. The Daily paper . eral instance, it would often be quite sufficient to print:—•Last night at Paddington Lord liandolph Churchill— ad lib. Yesterday, at Derby, SirW. Harcourt— It. would be a great saving of time and patience. Ifspeakers said anything briglit, humorous, or new, it couldbe printed ; but the old stock-phrases are so familiar now,there is no need to report them otherwise than by the newsystem of political notation. 8. The G. O. M. (Three U CHEEiiS.) •1. Ago. 2. Eloquence. •3. Authority. 9.
. The Daily paper . eral instance, it would often be quite sufficient to print:—•Last night at Paddington Lord liandolph Churchill— ad lib. Yesterday, at Derby, SirW. Harcourt— It. would be a great saving of time and patience. Ifspeakers said anything briglit, humorous, or new, it couldbe printed ; but the old stock-phrases are so familiar now,there is no need to report them otherwise than by the newsystem of political notation. 8. The G. O. M. (Three U CHEEiiS.) •1. Ago. 2. Eloquence. •3. Authority. 9. The Liberal Party.•1. Always right in the past.•2. Always victorious•3. No millennium without a Liberal majority. 10. High Falutin.•1. Remorse.•2. Progress. .•3. Sympathy.•4. Justice. XL Stock War-whoops. •1. Coercionist. •2. Obstructionist. 3. Judas. •4. The Invariable. •1. Tu quoque. 2. We never did wrong., •3. You never did right / 10 The Daily Paper. [OcroDrc 4, ^^^/fe THE FUTURE^ THE BRITISH ARISTOCRACY. Lady Brooke: A Telepathic Automatic Interview. Os returning to England on September 14tli fromLucerne, it occurred to me that it might be an interestingfcatore in The Daily Paper to publish an interview withLady Brooke upon the future of the British ariBtocracy. Ihad not seen Lady Brooke since the publication of thearticle, nor had I heard from her for several weeks, neitherdid I know where she was. I knew that she had been toDunrobin on a visit to her sister the Duchess of Sutherland,but I did not know whether she had returned. I had nosooner seated myself in the carriage at Dover railwaystation, than I mentally asked Lady Brooke where shewas, and whether she would have any objection to beinginterviewed upon the subject of the article on the peerageas part of The Wasted Wealth of King Demos. Myhand at once wrote that Lady Brooke was at DunrobinCastle, and that she would be pleased to accord me &ninterview on the subject.
Size: 2445px × 1022px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherlondon, bookyear189