Western Mail Tuesday June 15 th 1926. PHILLIPS - JONES. The wedding has taken place at St. Tydfil's Parish Church, Merthyr, of Mr. Thomas Martin PHILLIPS, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.D. PHILLIPS, Y Wern, Llwydcoed, Aberdare, and Miss Rosabel JONES, daughter of Dr. W.W. JONES J.P.., and Mrs. JONES, The Hollies, Merthyr. The officiating clergymen were the Rev. J. RICHARDS-PUGH (rector of Merthyr) and the Rev. Richard JONES (rector of Bishopton). The bride was attired in a frock of ivory charmeuse trimmed with old Carrickmacross lace (lent by her aunt), and wore a white tulle veil and a coronet of orange blossom, the bridal train being of silver brocade. The bridemaids were Miss Leslie PHILLIPS, Miss Marjorie PHILLIPS (sisters of the bridegroom), and Miss Peggy Llewellyn JONES, (cousin of the bride), and Miss Anette INGOLD acted as train-bearer. Mr. H.N FREEMAN was best man, and the groomsmen were Mr. O.H. Penn JONES, Mr. Douglas Bruce JONES, and Mr. John B. BROWN. A reception was held at The Hollies. The honeymoon is being spent in the South of England. HALL - WILLIAMS. The wedding took place at St. Andrew's Cardiff, on Monday of Mr. Henry Arthur HALL, provision merchant, Newport, and Miss Gwenllian WILLIAMS, elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas WILLIAMS, Caercady, near Cowbridge. The Rev. A. MATHEWS, St. Paul's Newport, officiated. The bride was attired in beige crepe de chine, with hat to match, and was attended by her sister. Miss Peggy WILLIAMS. Mr. S. Graham BURGE was the best man. After a reception at the Park Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. HALL proceeded to Bournemouth for the honeymoon. POTTER - FOORD.- The wedding took place at All Saints Church, Dulwich, London, on Monday of Mr. Stanley POTTER, of Whitchurch, Cardiff, a director of the great milling firm of Spillers and Bakers, of Cardiff, London, and Birkenhead, and Mrs. Gertrude Florence FOORD, widow of the late Mr. George H. FOORD, of Painswick, Gloucester, and daughter of Mr. Ellis MARLAND, of Camberwell. The Rev. Graham Copely BARTHOLEMEW, vicar of St. Peter's, Dulwich Common, officiated. The bridemaid was the daughter of the groom, Miss Vera POTTER. The best man was the groom's son, Mr. Hugh POTTER. After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. POTTER left for their honeymoon, which takes the form of a motor tour of the South Coast. They will live at Cardiff. An effort was made on Monday at a meeting of Barry District Council to abandon the proposed parking place for vehicles at the recently beautified Cold Knap. Mr.J.T. MASLIN made a spirited protest against an additional burden upon the ratepayers "for the sole benefit of visitors who were more or less a nuisance to residents in the vicinity." Mr. W.T. ACE remarked that the parking charge at Barry was unremunerative, and it was offensive to spend the residents' money by providing vehicular accommadation for non-spending visitor's. Mr. D.T. HOWE and Dr. P.J. O' DONNELL, J.P., said the town would never achieve even reasonable popularity if visitors were thus driven away. Upon being put to the vote the recomendation to allocate a site for parking vehicles was lost. Mr. J.J. POWLESLAND, of the Swansea Branch of the Transport Union, has been able to effect a settlement in Paddington in regard to the local railway clerks who came out on strike. The time-sharing basis was applied to other workers at Swansea and Port Talbot, is extended to the clerks. Mr. Morgan HUGHES, of Ffaldau House, Pontycymmer, draper, who died on February 1, left estate of the gross value of £9,190, with net personalty £8,326. Probate of the will dated June 2, 1921, has been granted to his sons, Mr. Edward Arthur HUGHES, schoolmaster, and Mr. Trevor Benjamin HUGHES, draper, both of the same address. Testator left £100 to his wife; 106, Oxford-street, Pontycymmer, to his sister-in-law Gwenllian REES; his interest in the business and his business premises to his son Trevor; premises 20 and 20a, Oxford-street, Pontycymmer, in trust for his daughter Mary, while unmarried; his residence and furniture to his wife for life, with remainder to his daughter Mary during her spinsterhood, and the residue of the property to his wife for life and then for his children Edward Arthur, Trevor, Mary, and Margaret McVEAGH in equal shares. Mr. L. Bruce GREAVES, of 21, St. John's-crescent, Canton, has taken his M.A. degree at Cambridge. Mr. GREAVES is an old Cardiff High School boy. At Trinity College Cambridge, he took the Mathematical Tripos. He is now in charge of a Wesleyan College in Africa. Mr. J. Reginald JONES, F.G.S., younger son of Mr. D. William JONES, 300, Newport-road, Cardiff, has taken his M.A. degree at Cambridge. Mr. Reginald was called to the Bar at Gray's Inn about two years ago, and his a member of the South Wales Circuit. At St. Catherine's College, Cambridge, he took the Mathematical and Natural Science Triposes, and is an Arden Prizeman of Gray's Inn. He founded the Shirley Society at Cambridge. Mr. JONES was also educated at the R.M.A., Woolwich, and holds a commission in the Regular Army Reserves, R.A. It will be interesting to South Walians to know that Mr. William LAW, the well-known consulting engineer of Cardiff Docks, has been prominent of late in Australia in connection with the transfer of the passenger liners of the Australian United Steam Navigation Company's steamers to Lloyd's Braziliero. This transfer was arranged by Lord Inchcape, and some interesting references appeared in the "Daily Guardian," an Australian journal. John Patrick