Western Mail Saturday April 24th 1926. Mr. G.G. JONES, chief clerk of Barclays Bank (Limited), Port Talbot, youngest son of the Rev. D. JOHNS, of Newton, Porthcawl, has been appointed manager of the bank's branch at Orpington, Kent. Leonard George HARVEY, son of Mr. George HARVEY, 27, Victoria-road, Aberavon, has been missing from his home since 10.30 a.m. on April 20. He is a schoolboy aged 14, 5ft. high, of stout build, light brown hair, fresh complexion, blue eyes, and dressed in a grey mixture coat and black mackintosh coat. He is wearing long trousers, colour not known, he was last seen on the Great Western Railway Station going to Cardiff. He may be going to sea. Page 12. Photographs. Three photos at a ladies golf match at Southerndown. a) Miss OWEN and Mrs. ROSCORLA. b) Mrs. and Miss Gear EVANS. c) Mrs. D. LUKE and Mrs W.E. HAMLETT. Swansea Devonian Society have presented a wallet of Treasury notes to Mr. S.T. DREW, who has been secretary of the society for the past 32 years. Two Cardiff schoolboys, aged thirteen and fourteen respectively, gave evidence before the Stipendiary (Mr. St. John FRANCIS-WILLIAMS) on Friday against Seth HENLEY, a blacksmith, of Pamela-street, Mountain Ash, who was charged with assaulting each of them in the neighbourhood of Roath Park on Saturday March 17. Prisoner was sent to prison for three months on each charge, the sentences to run concurrently. When Harvey NEWBERRY, of no fixed abode, was charged with being found on enclosed premises for an unlawful purpose at Newport Police-court on Friday Mrs. H. BROOME, oif 15, Linden-road, said that on the night of the 17th she retired to bed at about eleven o'clock. She woke up about mid-night and heard a crash downstairs. On going down she saw a man's foot protruding from the pantry. She then closed the door and locked it, and sent for Mr. Neil MacPHERSON (the well-known Newport Rugby Footballer), who is her next door neighbour. Mr. Neil MacPHERSON giving evidence stated when he went to the front of the house he found prisoner lying in a heap of groceries which he had knocked down on to the floor. He caught hold of him, and the prisoner said, "All right, what are you going to do with me?" Witness told him that he would hand him over to the police, and did so. Prisoner told the court that he had been drinking, and did not remember having been in the house at all. Prisoner was sent to gaol for a month. Frederick Charles TAMES 16, Twynffald, who was remanded a week ago at Blackwood on a charge of stealing a handbag from Miss Gladys HART, a bank clerk,was brought before the New Tredegar Bench on Friday. The father now consented to look after the boy. The clerk (Mr. H.E. BADMINTON) intimated that the report from the prisonĀ medical officer had been received. The Bench remanded Tames for a further week, in the care of his father. John Patrick