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Home News. I ANGLESEA. The ancient parish church of Llanfaethlu, Angle- sea, is now undergoing restoration and renovation at the sole expense of Lady Reade (of Carreg Lwyd), whose ancestors have been closely associated with the church for many generations. A proposal was made at the Anglesea County Council recently that the travelling expenses be paid of the Council representatives attending com- mittee meetings at the Denbigh Asylum. It was seconded by Mr. W. D. Jones. In the opinion of Captain Laurence Williams the representatives ought to be patriotic enough to pay their own rail- way expenses or resign their seats. He failed to see why the Council should differentiate between one committee and another. Professor Morris Jones, on the other hand, thought that the railway companies should be patriotic enough to allow the committeemen to travel free. He was spending more than he could afford in railway fares. The proposal was ultimately adopted. CARDIGAN. The application of Dr. Bonsall for an increase of salary as medical officer to the Aberystwyth Work- house having been refused' by the Board, he recently sent in a letter resigning his appointment as medical officer for the house, but retaining those of medical officer and vaccination officer for the district. The salary paid for the house duties was ^30 and for the district £ 25, which Dr. Bonsall considered altogether inadequate. CARMARTHEN. Some mystery attends the death of a young collier named David Henry Griffiths, living at Five Roads, near Llanelly, who left home on Monday last and attended the Llangennech Fair in the evening. His subsequent whereabouts were unknown until Thurs- day evening, when he called at his sister's house at Incline Row, Cwmfelin. He immediately became ill and lapsed into unconsciousness. Dr. Johns, Llangennech, and Dr. J. L. Davies, of Llanelly, attended, and lie was removed to the Llanelly Hospital. Ten minutes after his admission he died. The cause of death is a mystery. CARNARVON. A prize of £25 is to be offered at the next Easter Eisteddfod at Carnarvon by Mr. R. A. Naylor, the Unionist candidate for the Carnarvon Boroughs, for a Welsh National Anthem, with Welsh and English words. The sentiments to be expressed are those of love of country, of brotherhood, and of loyalty to the Throne. Competitors must either be of Welsh nationality or resident in the Principality. DENBIGH. The thirty-three applications for the Town Clerk- ship of Wrexham, which has been held for a quarter of a century by Mr. Thomas Bury, have been reduced to four, viz., Mr. Lawson Taylor, Deputy Town Clerk of Burnley; Mr. Alfred Wickham, Assistant Town Clerk of West Bromwich Mr. F. R. Duxbury, Assistant Town Clerk of Eccles and Mr. A. H. Redfern, managing clerk for Messrs. Iveson and Macaulay, solicitors, Liversedge. GLAMORGAN. At the South Wales and Monmouthshire Tonic Sol-fa Association's Annual Conference on Satur- day at Mountain Ash, Mr. D. W. Lewis presiding, steps were taken to arrange, in conjunction with the North Wales Association, the establishment of scholarships in music in recognition of the services of Mr. Eleazer Roberts, of Liverpool, on behalf of tonic sol-fa. Mr. C. W. Hedden, a senior assistant in the reference department of the Cardiff Central Library, has just been appointed librarian of one of the new Carnegie District Libraries in Glasgow. Mr. Hedden has been connected with the Cardiff Libraries since 1891, and he will take with him to his new sphere of work the good wishes of a large circle of friends. Mr. Arthur Evans, one of the teachers at the Barry schools, in the course of an article in ■*

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