MR JOHN MORLEY AT DUMFRIES
... course of three or four years, (Laughter of a, sa'a 'applasie.) They' had' to listen to a'ipe'ech t fi 1mm a gsutleman whose name needed no introduc- tn *ion to a DuEmfriesbire audience. (Hear, bear.) ar ;he Mft ...
... course of three or four years, (Laughter of a, sa'a 'applasie.) They' had' to listen to a'ipe'ech t fi 1mm a gsutleman whose name needed no introduc- tn *ion to a DuEmfriesbire audience. (Hear, bear.) ar ;he Mft ...
... of opinion about the Hiouie a a of Lords, (Cheers.) This is not an abstract t Squeation. Suppose by a vast efort of imagisation s a We were to have a majority at the next election in e e avour of Home- Rule - ...
... translation of the 'Tialmaued or. I know not 13 what a passage which I often have, in myI I's minid. Life, says the book, is a shadow; 's but is it the shado wof a tree or: a towe? eI No; it is te shadow. of ...
... of the reader with a fiash. Beyond almost anybody he suffered from what a famous writer of aphorisms in our time has described as the cursed ambition to put a whole hook into a page, a whole page into a ...
... Deceased sac a' ?? snar Imarricd, and lodged atl1 Wciilll S~c oct Gar. HeMleaes a widw and LaM, c a, Gaaaoeoca. - POi'ncz Co-, ;a Greenock Police C2o -,t ye.,rer~sr-lt' h., Ilfair-ilo len Ml'GhAee or T~'a t p ...
... dignities. At a subse- quent stage of the sitting a bill was brought in by Mr Craig Sellar for establishing a Commission to zesaiwino and rtport 04 ,gmt hl4 bi Parliament, and for other matters relating S Ithereto. On the motion of Mr Arnold ...
... settlement of the land question, Mr e Parnell, as a landlord and the friend of land- i lords, must of a certainty be the leader of a Conservative as distinguished from a Radical or perhaps even a Socialist party. ...
... to the forcigit A baasafdtrs resetiftet a most brilliatt effert and w*a peettetlyill a ?? diamonds. 'Wheii the suiishiie tlicttevl, Vt Prince lbtbcr- bazy, in particlilal, he glinrimered like a glasy. I cano}J learnt ?? if' he bad ...
... among others, as a total a of 100,909 absolute paupers in London, i - and a total of 159,800 miserably s poor in a population of 458,900-that of the metropolitan division of the Tower Hamlets 2 -are excellent things in their way. Un- ...
... rendezvous have, however, n s, little or nothing in common. Each has its c 'a charms, but they are widely different in char- -S acter. Oban is a modern creation, a mere neces- I d sity of the times, and, except that its beauty of ...
... has given rise to a serious contrzvarsy b a between shipowners and the Beard of Trade. a a hi remark seems to apply not only to the ti o, clauses of the measure, but to the policy in % regard to its progress pursued by Sir Michael ...
... 'oatI in do'. s Ic 1 a r- ' ' 3 e'rz.r r-'',n ti-e n3ur,';e-`s ' ?? i a a a M, .2 'Tyh ao'- ?? - be1;~ a oc ?? r ?? r I' 'tiC7.t~ ot rer- 'i ...