DEBATE THE ADDRESS. MR. ASQUITH ACCEPTS CHALLENGE. CONVERT Mr. ASQUITH rose amid Opposition cheers to resume ..
... constitutional governmer would be to ignore the fundamental facts of the cas ...
... constitutional governmer would be to ignore the fundamental facts of the cas ...
... the Civil List grant It will the writer in the “Fortnightly” considers revenues of of Lancaster tlie private property of the Crown only in very limited sense he anticipates propriety of placing them at the of will fully Parliament when the Civil List ...
... 138 houses and 690 inhabitants as the resalt of the wear and tear of nearly 300 years. Plagne and pestilence and famine and civil wae had much to auswer for in those stormy times. Houses were cheap in thoso days. and renta were low. Daring the reign of ...
... Erie shares 80000 Missouri Pacific 77000 Northern Pacific 430000 and Milwaukee Pacific 61000 Pacific common 198000 United common 143 0C0 United States Steel preferred 70000 for account totalled 150000 shares Western Southern Chicago Great Western Island Erie ...
... in South Africa, whether he be Dutch or whether he “ Britiah, we shall give to everyone equal “laws, equal justice, equal civil rights. “We shall give to them these things, and, as soon as it i» safe to do so, we “ shall go further, and shall establish ...
... anguish; angry race-feeling at the Cape exacerbated, and the suspension in a great colony the King’s dominions of civil rights and civil law. He would not now go back deeply into the question of the causes the war. knew that there were many different ...
... mourning and anginsh; angry feeling k Cape exacerbated, and the soapon»on in a great nolony of the King's domimoos of civil rights and civil low. He would now go back deeply into the question of the causes the war. He knew that there w'ere many different ...
... sseerted, some 1 4 1} doubt, reluctantly, that the je) the Boer territories in the Bri at it full autonomy so soon as the been re-settled, is the only adi the the present war. That being to say that their utterances Boers to fight on for sovereig It is the ...
... British Parliament in the 20th century, when it endeavouring resettle South Africa, carrying ou for months, and possibly for years, a sort of bloody assize, meant to stir up the dying embers of civil strife and undo all the good they have done by the peace ...
... with two would go to full CIVIL BOERS took definite oath of allegiance I believe that position of responsibility of will yourselves South Africa (Cheers) I believe representative Government you can onoe I believe you till resettled till rebuilt until the ...
... as terms a generous amnesty, abrogation of the banishment procla- Mations, a liberal resettlement of both Boers and Britons who had suffered by the War, and full civil rights for all at the earliest possible date. His policy was not an active one, but ...
... This fact is largely due to the com- plaisance shown towards the United States by the British Government, which abandoned its rights under the Clayton-Bulwer ‘Treaty, in order that the United States might have a free hand in carrying out the project for ...