Papurau Newydd Cymru
Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru
8 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
Advertising
TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, At the Vaynol Arms, in the city of Bangor, in the county of Carnarvon, on Friday, the 6th day of May, 1814S between the hours of 3 and 5 0 clock in the afternoon, subject to such conditions, as shall be then produced, (unless disposed of in the mean time by Private Contract, of which due Notice will be given.) A LL those Valuable Four FIELDS, Parcels of Laiul, situate lying and being in the 'parish of Aber, in the said county of Carnarvon, commonly called and known by the name of Caeau Penrallr, now in the occupation of William Ro- berts, as tenant from year to year. The above Fields are within about half a mile of the Turnpike-road, leading from Bangor to Conway, the tenant has an unlimitted right of Common upon the valuable Sheep-walk called Bwlch y Ddaufan. Is For further particulars apply at Mr EvtNs "Office, Carnarvon. BANGOR—NORTH WALES. TO HE LET, -And entered upon, the 12th day of May next. rrrHAT desirable residence, in the City of -—- Bangor, called the Cottage, now in the -cccnpation of the Rev. Archdeacon Jones.—The -advantages of this commodious Dwelling-house, comprizing two parlours, an excellent drawing- room, five bed-rooms, kitchen, brewhouse, store- I rooms, and a garret; together with a garden, two j stables, coach-house, dairy, &c. &c. concur in rendering this a most eligible situation for any genteel tamil), desirous of procuring an habita- tion in this attractive part of North Wales. The situation and prospect are universally admired, For further particulars apply to Mr. ROBERIS, Dep. Reg. Bangor. fidf* Rent for the whole 50 guineas, or without one stable and the coach-house = £ 4(i. N. li. A few acres of Land may be had with these premises if required. E fhis Adveriiement will not be continued.] Bangor, 20th April, 1814. Abcrdaron Inclosure Act. I THE Ln(let-sigoed Commissionersppoitif- ed in ar.il by an Act of Parliament, made ami passed and the 51st year of the reign of his present Majesty, entitled, an Act for Indosillt; Lands in the parish of Aberdaron, and other 'parishes, in the county of Carnarvon," DO HEREBY GiVE NOTICII, That for the purpose of defraying the charges and expenses of carrying the said Act into execu- tion, I shall cause several Lots or Portions of the Common, called Morfa mawr, in the parish of Denio, to be Sold by Auction, at the Crown Tind Anchor, in the low,, of Pwllheli,on Wednes- day the 25th day of May next, between the hours (Of 3 altd 5 o'clock in the afternoon, subject to "Conditions of sale. Particulars of the several Lots may be bad of -meittie said Commissioner, or at the of MT. ROBERTGRIFFITII, Solicitor Pwllheli. RICHARD ELLIS, Commissioner. Pielthcli, 16th April IS 14. LIKENESSES TAKEN IN ONE MINUTE, BY CILLESPIE'S IMPROVED PHY SIOG NOGRA.PH, Arrd iieatlyfitiished on Bristol Boards, at 2s. 6d. each. Profiles, in colours, 5s. Children, in colours, 5s. MR. GILLESPIE rcspeclfully informs the Ladies and Gentlemen of Bangor and its vicinity, that the Physiognograph is at Mr. Evan Tivans's, Tinman, where he will he happy to at- attend to their commands, and from his finishing the shade in a superior manner, and at so low a lie IKS pes to be honoured with their pa- tronage. Specimens to he seen at Mr. R.Evans. An assortment of Miniature Frames. Mr. Gillespie's stay will only be for a short ,time-while he remains in this place he will give lessons in drawing- and painting. Ladies and Gentlemen desirous of the opportunity of his in- structions, will be so good as app'y early as his time here is limited. JSGLESEi'. TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, fit the BuWs Head Inll, in the Town of Llanerchy- medd, in the county of Anglesey, on Wednesday, the l\th day of A]ay, between the hours of 3 and 3 o clock in ihe afternoon, subject to the Life Estate of a person aged about 77 years, and to such conditions as shall be then produced, (unless disposed of in tltemean lillle by Private, Contract, oj tOlllch dne Notice will be given.) AT Eligible Messuage, Tenement, and Lands, lying and being in the parish of Llanfwiog, in the county of Anglesey, commonly called and known by the name of Tyddynsherri, containing upwards of 38 acres, now in the oc- cupation of Henry Thomas, as tenant from year <o year. This Tenement is most pleasantlysituated upon a gentle eminence, adjoining the sea opposite to .the Harbour of Holyhead, it commands a beau- tiful view of the Town and Bay of llolybead, and is within two miles of the Town by water. It is a desirable place for the residence of a Family that wish to live in the Island of Angle- sey, near a good Market Town, and the public Toad from Holyhead to London, and other parts of England. The land is arable, in a high state of cultivation, and is very near good sea sand for manure. For further .particulars apply at Mr. ETANS'S Office, Carnarvon. JLlanvcJienal Colliery and Farm, TO BE LET ON LEASE. HOLLAND GRIFFITH, ESQ OF CARREG. Iwyd, in Anglesey, having lately employed an eminent Mineral Surveyor, Mr. John .Farey, sen. to survey, and minutely describe his Coal property in Llanvehenal, situated Ig miles S. W. of Cient, on the post road from Bangor to Holy- head, by a section, maps, and very frill report, containing all necessary particulars, calculations and conditions of letting, has deposited these do- cuments at his Berw MallsiOO- housei near the Colliery, in the custody of ^r' l>rutharchj who is well acquainted with the works that have been carried on in the said Colliery, and wiilshew the premises. Mr. Griffith hereby invites experienced Coal- masters, of sufficient capital, who nayledispos. ed to treat for taking this Colliery and Farm, to freely examine the same; the rent of which last, (as fixed by a land-valuer of eminence) will he sotiti(i in the report, when he doubts not, they *Vi'l find satisfactory evidences, of the most ample quantities of Coal, of good caking quality^ attended with no unusual difficulties of getting, and the market good and certain. With persons who may have made such exami- nation, Mr. G. will be ready to treat, in the order of their applications, at Berw; such may also be made to his Solicitor, Mr. Jennings, No. 4,Elm- Court, in the Temple, London; or Mr. Farey. sen. No; 12, Upper Crowu-strect; Westminster, J WANTED, A GARDENER, for a Gentleman at Ban- gor.—For particulars, apply to the printer of this paper, if by letter, post-paid. April 18th, 1814. TO BE SOLD, A Good strong FAMILY GIG, on its first wheels, with Head and Apron, and Harness coin I)Ieat.-EDquire of the printer of this paper, if by letter, post-paid. rriHE ANNIVERSARY of the UNION JL SOCIETY, will be held at the Union Room, Carnarvon, on Monday the 25th Instant. Dinner on the table at 3 o'clock. DAVID P. EVANS, Esq. Chairman. JOHN LLOYD, Secretary. Carnarvon, April 19, 1814. TO COVER THIS SEASON, 1814, (The property of G. Underbill, Horse-dealer, Eaton, near Shrewsbury,) IN CARNARVONSHIRE AND ANGLESEY, At One Pound Six Shillings each mare, (The money to be paid at the Bull's Head Inn, in I Llangefni, on 22d June, or charged double.) A Dark chesnut-coloured Horse, fifteen glands three inches high, with great strength and beauty, called Young Beningb rough, (Brother to Maidstone) got by Beninbrough, out of Lardella, by Young Marske (which was the sire of Shuttle, Symmetry, &d.) and was got by Old Marske, which celebrated stalliou covered at 100 guineas each mare. Brother to Maidstone won the maiden Plate at Nottingham, in 1806, beating Mr. Sitwell's Shaba, Mr, Andrews's Zofloya, Mr. Baker's May flower, and he was named for the first Class of theOatland Stakes, of fifty guineas each, where high odds were laid in hisffavour against the field, but he fell lame in training, and has not started I since. He is a sure foal-getter, and his stock is strong and bony. He will attend, during the season, at the fol- lowing places, viz. Llanerehvmedd, every Wed I nesday; Llangefni, every Friday; Beaumaris, and Carnarvon, every other Saturday Gwyndd, every Tuesday night; and Pan ton Arms, Angle- sey, every Monday night. TO BE SOLD BY PRIVATE CONTRACT, THE WHOLE OF The New Brewery at Holyhead3 In the county of Anglesey, Held in a lease of three young lives, none of which have dropt, and thirty-one concurrent, years, four of which have expired, except such part or the concern as may appear, Oil an investigation to belong to Mr. John AuwyJ, which wjllllot exceed the one-third. rlo"HIE above Premises, consist of a Brewing-, JL Malting, and D 'velting-house, together with all the necessary Offices for carrying on an extensive business, has a good stream of water running through the Premises, -by which much labour is saved in Grinding Mali, and pumping water for Brewing, and wort back to the copper, &e. and is certainly as well coa/rived and com- plete for the purpose of Brewing and Malting, as any in the Principality. Any person who can command five or six thousand pounds or upwards, might employ it to good advantage. Any person desirous of purchasing, will be pleased to send Tenders sealed up, directed and post paid, to Mr. John Evans, Agent for the New Brewery, Holyhead, who will, upon application shew the Premises; iu the Tender the parties will be pleased to state what premium they will give, over and above what it may appear upon valuation, by six com- petent persons, the Premises, Stock and mfmey due amounts to. Half the Purchase-money must be paid in three months, and the remaining half on the thirty- first of December next, proposals in writing will be received for twenty days from this date, and at the expiration of that time, the parties pro- posing will be acquainted with the name of the purchaser. In the mean time the Public are respectfully informed, that, the business will meet with no ■interruption, and that all orders will be thank- fully received, and punctually attended to. Holyhead, 20th April, 1814.
London, Monday Everting, April…
London, Monday Everting, April 18. TnE Earl of Harrow!))- is to be the British Minisler at the Ilpproaching Congress. His Lordship will afterwards be our Ambassador at the Court of his Most Chislian Majesty Louis tiie lgtli. This appointment renders the post of President of (he Council vacant.— It will be filled by the Earl of Buckingham- shire,who retires from the Board of Control. Lord Melville quits the Admiralty, and re- turns to the Board of Control. And Mr. Can- ning is to be the new First Lord of the Admi- ralty, in the room of Lord Melville. Wo con- gratulate the country upon the accession to the Cabinet of such a man as Mr. Canning. His Majesty Louis XVill. leaves Hart well to-morrow, and proceeds to the Prince of Conde's at Wimbledon, where he will sleep to- morrow night. Eight of the Prince's carriages L will be sen* down for his Majesty and his suile, and on Wednesday morning his Royal High- ness the Regent will go to Wimbledon to con- duct his Majesty into London, under an escort of cavalry; he will enter it, we believe, at Hyde Park Corner, and the road from thence to Albemarle-street will be lined by infantry. All tbe regiments of cavalry in and near the metropolis will precede the royal carnages.— The Park and Tower guns will fire a royal salute. A Proclamation, we suppose, will be issued immediately for the cessation Of 's between France and this country, by sea and land. Orders have already been sent to Ply- mouth and other places, for the prisoners to prepare themselves for being liberated in ten days. Our naval and military forces are re- turning to the peace establishment. The making of large anchors, cables, and sails, hall been directed to be discontinue* Count d'Arre and a French Naval Officer arrived yesterday at Dover, with dispatches for his Majesty Louis XVIII. and immediately set off for London. They expected to have found his Majesty at Duver, or on the road between Dover and London. A short dispatch from Lord Casflereagh in the Supplement to Saturday's Gazette, an- nounces the entrance of Monsieur into Paris- In his reply to the Provisional Government, he says,—" No more division Peace & France; I see it once more, and nothing is changed. except that there is one Frenchman more amongst you." There is an affecting and touch. ing simplicity in these words worthy Henry IV. Morlier has given in his adhesion. Hostilities against Bergeii-op-Zoom, Flush- 11 z!1 ing, and Antwerp, have cC;lsed-AII these places have hoisted the white flag as well as Lisle. The Crown Prince set off for Paris on the 10th. Our troops from Sicily broke up from Leghorn on the 13lh lilt. and entered Lucca. The Paris Papers to the 14th are chiefly fil- led with details of Monsieur's reccplioll.- When he came to Levri he was wet hy a de- tachment of National Guards. "My chil- dren," said the Prince, our miseries are fi- nished; our only care shall be to make you forget them." The grenadiers instantly threw down their arms and look his Royal Highness in theii arms. The Officer of the Guards said to him, Monseigncur, I want words to ex- press my feelings and my happiness is in. creased, for I had the honour to serve in the same regiment with YOII-I am of your age t, y I and, like you, I married a Savoyard." When his Royal Highness entered Paris he was mounted upon a white horse and dressed in the National Guard uniform. He was sur- rounded by the Count Is Ney, Marmont, Moncey, Serrurier, Keilerman, Ge- nerals Desolles, llicard, &e. When he passd under the Gale St. Denis, he let the reins fali upon his horse's neck, and his hands together said, "Again I pass under the tri- umphal arch erected to the glory of my grand- father. I am again in the bosom of that dear country for which I have mourned so long- Oh GOD! Oil Goi) I" It was not lill six. in the evening that he readied the Thuilleries, at the enh ance of which he was received hy the Pro- visional Government. Bonaparte set oft for the Isle of Elba at the very moment Monsieur entered. The formal Act of Abdication was not made public in Paris tin the 13!h. It is dated from Fonlainbieau on the I iii, yet it was published here on the 9th. The marriage of the Princess Charlotte of Wales, to the Heredit arv Prince of Orange, will he celebrated in July. Brest and Rochefort have hoisted the while nag, and our squadron off those potrs are on the best terms with the squadron in them. I The French Admiral received an invitation to dine with Sir Harry Neale on board the Zea. ous, a few days since. The to Saturday's Gazette con- tains the official account from Sir Henry WeI. lesley of the restoration of another Bourbon (Ferdinand the Till) to his throne and country. To such a state of desperation did the news of Tuesday (Dethronemont of Bonaparte, and Restoration of the Bourbons,) drive some of the adherents of the Popish Board, in Dub in, that they actually pulled down and tore in pieces tiie placards of the different newspa- pers, announcing the arrival of the glorious "ol S intelligence. Two of the miscreants concerned were arrested and carried to Duke-slreel Police office. This spirit has not been confined to tiie city of Dublin the maii coach carried out similar placards, one of which wss left at Maynoolh in consequence of which, yester- day morning, notices were posted on the doors of Mayuooth church, and other places, de. daring the whole a fabrication, invented by the enemies of the Catholics of Ireland. PRICE OF STOCKS. 3 per Ct Consols fi>\ ] 6iH 4 :r2 3 per Ct. Red.- (34Jf- (>;i 4 per Cents 7sf CoosutstorAcc. J
[No title]
The present year, as far as it has yet ad- vanced, promises to he a Russian one entirely. After a most severe winter—an immediate change to warm weather, and a spring already far advanced in vegetation. Twice had Bonaparte ran away from his army, and now to complete the measure of his cowardice and baseness, he has consented to drag on a miserable existence, a pensioner and an outcast, despised and detested by all man- kind, The North Wales Circuit closcd at Dolgelley for the; county of Merioneth, on Friday last, where John Doe, Richard Roe, Dio Denn, Pio Penn, and the rest of this ancient family, were somewhat harshly treated.—The genile- men of the long robe and practitioners refused to employ them, and in consequence there was not a single cause for trial. We hear they mean to make a bustle upon the next Circuit, (if pos- sible) in order to retrieve their characters.— The doors of Dolgelley gaol were thrown open, not a prisoner of any description being confined.—This fact requires no commcn 1 from us. At Carnarvon a cause was tried, in which the plaintiff in an action for defamation, re. covered twenty shillings damages only, and of course each party will pay smart money. We this week present our maritime readers with an engraved chart of Carnarvon Bar and L Harbour, which will i-egiiiarly appear ill each week's impression every alteration which the tides or weather may occasion, will he punctually stated, forming, we trust, a com- plete guide to masters of vessels trading to Carnarvon. There has been a mistake in the amount of the sum said to have been allotted 10 Bona- parte for his maintenance in the island of Elba, which was the place to which felons t were SCAt from Tuscany. If is not 6,000,000 francs, but 600,000, about 24,0001. sterling a year. Mr. Aslett, who has been so long confined in Newgate, has, it is said, received a pardon from tlie Prince Regent, on the condition of becoming an exile for life. Salurday,as soon as the glorious intelligence arrived at Oswestry, many of the inhabitants paraded the streets testifying their joy at the probable restoration of Peace and the Bour- bons, when they were attacked hy a number of the French prisoners, some of whom es- poused the Bourbon cans?, and hoisted the white cockade; it was not till several were much hurl that order was restored. Corner v. Chnmpneys.—This action, tried at the late Assizes for Somersetshire, held at Taunton, was brought against T. S. Champ- neys, Esq. and his gamekeeper Ralph Crozier, for shooting the Plaintiff's greyhound; which was proved by several sporting Gentlemen to be of such extraordinary vulwe, that had it been their own they wouid not have taken 50 or even 100 guineas for her. This actiofl was attempted to be justified by Mr. Chanip- neyg having caused hoards to he put on the oulside of his grounds, specifying that dogs found therein would be shot but the judge was clearly of opinion, that such notice could notjustily them in shooting the greyhound y and directed the jury to find a verdict for Ihe Plaintiff, to the full value of the greyhound, and Ihey accordingly returned a verdict for the Plain I iff—Damages 501. The following curious robbery took place on Thursday morning ••—Two or three men having the appearance of lamp lighters, came with ladders alld hampers and took d->wu all the lamps which were used its illuminating the fronts ol two houses iu Holhorn, consisting of stars, crowns, inilials, and other ornaments, which they carried away. At twelve o'clock the real owners came to takedown the lamps, v. Ilea they discovered they had been saved that trouble by the adroit thieves who preceded them. On Wednesday night, a gentleman, who had been viewing the illuminations at Somer- set House, after suffering many hard squeezes in forcing his way through the immense crowd, went into Mr. Boulter's, the sign of the New George, Little Drury-lanc, and called for a glass of rum at the h, which, when Mr. Boulter was serving him with, he smiled and remarked, that that was a very nnusuaiandunsaicwayturagentiemanto carry his walch, parlicularly on such a night at the same time pointing to a watch which was suspended by a white ribbon from one of the lower buttons of his coat. The Gentleman was surprised, he put down his hand, and found he had iiis own watch sale in his fob, but con- fessed he was ignorant how the olher walch came to be suspended to his button, unless that in the crowd his button had got entangled in the' ribbon, and and so pulled it out of some persons fob. Mr. Borders, a Gentleman resident at Tros- tot), in Suffolk, is well known there for his ardent attachment to the sports of the field. For many years he has been accustomed to hunt with the Duke of Grafton's hounds. In the season of 1812—13 he was himself 77 years old his horse, the same he always rode, 26, his saddle 28, his boots, 40, and his breeches, 48 The horse, a brown gelding, was killed last year. t, The joy produced amongst (he prisoners of war at Norman Cross, by the change of af- fairs in trance, is quite extravagant and lItI- descrihable. A large while flag is set up in each of the quadrangles of (he depot, under which the thousands of poor fellows who have been for years in confinement-through the cruel ambition of Bonaparte, dance," sing, laugh, and cry for joy, and produce a perfect bedlam of deliht. Two hundred and fifty of the poor fellows were marched away on Mon- day for France and the same number on Tuesday; they are in exchange for those of our country men who weretakcn by the Frcuch at. the late unfortunate attack on Bergen-op- Zoom. The Prince Regent has signified his inten- tion to invite the gallant Blucher to this country, thaL he may have in person the op- portunity of testifying his respect for the ta- lents, his esteem for the virtues, and his liiO'h sense of the services which the heroic veterau has rendered to the great cause of independent nations and the civilized world. Twenty-five thousand troops are forthwith to be transported to America and already the public mind is prepared for the exertion of all our strength, in bringing back that froward people to unconditional submission. At any rate, it is thought to be no diflicultlask to separate the Northern from the Southern States, and thereby to find sufficient employ ment for the turbulent spirit of Mr. Madison at home. 1:1
IMPROMPTU.
IMPROMPTU. Uttle Nap Horner, Is up in a corner, Dreading a doleful doom Ile wlio gave to'tlier clay Whole kingdoms away, Now is glad to se t-L, lba -I-gom. <
SHIP NEWS.
SHIP NEWS. PORT PEN tin YN — Arrived,N>pi tune, Roam i Milts, Bodeu, from Liverpool, ballast; Rose in June, Jones; Britannia, Parry, from Swansea, culm; Lady Peurhyn, Jones, Irom Llanelly Charles, Joaes, from Chester, coals; Ilero, Jones, fioai Chester, sundries. Cleared out, Hope, Williams, for Ballvshan- non; Swiftsure, Williams, for Kihrnsh Annanu Elizabeth, Priehard Harriet, Williams, for Cork; Olive, Mairs; Jubilee, Hill, forDroghe- da; Bangor and Liverpool Packet, Price, for Douglas; Nelly, Taylor, for Bridgeware! Nep- tune, Rome, for Dumfries; Industry, Roberts; Wellington, Edwards, for London; Minerva, Hudson; Grace, Dale, for Liverpool, siafes. PWI.LHE.Y.—Arrived, Mary, Griffiths, from Dundalk, linen; Chester, Evans, from Chester, goods; Hopewell, Hughes; Lovely Peggy, Da- vies; Nelly, Pierce, from Liverpool, coals; Royal Oak", Williams, Conway, timber Nelly, Evans, Tenby; Betsey, Edwards, Pembroke, culm. Cleared out, Friendship, Ellis, for Castle- town, tste of Man Cilgwyn, Rowlands, Dublin Ellinor, Jones, Chatham; ,vaiis, Chatham; Elizabeth,. Williams, for London; Harmony, Rowlands, for Liverpool; Dove, Parry, for Conway, slates Ann Williams'for Liverpool, siafes and potatoes. PWLLHELV.—Arrived, Defence, Rowlands Rachel, Gritiith Sincerity, Griffith$Menai, Jones; Sisters, Griffith, from Liverpool, coals and sundries; Eleanor, Roberts, from Beauma- ris, msll stones; Diligence, Edwards, from Aber- vstwith, oak limber and plank; Resolution, Da- vies, from Chester, coal and brcks. Put ill, Cygnet, Thomas, from Bowling Bat to Waterford. Cleared out, Blessing, Roberts, for Newport, slates; Fisher, Pilchard; Jane, Morris, from Liverpool, sundries. BEAUMARIS. — Arrived, Prince William, Wil- liams; Raven, Thomas, from Newry to llangor ilax; Charles, Jones; Nancy, M'Cane Nep- rune, Morris, from Liverpoo!, to Bangor,ballast Mills, Boden, from Conway, to Bangor; Sisters, Jones, from Newry, to Carnarvon, ballast; Sup- ply, Griffilh, froBI Li,crpool,to Pwllhely Mar- garet, Evans, from Liverpool, to Aberdovev; Lovely Peggy, Davies; Kelly, Price, from Li- verpool, to Carnarvon, coals and sundries; Vine, Ellis, from Liverpool, to Beaumaris, coals and flax; Charming Nelly, Watkins, from Llanelly, to Redwharf, culm; Fox, Jones, from Arklow, to Beaumaris, oysters Jane, Morris, from Pwll. hely, to Liverpool, paving stc)iiei, &c. Coicoi-(I, Evans, from Redwharf, to Aberdovey, limestone
A CHART OF CARNARVON BAR AND…
A CHART OF CARNARVON BAR AND HARBOUR. Directions for Ships and Vessels sailing into Car- narvon Harbour, over the Bar. In order to facilitate the navigation of this Har- hour, two Buoys are placed on the Bar, the outer one is painted black, and the inner red; a Perrh Bank! CreCted Baak"' Cal!ed tlle Muscle LuNDDwrs lies about two miles distance from the biack Buoy, m a N. by E direction. DIN AS DINLLE lies from three, or from that Buoy.m ^S. l^tn^ection!3'5^"02 ''0m Ule b!ack r^he'1; £ £ SbT The red Buoy lies about two, or from that, to two and a quarter miles distance from the Perch in a W. by N. direction. All vessels coming iii, should leave the Perch on ihe larboard baud—(he Buoys are in th* deep. f:xl)ert Pitcts -.niy always be had on ma!ciii.- the proper signal. te/iSh M"'ier,at Al11 atld dianSe» at a quarter af- ter nine o clock. The Trustees of this Harbour have expended from four to five hunrIred pouri(ls in hlastin:: "ome of the rocks at theSwillies, to low water mark whiui has rendered a most free passage for shins and vessels of large burthen, comin*- from the SrofMena?/Iarb0Ur' tiJroi*h C::3- This Bar is a shifting Bar; wt-enever H-e Buoys shall be replaced, [Jropercare will betake to give ihe true bearings, distance, &c. of them- in this paper.
! TIDE TABLE FOR THE ENSUING…
TIDE TABLE FOR THE ENSUING WEEK, H 5 » a j • I LAVAS/ SAJNOS. a E S s 5 .? « 25- § s K 55 # S S £ May he crossed 3 >• £ 5 ;« « £ &5 W S ^«Mrs high «! 5 £ 5 ° < ia g m « w «>«&»•, andconti- h | o o «o nuesafe4 hours„ h | p., o o ¡Q 0 -< ntie safi: 4 flOurs. p., u /7„v TligJTTlugTi //?#a T/IJa High 1 yJ Trafer ( Water Water Water Water Water Hobdays. APRIL. H. »!. I H. M. II. M. | H. M. | H. M. | H. Thursday .21 8 18 9 J8 9 58 10 48 11 8 ill 48 Friday, 22 9 6 [ 10 6 10 46 11 36 11 56 12 ?6 Saturday .23 9 54 (10 54 11 34 12 24 J 12 44 1 1 24 Sunday 24 10 44 11 42 12 22 1 12 1 32 2 12 2d S. af. Easter Monday 25 11 30 12 30 1 10 2 0 2 20 3 0 Tuesday 26 12 18 t 18 I 58 2 48 3 8 3 48 Wednesday.27 1 6 2 6 1 2 46 3 36 3 56 4 36
Family Notices
THURSDAY APRIL 21. "A II rtJ EO. On Thursday, Mr. Sykes, of Bristol, to Miss Thomas, of Cowbridge. On Monday the 11th inst. at Uandderfel, by the Iiev. T. Davies, Richard Michael Chadwick, Esq. to Miss Ann Roberts, of Bryn Selwin, near Bala. Drrcn. On the 12th inst. at Llanfawr, near Holyhead, Mrs. Jane Vickers, at an advanced age. On Tuesday the 12th inst. Elizabeth, third daughter of Mr. Burne, Chentra saint, i,laiirug. On Thursday, at her house in Hill-street, Lon- don, Lady Glyn, relict, of Sir Rd. Glyn, Bart. At Aberdeen, in the 29th year of her age, Miss Roderick, daughter of Mr. W. Roderick, of Llan- elly, Carmarthenshire. Lately, J. Bowen, Esq. of Maes, in the county of Carmarthen, of which he was for many years an active and upright Magistrate. On Sunday se'nnight, at Chelsea College, the venerable Dr. Burney, in his 88tli year, author of The History of Music," &c.