English: Mr. Spencer Charrington. (
https://archive.org/details/cu31924086372178/page/n560/mode/1up)
Identifier: sirbenjaminstone02ston (find matches)
Title: Sir Benjamin Stone's pictures; records of national life and history reproduced from the collection of photographs made by Sir Benjamin Stone, M.P
Year: 1906 (1900s)
Authors: Stone, John Benjamin, Sir, 1838-1914 MacDonagh, Michael, 1862-1946
Subjects: Great Britain. Parliament Statesmen
Publisher: London : Cassell
Contributing Library: University of California Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive
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t 25^ hours. It was the longestsitting for close on a quarter of a century. Thebusines.* was the committee stage of the Finance Bill,founded upon the Budget of Mr. Austen Chamberlain,which was stoutly opposed by the Liberals. Throughout that long sitting, all through the drearynight, Mr. Charringtou stuck to his post. There weretwenty-one divisions, and in 19 of them the old manvoted. He was cheered by his Conservative colleaguesas he walked up the floor from the division lobbies,almost bent double with age; and each time turningup the gangway, climbed to the topmost bench imderthe gallery, where he reclined until another divisionwas challenged, and he had again to walk the weaiyround of the lobbies. A few days subsequently the octogenarian memberfor )\Iile End division of Tower Hamlets was presentedby the Prime Minister, Mr. Arthur Balfour, witli a silvercup, subscribed for by liis colleagues, as a memento ofhis signal display of loyalty to party. He died inthe following December. 41
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^ t*/t. WM,a<,tA.C-C.C^^U. kZCc/x. ^licJKl •A^</tU ctrz^ ^<3<tJ^iA- ^Oc^t^yT ^Ji^ INNER VIEW OF BIG BENS DIAL. There is probalily no feature of mighty London sofamiliar in tlie Metropolis, or so widely known—byname at least—in the provinces, as the famous clockof the Houses of Parliament. No visitor to Londonwould think of returning home without having seenBig Ben, and heard him chiming the quarters orbooming out the hour. It is the largest clock in the world. Each of thefour dials—for, of course, there is one for each pointof the compass—is twenty-three feet in diameter. Frombelow, the minutes on the dial look as if they stoodclose together; they are fourteen inches apart. Thenumerals are two feet long. The minute hand isfourteen feet, and the hour hand six feet, in length.The mighty pendulum hangs through two apartmentsof the tower. At niglit the dials are illuminated byseventy-two gas-jets. The time is regulated by electriccommunication with Greenwich Observat
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