STEAD'S SPOOK.
"SHAMELESS DEVICES." THE GLADSTONE INTERVIEW. Received November 5, 8.35 a.m. LONDON, November 4. Lord Curzon, ex Vicreoy of India, in a letter to the "Times"' protests against the attempt to exploit a political manoeuvre of shameless devices, in the alleged interview between a notoriously hysterical journalist and the spirit of the illustrious departed. ON THE PEOPLES' SIDE Received November'sy HO'-55 p.m. LONDON, November 5. Mr William Glynne Chaifes Gladstone, (son of the late Mr W. H Gladstone. M.P., and grandson of the late Right Hon. W. E Gladstone), speaking at Liverpool, said that there was no need to go to "Julia's Bureau" to learn that his grandfather (the late W. E. Gladstone) would have been on the people's side and not on the side of the Peers.
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 9642, 6 November 1909, Page 5
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129STEAD'S SPOOK. Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 9642, 6 November 1909, Page 5
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