MEN AND AFFAIRS
... stipends when not equal to th» sympathy and rest he was met by an in- br.ght-lookiog girl of 13, who is quite dumb, work. Speaking broadly, the sympathies of furiated wife, who ncked him where he|€oso:deriug a suppor ...
... stipends when not equal to th» sympathy and rest he was met by an in- br.ght-lookiog girl of 13, who is quite dumb, work. Speaking broadly, the sympathies of furiated wife, who ncked him where he|€oso:deriug a suppor ...
... Playing at School. > & F:'A.‘l{.ll )lmpn:;. i The little zirl named Dons, who aould onl Professor .of Sirging in the Royal speak indistinetly, was :tu’oehod for .I{l (Manchester) College of Music months before she ever spoke a word, and even now she rarely ...
... was » cadet on the Britannia, and ¢he did not see him a.sa.in until February, 1893, at a party at Lord Spencers. She did not speak to him on that occacion. She next saw him in 1598 at her father’s Portamouth house. X Her first visit to Malta was in November ...
... unionisis they ssked for no preferential treatment, but on'y Jor taiv play. To him politics were sacred, and he was prepared to speak about them on the Sunday as well as the week day. Ald. Gr\md‘{':uppuml the motion, and m«ld the ision of a 2 month ago of the ...
... his full-bottomed wig and in his |sveeping robes, and for the first time this Isescion took the chair as fully created | Speakes, . o o R ...
... try him. The only way he can be dealt with in this country is by revolution. No one can pro?eer speak of the King nctin%l'gally or illegally. We can only speak of him acting constitutionally or otherwise. | “Tt secms to mo, therfore, that the ‘article must ...
... betwaen several applicants for leave to establish a ‘beer-off licence in the Bolsover road district. ~ Mr. Horace Wilson, speaking on behalf of Mr. Arthur Beaumont, of 98, Bolsover road, said this distriet had grown up almost entirely in the last 12 vears ...
... dinners like we have had to-uight, then 1 am somewhat anxious to be amomfim the selected fifty.” (laughter and applause.) Speaking of the society and its prospects, he “understood it consisted of representatives of various angling clubs which alrady existed ...
... HRGLY i R E On the platiorm will be seen—iessrs. G. H. Roberts,-J. R. Clynes, A. Ilenderson, Ramsay Maedona'd (Chairman) speaking, W. S. Robinson, M. Camelinst (the French delegate), H. Orbell and Keir Hardie. ?T'f—’- RS % Y TSR S MR ROV .T i LT ...
... several quarters. There 15, unfortunately, still only foo ‘much soil 1n this counutry for these rank ‘wwfhs of calnmny and evil speaking. The ing is not the oniy wan who has to sufter ’fmm them. It is a peril which attacke rearly all public men whose characters ...
... ‘An Unfair and Unscrupulous Battle!” Speaking last night in an interval of a social gathering of Ecclesall Conservatives, at tha Grand Hotel, Shefficld, Mr. S Roberts, M.P, described the recent election in the division, as a strenuous one, and asserted ...
... effect of inoreasing the price of food to the British poor (says the *“Chronicle” Melbourne otmu{mndml ) 2 The Prime Minister, speaking with much emphass and indignation, sad: “ Certatuly »ot. Moreover, | believe that the people of . Australia do not destire ...