" Coe rcion " arose. 15 first settlement of the Pale this seems to have been ever the ideal which the English conquerors set before them. Most of us now believe that the ideal was a false one. If the
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is to organise iro?:;cj as Co-operators for the study and practice of- (1) Co-OPERATIOX AND OTHl ' .r. MEllIODs of Soci Mi KEioirt: (2) Impboved Conditions or Domestic Liee. JLVSCHESTER: Co-orr,mTivE Printing Society Limited, 92, Coe .pokation Street, 1896 .
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the day ar¬ rive, which God forbid, that either by stroke of foreig n foe, or through the growth of Coe 3erism from within, the liberties of the people of England should be placed In jeopardy, then the centres of
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N. Blatchpord, William Blazeby, W. Copeland Bowie , J. Estlin Carpenter, And rew Chalmers , Hubert Clarke , Charles 0. Coe , Henry W. Crosskey , David Davis , V. D. Davis , H. Enfield Dowson, Robert B. Drummond ,
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. Clarke, Thomas Chatfield , London . Clarkson, Rev. W. F., B.A., Lincoln . Clayden, Rev. P. W., London . Coe , Rev. Charles C, Leicester . Colley, William, Leamington. Collings, Jesse, Birmingham , Hon. Sec. Congreve , Rev. John
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