18 



rency Reform Movement being vigorously pushed onward, 

 said the question having thus been once formally mooted 

 among them, he trusted that it would not be allowed to drop 

 (hear, hear). They must look on this as only a preliminary 

 meeting. They must get further information ; and they must 

 discuss it again and again, to see whether they were right in 

 their views or not, though they would not always be as for- 

 tunate as they had been that evening in securing the assistance 

 of so able an expositor as Mr. TWELLS (hear, hear). Truth, 

 however, was truth ; truth and justice only had been advocated 

 in that Association ; and so long as their body held together, 

 he believed they would be advocated there (cheers). 



Mr. TWELLS briefly replied, and added that it gave him 

 great pleasure to visit so practical an association as that at 

 Market Bosworth. 



After a vote of thanks to Mr. Harrison, for the incessant 

 interest he took in the prosperity of the Association, and for 

 introducing Mr. TWELLS ; and to the Chairman for again pre- 

 siding, the meeting the interest of which was kept up to the 

 very last separated about half- past six o'clock. 



METCALFB, PRINTER, RETFORD. 



