Brearley Street West, Birmingham and at 62a, Aldermanbury, London
Notice is hereby given, that the Partnerships heretofore existing between the undersigned, Alfred Wright and Frank Wright, whereby they have traded as Military Ornament Manufacturers, at Brearley-street West, Birmingham and at 62A, Aldermanbury, London, E.C., under the style of Smith and Wright, and as Pearl, Shell, and Ivory Nut Dealers, at Brearley-street West, Birmingham, and 62, Aldermanbury aforesaid, under the styles of J. S. Wright and Sons, and P. Popplewell and Co., have been dissolved, by mutual consent, by the retirement of the said Alfred Wright therefrom. The said businesses will be continued by the said Frank Wright alone, who will pay and receive all moneys owing by or to the said partnership firms.—Dated this 23rd day of March, 1882.
Alfred Wright.
Frank Wright.
The West Indian Contingent Committee has drawn out this design for the cap badges which they are presenting to the officers, non-commissioned officers and men of the British West Indian Regiment, comprising the contingents for active service from Barbados, British Guiana, British Honduras, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, the Leeward Islands, and the Windward Islands and the Bahamas. The King as sanctioned the use of the Imperial Crown in the design, which has been approved by the Army Council. The badge is described heraldically as "an oval bordered medallion surmounted by the Tudor crown. On the border the inscription The British West Indies Regiment. Within, the ship of Christopher Columbus in full sail proper. Surrounding the oval dexter a wreath of laurel, sinister a wreath of palms."