Papurau Newydd Cymru
Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru
6 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
HAVERFORDWEST POSTAL REGULATIONS.
HAVERFORDWEST POSTAL REGULATIONS. Postmaster—Mu BRYANT EVKKIS. UP MAIL TO LONDON. Box Closes I Late letters with addi- Departure 3.50 p.m« I tionalstamp, 4.30. | Mail 4.50 p.m. UP MAtT. TO THE NORTH. Box Closes I Late tetters with addi- Departure of 8.39. a.m. tional stamp, 8.40. Mail 8.50 a.m. DOWN MAIL TO PEMBROKE, PEMBROKE-DOCK, MILFORD 4.ND IRELAND. lIox Closes I Late letters with add i-I Departure of 7.59 a.m. tional stamp, 8 a.m. ) Mail 8.5 a.m. 811COND DOWN MAIL TO PEMBROICE, &C., &C., AND IRELAND. Box Closes I Late letters with addi- I Departure of 1.20 p.m. I tional stamp, 1.30. Mail 1. 35, p.m London Down Mail arrives 8.10 a.m. Letters delivered 9.10 a.m. North Down Mail arrives 1.46 p.m. Letters delivered i 6.10 p.m. First Up Mail from Milford, &c., arrives 8.50 a.m. Letters delivered 9.10 a.m. Second UpMailfromMilford, &c, arrives 4.55 p.m. Lettersdelivered. 6.10 p.m.
Advertising
SETT E ES. SOME First-class Setters for sale or for hire, cheap. Apply to Mr Joseph Potter, Pembrokeshire Herald Office, Haverfordwest. PILES AND GRAVEL CURED. PROMPTED by feelings of humanity, the advertiser thinks it his duty to inform the public that he is in ^'session of a most valuable remedy for the Piles—an ftectual cure—as numbers of the town and neighbour- ed of Haverfordwest can testify. He has cured cases ^'welve and fourteen years' standing, both internal and without any return of the complaint. The ertiser has also an effectual cure for the Gravel.- inters addressed to John Jackson, Dredgeman Hill, near ?*verfordwest, Pembrokeshire, South Wales, will be ^'yjuteiided to. PRIZE MEDAL, 1862, AWARDED BY THE JURORS OF CLASS 2, FOR THE GLENFIELD STARCH, YjltllqG A CONFIRMATION BY SOME OF THE MOST EMINENT SCIENTIFIC MEN OF THE AGE, OF THE SOPERIOR QUALITIES OF THIS WORLD RENOWNED STARCH. SOld in Packets at £ d, ld. 2d, 4d, and 8d each, by all respectable Grocers, Chandler?, Oilmen, &c. Wotherspoon & Co, Glasgow & London. o REYNOLDS'S SAJL,UTA.TIO!Sr JEIOTEL, AND POSTING HOUSE. & SPIRITS OF THE BEST QUALITY, LONDON GIN, BRKWED, BOTTLED, AND BITTER ALES, AND PORTER. PRIME CIGARS. QOOD STABLING AND LOCK-UP COACH HOUSES, HORSES AND CARRIAGES FOR HIRE. 81ty ACCOMMODATION FOR FAMILIES AND COMMERCIAL GENTLEMEN. Within three minutes' walk of the Railway Station, HAVERFORDWEST. Abuses to andfrom the Railway Station every Train. AN ORDINARY EVERY SATURDAY. PRIZE MEDAL, AWARDED FOR THE 1! Q¡:LE N FIE LD 'STARCH, the Jurors of Class t. International Exhibition, 1862 THIS UNRIVALLED STARCH IS USED IN THE ROYAL LAUNDRY Pronounced by HE* MAJESTY'S LAUNDRESS to be JlTIIEFINEST STARCH SHE EVER USED. :e It MAJESTY'S LACE DRESSER DECLARES IT TO BE 4 THE BEST SHE HAS TRIED, the above Award by some of the most Eminent Scientific Men of the age, CONFIRMS ITS SUPERIORITY. otherspoon & Co, Glasgow and London.
PEMBROKE BRITISH SCHOOL.
PEMBROKE BRITISH SCHOOL. J'BE object of the above is to supply the children of the J*- forking and middle classes with an unsectarian c^j^ticn at a low price, To enable the committee to their object; Mr Meyrick generously grants the a spacious building in the Green for a school- rent free. 8M Weekly pence being inadequate to pty the master's (co^and meet the current expenses, the committee vNsed of gentlemen of different religious persuasions) iijw^lder the necessitj' of appealing to the friends of n^ioh for their practical sympathy. *«nlmi"ibutions may be sent to Messrs Lock and Hulm, "A" secretary, Rev. B, Williams. founts already subscribed or promised— T. v» £ s. d. ft|»?5yrrel^ Esq. (president) 10 0 8 HOB. Lord Cawdor » 5 0 0 an|h Owen, M.P 5 0 0 Triewent, draper 5 0 0 Ppwell 2 2 0 T'^9hes, Lion Hotel 2 2 0 1^& ^AWkina 2 2 0 W*Treweeks.iv. 1 1 0 J. 'Williams I I 0 Mrf,Bryant,Esq. 0 10 0 ^ei«»0{Fe Jones. 0 10 0 Mr ^.weorge-and-J. Davies 0 10 0 Mj o'Cleaver 0 10 0 Mr^iHing .v. 0 10 ,0 Mp^-Warlow 0 10 0 •nje Thomas, Government Contractor. 0 10 0
Advertising
S°CIE;TY FOR PROMOTING THE INCREASE OF SALMON AT FISHGUARD. PRESIDENT "OHN WORTHINGTON, E'SQ. w COMMITTEE t P JONES, ESQ,. CAPTAIN NICHOLAS N TAYLOR, MU JOHN FURLONG, «J* WILLIAM VAUGHAN, MR JOHN WILLIAMS. 'W. H. JENKINS,. <3APT. WM. GEORGE. ?NTYPHILUP 4.' ^.Wwaun having, of late years near its confluence 8%lo» sea» dlvidied itself into a number of small ,ML streams, so as to render it impossible for Salmon Mq6ni'lP the river; the above Society is desirous of of an<l deepening its main bed for the distance of rii bl'yards above the' Bridge, so that all the water S^cesii»n down one channel. The Committee consider it ^8on yt.for tbe reason 'that in ordinary Spawning ^ere is not more than two'inches of water near SrUgea f °f the river, and consequently the Salmon are toat 0„ot0 spawn in the Bay, wkichtfs proved by the fact to of 0va ^e frequently found on the rocks Hthe 2OBiloiittee'therefore feeling certain that the opening 2^ be °f river in the manner above described anl 8feat arid permanent beiiefit to the poor fisher-, 'cit«i,K eXs of the town and neighbourhood, earrifeStly, HBScrijptifttiS to aid tbeip in the undertaking. H. F. CARPENTER, Honorary Secretary. RICHARD FRANCIS, HORSE, CARRIAGE. FLY, AND OMNIBUS PROPRIETOR, BARN STREET, HAVERFORDWEST, BEGS tbi nform his Friends, and the Public generally, that, in addition to the above, he has added a neat and commodious HEARSE, of the newest design, which he will let on Hire on the most reasonable terms. LONDON AND PARIS HOUSE MARINERS' SQUARE, HAVERFORDWEST. ANOTHER FRESH ARRIVAL DIRECT FROM THE MANUFACTORY IN LONDON, OF GOLD AND OF SILVER WATCHES, GOLD CHAINS, ALBERTS, KEYS, PINS, LOCKETS, CHARMS, BROOCHES, EARRINGS, BUCKLES, CLASPS, CROSSES, NECKLETS, &c, &c f T H 0 M A. S W I L L I A M S. WATCHMAKER. JEWELLER, & 0PTTCIAN, DESIRES to inform the inhabitants of Pembrokeshire that he is prepared to submit to their notice an un- usually large and well assorted stock of the above articles, and at prices considerably lower than on any other previous occasion. MUSICAL CLOCKS AND MUSICAL BOXES. THE AGRICULTURIST'S OR WORKINGMAN'S WATCH, SUITABLE FOR FARM SERVANTS &'LABOURERS. In strong Silver Cases, from £ 2 159 to 44 4s. This article has received T. W.'s undivided attention in its manu- facture, he having introduced several admirable improvements in its construction, which render it—for correct time keeping, finish, and design-far superior to any article of the sort ever offered to the notice of the public. Best Lever Watches with Gold cases, from Marten & Bishopp, from. ZC 14 14s to J625 Ditto, with compensation balance, double calipered, and club tooth escapement, extra jewelled, &c, &c X25 Os to £50 Foreign Watches, manufactured by those eminent makers in Geneva, expressly for T. W., Messrs. Platnauer Freres, with Gold cases, from.E5.with Silver cases, from 15s to X3 10s. A large assortment of eight-day Clocks, in mahogany cases, £5 to X7 10s; Office Clocks, eight-day, 30s to £ 3 Chapel Clocks, from 30s to 94; American Clocks and Timepieces, from 5s each. ELECTRO PLATE, in Spoons, Forks, Teapots, Coffee Pots, Bracket and Chamber Candlesticks, See, &c. Silver Goods at th« London advertised prices. Aneroyd Barometers, £ 1 15s, usually sold at £ 3 10s. The Metalic Barometer, similar to that which won the Prize at the Exhibition of the present year, £3 10s. SPECTACLES and EYE-PRESERVERS, from the best Opticians in London, from Is, the best made, 2s 6d. T. W. would respectfully caution persons from using Spectacles purchased of Jews and other inexperienced persons, who are entirely unacquainted with the science of Optics. Opera Glasses of every description. SOLE AGENT FOR THE CELEBRATED RIFLE CORPS TELESCOPE. BUY Y O II R "W E D D I N G RINGS OF 'THOMAS WILLIAMS, They are 22 carat, and are purchased with his Jewellery of Edmond Haynes, JEWELLER TO THE ROYAL FAMILY. MISCELLANEOUS. Purses, Fortmonaies, Writing Desks, Dressing Cases, Work Boxes, Tea Caddies, Silver Knife, Fork, and 1 Spoon, in Morocco case, ditto in Electric Plate, Silver Thimbles, Steel ditto, Steel Buckles, ditto Earrings, I Clasps, &c. Walking Sticks, Canes with gold and silver knobs, thermometers, and Foedometers, Dressing Combs, 1 Back Combs and Brushes, of every description. ,1 Clocks, Watches, and Jewellery, made and repaired; Moderator and other Lamps, Guns, Pistols, Steam Jacks, Fishing Rods, &c, &c, properly repaired by experienced workmen. Priae Cups and Crest Buttons on the shortest notice.—Old Gold, Silver, and Precious Stones, bought. The above Watches, &o, will be ready for inspection on Saturday next, at 8 o'clock in the' morning a Haverfordwest, 22 September, 1862. f MR. JAMES RIBBON, dIANO-FORTE, VIOLIN, AND VIOLONCELLO TEACHER Pian«-Fortes Tuned. RESIDENCE—ST. THOMAS-STREET, HA VERFORDWEST cill vqo silver 611 .10$ 0 -0 0 .14 THE READY AND RELIABLE REMEDY. t "t .f"' V. ■•HA HO L LOW A i' 13 0 I N T M E N T. Itheumatim, Scrofula, Erysipelas. These are among the most terrible and agoniBing diseases, yet intheir worst forms, and when seemmw yariably disappear under a persevering application of this sootU ing, healing antidote to-pain and lnflammatwn. King's Evil, Fever Sores, Stiff Joints. In cases of King's Evil, where medicinal waters^, lotions, and everv recipe of the pharmacopoeia have p Sores heal Ointment will accomplish a upon con- quickly under its influence, and its relaxing <- tracted sinews is truly wonderful. jBed Legs, Piles, and Fistulas. The cures Which this Ointment effects, °gf long standing, and which have resisted /^?^^PC vf been' «o w«ll as in curing Bad Legs, Piles, and Fistulas, have fteen so countless and so notorious throughout the world, pir nuSfher or togive an adequately detailed statement of their number or character would be 4in. It is sufficient to cay that'the Oint- ment has never proved inefficacious. Both the Ointment ana Pills should be «sed in thefouowing Bad Legs Chiego-foot Fistulas Skto^di Jeaso Bad Breasts ChilWains- Gout a,Vm(r8 Burns Chapped-hands GlandularSwellmgs £ e«rvy^ Bunions Corns (Soft) Lumbago BiteofMos- Cancers Piles ofcetoes & Contracted atid Rhetiraatisi* Sand-Flies StifWointa Scalds I Coco-Bay Elephantiasis Sore Nippl" L",y8c+^ Sold at the Establishments of Professor Holloway, 2M, Stona, (near Temple Bar,) London, and also by all respectable druggists and dealers in medicines thxoughoat the civilized^ world, at toe foH6winsJ prices:^—Is.ljd., 2s.9a., 4s.6d, l'ls» 22s, & 33s.each pot. *,» Th^ee is a considerable saving by taking the larger siz<.>8. K.B.—Mrections for the guidance of jiatient" in every disorder are affixed to«a«h pat. STEAM COMMUNICATION WITH THE SOUTH OF IRELAND, VitNew Milford (Milford Haven) Water ford. DAILY SERVICE-SUNDAYS EXCEPTED. fHE Milford Haven and Waterford Steam Ship Company'* Royal Mail Steamers will sail (wind and weather per- mitting). MILFORD HAVEN & WATERFORD. From New Milford, 7.5 p.m.,on I From Waterford, 3.15 p.m.on arrival of the 9.15 am. express arrival Qf the train from Cork, and 6.0 a.m. third class trains, Limerick, &c, sq as to enable (o as to enable passengers to passengers to proceed by the proceed by -the 6 a.m. train to 9.5 a.m. express train, reaching Limerick, Corki &e. London about 6 p.m. For 'artber particulars apply at any of the BailWay Stationf, or of IV. essr Ford and JaCksoin, 36, Cannon-street, City, London, and New Milford, South Wales. See Bradshaw's Railway Guide and Time Tables.
HAYEEFOED WEST E ACEB I .ARE…
HAYEEFOED WEST E ACEB ARE APPOINTED TO TAKE PLACE ON THURSDA Y (IN THE PEMBROKESHIRE HUNT WEEK) NOVEMBER 20, 1862. STEWARDS. Lloyd Price, Esq, Cecil Anson Harries, Esq. George N. Hassell, Secretary. First Race to start at one o'clock. THE TOWN PLATE, Of 3 sovs. each, 2 forfeit, with THIRTY SOVEREIGNS added, for horses bona fide the property of residents in South Wales; second horse to save his stake; three years old to oarry 9st 71b; four years old, lOst; five years old, 10st 71b; six years old and aged, list. Gen- tlemen riders professionals 51b extra. The winner to pay three sovereigns towards expenses. Two miles over the fiat. THE OPEN RACE, A Handicap of 3 sovereigns each, 2 forfeit, with THIRTY SOVEREIGNS added; second horse to save his stake. The winner of the Town Plate to carry 71b in addition to the weight he is handicapped at. Heats,- two miles over the flat. The winner to pay three sove- reigns towards expenses. THE FARMERS' STAKES, Of one sovereign each, half a sovereign forfeit, with TEN SOVEREIGNS added, for horses bred in the counties of Pembroke, Carmarthen, and Cardigan, and bona fide the property of tenant farmers, or tradesmen, residing in these counties, and that have never won a race with £ 10' added money, and to be ridden by gentlemen, tenant farmers, or tradesmen, or their sons, who have never ridden for pay. The second horse to save his stake; three years old to carry 10st; four years old, lOst 7lb; five years old., list; six years old and aged, list 71b. One mile and a half over the flat. THE CONSOLATION STAKES, A Handicap (for beaten horses) of half a sovereign each, with TEN SOVEREIGNS added. One and a half mile over the flat. CONDITIONS. The entries to the Town Plate, the Open Race, and the Farmers' Stakes, to close and name to the Secretary, at the Mariner's Hotel, Haverfordwest, by letter, on Saturday, the 1st November, 1862, on or before nine o'clock, p.m. The weights for the Open Race to appear in the Pembrokeshire Herald of Friday, the 7th Novem- ber, 1862. Colours to be named at the time of entry, and any Jockey riding in different colours to those named, to pay 10s to the fund. Weighing 2s 6d each race; Three horses, the property of different owners, to start for each race or the public mofier will not be added. The Stewards' decision to be final in aM mattera.
1VARIETIES.
VARIETIES. An Irishman, being a little fuddled, was asked what was his religious belief Is it me belafe ye'd he asking about? safd he, It's the same as the widdy Brady. I owe her twelve shillings for whisky, and she belaves I'll never pay her; and faith, that's my belafe too.* QUERIES -Can the sun's character be considered as spotless -May not an undertaker be considered a grave man ?-When various kinds of teas are unpaid for, may they not be considered as trustees ? May not ornamental writing be considered as a very flourishing business?— When thunder claps, for whom is the applause intended? Can a man who loses his arm he considered absolutely harmless? A NEW REMEDY FOR SMALL-POX.-The 'Saracenia purpurea,' or Indian Cup, a native plant of Nova Scotia which we mentioned some time ago as being the specific used by the Indians against the small-pox, bids fair to realise the expectations entertained by medical men of its efficiency. In a letter addressed to the American Medical Times, Dr. Frederic W. Morris, President Physician of the Halifax Visiting Dispensary, states that this saracenia, a papaveraceous plant, will cure small-pox in all its forms within twelve hours after the patient has taken the decoctioi)." However alarming and numerous the erup- tions, he says, or confluent and frightful they may be, the peculiar action of the medicine is such that very seldom is a scar left to tell the story of the disease. If either vaccine or variolous matter is washed with the infusion of the saracenia, they are deprived of their con- tagious properties. So mild is the medicine to the taste, that it may be largely mixed with tea and coffee and given to connoisseurs in these beveragee to drink without their being aware of the admixture. The medicine has been successfully tried in the hospitals of Nova Scotia, and its use will be continued. MAN AND THE GORILLA.-Referring to a discussion which took place at the last meeting of the British Association, relative to the supposed analogy between man and the gorilla, a correspondent of the Athentetm observes:—' While philosophers are engaged in showing the resemblances or the discrepancies between the skull and brain of man and the gorilla, some persons are alarmed lest the tribe of apes should establish a claim to be the ancestors of the human race. But, whatever approxima- tion may be discovered in the human and the simian head, we may console ourselves with the conviction that the difference, even were it smaller than it ts, would be sufficient to form a very decided bairier to the actual relationship of the two races. Resemblance of form has evidently little to do with resemblance of intelligence; for the head and brain of the canine species we so unlike those of man, no chimpanzee, gorilla, or other ape, is to be compared in point of intelligence with the dog. The hand, the general appearance, and the anatomical struc- ture of the ape have led us to exaggerate its resemblance to man; but neither external aspect nor a certain similarity in the brain has enabled the ape. to possess qualities in any way analogous to human reason; and no resemblance need alarm us, when the intelligence of the dog, whese form and skull differ so widely from those of man, approaches so much nearer to human reason thaH that of the ape.' HAPPINESS.—The measure of happiness depends hot so much on what a man possesses of good absolutely, as on the relation of what he has to what he wants. The great reason why men are so often unhappy amid an abundance of good things is, that their sense of want is greater than their sense of possession. A man with a competent in- come is unhappy because he wants a fortune ;,a man with great wealth is unhappy because he wants titles, distinc- tion, and fame; aud so of other cases. On the other hand, but on the, same principle, the effect of any calamity upon a man's happiness is determined, not by the greatness of the calamity in itself, so much as by the relation which the mischief it inflicts bear to what the man retains qnaffected by it. Whaitcares the tord of a thousand acres because the wind has blown down a tree or two on some corner of his estate? What cares the man of boundless wealth for ihe injustice which has robhed biwofafew shillings? Who, in the enjoyment of robust health, would allow himself to be depressed because one of his fingers ached ? The loss is, no doubt, a loss; the suffering is, no doubt, a suffering; and, so long as the mind attends only to it, there may be bothanuoyiince and impatience. But whenever th.e mind realises that, whatever be gone immensely more remains; whatever be painful, there is still retained what is pleasant in an immensely larger degree—the balance of equanimity is recovered, and the man enjoys, so far as, this is concerned, peace.—Dr. Alexander's I Christian Thooqht apid Work.' THE POWER OF CHRISTIANITY.—Flowers that are so pathetic in their beauty, frail as the clouds, and in their colouring as gorgeous as the heavens, had through thousands of years been the heritage of children—honoured as'tibe jewellery of God only by them," hen suddenly the voice of Christianity, countersigning the voice.of infancy, raised them to agrandeur. transcending the Hebrew throne although founded, by God himself, and pronounced Solomon in all Bis glory not to be arrayed like o.)e of these. Winds aghiii, hurricanes, the eternal,1 breathings, soft or loud, of JEolian power, wherefore had they, raving or sleeping, escaped atl moral arrest and detention ? Simply Ueeause vain it were to offer a nest for tlae recep- tion of some new moral birth, whilst. no religion is yet moving amongst men that can furnish such a birth. Vain is the image that should illustrate a heavenly sentiment, if the sentiment is yet unborn. Then, nrst. when it had become necessary to the purposes of a spirutual, religion that the spirit of man, as the fountain of all religion, should in some commensurate reflex image have its gran.deurand. its niy-steriousness emblazoned; suddenly the pomp and mysterious path of wind and teuipestt, blowing whither they list, and from what fountains no man knows, are cited from darkness and neglect to give and to receive reciprocally, an impassioned glorification, where the lower mystery, enshrines and illustrates the higher. Call, for the. grandest of all earthly .spectacles, what is that?, It is the sun going to his rest. Call for the grandest of all human sentiments, what Is that? It is, that man should forget his anger before he lies down to sleep. And the/se two grandeurs, the mighty lientiment and the mighty spectacle, are by Christianity married together.—Be Qumcey's Conjessions., WELLINGTON'S BUSINESS CAPABILITIES.—As we read through t he correspondence which he conducted as Secre- tary for Ireland, we see distinctly that he was thoroughly up to. his work, that nothing escaped him, that he knew every detail, that he was equal to every exigency, that nothing was too trifling for him. Places have to be filled, adherents have to be satisfied, elections have to be con- ducted, bills have to be drawn, deputations have to be answered, defences have to be devised—there are myriads of things, to be done, and Arthur Wellesley is always ready, never idle. It is wonderful to seethe coolness with which be quits the work of his office to go and fight a battle over the sea, returning to his post to take up the old routine as if nothinghad occurred in the interval. In 1807 be goes with the expedition to Copenhagen, fights his battle, wins the day, returns to receive the thanks of Parliament, and to take up where he left off the curions correspondence with place hunters and borouglimongers. In like inauner he is despatched in 1808 to Portugal. To the last moment he directs the business of his department with unabated energy; even when he is ou board ship he goes on writing about collectors of Customs and of Excise; he does not cease after he has landed in Portugal; he conducts the movements of his army at the same moment he writes directions for the disposal of his patronage in Ireland; he wins the battle of Rolica, he wins the battle of Vimiera: in the midst of victory he thinks of the Dublin police; and when he is superseded he quietly re- turni to his office in Dublin Castle, to sink all the glories of his campaign in the purchase of votes or the discussion of fees. His power of work was unrivalled. The con- centration of his mind was complete. Just as in war he carried bis resoluion to judge of every thing with his own eyes, so far. that, on one occasion, when close to the enemy's outposts, he put an oilskin cover to his cocked hat, and entered into conversation with the French vidette during which be took a careful survey of all that he wished to see—so in all be undertook he showed the same energy and there were few things which he was not ready to undertake People seemed to wonder that he was willing GO accept the command of a brigade on the Sussex coast 11 have eaten the King's salt," he replied, and whatever be desires me to do, ifcat becomes my duty.'