Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

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IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT.<

HOUSE OF COMMONS.—MONDAY.

.-TAKE BACK THY ORDER.

. THE DANO-GERMAN WAR.

ARRIVAL OF GARIBALDI AT CAPRERA.

------------MODERN MIRACLES.

[No title]

ITHE MAKING OF MALT DUTY-FREE.

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-I SUM MAR Y.i

Newyddion
Dyfynnu
Rhannu

SUM MAR Y. THE Conference, just when it had completely worn out the patience of gods and men, has agreed to an armistice (we beg Lord Russell's pardon—a suspension of arms) to continue for a month dating from Thursday. The Danes consent, reluctantly, to raise the blockade of the Baltic ports, but not to purchase the evacuation of Jutland by the sur- render of Alsen. One step tlieiti, trt last^ the Pleni- potentiaries have made, but that so short and simple a step that there can be no reason why it should not have been taken a fortnight ago. The 11 21 pace at which what they call their proceedings have hitherto moved, and the constant references for further instructions, do not encourage sanguine hopes of the success which will attend them when they approach the real difficulties Of the question. These delays, and the behaviour of the Prus- sians in Jutland, who under the name of levying contributions are plundering the country and deporting those officials who refuse to serve as instruments of extortion, have blown almost into a flame the feelings of impatience and indignation in this country. Two recent passages in the House of Commons have marked very plainly the rise of the thermometer in that assembly—one, a short speech of Lord R. Cecil's—the other, the hearty applause which followed the announcement that the Austrian squadron had been esgaged and worsted by a Danish force, apparently somewhat inferior to it, near to Heligoland. We have been told so much of the abolition of imprisonment for debt that it is a novelty to hear of the many thousands who, according to the Lord Chancellor, are thus imprisoned every year by the County Courts. The judges of these Courts have in this respect powers loosely defined, which they think themselves bound to exercise freely, and which he now proposes not indeed to take away but to restrict. On behalf of the debtor his ap- peals to our sympathy do not move us very keenly; it is hard enough to make careless and dishonest people pay their debts and resist temptation to incur debts they cannot pay, even by the terrors of a gaol. But if the debtor's case is not a very t) strong one, neither is the creditor's. How far the practice of giving credit should be encouraged or assisted by the arm of the law, is a Dice question of political economy, on which the creditor has less to say for himself than may at first sight be supposed. M. Thiers has favoured the Corps Legislatif with an oration on the French Budget, setting forth its rise under the Imperial regime to ninety- two millions sterling, as compared with the sixty millions that sufficed in the time of the Republic and the Citizen King. He entirely repudiates, Z!l however, any idea of 'disarmament.' An army of 400,000 soldiers he considers barely sufficient for a peace establishment. Another considerable success on the part of the Confederates is reported this week. They have taken Plymouth in North Carolina, with many guns and 2,500 men. And the victory over Banks is confirmed.

CAHfitARTHEN.

HAVERFORDWEST CHORAL CLASS.

HAVERFORDWEST TOWN COUNCIL.