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LOCAL NOTES

... Mr. George Russell, as everyone knows, i w nephew of the Duke of Bedford and by inheritance avd heredity he ought to be a Whig ; but in fact he i« & Radical—which when the Duke discovered from the pages of a magazine, he wrote to his nephew as follows ...

e EATON SOCON. ’ Trxxls.—A mesting was called to be held io 1, ENTHUSIASTIC LIBERAL MEETING. | Boys’ School, on

... contempt (applause). Mr. Wurrseean, M.P., was received with lusty cheering. The oft-repeated game of the Tories stealing the Whigs' clothes while they were bathing had been played in the County Government Bill, but with them, as in many other similar ceses ...

out work and were rather e:sfinuive to keep, seeing I that each black man wan! about 18,000 square a NATURALIST'S

... would never come | ; 1, 2 island on the west, and an easterly one, with back, ‘:g) the tears that must have been shed would whi:g! Tasmania was continuous, extending northe sufficient 10 water a good many weeping willows. ‘ wards in the direction of India ...

R RRRss—— ——e This year saw the of ning of the Bedford and I ’ .Cf'nb,flayge Ruilw-y.l_tl: W. H. Whitbread

... constituency until the most able, ivfluential, and highly-esteemed towns- regretted retirement of his lordship in 1885, men, & Whig in politics, a liberal churchman, a fluent | 7 1876 General Grant, ex-President of the United and energetic fipea'krr. Possessing ...

SANDY

... England was a far more important place than Ireland, and certainly wanted attending to first. With his lordship, names such as Whig and Liberal, Tory and Conpservative, or any other political names, melted away. He only looked at a party for what it had done ...