in Tit Bit8 says that to ninety-nine out of every hundred per- sons tea-drinking is not harmful, and gives as one of the rules for making wholesome tea. Be careful not to brew your tea too long." CasselVs Almanack observes that the Scotch do not say to make tea," but to infuse the tea," which is more correct. By boiling the tea- leaves, you get from them a bitter principle, and you drive off the delicate perfume of the tea. For this reason the tea-pot should never be kept hot by letting it stand on the top of a cooking-stove, over a lamp, or where it is likely to be made to boil. A metal teapot is better than an earthenware one, and the brighter it is kept the better is the tea."

gistet

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VALE OF NEATH RAILWAY. -

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TO CORRESPONDENTS.

THE IRISH QUESTION.

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ABERDARE : SCHOOL BOARD ELECTION.

ELECTION OF THE SLIDING SCALE…

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ABERDARE POLICE COURT.

PRESENTATION TO MAJOR PHILLIPS.

I NOTES FROM THE TOWN.

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