Papurau Newydd Cymru
Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru
11 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
.-----CYCLONE IN ENGLAND.
CYCLONE IN ENGLAND. H is seldom that the centre of a cycloftfe of ■>n, intensity passes directly across these islands, but during Saturday afternoon and flight such a system, with a minimum onro- ;«jcter of rather less than 29.20 inches, moved ■ rapidly across Ireland, the .north-west of Ung- •^iaad, and the east of Scotland, causing Iteavy .gales over the whole country. The steamer Lord Kelvin, from the River Plate to Bdfad, put in to Queenstown on Sun- and reported that on Saturday, when ap- proaching the Irish coast, it blew a perfect "jimrrieane, with heavy seas breaking on board, .•And it became necessary to lieane he vessel to for hours. Ulster was visited on Saturday by the worst ••je'niv.siorm experienced for ;»i \ny y-ars. Se-ere •jfioods occurred all over the piovince. In Bel- fiwt the river overflowed the streets, and houses flooded and traffic suspended for many J) ours. A violent gale raged at Bristol on Saturday afternoon. Trees were blown down aim oome large shop windows smashed. On CWvon Downs two young ladies were knocked down by *1 falling elm tree and pinned to the ground. In the Isle of Man considerable damage to Jjmildiugs was done. FLOOD TRAGEDIES. Many parts of the country were visited by jiieavy storms on Saturday, and floods in many .-districts resulted. 4istdcts resulted. Four brothers—William, Alexander, David, n (I Grali,.iii Mowatt—were drowned by the foundering of the fishing yawl Morning Light fit Gourd on during a jheavy gale near Ston-j- |ia veil. Two of the brothers were married, aud pother was to have been married next week. There was a recurrence of floods in South Wales, owing to torrential rains. In several places the rivers overflowed into the streets, ^compelling the inhabitants to take refuge in the ipper rooms of their houses. In one street at. Aherbargoed the inhabitants made a vain at- I j&empt to prevent the flood from penetrating I Jfcheir dwellings by using clay. Destructive floods (spread rapidly throughout Westmorland, owing to the heavy rain, which ^persisted throughout the week, and on Saturday "-jfell in torrents. Between Carlisle and Kirkby Stephen many hundreds of acres are under •«*ater. Much corn and hay is still unearned, ;nd the crops are rotting on the ground. William Thurkettle, a commercial traveller, -,»#8 crossing the Jine at King's Norton in a ({iStoriP of w',él :an,cl j.»ia, and was holding up an with the result that he did not hear I -•♦i! express coming, and was killed by it.
TWO WIVES BUT NO BIGAMIST.
TWO WIVES BUT NO BIGAMIST. At the Thames Police-court on Saturday Jj £ hc magistrate discharged Thomas Henry :Spilier. who was accused, on his own ^v>nfes- of bigamously marrying Harriett S6p2. In 1892 he married Elizabeth Warren, but Afterson-ie years, as they could not agses, they ,.decided to live apart. Harriett Hope said she was a widow at the • jifme tihe went through the ceremony of mar- ■■.Mage with Spiller on June 27 last at SUMord. .She was not aware he had a wife living. Spiller r$old her his wife was dead. Spillpr said he married Hope believing his rl\!t wife, whom he had not seen for seven and A half years, was dead. He now knew he had -.Committed a crime. Magistrate I am not so sure you have. The magistrate decided that as the man had Jtot seen his wife for seven and a half years he JJ^ght have had reasonable ground for believing r*r to be dead, and he would be discharged, ,J>ut he must understand that he was married to ■Ms first wife, although he was not guilty of ■
AVIATION * EXPRESS SCENE.
AVIATION EXPRESS SCENE. The sequel to g, violent scene on an "aviation" express train from Doncaster on Friday night heard at Clerkenwell on Saturday, when fcur men were charged with obstructing two picket collectors, named Pi#st and Cable. It was explained that after the train—a ..corridor—left Grantham Cable and Pullet be- gan to collect the tickets. One man, not in cus- "tody, had no ticket, and when the collectors /proceeded to take his name and address the pri- soners; "made a rush at them, and in the .^mele-e the man got away to another eompart- JnellL The proceedings were accompanied by ,,v i, k -t threats. One of the colleeters thereupon -galled the coinmundcatien cord and stopped tne 'train, and this had the effect of quietening the Men. The men were arretted on arrival at L" sCi-ess. 5^ Ifr. Bros fined each^defendant £ 5. for oh.strucc -d'iot). and sent Lant to prison for a maElh with jf-iard labour "for spitting in the officer's face."
STARVING LIVINGS.
STARVING LIVINGS. -Preaching at Westminster Abbey on Sunday '3;Ín support, of the Queen Victoria Clerg- Fund, ithe Bishop of Chichester made 11 remarkable appeal on behalf of the clergy. Out of 14,(.,00 "divings so-callcd of the Church more than 0,000 Were worth less than £200 a year, and up- ward* of 1,500 were worth less than £ 100 a year. And twelve thousand of .;1th( clergy were receiving not more than CiaO year. That state of things, apart from ihe in- justice, spelt poverty for the great majority of ■••the clergy who had no means of their own.- "Various remedies were suggested. One was to •.take all the revenues of the Church, posC them, *nd devote them amongst all alike. That' was itu illusory dream. The only remedy was to en- list the sympathy of the laity. Some clergy < ,weI"E' shy about asking. He thanked Goti there Was a change coming, and he hoped it would ftdd to the livings which really ousfS*- fa be called "(starvirigs," not "livings." T must be, no such thing as sweating the clergy of the < Church.
THE INGAND THE BUTTON.
THE INGAND THE BUTTON. The King, while staving with Mr. and Mrs. ^llham James at Wst Dean Park, near •- nic.hes.ter, Sussex, opened the..Tuberculosis ^n«titute at Belmont Park. Montreal,$v the "it 6 of pressing a button. f D1 UUBBlmple mearw a flow of electric cur- Tl? T'lS S<Jni?J-«ted which travelled 3,000 miles. «e- dooi'6 of the institute flew open, all the i If* in the building were turned on, <i X-ion Jack ran up and floated grace- *$at the k'p'of the.flagstaff on the roof. uCereJt1.ony Wa:i f¡x{d to take plaea -A mire shortly before that hour his «.■ |7'oc,J,'t'<-d to an apartment where a 'Mad1*"l instrument had been installed, leiegraph operators were in attendance. if>uHUtKt';Uail3r at tfte King pnawwi tfo tea- 051, a. & ^ew •eeondi-later a return signal ii»/H^r^eiVe^ *rom the other end of the cabie ceremony had beesL per-
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-c-r,y.Ç" 'BUDGET BULL'S-EYES. (FROM THE BUDGET LEAGUE.) The "sandpapering" of the Budget is now practically finished, and the only stage that remains before it goes up to the House of Lords is the third-reading debate. Since it is not permissible to make any change in bills before the House of Commons after the Report stage, we may now regard the Budget as being in its final shape. The third reading stage will take place next week, and in the following week, two or three days after Guy Fawkes' day, the Budget will go up to the House of Lords. Let us hope that when they approach it they will remember the fate of Guy Fawkes. It is true that he tried to blow up the House of Commons, but he did not suc- ceed, and he came to a very bad end. Except for a few elegant remarks on Mr. Winston Churchill by the Duke of Mont- rose, the Dukes have been rather silent of late. The Dukes cannot forgive or forget Mr. Winston Churchill. Perhaps that is because he is one of their own order, awd they cannot understand how one of their own order can be a friend of the people. In the days when the Dukes really repre- sented something it was because they were friends of the people. The noblemen of to- day forget that it was the Barons of Eng- land who extorted Magna Charta from King John. If they would see the matter rightly, they would realise that Mr. Win- ston Churchill is really on a far safer his- toric road than any of the noblemen who spend their time in threatening to take their taxes out of their wage bills. » There are some people who think that the Liberal Party are a little hard upon the Dukes, and upon the people whom they represent. But those good people forget that England is at the present moment lying under the shadow of a very formid- able threat delivered by the Dukes. The people did not declare war on the Dukes. The Dukes declared war on the people. It is they who threatened to throw out the Budget. Let us be clear on the matter. If the Dukes, withdraw their threat and consent to pay their taxes like men we are all will- ing to De irienas witn them. We have no wish to quarrel with any of them. But if they insist on coming into public life and threatening to deprive the people of Eng- land of the. right over the public purse, then it must be war to the knife. There can be no compromise on such an issue. No compromise. For the Budget Bill must be passed exactly as it stands.' Dur- ing the last few days there has been a re- vival of the rumour that the Lords intend to amend it. But let us be clear on that point also. The Lords can neither amend, postpone, nor reject the Finance Bill. They have only one duty towards it: they have to pass it. The matter was put most clearly and concisely by Lord Rosebery in his speech in the House of Lords on "the FiiÙtilce Bill of 1894. It was then that he said, in answer to Lord Salisbury, when he asked for time to consider the bill: I do not think that it is necessary, for the purpose of passing the bill, that they should make themselves masters of it, because I de- precate altogether the idea. that the House of Lords has anything to do with money J bills. Any discussion of it must obviously j be academic, and, therefore, I should have thought the least said, soonest mended" with regard to this measure. Those remarks hold true now as they did then. The least said, soonest mended" is still the proper rule for the. House of Lords in dealing with the Finance Bill. In the words of Mr. Balfour, spoken at Dum- fries as recently as October 6th, 1908: It is the House of Commons, and not the Hcuse of Lords, which settles uncontrolled our financial system. x There is a great deal of rubbish being talked by Tariff Reform critics of the Bud- get about the flow of British capital abroad. These gentlemen have suddenly become the most violent Little Englanders in regard to the money of this country. Their minds cannot leap to the most ele- mentary conception of the manner in which capital that goes abroad comes back in the form of orders for machinery, engines and rails, and so forth. But, as a matter of fact, they are entirely exaggerat- ing the whole case. The Daily Mail, for instance, the other day talked about 90 per cent, of British capital going abroad. That is a very re- markable figure, because it happens to be precisely the opposite of the facts. It is 90 per cent, that stays at home and 10 per cent. that goes abroad. How do we arrive at those figures? By I a careful reading of the Blue Book pro- duced annually by the Inland Revenue, giving a full record of the incomes assessed to Income-Tax within the United King- dom. No doubt there are some leakages, but, taking it as a whole/that record gives us a very trustworthy survey of the way in which British capital is being employed. For practipally the whole of British capital pays Income-Tax, and, as it .pays, it comes under the eye of the Inland Revenue. Let us look at the figures. The total British income assessed to Income-Tax in 19C7-8 was £ 946,000,000, or very nearly ^1,000,000,000. Of that total £ 83,000,000 represented income drawn from abroad, or, roughly, one in ten, or, as we have said, 10 per cent, as against 99 per cent. But that is only a beginning. For this sum of E83,000,000 includes all the British capital invested in Colonial and Indian securities. That amounts to £ 24.000.000 ? alone ef investments in Government capital invested in Colonial and Indian securities. That amounts to £ 24.000.000 alone ef investments in Government ties within 'the Colonies and the I,: i:-ta [ Empire —- £ 14,000,000 in C&ldhlftl' 'ties and £ 10,000,000 in Indian. Sim- have our Imperialists objected to tLu- VJ-J, &f investing monev? ■■ I As for purely foreign securities, there has been very little increase except in the Argentine and in Japan. Japan shows an increase of £ 1,000,000. She is out ally and gives a very good rate of interest. The Argentine is fed by English money, but it is also largely run by Englishmen, and brings back a great crop of orders to this country. We might go on with this investigation from Government securities to industries. Fifty million pounds sterling of British money is invested iii industries within the Colonies and abroad. But of that 220,000,000 is wivested in railways, which bring back profit to Great Britain, and of which £13,500,000 represents railways which are actually under 'British com- panies operating on British soil. The fur- ther we go into it the thinner the fable becomes
FUN AND FANCY.
FUN AND FANCY. "Your hair wants cutting badly, air," said a barber insinuatingly to a. customer. "No, it doesn't," replied the man in the chair; "it wants cutting nicely. You cut it badly last time." Uncle Joe: "Yes, Teddy, it is quite pos- sible that there are people in the moon." Little Teddy "Well, what becomes of them when there isn't any moon?" Tenant: "I think, sir, something ought to be done to my cellar. It's constantly full of water." Landlord: "At Y-20 a year rent would1 you expect it to be full of cham- pagne? Father: "Milly, I have a request to make." Milly: "All right, pa." Father: "I have just wound the eight-day clock. Will you please wind it again before that young man goes." Artist: You didn't accept that little drawing of mine—the drawing of a hen?" Editor: "No it was not true to life." Artist: "Not true to life? Why, when I put it on the desk it laid there." Missionary: "Our situation was so remote that for a whole year my wife never saw a. white face but my own." Sympathetic Young Woman: "Oh, poor thing!" Lawyer: "You say the prisoner stole your watch? What distinguishing feature was. there about the watch? Witness "It had my sweetheart's picture in it." Lawyer: "Ah, I see. A woman in the case." First Arctic Explorer: "We must hurry back." Second Explorer: "But the North Pole is ours if we keep on." "But if we don't get back now, we'll be too late for the lecture season." ,i Father: "I can't think what makes this confounded razor so dull; it was all right yesterday." Freddie "Yes, father, and it was ever so nice and sharp this morning when I war. making my boat." Lady: "What is it, little boy?" Little Jim (carrying a cat): "I came to claim the re- ward you offered for the return of your canary." Lady: "But. that is a cat." Jim; Yes but the canary's inside Young Lady: "You're what's known as a wcman-hater, aren't you?" Old Gentleman: "I am, my dear girl, I am; and I glory in it. When I was a very young man a woman made a fool of me, and I—er——" Young Lady: "And you never got over it." "Never point, my dear," said the mother gently. "But, mamma," objected the little girl, "suppose I don't know the name of the thing?" "Then let the salesman show you all he has in stock until he comes to the article you want." A woman went to visit her friend in the city, and when walking together in the street remarked: How that beastly man stared at me." Her friend replied: "He was looking at your nose. He is a newspaper reporter on duty, and keeps an eye on everything that turns up." "Your husband says that when he is angry he always counts ten before he speaks," said one woman. "Yes," answered the other. "I wish he'd stop it. Since, he got dyspepsia home seems nothing but :a: class in arith- metic." Jenkins (speaking to his friend the editor about the death of Riche, the millionaire): "How much is he worth, I wonder?" Editor (absent-mindedly): "Not much. Not more than a quarter of a column at the outside." "Father," said the young man who had been feeding at the parental trough for a number of years, "I have made up my mind | to paddle my own canoe hereafter." "I'm I certainly delighted to hear it, my son," re- plied the old man. "And, father," continued the young man, "I want to begin at once, so kindly let me have ten pounds to buy a canoe and a paddle." "Cheer up, old man!" said a man to a friend who had been ignominiously dismissed by the father of his adored one. "Love laughs at locksmiths." C, Ys, I know," re- plied the dejected suitor. "But her father isn't a locksmith; he's a gunsmith!" i A young man returned to the country village where he wae born, after having suc- i cessfully worked his way up to a desirable Government office. "I suppose the people here, Thomas, have heard of the honour that has been conferred on me?" lie inquired of one of his old friends. "Yes, they have," was the gratifying reply. "And what," said the ¡ man of fame, eagerly, "what do they say t about it, Thomasr" "They don't say any- thing," replied Thomas; "they just laugh." J Bishop Blom field was led into a contro- versy one time with a learned man as to the mental superiority of the East over the West, t and his opponent, as a parting shot, said: "Well, at any rate, you can't dispute that the wise men came from the East." "Surely < that was the wisest thing they could do!" re- torted the Bishop, s ¡ Visiting a lunatm-asylum some time ago, I noticed one of the inmates wheeling a barrow j around upside down, so I walked over to him and «aid: "Why don't you wheel the barrow j properly, my good man." "Ah, sure," said he, "if I turned it up the other way they'll put aoaiethiog in it. t
--------HOME HINTS.
HOME HINTS. I To remove te& or coffee stains from silk spread the stained portion evenly over a I basin, and pour clean boiling water through the part. If the stain is an old one, rub on a. little powdered borax, and continue the boil- ing water. Grease spots on delicate fabrics can be re- I moved by covering them with powdered French chalk, which should remain on the spot several hours before it ie brushed off again. In obstinate cafes, which cannot be removed by the simple application, the chalk must be spread thickly over the spot, covered with a piece of tissue paper, and ironed with a hot iron. The care of the piano is not understood, as a rule, and so a valuable instrument often suffers. Always close down the piano at night and in damp weather; open it on bright days and, if possible, let the sun shine on the keys, for the light prevents the ivory from turning yellow. To raise the pile of velvet cover a hot iron with a damp cloth, and hold the velvet firmly ever it, the vapour or steam that riees will raise the pile. Do not touch the velvet that is heated with the fingers, or it will leave a mark. When the velvet is cold, Lrush care- fully with a light brti-"i, which must be soft. In order to save expanse when using a gas- stove, place over the top of the stove a piece of sheet iron, just large enough to cover it. Turn on one burner only, and enough heat will be diffused to cook a dinner. Whatever requires the greatest heat should be put directly over the burner.
USEFUL RECIPES.
USEFUL RECIPES. MILK SouP. Two fair sized Spauisfe onions, four to six potatoes (according1 to size), a little celery, and about three crust* of stale bread. Cut onions, potatoes, and celery up, and boil with bread in about a quart of water till thick, stirring and adding more water if wanted. Boil slowly for about. an hour, then rub all through a wire sieve. Add about half a pint of boiling milk; ami pepper and salt to taste. Do jj4»t boil after milk is added. To ROAST AN OX TONGrr,Rub a fresh tongue well with a pound of salt, leave it for five days, rubbing and turning it occasion- ally. Afterwards boil the tongue gently for two and a half hours. Peel off the &-in, brtss-k the tongue over thickly with beaten eggg and bread crumba; put it on » weB-gresused bak- ing tin, and roajet it for an jhour, basting it frequently. Bead to taMe with brown gravy, to which a seasoning of cayenne pep- per, and half gill of -port wine have been added. ROAST Srittoi iq.-M,any housewives like ti sirloin boned. Well, if a small joint and carefully done, it is better, then it must be rolled, skewered and tied in shape with a tape. Before taking to the table, remove tape and skewers, but it must then be secured with other skewers. It will then carve with care to the last portion. The uones may be boiled in vegetable stock for the gravy. HOESK-RADISH SAUCE. One stick of nicely-washed Ihorse-radish, one gill of cream." Two taMespoofiftils of vinegar sweetened to taste. Scrape, or better still, grate a fine stick of horse-radish, put into a tureen, pour over the vinegar, already sweetened to taste. Then slowly stir in the cream. PLUM PUDDING.—Ingredients required: Three-quarters of a pound of flour, one ounce of good baking powder, two ounces of breadcrumbs, one and a half pounds of suet, two pounds of raisins, one pound of currants, ten ounces of sugar, two ounces of almonds, one pound of riixed fZft.:m:b.eç].'peel,saltand Ji spice to taste, sis lid three-quarters of a pint of milk. Mix the abcive ingredients well together, and add the eggs, well .beaten, and three-quarters of a, pint of milk. Divide in two, put into w^U-gTeased basins, place a piece of greased paper over the top,. cover with a cloth, and tie in the usual way. Boil eight hours. A NEW YJSAR CAKE.—Enquired, one pound of flour, one pound of butter, one pound of Demerara sugar, half a pound of Valencia raisins, one and a half pounds of currants, half a pound of citron, half a pound of can- died peel, half a nutmeg, nine eggs,, and a wineglassful of rum. Beat the butter to a cream, add the sughr, and then the flour by degrees and the eggs. Beat with a wooden spoon for about twenty minutes. Add the raisins (weighed after they are stoned and chopped) and rest of fruit, etc., mix well, and put in a tin. Cut the citron in thick pieces one inch long and push into the cake here and there. Bake five hours in a slow oven. MILK PUNCH.—Take six Seville oranges and peel off the rinds very thinly, also six lemons, and treat in' the same way, then steep the mixed rinds in three pints of rum or, brandy for over 24 hours. Next add one pound of refined sugar; one and a half 1. pint-s of water, a grated nutmeg, and nearly half a pint of lemon juice. Stir the punch till the sugar is dissolved, then take one and a hall pints of boiling new milk, and pour on the aNve. Let all stand till next day, closely covered, then strain through a jelly bag till J quite clear. Bottle and cork tightly, CHRISTMAS Oil PLUM PUDDING. I 1 packet of Cakeoma. f fib. finely chopped Suet. A little Salt. The grated rind of a lemon. A grated Nutmeg. I 1 or 2 tablespoonfuls Pudding Spice. lib. Raisins. t fib. Currants. Jib. Candied Peel cut into strips. ilb. Candied Peel cut into strips. 4 Eggs. A wineglassful of Brandy or Ram. METHOD:- Put all the dry ingredients, chopped, suet and fruit, together into a bowl and mix them well; then add the eggs (previously well beaten) and the spirit, and thoroughly but lightly mix altolt ther. Divide the padding into two bums. tie them up on4 put aem into Doirawa water and keep them boiling for five hours. When .9 reqmretf for use boil "for a further 1 £ hours,, and serve with the Sweet Sauce prepared ae tdlwwa s •; Take two ounces of butter «nd onf dessert- i spoonful fit plain Flour and mix them to a smooth paste, 'then put them into an enausel- lined 'saucepan together with i pint of Milk and two or three tableepoonfuls of Sugar and any flavouring you like keep stirring one way over a sharp fire, letting it boil for a minute or two, then add a little Brandy or Rum to taste.
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EVBBTON TOTFEK.—Place three ounces of butter in a pMsernng-pam or lined saucepan, and when melted add one pound of sugar. Stir gently over a moderate fire for about a quarter of an hour, or till a little bit of it dropped io cold water is brittle. c ipla,vour lwith grated 'Itiiiou' rind. Turn out .on n greased tin. MABMALADB CiEx.—Tftke dm and 'Ø) Mf cupfuls of flour, one aud » half cnpf18 of milk, hulf eitprui of ensior sugar, halt' a tcaspoontulof carlxjirate df aodsv a pinch of tartaric acid, one IJix the floiir, soda, and acid in a basin: whisk the egg, put in the milk, whisk again, add the marmalade to the milk, stir well and add the other in- gredient*. Pour on a flat buttered tin, an# bake i* • *low ovea for hali-m-lajoui.