The Kington Times - March 1917

Kington Times 24th March 1917 - Page 8

Page 32 of 32

Kington Times 24th March 1917 - Page 8

Image Details

Date 24/03/1917
Type Newspaper
Format
Language English
Area Kington Times
Collection Holder Herefordshire Libraries
Date of Publication 24th March 1917
Transcription 8
GOLDINGS
Oil Merchants and General Providers
We are pleased to intimate that we have obtained another consignment of the well - known
THE KINGTON TIMES ,
Perfection Oil Cookers
Intending purchasers are advised to order early as the supply is somewhat limited .
New wicks can be re - fitted if clients will forward to us the old wick carriers
All the new patterns in Wallpapers
West Street , Leominster
W. E. RODGERS , Proprietor
CORRESPONDENCE .
THE EDITOR DOES NOT HOLD HIMSELF RESPON- SIBLE FOR THE OPINIONS EXPRESSED BY HIS CORRESPONDENTS . ALL COMMUNICATIONS FOR PUBLICATION MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE SENDER , NOT NECESSARILY FOR PUBLICATION . BUT AS A GUAR ANTEE OF GOOD FAITH .
BREAD OR BEER ? " "
To the Editor of the Kington Times . Sir , In his reply to my letter the Rev. G. Elliot Lee lays emphasis upon the imminent shortage of bread and sugar .
I would point out that the use of wheat for brewing has been prohibited . The material used is principally barley , but bread is not made from barley . The process of brewing turns into a valuable human food a grain that is not otherwise a staple food . Yeast is one of the products of brewing , and where will a sufficient quantity be obtained to make bread As a matter of fact if we stop the brewing .
the home supply of yeast is already short , and a good deal is imported , then why increase the imports ?
The sugar used is of a kind not suitable for domestic purposes , being that known as glu- cose and saccharine . My point regarding tea is that there is plenty of wheat in Australia and New Zealand , if it could be fetched ; therefore , a in the imports of tea , etc. , would mean a cor- responding amount of shipping set free to bring the wheat to this country .
reduction
The action of the Food Controller in prohibit- ing the import of certain classes of tea con- firms this view ..
Yours , etc. , ALFRED PARRY .
HEREFORDSHIRE
WESLEYAN MISSION . QUARTERLY MEETING AT LEOMINSTER . The quarterly meeting of the Herefordshire Wesleyan Mission was held at Leominster Wesleyan Church on Monday afternoon . A good company assembled , presided over by the Rev. W. H. Rolls , the Rev. T. Ferrier Hulme being in attendance .
Among the items of business were the finan- cial statement , returns of membership , Sunday School Guild , and Chapel Trust returns . The Rev. W. H. Rolls was heartily invited to be Superintendent for a second year and the Revs . G. Elliot Lee and W. Standley to remain a fourth year .
Kindly reference was made to the late Mr. J. Downes , so long a faithful and honoured worker in the Leominster section of the Mission .
THE PUBLIC
KNOW !
PREECE & CO .
Have the
LEOMINSTER NOTES .
an-
The Hon . Secretary of the Leominster Branch of the Vegetable Products Committee nounces with much pleasure the receipt from Mrs. Jenney of a cheque for £ 7 os . 3d . for potatoes sold by her , and grown entirely by the donor on ground kindly given by Mr. Edwards and Mr. Price , of Kingsland . This is a splendid help to the branch finances and shows what can be done by energy and patri- otism . Mrs. Jenney and Kingsland well de- serve our sailors ' thanks , as this fine result was entirely attained by her own labour . The Kingsland Boys ' Brigade has now taken over the Navy plot , which they will continue to work for the same cause . We hope that other parishes will follow suit .
The contributors to the Navy Stall in Leo- minster Market on March 23rd , were : Mrs. Thornley , Mrs. Chambers , Mrs. Boulton , Mr. W. C. Boulton , Mrs. Levick , Mr. J. Hutchin- son , Mrs. Jenney , Colonel Davidson .

In connection with the great Farmers ' Red Cross Sale , which takes place at Leominster , on April 13th , the Mayor ( Ald . H. Gosling ) has already received the following subscrip- tions Major C. L. Ward - Jackson , £ 5 ; Alder- man H. F. Russell , £ 10 10s .; Commander A. J. Windebank , £ 5 5s .; Mr. A. Duncan , £ 10 IOS .; Mr. T. Neild , 1o 10s .; Mrs. W. Russell , £ 5 ; Miss Wood , £ 10 10s .
*
Those who have ordered seed potatoes or lime should particularly notice an important letter from the Chairman of the Food Produc- tion Committee ( Councillor J. Watkins ) which appears in another column .


We regret to record the death of Mr. Job Gittins , of Glan - y - mor Terrace , Bargates , Although he had been ill since before Christ- mas , his death was unexpected . He was well known in the town and highly respected . years . " Mr. Andrew Lewis carried out the funeral arrangements .
In aid of the Leominster Y.W.C.A. a jumble sale will take place at the Institute , Rainbow Street , on Wednesday , April 14th , at 6 p.m.
**
Smartest Raincoats pital would be very glad of gifts of potatoes ,
in Town
From
27/11 .
did not continue very long . On August 4th a United Intercession Service was held in the Baptist Church to mark the end of the 2nd year of the war . This was well attended .. The autumn meetings were held in the Congrega- tional Church on November 9th . The Rev. J.
The Matron of the Leominster Cottage Hos- vegetables and eggs for the wounded soldiers . She returns thanks for the following : Pota- toes , Mrs. Price ; mittens , Mrs. Kostin ; eggs , Miss Wood ; eggs , Mrs. Nott Lewis ; eggs , Miss Burlton ; vegetables , Mrs. E. P. Lloyd ; plants and swedes , Mr. Rees .
**
**
Since the last meetings mentioned in our local notes in connection with the Moravian Church Guild others have taken place on re- cent dates and have been well attended . The
first was a lecture on " Insect Life , " illus- trated by magic lantern slides and given by Mr. W. C. Miles with his usual skill and ability , the lantern being manipulated by Mr. W. J. Thomas . Also a Devotional Meeting was held when the President gave the address and Mrs. Thomas gave a pleasing recitation . The Winter Session was closed with a most
interesting lecture , given by Mr. Harold Eas-
ton .
Needless to say the lecturer drew an appreciative audience , for his former visits were well remembered by many , and his lec- ture " Lawyers in Dickens " surpassed all pre- vious ones in enthusiasm and interest . The Guild is much indebted to Mr. Easton for his : excellent paper .
The programme at Leominster Picture Palace on Monday , Tuesday and Wednesday next is headed by " The Golden Pavement , a story of London and its temptations . " Stolen Magic " is a side - splitting comedy in three parts . Also on the programme are " Tubby's Uncle " and Pathe Gazette . On Thursday and Saturday , April 5th and 7th , the great attraction is " The Bubbles in the Glass , " featuring Harris Golden and Lorraine Huling . " The Janitor's Wife's Temptation , " is an ex- clusive Keystone two - act comedy . The pro-
#
*
#
On
Readers are asked to note that the Leomins- ter News will be published next week on Thursday , as in previous years .
Davison Brown made an admirable substitute in place of the Rev. J. Watkin , who was un- Mr. Brown able to fulfil his engagement . preached a very helpful sermon in the after- noon and gave a stirring address at the even- ing meeting . Our President , the Rev. R. Klesel , presided over the evening gathering and delivered a capital address . The attendance at these meetings was very good . December 31st was the day appointed for National Inter- cession . A United Service was held in the afternoon in the Hall , Etnam Street , and this was followed by a week of Prayer Meetings , We are glad to conducted by the Ministers . report that there has been no change in the I am ministerial members during the year . delighted to mention the true friendship among the members of the Established Church and the Nonconformist Churches and the real hearty brotherliness existing between the clergy and the Free Church ministers . My prayer is that that may deepen and , broaden as the days go on . There have been eight meetings of the Council and one Executive meeting during the year . The officers elected for the ensuing year were : President , Rev. Gordon Lang ; Vice - gramme also includes the final episode of the Presidents , Alderman J. Farr , Mr. E. Ross , great serial drama " The Red Circle . " Mr. C. Norgrove , Mr. W. T. Neatby , Mr. E. the following week patrons should note that B. Reynolds , Mr. W. Russell ( Pembridge ) , Mr. " The Mill on the Floss , " by George Eliot , A. DeAth , and the Free Church Ministers ; has been booked . This film proved great Hon . Treasurer , Councillor John Watkins , attraction at Hereford last week , and all J.P .; Hon . Secretaries , Rev. R. Klesel and readers of the famous story should see this It was decided to utilize the visit of the Mr. R. S. Farrar . At the annual business wonderful film . Rev. S. Chadwick to Hereford in May as a meeting a resolution was passed in fav- Mission Convention to raise that day a sum our of prohibition . Our earnest prayer is of £ 150 for church purposes . that God will direct the Council in all In the evening a special service was held in its efforts and in the great problem which the Church , conducted by the Rev. T. Ferrier we have to face and will build up the Hulme , who preached a powerful sermon from individual churches that they may not only the words " We are not sufficient in ourselves , have a name to live , but be a real power , and but our sufficiency is of God . " He com- the source of comfort and peace to many in menced by saying what a comment that was these days of stress and darkness and sorrow , on the past . Self determination and self and make us ready for the coming peace and energy had carried them far . Sometimes they that each church may be made a real home of had taken them within sight of the goal and joy and brightness with the door open ready to then the unforseen and the unexpected had welcome home the boys who have sacrificed so happened and they had not got there . It was much for us . not a case of luck , but of lack ; they were not sufficient . If that was true of the past as of the future they ought to be convinced of their incompetence and insufficiency . That was why as children of God in that most . critical time of their history they ought to be full of humility and yet full of confidence . He defied any man to look into his own heart rate the Council had justified its existence , and with eyes cleansed by the tears of repentence thanking Mr. Elder for his report , referred to and reality to fail to realise that his individ- the fact that the anticipation of a great re- ual insufficiency rendered him incompetent , vival of spiritual life had not been realised and because sins were cloaked instead of faced . spoke with regret of the failure of thUnited He said they It was owing to these hidden sins to which Prayer Meeting in the town . were organising the nation and he was for or- they would not own that their insufficiency was ginising every ounce of the nation's strength . so glaring .. There was no way to end it except by the lowly way of the Cross and by It struck him , however , that they ought to have organised their spiritual affairs . If the that way alone would they acquire that note Churches had risen to their opportunities and of confidence which was the essential to responsibilities at the outbreak of the war the victory . Dared they face the future without drink question and some other questions . would Some of the noblest natures which have been settled long since and in the right their race had produced , men of massive intel- There was something radically wrong . lect , men with a reputation for moral influ- The fault was not the organisation . They did ence and upright statesmanship , had been the not wantia dictator or a director general . The first to acknowledge that their strength thing was ready to their hands , but they did was in leaning upon God . The preacher went not use it . on to show that the sufficiency of God was
God ?
The Rev. J. C. Elder added a brief , but in-
teresting impression of his visit to the annual conference of the National Free Church Coun- cil and promised a full report at a later date . CHAIRMAN'S ADDRESS .
The Chairman after remarking that at any
way .
The Rev. J. Meredith in a striking address assured to them by His supremacy and that said the Chairman had referred to some things the man of God was the man for the emer- wherein they failed . He agreed that their pro- gency . Mr. Hulme concluded by giving two gress as a nation had been hindered by their striking illustrations , one of the story of the spiritual failures . The events of to - day were book A Student in Arms , " the second being | making the Bible very much more real and he a Christmas letter received from a friend who had been struck with the prophecies of the had just lost his son on the battlefield .
LEOMINSTER FREE CHURCH and thought - provoking manner the analogy be-
COUNCIL .
ANNUAL MEETINGS .
the Moravian Church and speaking at the evening meating . Mr. W. T. evening meeting which
Bible and the remarkable parallels there were between the national condition of those days and the national condition of our own day . The speaker went on to develop in a helpful tween the ministry of Jeremiah and the min- istry of earnest men to - day who were fighting the vices of the day , intemperance , impurity , greed and avarice , with the conviction that

All are heartily invited to an American Tea
at the Moravian Schoolroom on Thursday , April 19th , at 4 p.m. , during which a high- class programme of music will be rendered . Admission , including tea , 6d . Each visitor
is asked kindly to bring one article of any description for the stall , worth not less than 6d . , and also to purchase at least one article . of similar value .
$
$
*
On Sunday evening , April 1st , at 8 o'clock , after the evening service , a short Sacred Con- cert will be given in the Moravian Church , for the benefit of the Choir Funds . The Rev. J. Weiss will give an organ recital , and Mrs. Paynter , Miss D. Evans and Mr. W. , J. Thomas will sing . There will be a collection . The support of friends from other churches is very heartily solicited .
"
"
At the Leominster Priory Church on Sun- day morning , the vicar , the Rev. W. J. Nelson , preaching from Acts x . 15 , " What God hath cleansed call not thou common , strongly urged the claims of common service and work on behalf of our country at this time . The preacher made a strong exception as regards Sunday labour . He contended that Sunday rest would increase the output and emphati- cally protested against any interference with the observance of the Lord's Day . With this reservation the Vicar urged one and all to do their utmost for their beloved country and to remember that
" The trivial round , the common task Would furnish all we need to ask ; Room to deny ourselves a road To bring us daily nearer God . "
LADY WHO WASHED HER FACE IN PETROL .
" ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMEN IN ENGLAND .
In the Probate Division Court , on Tuesday ,
The annual meetings of the Leominster Free these were things that were hindering the vic- before Sir Samuel Evans and a special jury , Church Council were held on Thursday . The Rev. J. Meredith , of Hereford , was the special tory in which they believed . The one remedy the last will dated December , 1910 , of Mrs. visitor , preaching at an afternoon service in which the prophets had was the only remedy Frances Emiline Shaw , of Much Hadham , to - day - there must be a turning of the people Herts , was contested by her husband , Captain to God in repentance , trust and surrender . Townsend W. Shaw , a barrister , who declared Before the conclusion of the meeting the that his wife was of unsound mind at the eatby presided at the evil . Rev. R. Klesel voiced in suitable terms the time . He set up an earlier will dated April . Among those present were the Rev. J. Meredith , thanks of the meeting to the Chairman , and 1896 , under which he benefited . Under her Rev. Gordon Lang ( President ) , the Rev. J. C. also the speaker , Mr. Lang , who presided at last will Mrs. Shaw made her aunt , Mrs. Fider ( Secretary ) , the Rev. R. Klesel , the Rev. the harmonium , and the Mayor for the use of Sarah Ann Smith , her residuary legatee . J. Weiss , Mr. R. S. Farrar , Mr. A. W. DeAth , Mr. F. Larcombe , Mr. A. Rouch , Mr. J. Brace , Mr. E. Coslett .
the hall
HOW A DOUBLE - DESERTER WAS CAUCHT .
MARCH 31 , 1917 .
Your Garden .
Ellwoods ' Specially Selected Early Longpod Bean , 6d . pint .
Hero Onion
ELLWOODS Specially Selected Rousham Park Seed , 3d . , 6d . , 1 / - packets . ELLWOODS ' Specially Selected Pea , 1 / - pint . Gradus Pea , 10d . pint .
ELLWOODS ' Specially Selected Maincrop Marrow fat Pea , 8d . pint Use Vaporite , for destroying Wire - worm , Slugs , & c . Tins 10d . , 7lbs . 2/3 , 14lbs . 3/4 , 28lbs . 4/11 .
Use With's Potato Manure , yields enormous crops of good sound Tubers . 3/6 per cwt . , also 1/2 packets .
Use With's Universal Manure , for all kinds of Vegetables ,, 3/6 per cwt . , also 1/2 packets .
Etc. , etc.
Catalogues on Application
, Seedsmen ,
Ellwood & Son , Chemists and 25 , Drapers Lane , Leominster .
E.M.
22 K
E. MORGAN .
Watchmaker , Jeweller , Silversmith and Optician .
22 Carat Government Hall - marked GOLD
Wedding
RINGS .
YARDE
And Co's Gold
Medal
SEEDS
Limited Supply of
Schallots .
Early PEAS
per pint .
PILOT , 10d .
( Best Pea in Cultiva- tion , similar to Gradus , but 8 days earlier , and much more hardy ) . LAXTON , 9d . DAY'S EARLY SUNRISE , 8d . SHERWOOD , 9d DAISY ( new ) 6d . Main Crop Peas .
Duke of Albany 9d
Enormous cropper , 10 to 12 peas in each pod . Gladstone , 8d AUTOCRAT , 9d .
Stratagem , 6d .
Broad Beans
One of the EXHIBITION LONG BEAN , 8d Largest and Best GREEN WINDSOR , - 6d .
All shapes and
Selected Stocks in
the County .
sizes kept in Stock Silver & Electro
EARLY LONG POD Onions . Rousham Park Hero , 10d BROWN GLOBE-
6d .
per oz .
9d .
10d .
plated Goods , suit able for Wedding and other Presents
NUNEHAM PARK
-
AILSA CRAIG , 1/8 INVINCIBLE , ls . 16 , Drapers Lane , P.S. - All Carrots , Parsnips , Beet
LEO MINSTER
Clover , Meadow Hay & Swedes
WANTED
BY
G F. Hinton ,
Corn and Potato Merchant , Leominster .
Depôt for Agricultural Salt , Sulphate of Ammonia and Nitrate of Soda . Telegrams : " Hinton , Leominster . "
Telephone No. 26 .
The ' Ware ' Boot
Is simply the Logical conclusion or
Superior Workmanship
AND
Best Material
To Produce FOOTWEAR that completely satisfies all the DEMANDS OF
COUNTRY
WEARERS .
Waterproof Leather , with or without Nails .
Weaver & Son ,
No. 1 , Drapers Lane ,
and Market Place ,
" KEEPING UP AP PEARANCES . "
herself .
Leominster
-
Root , Cabbage , Broccoli , Sprouts , & c . are practically the same price as last year .
Postage Paid on 4 / - Ordere .. Call and secure a Catalogue , and we shall then secure your Custom .
HARRISON
TOBACCONIST ,
( Sole Agent for Leominster ) ,
2 , SOUTH STREET , LEOMINSTER .
OPTICAL DEPARTMENT .
DISTANCE
NEAR
DISTANCE
NEAR
We make up all Prescriptions for Glasses from Medical Men or Eye Infirmaries and Undertake all Repairs to SPECTACLES & EYEGLASSES .
ELLWOOD & SON ,
Chemists ,
Drapers Lane , LEOMINSTER .
When Furnishing
Buy from the Maker .
Largest Stocks in North Herefordshire
OF
Furniture ,
Bedsteads
Carpets , Linoleums
AND
China .
FREE DELIVERY To any part of the Country .
SPECIAL TERMS
To those Furnishing Throughout
John Holmes , Complete House Furnisher , & c . CORN SQUARE , LEOMINSTER .
TESTS FOR TRUE MUSHROOMS .
It is necessary to be very careful in picking fungi for the table that only the true mush- mind are the following :
came of good family - she pleaded , but not for rooms are eaten . The chief facts to bear in Mr. Symmons said he could not pass over months , but it would be without hard labour .
RESULTS IN WOMAN BEING SENT TO such a case . Fage must go to prison for two be considered wholesome ,
PRISON .
In A touching appeal was made from the dock at Clerkenwell Police Court on Saturday by Rhoda Page , a young married woman of 26 , who had been caught stealing a parcel contain- ing underclothes of the value of £ 2 at Mount Pleasant Post Office . Mr. McIntyre , prosecuting , said Page was
April , 1896 , testatrix married Captain Shaw , then in the Indian Medical Service . Two days later she made a will in his favour . In 1902 she developed eccentric habits . Instead going to bed she would sit in a deck chair n the hall . She had the idea that everything was
aunt .
of
If the fungus has a pleasant odour it may false mushrooms . generally have an offensive smell .. The gills of a true mushroom are of a pinky- red , changing to a liver colour , while the false ones often turn blue when broken .
a warty cap , or pieces of membrane attached to the surface . Fungi found growing in humid or damp places , and whose flesh is soft and watery ,
FRAUD BY A BOCUS OFFICER . A good test is to sprinkle a little salt on the The Rev. J. C. Elder read his annual report TROUBLE THROUGH " FAST " COMPANY . gills of a sample . If the part turns yellow and also in the unavoidable absence of the Wearing an officer's uniform of the Royal it is poisonous , if black it is wholesome . Treasurer ( Councillor John Watkins ) , the bal- True mushrooms will generally peel very ance sheet . The latter showed that the year covered with microbes , and she would not employed at Mount Pleasant Post Office , with Flying Corps , Charles May ( 25 ) , was charge easily , the flesh is white , the stem solid and on remand at Westminster Police . Court on began with a balance of 9s . 2d . in hand and turn the handle of a door even until she got salary , bonus , overtime , and allowance on ac- A middle - aged woman , Jane Clay , of Brady something to put found it . In August , 1910 , count of her husband , serving in the Royal Saturday with obtaining goods by fraud from cylindrical ; but fungi unfit to eat , often have concluded with an adverse balance of 12s . 5d . Street , Bethnal Green , was remanded in cus- Harrods , Ltd. The Rev. J. C. Elder then read the annual tody at Old Street Police Court , London , n she was certified insane and sent to a She received as much as sana- Naval Air Service . It was said that May had specialised in report as follows : - Saturday , on the charge of assisting in conceal- torium . On October 31st she was discharged . 3 in a week . fraudulent telephone messages purporting to Since the last annual meeting the work of ing Percy Albert Clay , a deserter from the December she made the will benefiting her parcel from which the original address had Charles Whitehurst said he showed Page a She was very angry with her husband and in come from credit customers of Harrods . He the Council has gone on harmoniously and hap- army . will benefit been removed and a tie - up label attached ad- had been a clerk in their employ , and , havin ; should be suspected , as wholesome mushrooms pily throughout the year . Many subjects have Police evidence showed that the woman's to customers grow in open places like meadows and waste been dealt with and action taken where pos- home was visited on February 18th , and again Miss Mary Freer , milliner , of Lincoln Street , dressed to the prisoner at her home in High obtained inside information as sible . The Rev. Professor Jones , of Brecon , on February 21st . On the first occasion she Chelsea , said deceased had a dread of being Street , Kingsland . She said : " I am sorry . I and procedure . he lately personated an officer land , and they are firm and brittle in texture . The address kidnapped and used petrol to wash her face . admit doing it .. was partially residing at Anerley , and by telephone ordered rendered us splendid service at our annual meet- denied having seen anything of her son for She would pick up articles , even money , with torn off . I tore off the remainder , and wrote goods valued over 20 to be sent to Liverpool ings on March 9th , 1916 ( which were held in six weeks . On the second visit the door was Customer " Now , you are sure He was there arrested with the Wesleyan Church ) , preaching , in the after- opened by a man whom the police recognised my own name and address on a label and tied Street Station . you have I placed the parcel in a the goods in his possession . given me the proper drug , and not some fatal noon and speaking at the evening meeting . The as answerin ; the description of the wanted ceased was certainly eccentric but otherwise it to the parcel . town bag . I. don't know what made me do Pleading guilty , May said he was in the poison ? " Rev. Joseph Reed , President of the Hereford - man . The man was told he resembled one who quite sane . Druggist's Apprentice : " Well , I shire Federation , presided at the evening meet- had deserted from the army in December , 1916 , Mr. Healy , for the defence , said that at one it . " She produced another label addressed to Naval Air Service twenty - two months , and had wouldn't be quite sure . Perhaps you'd better ing and gave an inspiring address on " Church and he produced a certificate of discharge in time deceased was one of the most beautiful herself . The office could not so far trace the been a despatch rider in Frince . He was ' ed try some of it and see . " Union . " Mr. W. T. Neatby represented the the name of Thomas Horatio Moore . The women in England . It was in consequence of sender of the parcel . Her home was searched , into this by the fast company he mixed up Alphonso " You have used the word ' don- Council at the National Council Meetings at woman said . " That's not my son . He is an imaginary grievance she was labouring un- and covers of three parcels and dress material with in the West End Bradford . He rendered a good account of his shorter , and is ginger . " der that her husband was entirely cut out of was discovered . She admitted this was the Detective - Sergeant Markham stated that it key several times in the last ten minutes . Am I to understand that you mean anything It was true , as property of the post office . was a fact that May was recommended for a stewardship in a very helpful and interesting As the man had also deserted his wife and her will . a personal nature ? " the woman said , that she had been in a bet- commission . When ordered to join a training not . There are lots of donkeys in the world report which he gave , dealing chiefly with the family , the policeman fetched the wife , who at The hearing was adjourned .. Rev. J. H. Shakespeare's scheme for a United besides you . " once identified the man as her husband . ter position before the war , and undoubtedly , school he absconded . He had been working as Church . The United Prayer Meetings on the was told he would be arrested , and at once as she urged , she did this with a foolish idea a clerk at Harrods during the day , and at Sabbath evenings were discontinued on the said " The game's up . " The mother was told Customer ( to shopkeeper ) : " Have you got of " keeping up appearances " as of old .. She night walking about the West End in a flying officer's uniform . Eventually he would be understanding that each church would hold a she would be reported for a summons , but in any eggs that you can guarantee to me that had a little boy of five years of age . prayer meeting at the close of their evening the interval she moved , and some trouble had there . Shopkeeper Page , addressing the magistrate , said her dealt with by the military authorities as a de- service . It was arranged to hold united ser- been experienced in tracing her , so a warrant ( pausing for a moment ) : " Yes , sir ; duck ( husband was an honourable man , and for hisserter . vices once a month in each church , but these was granted for her arrest . sake , for the child's , for her mother's - for she Mr. Horace Smith centered
He
De- a piece of paper , for fear of microbes .
eggs . "
are no chickens in ? "
months ' hard labour .
of
Bertie Certainly
him to
six
Printed and published for the proprietors by T. SOUTHALL , at his Offices , 27 , Drapers . Lane , Leominster .
VOL . X.
SALES BY
By Messrs . EDWA BALD LEOMINSTER HO
NEXT
Of Valuable Heav Consigned by Farmer
On FRIDAY , M
ENTRIES CLOSE , W Schedule and Entry EDWARDS , RUS
Leominster ,
LEOMINSTER S
TUESDAY , AP
AT Cattle and She
FAT
11.30 ; Store Cattl Entries kindly solici
EDWARDS , R Leominster , Hereford
ALTERATION OF DATE . STOCKTONBURY
NNUAL GRASS
A Williams , Esq . , at
minster , on
FRIDAY , APR
EDWARDS , RU
IMPOR Plough
Motor 1
Farmers who
Hiring a Mo for Pla
should make imm a Member of War Executive
to
H. F. RUSSELL , S ster .
J. M. PARRY , Birle ster .
E. T. CAVE , Kimb M. C. CONNOLLY , ster .
W. J. REES , Lucto March 16th , 1917 .
By Mr. R.
R. H. G
Auctioneer , Valu
and S PROPERTY and T MORTGAGE BROKER TRATOR under the Act , 1908. REPORTS , VEYS carefully and
HOTEL and PUBLIC VALUATIONS for E GAGE , ASSESSMENT
PERIODICAL SALE Prompt settlements i
ذكر
ESTABLISH
Offices : - Croftmead , Kingsla Leominster Office
MILTON GRA
R. H. GEOR
Mat the Bateman
SATURDAY , A
at 3 o'clock in the afte lots , the Pasturage on Meadows , Pastures an Farm , containing ab watered and shaded . from Pembridge Railw The Lots may be v the farm and full Par may be obtained from Milton , Shobdon , Ki Auctioneer , Croftmead , shire .
ΕΥΤ
Two miles fro
MRR . H. GEORG
structions from Auction , at The Black ster , on
TUESDAY , AP at 3.30 p.m. punctual excellent GRASS KEI Being within a mil lots are highly desirabl Catalogues and Parti from the AUCTIONEER ,
MR .
CROFT CAST
R. R. H. GEORG at The Corners THURSDAY , A at 3 o'clock in the about 175 Acres of capi 116 acres at The Stoc 7 lots ) ; and 59 acres in Particulars and Catal from the AUCTIONEER ,
the ESTATE
or from Leominster .
A BOY ON T A boy of 17 , who Birmingham on the bu riage , told the magistra was anxious to get a jo Birmingham . He was
of not paying his fare .
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