Papurau Newydd Cymru
Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru
8 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
Advertising
tVHJ ITED HOUSE DUTY, 1861. g^G:i FiiMABLE to a late Act of Parlia- men. «md directions from the Commissioners of he Board oi Taxes, the Inspector and Sur- \ey-.ns f«»r North Wales, are under the necessity all such Houses, (as are at prssent chj#t:e-A with pniya ptop^rtipn-of such duty) to the t'uil value 01 lyltich such House is or may be iiiiiHUx iv reiiic;1 .)1 t m U'lrid. to be woilhi The of iv i» wilt be held at tin; usual placl;" m etch v » of a't.h due notice will be gire.i. JONES, Inspector. liryntii ion, Nov. 2hf)t lodi). ftOTJCE TO CREDITOR* AND DEBTORS. \Ll PERSONS having any ciaim on the t tsiafc or Effects of the late Mr. Henry nen-of Carnarvon, Mercer, deceased, are dc- eJ it) state the nature and amount ai, Hieir res- ,ti%e demands without delay, to Mr. Thomas nesof Chruarvon, Siirgeoti :-Aiiii all Persons o stood indebted to the said Mr. Henry, Jones rhl time of his or t,) the concern of net and Roberts, Mercers, Camarvon,are re- vested to pay the same forthwith to the sard r. T. Jones, as the account of the said concern iusfbe immediately settled. Ca.rnu.rvoH, Nov. f2Sth 1809. I. Capital £ 1 ,200,000. ATLAS J f IRE AND LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, Sir CRISTOPHER BAYNES, Bart. DIRECTORS. WILLIAM GORDON, Esq. M. P. CNAIRMA-ST. eIMON COCK, Esq. DEPtJTY Cti AIRMAN. Col. J. A. Bannerman. t Levis Lloyd, Esq. Charles Campbell, Esq. Moses Moccritta,Esq. John Carricfc, Esq. Emanuel Paoifi'co, Esq. John Green, E:IJ. W. W. Preseott, Estl JFcftn.IIigpiii, Esq. Joseph Pulley, Esq, Sivi;tli, ■William Laforeat, Esq. Sir T. Turton, lit. M }P. G. IjOiiginan, Esq. M. P. iolli-I Woolicy, Esq. The following tire tkg Adnantages clcriecd from effecting assurances at this Office. That Rent is paid in arse of Pire, without any additional. Prehviahi. 3'hat Farming Stock is assured, without an average Clause-, at s. per ::Cent. -per ,dmwm. That Damage by Lightning is made good. fjphat JJlercltandizefn the West .India Docks is assured at 2s. per Cent, per AliI/fun, and That Policies are issued, and Endorsements and Surveys made free of exptnee to the xi) fissured. Printed Proposals maybe had, on application et the Office in London, or to the respective Agents in Edinburgh, Glasgow., Dublin, Cork, and other Cities and Towns in the United Kingdom. By order of the Board, HENRY DESBOROUGIT, Jun. Secretary. AGENTS. "Bangor, Mr. JOHN RASUROOK. Carn.<r\on,RoBf.RoKKRTs,Esq. Beaumaris, JouN JONES, Esq. Bulkely Place. Holyhead, 1\1; JOHN PRICE. Holywell, Gnii-'FrfiJ Wu.LIAMS, Esq. Mention. Sept. lit Ift. JSforth Wales General Infirmary. AT a Meeting of the Committee, he'd at the Grand Jury Room in Carnarvon, on Monday the 27th day of November, 1809, for carrying into effect, the resolutions of äeoIJllty Meeting, held for the purpose of establishing an Jrilirmary at Carnarvon, to-be called the North Wales General Infirmary. Sir ROBERT WILLIAMS, Bart. M. P. in the Chair. J t was Restlvul, That application be made to Sir Robert Wil. lianies Vaugoan, Bart. Member, of the county of Werioneth and to Sir Robert Williams, Bart. Owen Putland Meyriek, and Holland Griffith,. Esquires, in the absence of the Member for the county of Anglesea, requesting that they ik,illf be pleased to adopt the proper method for taking the sense of those respective counties, as to the eligibility of concurring with the inhabitants of the county of Carnarvon, in the proposed isea- iiirs." It was also resolved, That, in case county Meetings are held in An- glesey and Merioneth, Hugh Owen, Esq. M.D. William Williams, Esq. of Llangwstenin, Owen Anthony Pocie, Esq. and Mr. Jones, Surgeon, of Carnarvon, be requested to attend such county Meetings, to give every information in their power, relative to the proceedings adopted at the General and Committee Meetings held at Carnarvon. The Medical men at Carnarvon having procur- ed a large supply of Genuine Matter from the National Vaccine Institution in London. It isresolved,, .11 That children be inoculated gratis for the Cow-Pock at the Dispensary in Market-street, the town of Carnarvon, on Tuesday the 5th f of December next, and on every succeeding osday until May, between the hours of ten and ,he in the forenoon,—such children to be re- ..KiTimended by a Magistrate, Clergyman, Medical Man, Churchwarden, or Overseer of the poor, of iuiy place or parish in North Wales, Mes»hiedf That this Meeting be adjourned to be held in the Grand Jury Room, in Carnarvon, on Monday 18th day of December next", Signed by, Sir ROBERT WILLIAMS, Bart. I Chairman. William Williams, 1 Owen Anthony Poole, j JRichard Jones, S „ John Haslam". Esquireu John Evans, J Ker. Henry Jones, ) Owen Jones, > Clerts, Evan Herbert, ) Hugh Owen, M. D. Robert Currie. Robert Beaver, > Surgeons, Thomas Jones, ) Jtesolveil unaniniously, ,1'hat the thanlcs of-this Meeting be given to ir RObert WiUiamx, Bart. for his liberal atten- (!n to this Institution, iUitJ tor his OQBtluct i« the QA t,4i3 dav. k THE COMMISSIONERS in a Commission 1 Bankrupt awarded and issued forth against Robert Griffiths of Lleweny Farm, in the Parish of lienllan, in the county of Denbigh. Farmer, Dealer and Chapman, intend to meet on Saturday the 23d day of December instant, at eleven O'clock in the forenoon, at .the Bee Inn in Abergele, in the said county, to make an order for a dividend of the' estate aod efl'ects of the said Bankrupt, when and i,-hern the Creditors who have not already proved their debts, are to come prepared to prove the sam, or they will be excluded the benefit of the said dividend, ;UM! all claims not then proVfA fiJl be disallowed, J. and E, OLI>FiELD4 Solicitor* 1' TO BF, SOLD. At Broriy. Gaderf near doc, Carnarvon shire. NEW STRONG GOKSE MILL, as the ..1; A. are of a superior quality,, it will not be sold uiider Fifty a Hick of excclIclHJ\Ieadoy{ Hay measuring rie:F,'Iy thirteen yards in leugih, three a half in breadth, and Hvcand a half Hay Jiutst. be foddered upon tl',e.premises-Apply (if by,letter post paid) to the Rev. Mr. JONES, Llangedwaiader, ilnglesea. TO BE SOLO nr AUCTION, On the premises (under and by virtue of a Oill of Sale irom John Pearson, of in the county of Anglesey, Book-eJler and Statioaer to.Jared Jacksoa of the same .place, Esq.) on Thursday the 7th day of Decemher next, and the following days until the whole are dis- posed of. s f I;HI.E VALUABLE LIBRARY and Slock .4. in Trade of t'rfe said John Pearson, consist- ing of London made fashionable hats,, haber- dashery, cutlery, trinkets, hardware, Tunbridge ware, oil cases, travelling caps, toys,.velveteens, thicksets, woolen cloths, stationary, perfumery and patent medicines' tea boards, groceries,, tohacco, aquillltity of pipes and various otllet articles. The l,il)rary, wliieli consists of near 500 vo- lume's, may he purchased by private contract, by applying to Messrs.- Jackson and Price, I.Ioly- head. The sale to commence each day at 10 o'clock precisely. Holyhead, Nov. 27, 1809. -h. To the Sheriff of the County of .Anglesey. WE request that 5011 will convene » County Meeting on an early Day, to take into jjconsideraf ion the propriety of concur- ring with the inhabitants of the county ofCarnar- von, as to the measure of establishing an Infir- mary at Carnarvon, to be entitled the ISorth Wales General Inlirmary. Beaumaris, Nov. 28th, 1809. Robert Wiiliams Griffith Roberts Owen P. Meyriek John Jones R. Griffith, D. D. ¡ H. Williams. J. B. Sparrow John While J. II. Hampton H. Thomas, Clerk J.Panton M. Lewis, Clerk J. Williims t< J. D. Lewis W. Sparrow JL Allen Hugh. Davies, Clerk R. Lewis Robert Williams, do t John Jones. In compliance with the above requisition, I do appoint a :Mct-tin^ of the Noblemen, Gentry, Clergy, and t'reetf dders of the COUll:) ofAuftie-' sey, to be holden at the Shire Hall, in the town of Beaumaris, on Friday, the 8th day of Decem- her next, precisely at 12 o'clock at noon. J JOHN THOMAS STANLEY, Shenir. PenfhoS, Nov. 1809.
--= POLITICAL SUMJ/JRY.
= POLITICAL SUMJ/JRY. Fi, A, cF.Accoi- (Iiii(,. co accounts received from several persons recently arrived from France, its situation is represented as most d.cl)foi-abie.rhe wars, aud ambitious views of their ruler, having so completely drained <111 the male population, that excepting those holding civil offices in the state, and even those are soldiers, there is none left but the very old and the very young for the purposes of handicraft, manufactures, husbandry, and the other social duties of life. Such a picture is truly lamentable, and was it not from the following considerations, labouring, as they deciare, under such a load of glory, we should scarcely conceive it credible but when their despotic military code is considered, the con- sequences beceiuc sufficiently clear.—A man, though be may escape the conscription, this year is still liable to the ballot for three and four years- in anticipation, and however he may still escape, and in the, interim with indus- try and attention support himself in compara- tive affluence, he canlook forward with no con- fidence for its continuance, for when once the lot fall upon him, no pecuniary consideration cau purchase his freedom—he must himself i become a soldierl The above statement is further corroborated frprn the following ob- servations, >pade in the French papers, iir a critique upon a new farce called There are ;toI#noi-c Cliiltlren.This assertion is unfortu- nately too true. Children now treat their parents, their relatives, their masters, with contempt; great teascncrs before they have attained the age of reason learned Doctors before they have acquired any knowledge great libertines before the age of corruption; 6 el they have all the vices of that society of which they are not yet members. Childhood has loiit its characters, and all its amiable qualities.— Licentiousness, pride, and boldness, have su- perceded mildness, thÚiliity, and innocence,-— Childhood is, asH were, cut off from human life, just as the spring is cut off from the year. t, car.: The life of man is now composed only of two seasons-he commences it by summer, and his autumn is a winter. We have overturned every: thing we want the fruti before the .19S$m; ty-w wwteni prictict te put children" into hot tads. Every thirig is For- ward, premature, and forced, and nothing comeq, to perfection. Prodigies at lwel vo years old are fools at thirty." SPAIN.—It is stated in the last French pa- pers, that the army of General Blake, in Ca- taionfa, consisting of 25,000 mcn, has been defeated by General St. Cyr, with the loss of one third in kiNed, wounded, and prisoners. The Spanish papers had before intimated, that Gen. Blake had concentrated his forces and marched from Vique to raise the blockade of Gerona, adding 61. these, movements indicate a positiot, of the armies were, aböat the middle of last month as S'al- lows :a strong division of the enemy's force was at Toledo; Ney and Mprtier's divisions had joined in.thc ueighbourhobJ of Piasencia. The Spanish division of Estremarfura had its i:ehd-qnnrtsr.s at Dcteytosa those of Marsha) Beresford iit Caslel Branco the English arhiy occupied the- positions of Montijo, Puebla, Ta- lav.era,. <u<d Bac1 jos, being daily reinforced by | troops h o « >0r ugai. The Duke del Piuque I and Gen. Lahasturos are supposed to have CIl- lered Salamanca—they took, in the iiei b. I bourhood of that city, a convoy, aud hianj carriages intended to carry away the sick. ( r:
WEDNESDA Y.-FOll1. o'Cloclc.…
WEDNESDA Y.-FOll1. o'Cloclc. 'IV- Marquis Weliesley landed on Sunday last, and proceeded immediately lo town, where he arrived on Monday In( new a (I., ministration may now be pronounced com- plete, and we imagine will hereafter he called Lhe Weliesley administration. Itapnearsthat before the Marquis Icft Seyille a material change had been effected in the form of the government; the executive powers were ves- led in a Directory, consisting of live Members. This change, it is expected, will remedy the former evils arising from the divisions which were well known to prevail to a considerable extent' in the Junta, allay the before entertained by the patriots againsttheir government, and re-animate and invigorate their efforts against the enemy. The army of La Mancha has left VaiRpcnas, and marched against the enemy with that mi- litary order and high courage which predict victory. So official accounts have yet been received respecting the reported engagement in the Mediterranean, but from the iollowill", state- ments, copied from the Portuguese and Spa- nish pa pes, just received, we have not the le-tist tilo!tbt ot* stttli an event having taken place:— SEVILLft, Nov. n.-They write from Ma- laro, under date of the 28th October, that a great number of ships were discovered at sea from that place, and much lire seen, LISBON, Nov. 5.—The English have struck the last blow against the French navy. The Toulon squadron, which sailed from that port to escorl a, convoy bound for Barcelona, has been taken by the Britishtleet. This pleasing intelligence wasconuuunicafcd to the Captain of an English ship who happened to be at the house of the Governor of Malalo by the Marquis de Coupigny. France is likely, ere long, to have no other ships but on call- vass or in print. c
Advertising
WANTED, A CURATE, to serve one Church, in the county of Carnarvon, a banal some Stipend will be given. For.further particulars apply to the Rev. W. Evans, Rector of Crickieth,
ThursdayNovember 30. t....
ThursdayNovember 30. t. tr-ff" From the pressure of Advertisements this u-eek ice are under the necessity of omitting the Ship ping. Returns.
Family Notices
BIRTH. On Tuesday, the 21st inst. the lady of J. Price, Esq.. Mona Lodge, A of a son. MARRIAGE. Friday last, D. Davies, Esq. banker, of Aber- ystwith, to Miss H. M. Rogers, only (laughter of Win. Rogers, Esq. of Carnach nweu, Pembroke- ibire. DEATH. t e I y, the Rev. Thos. Hughes of T'y Tssa II U II iflftaid, GlanrConway, B. LL. ThegluolU which this event produced in the minds or those who had the pleasure of his acquaintance, will not speedily be dispelled, and it would be injus- tice to his memory not to add, that he was a- sincere friend, a cheerful companion, and aJ worthy Man, I
[No title]
His Majesty has prorogued Parliament until the 23 d of January, then to meet for the dis- patch of business. On Saturday last, a Coroner's Inquest was :aken at Montgomery, on the body of a youpu- i ivoman, who was shot through the head by a jentieman's servant. It appeared that the nan was intoxicated, and bringing a gun down ) itairs to- clean, and passing near the girl, it ?ras discharged, and caused the fata) accident. < rhe Jury returned a verdict of man-slaughter, t uid lhe ujau was comniitlcd to gaaJ. t WooncoflKS, &c.-1hertf etn be no dmibt, | hut that a very great proportion of the wood- J cocks, snipes, plovers, starlings, aud such other birds as.migrate to the southward, in the winter season, are lost in the vast Atlantic Ocean. They generally travel before the i storm, and frequently amidst the obscurity of dawn, and snow showers. At these times, woodcocks abound on the Sciliy islands, and near the Lizard and Land's End; the extreme Southern and Western Capes of Cornwall; where, such as approach before they are quite opent, like Noah's dove, find rest from the oceans of water and air and such as cannot reach the shore, frequently drop, exhausted with fatigue, upon such ships as they happen to discover. There are few vessels from the Atlantic, which, upon approaching the coast at this season, are not visited by these forlorn voyagers; while great, numbers of others are seen—'(yet, how small a proportion of the whole can ever be secii, in foul weather to the southward and westward, where an ocean, too vast for the strongest wing to I pass over, must inevitably swallow them up. i It appears, from a paragraph in the Moni- teur, linn. Bonaparte, before he left the Aus- trian Palace at. Schoenbnmn, packed up seve- • ral valuable pictures and books, and sent them to Paris. This b a species of low that neither the Duke of Marlborough, an Englishman, nor King William, a Dutchman, nor even Louis XIV. a Frenchman, were ever guilty of. The celebrated Miss Taylor, the friend of Mrs. Clarke, it has been said, was in a state of distress, not having received a shilling of the subscriptions raised for her. The first part of this statement is correct; but the latter part of it is 7101 true. The whole sum raised for her use iu this way amounted to upwards of £ 2,000. of which she received Z-300. to pay her debts; and a farther SUll) of to pro- vide and prepare a house, for the pupose oi re-opening tier school, instead of applying it so, she thought proper to set off, with her father and mother to Broadstairs upon a party of Uuder these circumstances, the Trustees did not think it adviscable to- make b'T any further payment, but have declared themselves ready to purchase an annuity wilh the balance in their hands the moment that she furnishes them with necccssary instructions for that purpose, charging themselves with interest for the same while it rcmilins in their hands. His Majesty has been graciously pleased to t, confirm the honour of Knighthood on Sir Thomàs Staines, hy granting him his Royal licence and permission IV accept and wear the insignia of a Knight Commander of the Royal Sicilian Order of St. Ferdinand and of Merit, conferred upon him by his Majesty Ferdinand I V. King of the Two Sicilies, as a mark of the sense his Scilian Majesty entertaius of the great skill and intrepidity displayed by the said Sir Thomas Staines during his services in the Bay of Naples m June last. Local Militia—The following clause is ex- tracled from the iiistrzieLioll.4 to Colonels of Local Militia Regiments, dated War-Office, 1st August, UW9,The pay and the al- lowaiices, as on a march, for the days of ving at and departing from the place appointed for Exercise, are only allowed to those Offi- cers, Non-Commissioned Officers, Drummers, and private men, whose residence'is-at such a distance from the plaee of exercise as shall be considered by the Commandant, sufficient to warrant the charge being brought against the public." Publication of Banns ilf TI)c Lord Chancellor, in a late cause, laid down the law to be pursued by the clergy upon the publication of banns. His Lordship said, he understood that clergymen frequenly publish- cd banns upon their being handed up to them, alter the first and second lesson. The law, however, allowed no such power. OBy the Act of Parliament for the regulation of mar- riages, the banns should be made known to the clergyman atleast seven days before the publication, together with the christian and surname of the parties, the parish in which they resided, together with their respective residences, and how long they had occupied them. It was the duty of the clergyman, after the first notice, to go to the house where he was directed, and make enquiries there as to the facts; if on such enquiry he was de- ceived, then he was certainly not to blame for the first publication; but if he neglected to make such enquiry, he was subject not only to heavy ecclesiastical censure, but to punishments of another description, I t-
j COURT OF KING's BENCH, Nov.…
j COURT OF KING's BENCH, Nov. 21.. VERB V. LORD CAWDOR AND 'ANOTHER. IND A-, This was an action for damages, on acconnt rof the defendant's game keeper having shot l and killed the plaintiff's dog. The plea was, that the defendant, Lord Cawdor was Lord of a manor, at Kidwelly, in the county of Carmarthen, and that' the other defendant was his Lordship's game-keeper .that the plaintiff's dog came upon that ma- nor, and was following a hare, ancÎmight t, It then and there have killed the said hare; that the gamekeeper shot, the said do as it was lawful for him to do. To which plea there was a demurrer. Lord Ellen bo rough, hy way of shewing the absurdity of this plea, said—ts I" lb ink' the plea does not justify the killing of the gate- keeper; is it to be endured that a man's dog, or any other animal, shall be shot because he v, a hare, without statiii, in the justifi- cation of killing that dog it was nucssary to hill it; or that the dog belonged to an un- j m qualified person, aud was pursuing game Uil- } lawfully? All this, or some of this was sure! v necessary to be staled J' Mr. Scarlet quoted several cases as anala- gous to this plea, and one, from the prece- dent of which this case had actually been drawn. Lord Eilenborough— Upon this pica, the question is, whether the dog incurs the penal- ty of death for running after a hare, in the manor of another. This case, upon this plea, has nothing to do with properly in game, nor with any right that may be delegated, by a Lord of the manor, or any other qualified person, to a game-keeper but it is the sim- Ille case of one animal running after another; I ind the question is, if a questiou it can be I "ailed, whether the animal so pursuing ano- :her, may legally be killed, without stating hut the uct oi killiug him was accessary. If