Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

10 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

z Llandovery Gossip. ^

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Rhannu

z Llandovery Gossip. [By CIW BOWDDWR. "] My notes last week went astray. When I saw the Editor on Thursday afternoon, they had not yet reached the office, although posted on Monday. I wonder if by chance they have yet arrived at their destination? One can never say in these times of turmoil what may happen. There is, however, no cause for regret, for the notes were neither Bradburys or Fishers." On the day of publication, editors of local newspapers are usually flooded with copy that ought to have been in hand on Monday or Tuesday morn- ing, and it becomes a question of how to compress the contents of a quart into a pint. A free use of the blue pencil follows, with an accompaniment of expletives not intended for polite society. The country scribe, often living in some outlandish mountain fast- ness, regards his account of a tea-fight in the nearest village of such import- ance that the poor, tired, bald-headed and worn-out editor should devote at least a column and a half of his valuable space to it. He is entirely lacking in a sense of proportion. Last week, there must have been a good deal of teeth gnashing on the part of the aforesaid scribe. One editor of a country newspaper whose loyalty and devotion to my directors is touching in the extreme overcame the difficulty of collecting copy" by sending a motor cyclist on a house-to-house visit to his contri- butor.s A few paragraphs giving the collector's experiences would no doubt prove very interesting. The announcement that the railway strike was at an end was first made publicly at the Williams Pantycelyn Memorial Chapel on Sunday evening by Mr. T. Handley, Rose Cottage. Later, Councillor W. J. Esmond, J.P., c hairman of the local branch of the N. U R., repeated it at a sacred con- cert held under the auspices of the branch at the, Public Hall. In both instances there were sighs of relief. The fate of the Llandovery Work- house is in the balance. Mr. Wm. Thomas, one of the members for Caio, will initiate a debate at to-morrow's (Friday) meeting of the Board of Guardians as to whether its existence should be continued. With whatever feeling hthe present generation may regard the Institution- I hardly think il is one of. love and veneration—hos- tility and resentment heralded its birth. i have been told that after the con- struction of the building had proceeded to a certain stage that the then inhabi- tants viewed it with such hatred, that some of them clandestinely set it on fire. Whether this is so, or whether the burning was the result of an acci- dent, I have no means of ascertaining, but some of the older natives might be able to enlighten me and my readers on the matter. Viewed from one modern aspect, these institutions are sadly out of joint with the times we live in. Call them by whatever fancy name you like— Tanybryn or Cilcennen Castle-there is writ large over their portals the stigma ol pauperism. Few enter their gates, the victims of cruel fate or those who owe their downfall to their own folly and profligacy, with much hope of afterwards receiving an invitation and a smile of welcome from the more fortu- nate world outside. A barrier as un- climbable as a high stone wall or a spiked iron railing divides them. It is only the weak-willed and feeble- minded who can without a feeling of loathing and contempt receive the approaches of many of those who greet them as inmates with patronising airs. As I predicted, the Demob." Eis- teddfod attracted an immense con- course of people to the town and the inside of the Drill Hall itself. The competitions were keen, and the com- petitors, in in a threadbare phrase, were up to a high standard. A good number of people found themselves stranded in the borough and unable to proceed on their journeys by the railway strike. Some of them hailed from Neath and Briton Ferry. The profiteering correspondence in the newspapers is still, like Charley' s Aunt, running. It will no doubt have a salutary effect. Honest folk will have no cause to fear. Resentment jvill only manifest itself in the case of the guilty. There is nothing like publicity to remove grievances, real or fanciful.

LLANGADOCK MAN'S SAD DEATH.…

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