NEWSPAPER CHAT
... NEWSPAPER CHAT. A DIFFICULT RarryE.-Whai~e Dean Swift was vritti'g a lampocn in which hle wished to have a fliln at a fooli-h irritable serfealdlt-alaw ?? 'Bettesworth, ant was very ouch puzzled to find a rhyme ...
... NEWSPAPER CHAT. A DIFFICULT RarryE.-Whai~e Dean Swift was vritti'g a lampocn in which hle wished to have a fliln at a fooli-h irritable serfealdlt-alaw ?? 'Bettesworth, ant was very ouch puzzled to find a rhyme ...
... 7r, iuderittNlrd, lexi h.Itlti 1dm a vry caur rS rna- nuscript diary, vwhich! Ci ictc a nitait t 1Wory ut xiii, Fbilih Ciut, Ai) a-ddte, o: Ih th i-tili/. i ;, g .ether ii*elr ;'P, , , Stlt FPlOceg,' al tAir t:.1:. a mettia-,. Inc ud!lg iAwwisev1 the bill ...
... have induced a few Individuals connected with the Metro- politan Theatres to consider the possibility of instituting a a General Theatrical Fund, to which every person attached to the profession throughout the United Kingdom might become a sub- scriber ...
... Head, was bred a carpenter, kd but latterly followed the business of a glass -blower, and, probably a. with more constatncy, that of a resurrection maq. About eight [d weeks ago he married a sister of Bishop's, and went to live with ...
... represents a curtaifs, which discovers a profile of Kean, well executed ' insrelief, upon a medalion, and underneath is the ?? d brief inscription :- Edmund Keai, died May, 1833, aged 48. A memorial erected by his son, Charles John > lRan, 1839. is ...
... ThoughI ance I liked a social gill, A friendly crack w croei.' I like my svjife better still,- Our Jennys an' our Johnnies. There's soniething by my ain fireside, A saRf a baly-sw;eetness; I see wi' mair than Iingly pride, My hearth a heaven ...
... the people denianded a lowering of the taxes, they obtained a suspension of thle Habeas Ce'ortss Act. Their complaists. were treated with scorn, their miseries were laughed ~at, antI tlteir actual bodily infirmities were made a subject of ribald joking ...
... boue will still give pain, in the same manner that a common splinter would Irritate the surrounding parts. Mr. Chiunock men- tioned a case, in which a noted advertising dentist took out a tooth from a lady, and having produced great ...
... lutely thrown a-V n te puichase of a slave in such a temper as this. F a s ., corunme twice as nucb as he earns. It is [ot utl- _t 4r, a .rlse o omaij slavetG sell hlnself. To bring a hligh, price in the ...
... inconvenieet.-.5 Al - -a-hat ? - A. shilling, Sir !- What 'can you 'do wit ycur money ? 'Thenf,tkn anotlmer Mouthful of his Cup he hesitated a moment hut per iwe 'were all loolingii' at him stedfastly,' le at length reluctantly drew a leather pouch from ...
... inmate. Then came a blow-up, Mr. M. insisting that he had a right to do as he pleased in arepub- lican government, and the boarders swearing that they would not sit at the table with the servants of Madame . Though the rooms were engaged for a month, Mr. . ...
... THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT. Mr. Pierce Butler, the gentlemen to whom Miss Fanny Kemble Is to be, or has been, united, is reported to be at fine young man, with a fortune of 4,0001. a year. Miss Smnithson has been lately married la Parls to a celebrated musical ...