21 OCTOBER 1911, page 3

The Eighty Club In Ireland Were Maliciously Described By A

Unionist speaker as a party of dull bores who had to go with h one another because they could not get anyone else to go with them. It was also pointed out that they went with......

We Fear It Is Impossible That The Money Will Be

obtained locally, but there is a very strong case for appealing to a wider public. If Colley Hill is saved and added to the twenty-six acres already given to the town of Reigate......

A Letter On Unionist Leadership And The Halsbury Club Move-

ment appears in Tuesday's Times over the signature " One Who Served under Disraeli." He maintains that, while nominally formed to promote highly commendable principles, the......

We Note With Regret From The Reports Of The Meeting

hell at Reigate on Monday last that the attempt which is bell made by the National Trust to purchase Colley Hill, the beautiful sweep of chalk down rising to a height of 750......

Mr. Lloyd George Is Proceeding On The Principle That The

great thing is to pass his Bill—somehow and anyhow—as long as it is passed. If he cannot pass it one way it must be passed in another, so intense is his determination to get......

The Question Of Redistribution Is Brought Up In An Excellent

letter from Major Clive Morrison-Bell in the Morning Post of last Saturday. Starting from the conviction that this is the one and only inevitable question in the whole political......

The Military Correspondent Of The Times In The Fourth Of

his interesting articles on the German military manoeuvres deals somewhat severely with "the far-famed Prussian infantry." He admits it has a rifle and ammunition superior to......

Bank Rate, 4 Per Cent., Changed From 3 Per Cent.

Sept. 21st. Consols (24) were on Friday 78—Friday week 774.......