OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENCE
... Balfour protested that as the Opposition fwanted the debate they ought to be preparedf to go on with it, and while he was speaking Sir - .-William Wairoud rushed into the House end J ...
... Balfour protested that as the Opposition fwanted the debate they ought to be preparedf to go on with it, and while he was speaking Sir - .-William Wairoud rushed into the House end J ...
... are accused of slackness and J' of omitting to give the people the tE encouragemnent they require. Does a t young Minister speak with charactenistic. ;fire, and pile up a fewr figures to I show that the country need not really be I1 Lafraid of being whipped ...
... Natal, and whether these sites, 1:State for the Colonies wrhether in August last ti *;the Governor of N Aewifounldland, speaking at n; ! Bay of Islands, informed his hearers that ne- 4r !gotiationS wvere going on between Great Britain vi I and France ...
... if huller were across the Ta gels. !110 , Again, M~r Enunet Burleigh wires from Spear- 11 mn'xsS C.amp late last night, and speaks of the to .|Boers being quiet at Potgieter's. iiioreover, jsh ; not one item of thle ertainly credible newvs lin from thse ...
... tdonian Society was held, and, curiously enough,.y a on the same night the Highland Society (which to is composed of Gaelic-speaking Scotchinen) held as similar meeting with the same object. At the It meeting of the council of the Caledonian Society Ts Z ...
... he used not as lesson-book~s b ar- or text-books, but simply as dictionaries, and to ath partly as glossaries. Generally speaking, quite Y not- tereverse system was adopted. The; began. lx Mrt with the hook, and then turned from it to 1 nature to try ...
... which e-4already belonged to the hictoric regiments of w vhich they are m~embers? (Cheers.) I speak; ot e the troops from this country; hut, of course. I* I speak with equal praise of th~e C:olonial soldiers -{0cheers)-wvho have been shou.lder to shouldet ...
... uncoversd they sang a hymun in Dutchn. ti itS. It cut ou~r fellows up ver much indeed. InL cli ers faict, we could hardly spe~ak for some time- an Pr st Literature for- the Front. 'hrt the - i1 era (Tasth Editor ofthze Glasgow Hcrtr&L I ha The Birkenwvard ...
... brought- to a eec- creasful conclusion. As regarded the army, he- In I need not detain tb-ecu long, because it had been ir speaking for itself lately, and it was not for ?? him to descant cither upon the heroism of our - soldiers at tbe-fmnt, or for him ...
... of all w~ere tulrn:ed awfay fromn then. r selves, bitt hie expressed the hops than the vie ,would soon comne to an end. Speaking of the Y.progress of the society, Sir Williamn said that zrhe believed that it wts advancing in the ar Egyptian territories ...
... constitutional. M~r Macklen zic thenr -ceoded to speak on th1e general aspect ?? 3putes betwveen the mninister and the h-rki.- Iton the one bandL, and the managsers, o,.err h ut, as he wvas not speaking tO a zinniAu- motion, lie was, on the apursal of ...
... is, and what he Ytrusted it would still continue Ito he, the grand Lo er inquest of the nation. (Oppositica cheers ' In id Speaking to his own constituents in the earl'y b ie days of September, when the negotiations were cI al just -reaching their most ...