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Liverpool Mercury

NOT FOR JOE

... . NOT FOR JTOM - I No, Not for Joe; ab, dear-ne, He has sold ux to the foe. He has tawht us 3or he-cam All thing. be to every man. in his & _ Storot He ha1 searu'd ?? e the trub. He has cast his lot with those On the le who impose L tinh our leaders still mnt bs, Tm se el-nat suh #A he. and prid, ?? Who'd base thogt li--v't 'Iss; Who'd bare tholght it once Of Joe I it to tum d Gay- we lookad ...

WATER ART GALLERY

... I _WALKER ART GALLERY. e EXHIBITION OF THI LIVER SOCILTY OF ARTISTS. The first spriug exhibition of this society, hitherto better known as the Liver Sketching i oClub, opens to-day in the first or Fountain Room of the Walker Art Gallery, and com- i Dprises 284 frames in oils and water colours. i a This society has hitherto recruited its merobers i t from the younger disciples of art; and ...

ART NOTES

... , I Those whose avocations are counecte with the Fine Arts will welcome Part VI.L uf the new edition of Bryau'e Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, whieh has reoently been pub- lished by Messrs. Bell ad Sons. An important work of this nature cannot be hurried tirough the press; Irtill it ie proeckngf to habve to wait soilng for the lae of the dzfferent parts. Tbe newv number cninenes with ...

LIVERPOOL JUBILEE EXHIBITION

... I LIEPOOL JILEE, EXIM ON. There is no ceaation of the ?? whicb at th6- oxtset characterised the work of prepar&ion at tbi Exhibtion, and each sooessive day bring. 'ithi! some new and surprising development. Tbe fin watber with which Iw have been favoured dazzag the Past few day. baa helped to gretly ?? importent outdoor operations, such as the widen. ing of the promesedes, the excaations for ...

MUSICAL NOTES

... I MUSICAL XOTEST. Mr. Cellier's comedy opera Dorothy has been having an exceptionally successfn. run at the Prinoe of Wales Theatre, London-not Liverpool, be it undergtood-and in the most correct and proper order of things has found its way to our Royal Court Theatre, where it is to be heard for the first time to- night. As one of the very best of the writers of modern opera of a lighter ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... LITM~ARY NOTICES. If I.s|l T7% G(zxCeer of ae world. Edited by2a Fellow of the Royal Geographioal Society, assisted by mans eminent geographers. Vol. 7. London. Tmas C. J0ok. MiAevolumebegins with a :CtftChina nad end with vilage I It fro ch it Will at once be seen the space covered to very large indeed. !Ihere oro UW F Queens. d land, Panama, Peru, And SC Bolivian peniu, Rome and its cleans ...

LIVERPOOL JUBILEE EXHIBITION

... I LIVERPOOLJUBILEE. EXHIBITIOLN* zr Every effort is now being made by the Council, dthe committees, and the otitials conested with un the Liverpoul Royal Jubilee Exhibition to cons. an plete the work before the day fixed for Opening U mriveS. Last year, anfortunately, the Canadilan Government ware tnnable to make a dixplay at the e Liverpool Exhibition from the fact that the it Colonial ...

ART NOTES

... it At the Walker Art Gallery, the following I' ,_ pictures, lent and received from the permanent it collection at Manchester, have been arranged el in the Rosetta Gallery: - The Good a Samaritan, an heroic upright group by G. .s P. Watts, B.A., painted, according to the a catalogue of works, by this artist in 1850; 1 The Idea of March, by E. J. Poynter, RA., apurchased from the Academy in ...

A NEW ENGLISH OPERA

... A NEW ENGL1SH OPERA. Nothing ought to be more welcome to English ears than English music, to English appreciation than a cleverly-told English story, or more pleasant to E~nglish eyes than the scenezry of our owrn dear England. And as in Mr. Cellier's newest opera every one of these qualities is exhibited in lavish quantity, it goes without saying that , Dorothy must be a pronounced buccess. ...

LITERARY NOTES

... LITERARY NOTE itissignifieant of the tedecy of ihe times that the WWmainitr Revie has ut altered its size, price, and period of pbiction, o longer a six-uhifllg quartely, it, is now a half- crown monthly, and, ceasing to compete with the EdiulnmgA and tlu Q.'*rsy, it. enters the lits with the Nmft& Centvhin and the ! Cotemporay, The W&%iseter was not among the first of its class. The ...

TWO BENEFIT CONCERTS

... TWO BENEFI ONCERT.S. Almost within earshot of each other, ani, unfortunately, not out of the reach of the nois demonstrators at the Beacosasfield statue, tzese events took place last night-the one in :e small concert room of St. George's Hall, a-cd the other at the Rotunda. The former wens given by and for the benefit of the Peoples Orchestra, and the latter on behalf of a 'a.eE which has ...

THE PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE

... Yesterday afternoon, at The Mart, Tokenhoras' yard, London, the Prince of Wales Thearre, Liverpool, was put up to auction by Mr. J. J. I Orgill, under an order of the Court of C(hancer, granted by Mr. Justice Stirling. There were n;: more than 15 or 16 gentleunen in attendance at trbs time announced for the sale, which w ,f two o'clock, and ?? these was MKr. Grannell of the Rotunda, Liverpool. ...