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LLOYD GEORGE’S ENEMIES

[By Electric Telegraph—Copyright j [United Press Association.] (Received 12.30 p.m.) London, July 31.

Mr Lloyd George, speaking at Carnarvon, said the House of Lords were right in assuming be had organised an attack on their arbitrary powers through land and other monopolies. Lord Northbourne had expressed his intention to roast an ox to mark Mr Lloyd George’s disappearance from office, which indicated their opponents’ temper, but the vitrol-throwing of the Lords and their hangers-on and flunkeys in the press had failed to maim, kill, or deface him.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19130801.2.13

Bibliographic details

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVI, Issue 74, 1 August 1913, Page 3

Word Count
90

LLOYD GEORGE’S ENEMIES Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVI, Issue 74, 1 August 1913, Page 3

LLOYD GEORGE’S ENEMIES Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVI, Issue 74, 1 August 1913, Page 3

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