ii s. xii. OCT. 23, i9i5.] NOTES AND QUERIES.
321
EABLY WIRELESS MESSAGES. A corre-
spondent of The Sunday Times states that a
learned Italian Jesuit and historian named
Strada, some three hundred years ago, told
LISSAUER'S ' THE HYMN OF HATE.' Can
this be obtained anywhere in Engknd, in
German or English, with the music or with-
out? The papers have lately described our
the story of two friends who, by means of a soldiers as catching it up from the enemy
magnetized dial-plate, inscribed with four- | trenches, and gleefully adopting it; but it
to have reached
and-twenty letters, were able to communi- I does not appear
cate with each other, even though miles | streets,
apart. Where can one find this authen-
tically recorded?
J. LANDFEAR LUCAS. Glendora, Hindhead, Surrey.
[Addison in No. 119 of The Guardian, 28 July, 1713, notices at some length Strada and his sympathetic needles. See also the articles on ' Strada and Wireless Telegraphy ' at 9 S. ii. 184, 276, 471, 517; and ' Electric Telegraph Anticipated,' 10 S.ii. 66,135.]
London
W.
[See paragraph 3 of the query ante, p. 302.]
" WHEN MORSE (Moss) CAUGHT HIS MARE." Can any one give me the verses of this song, said to have been sung by farmers in South Devonshire? I know the version in Halliwell's ' Nursery Rhymes.' JOSEPH C. BRIDGE.
MAWMAN. Was the
York firm of printers '
Mawman of the
Wilson, Spence
Mawman," whose name disappears from the
JOHN MAYOR. He was M.P. for Abingdon
from 7 Oct., 1775, to 21 Dec., 1782, and
High Sheriff of Berkshire in 1774. He lived
at Upminster, co. Essex, and on 26 Nov.,
HORACE BLEACKLEY.
MR. SAVORY, MRS. BILLINGTON'S
nrm * or a^out MM, the T^me who sue! " f married Miss Dickinson the daughter
ceeded C. Dillv in London-^>ne of Beilby of a wealthy brewer I should like" further
and Bewick's publishers there (see imprint I Particulars of his and his wife_s family,
in the ' Quadrupeds,' fourth edition, 1800)
whose name appears as the London pub-
lisher of the ' Figures of Birds/ vol. i., 1800 1 TRUSTEE. A Mr. Savory was left trustee
edition? WHITE LINE. under Mrs. Billington's will, but as that
document does not appear to be at Somerset
I DON T THINK. This phrase is fre- House I am unable to discover his Christian quently heard at the present time, and was nam e or his address. I shall be obliged if used by Mr. Samuel Weller to Mr. Winkle any one can help me to identify him. " in a tone of moral reproof " : " You' re an amicably -disposed young man, sir, 1 don't think" ('The Pickwick Papers,' National Edition, vol. ii. ch. xxxviii. p. 178).
Is this the origin cf the phrase, or has it an earlier sponsor? URLLAD.
HORACE BLEACKLEY.
" LIENIN." The Times of 11 Oct., 1915,
quotes on p. 15, from its number of the same
date in 1815, the following :
" Also Horned Cattle, at three shillings per week
FLEETWOOD MISCELLANY.
(11 S. vi. 43, 331.)
THERE is an error in MRS. F. H. SUCKLING'S notes at 11 S. vi. 331, regarding the Marquis
each with two most excellent yards perfectly dry of Wmc hester. The reference should be to
and a range of lienin sufficient for the reception of
two hundred head of cattle."
In which dictionary can one find a de- finition of " lienin, 11 or of what word may it be a misprint? EDWARD S. DODGSON.
Union Society, Oxford.
BOOK ON LAUREL HOUSE, LOWTON. Some thirty years ago a friend at Southport offered to lend me a book giving the history of Laurel House, Low ton, near Leigh. Through his leaving the neighbourhood I missed getting it. Can any of your readers give me any information about either the book or the house?
J. A. CLARKE.
Eccles.
William Paulet, third Marquis, who died
24 Nov., 1598.*
MRS. SUCKLING has made a slight slip in the reference to the letter to Dudley Carleton; the writer was John (not Thomas) Chamberlain (Cal. S.P. Dom. Eliz., v. 152). She has adduced evidence which renders it tactically certain that Mrs. Gifford was >ir Gerrard Fleetwood's daughter by his second wife, Mary Dutton.
'Burke's Peerage,' and 'D.N.B.' The mis- take originated in Berry's ' Hampshire Pedigrees,' p. 268. The same confusion with the first Marquis (also named William) is repeated in Woodward's 'History of Hampshire,' i. 416, and in ' Papers and Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club,' vi. 50.