MORE SEIZURES OF PUTRID FOOD
... MORE SEIZURES OF -PUTRID FOOD. S, CARDIFF T4,4DESkMEX FINED. 7 ;, At the borough' police-court, on Friday (before cr a MIr. B. 0. Jones and Aderman Alexander), James It Scours, a shopkeeper, ea-rying ...
... MORE SEIZURES OF -PUTRID FOOD. S, CARDIFF T4,4DESkMEX FINED. 7 ;, At the borough' police-court, on Friday (before cr a MIr. B. 0. Jones and Aderman Alexander), James It Scours, a shopkeeper, ea-rying ...
... SIR WILFRID LAWSON ON THE TRAFFIC. ^eejz Sir Wilfrid Lawson, speaking at Bristol on eo rj night, made some reference to Mr Cross's new A'tlfP licensing of public h .ose, and said that never hefd*^ BO shamefully treat'd b>- his pa ...
... THE TABLET ON MR GLADSTDKF Men are asking the Tall« ^ONE statesman turned theologian? And th rV'LL question thus First, that when the then Archdeacon of Chichester and Mr. Hone Scott entered the Catboli Church some twenty- three years ago, Mr. Gladstone himself was on the point of making hisbut tarned his back upon the light he laa becosao the more petemical'y hostile; and personal feeling, ...
... BEWABE OF PRRATICAL IiiiTATioys OF ALLCOCK'S PENOTR* PLASIEE.—thvin? to the wonderful sale these celebrated plalo ten; have obtained by their curative properties in lumbago, sciatica, rheumatism, pains in side and back, and in short, aU pains and local aflectiuIls, some unprincipled parties have been manufacturing and offering: for sale spurious plasters, put ap in such a manner so as to ...
... NOTES FROM LONDON. [FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.] LONDON, FRIDAY. The new Liberal club started recently will be opened before Parliament meets, and be called the Devonshire Club, after the Duke of Devonshire, its first president. Mr Gladstone, Mr Bright, and Lords Westmoreland and Lansdowne are the trustees. It is rumoured in the Law Courts that Vice-Chancellor Malins and Mr Justice Mellor ...
... d Professor Tyndall, In a second letter to the r `iines, writes :-It is not my intention to enter into any controvery aas to the points raised in the 'd letter which you d ...
... inquiry. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ AT - - - - - -1.- -AA CHA M.f A A1- Sir George Bowyer writes to the Times as fol- rec k lows :- Four years and some months have ...
... The Morning Mail treats it as a bid for office, and heads its srtlde with the words Bearing up for the Port pro- tenant. It Snys Mr. Gladstone, having failed to establish his Protestantism— or as we ought, perhaps, rather to say, haTirg failed to put himself again en rapport with the English mind—discerning its present tendency, is about to make another effort to outbid Mr. Disraeli. It ill a ...
... LIBELLING AN M.P. Yesterday, in the Court of Exchequer, sitting: in bane. before BaronsBramwell and Clea»l>y,Mr. Char es louip on made an application to their lordships on be la o tie plaintiff in the caM of Turner v. T?ame», mthe Solicitor-General, Mr. John Holker, 4- .•> the plaintiff*s lea.ling counsel, had at the pievio » si lug o( =. nl« ni»i. calling upon the defendant to shew cause why ...
... THE SOUTH WALES COAL AND IRON TRADES. THE IRONWORKfcliS AND THEIR MANAGER AT EBBW VALE. A deputation has waited on Mr Richards, according to appointment, to learn the present terms of the reduction, and was introduced by Mr. Janeth Forge, manager. We need hardly state that the reception given to the nun was of the most cordial and concilia!o y mature. Mr. Richards assured them that at one time ...
... CRIME IN, CARDIFF. THE annual publication of the criminal statistics for Cardiff is anything but a pleasant experience. It for. cibly reminds us of the existence in our midst of a large number of persons who are really a source of great danger to us. Not only do they prey upon oar goods and chattels, but they have the faculty of multiplying their kind, of seducing others from the paths of ...
... CARDIGAN. A meeting for the election of mayor took place on Monday, when, owing to the popularity of the gentleman whom it was kuown was the choice of the corporation, the council chamber was found to be quite inadequate for the large numbers of burgesses of every political and religious creed who attended, and the meeting had, con- sequently, to be held in the large room of the Guildhall. Mr ...