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Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru
11 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau
11 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
o50 MILES ON HORSEBACKI TO…
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o 50 MILES ON HORSEBACK I TO GET LAVONA HAIR TONIC. Lady's Remarkable Rides. Only a full knowledge and thorough appreciation of its wonderful merits would induce a person to travel fifty miles on horseback to obtain Lavona Hair Tonic. But Miss Dolores Edwards, of Leicester, and formerly of New Zealand, experienced such striking and speedy benefits from it that she felt amply rewarded for her long journeys. She writes: "It is a remarkable hair tonic, and, thanks to it, I have a new growth of hair. I also find it refreshing and cooling to the head in hot weather. I have often ridden fifty miles to obtain Lavona Hair Tonic for myself and my friends, who are also delighted with it." Similar spontaneous and enthusiastic testimony is being constantly received from users of this famous, Lavona pre- paration, which is, by universal consent, a most efficacious and powerful tonic for the hair; promoting its growth, prevent- ing thinning, and removing dandruff, besides invigorating and stimulating the scalp. Lavona Hair Tonic is sold by all chemists at 2s. lid. per bottle, and each package contains a strictly binding and legal guarantee of perfect satisfaction or money refunded, the purchaser being thereby fully and completely covered against any possibility of risk, dis- appointment, or loss.
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Child Saved From PNEUMONIA. Severe Bror-ehiaf Trouble that was besom ing Dangerous Promptly Cured by Vena's Lightning Cough Cure. Mrs. Cooper, 47, Oscar-street, St. John's, Deptford, London, S.E., says :— Veno's is splendid. Last winter one of my little boys had a very bad attack of bronchial trouble which came near to being pneumonia but Veno's cured, and soon he was all right again. All my children have Veno's, even baby, whenever I find them. coughing, and I have taken it myself with splendid results." Veno's Lightriing Caugh Cure is the World's supreme remedy for Coughs and Colds, Lung Troubles, Asthma Bronchitis, Nasal Catarrh, Hoarseness, Difficult Breathing, Influenza, and for Whooping Cough and other Bronchial Troubles in Children. Prices Is. 3d. and 3s., the 3s. size being the more economical. Of Chemists and Medicine Vendors everywhere. Insist on having Veno's and refuse all substitutes. SPINK & SON, LTD., 16, 17 & 18, Oi_ D Piccadilly,London, W.l, require Gold Jewellery for remanufacture. They i alsopurchaseAntiqueTrinkets, Silver, FT> etc. Parcels safely sent reg. post. ijUvbl#, Eeplies by return. Est. 1772.
BATH AND WELLS DIOCESE-
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BATH AND WELLS DIOCESE- QUICKENING PARISH LIFE. AT the Bath and Wells Diocesan Confer- ence the Bishop said they all desired to quicken the Church life in their parishes. They desired, too, to instil into the mind of every member of the Church that he or she bad a real responsibility for the vigour or the decline of Church life in their particu- lar church. The Bishop announced the receipt of a cheque for £1,500 from a donor interested in a small underpaid incumbency in the diocese. This cheque, he said, would be augmented by the Ecclesiastical Com- missioners, and added to the endowment of the benefice. He also announced the receipt from another donor of £ 600 to be sent to the Central Fund, and expressed the hope that when prospective benefactors saw it was possible to keep their names out of print others would follow those good examples. The Dean of Wells read a paper on "The relation of the Cathedral Church to the county the Mother Church and its claim for support," and moved a resolution "That the present needs of the Cathedral deserve the attention of the county and diocese, and that a committee of five mem- bers of the Conference be appointed to confer with the Dean and Chapter on the financial question and to report to the Board of Finance. The Rev. J. Boyle, I; Vicar of Wembdon, proposed and Mr. Harold Shepherd seconded an amendment That in view of the general insufficiency of clerical stipends this Conference regrets that the present is not an opportune time for an appeal on behalf of the Cathedral." The Dean's resolution was carried, and Mr. Boyle's amendment was adopted as a rider. Industrial Problems. On the second day of the Conference the subject of The Church in relation to industrial problems in country life" was drawn attention to by the Rev. Prebendary Hamlet, who said: The duty of the Church was to teach. 1 J was not the part of the Church to produce social programmes. If they were going to teach they must begin with a teachable mind." He urged them to regard with sympathy the principle of Whitley Councils, of which there were now fifty in existence. He moved That in relation to industrial problems it is the duty of the Church to set forth Christ as the living Master and King, the enemy of wrong and selfishness, the power of righteousness and love." Mr. Henry Hobhouse seconded, and said they need not be discouraged by the present symptoms, because if they agreed to work hard they would get through heir difficulties. As Churchmen it was their duty to promote a good relationship between employers and employees, and to teach men that money was not the end-all I and be-all of life. The Bishop strongly advocated the principle of co-pperationand co-partnership in industrial life. The Bishop of Taunton moved a resolu- tion, which was passed, strongly approving of the effort being made by the Central Board of Finance, supported by the Tithe Owners' Union and Clerical Tithe Rates Committee, to obtain exemption of the clerical tithe-rent charge from local rating. Presenting a report of the Diocesan Schools' Association, the Bishop of Taunton referred to the excellent work being done by Miss Turner, the Sunday School visitor.
A SPLENDID TRIBUTE.
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A SPLENDID TRIBUTE. UNITED MEMORIAL SERVICE. A HANDSOME white marble scroll has been unveiled at West Thurrock Church, Essex. There was a most impressive ser- vice at the unveiling of this memorial to men from the parish who fell in the war. Almost every denomination in the dis- trnct was represented, including the Wesleyan Methodists, Primitive Method- ists, United Methodists, Presbyterians, Close Baptists, Open Baptists, Congrega- tionalists, Society of Friends, Church Army, and the Salvation Army. The scroll, which is on the north of the church, was surmounted by a draped Union Jack and two wreaths. The scroll was unveiled by Mrs. Hilder, wife of Colonel Hilder, M.P. The Vicar, the Rev. J. W. Hayes, delivered a most elo- quent address. Referring to his own efforts to recruit during the early part of the war, he said he felt a sort of moral responsibility for many of those brave volunteers whom time and again he saw off from the railway platform amidst the cheers of the people, but a large propor- tion of whom he felt would return no more. He then spoke of the joy of the Resurrection. The Vicar of Surbiton, the Rev. G. H. Lunn, preached the ser- mon, and took as his text the words: Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." The "Last Post" was sounded by a Salvation Army officer. The Wesleyan minister, the Rev. S. O. Tattersall, read one lesson, the United Methodist minis- ter, the Rev. J. W. Kitching, read the second, and a third lesson was read by the Congregationaiist minister, the Rev. A. E. Fox. Sixty-five men from the parish laid down their lives, and so great .was the number of people who desired to be present at the service that two hundred, were unable to get inside the church*
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A MEMORIAL was unveiled in St. Stephen's Church, Cheltenham, to the late Rev. Hugh S. Rowden, a curate who was carried off in last year's influenza epidemic.
NO SUNDAY CINEMAS|
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NO SUNDAY CINEMAS MIDDLESEX FIRM. THE newly-elected Middlesex County Council decided last week to maintain the policy of the previous Council in for- bidding the Sunday opening of places 'licensed for amusement. The majority was a large one, 41 to 25 votes against Sunday musical entertainments, and 39 votes to 18 votes against local option in the matter of cinemas. As the election of Councillors in March last was largely fought on this question, it may be as- sumed that there is no real demand for Sunday amusement in the County of Middlesex. A large area is affected, em- bracing over a million souls, and extend- ing from Enfield and Tottenham in the north to Hounslow and Twickenham in the south. The campaign for Sunday closing has been conducted by the Mid- dlesex United Committee for Sunday Defence, the president of which is the Bishop of Lpndon. The question arises as to what would be the result of a referendum taken on this question in the L.C.C. area?
THOSE WHO HAVE PASSED
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THOSE WHO HAVE PASSED DANGERS OF SPIRITUALISM. THE Bishop of London preached last Sunday at Fulham Parish Church, and dealing with the question of What do we know about those who have passed away? he said many of the officers and men killed in tho war were between 18 and 25 years of age. What were they like now and what were they doing? He had studied very carefully the an- swers given by those who called them- selves spiritualists. He wished to speak with great tenderness of the mother who had been persuaded that she could hear her boy speak through a medium. He had not found a single revelation which had thrown any knowledge or real light from the other world. Fraud had been discovered again and again in the reve- lations of mediums. What he feared was that those who grasped the shadow too often lost the substance. The Church had an answer to mourning mothers. A mother must not think of her son as a ghost. There is," he went on, a sub- stance in the Church which redeems the world from despair, which comforts those who have lost their dear ones, and ought to ennoble their whole life."
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RECTOR of Deal for fourteen years, and for several years i'Eiural Dea,n of Sandwich, the Rev. R. Patterson has received a presentation from his parishioners.
ICHUaCH TUTORIAL CLASS.
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CHUaCH TUTORIAL CLASS. A CHURCH "TUTORIAL CLASS, consisting ot thirty members, has been formed at Head- ing to study The Four Gospels," under the tutorship of the Rev. Maurice Jones, D.D. Two other classes in the Oxford Diocese will probably shortly come int( being—at Oxford and at Banbury. j
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THE BISHOP OF HEREFORD has instituted th» j Rev. A. F. Dausiish as Vicar of Kinlet, vacaff. ] by the resignation of Prebendary James Pay ton. The Rev, H. A. Bright has been ap pointed Rector of Upper Sapey, Worcester, vacant on the cession of the Rev1. E. F. Tall lents.
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