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104

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104

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A PRACTICALLY UNITED PEOPLE

... of the Dutch !eumblic refused to give Way, and a point &t which we could not and would not give way. The interests of South Africa, be added, the interests of civilisation, the in- terests of national honour, all made such a curae impossible, and however ...

LITERATURE

... they do expect, to see the relations of the two races placed on a better footing by a bitter war between them, a war 'which has many of the .incidents of a civil war, and is waged on one side by citizen soldiers. To most observers it seems more likely to ...

DUBLIN MUSICAL SOCIETY

... proceed to South Africa to be enrolled as police. He desires it to be kuown that Nr Stewart has no authority from the War Office or the Colonial Office to make any such ar- rangements, and that the young men if they proceed to South Africa do so entirely ...

LITERATURE

... f- t . SOs'riT AXFRICA( 1y kct7ardl WLSOI-. x.!-7t - ° s'sacics fl'y Aadd non. 'The experience of eight years' duty in ?? e Africa, as narrated by lyr. Wilson, late Sub- e inspector, is At once instructive and interesting. £ g Deeper glances into the social ...

LITERARY NOTES

... Eaat-Africa, the. first part givini5 a history of South Africa dotwn to the present day. the second includiug geograpbical chapter4 on the Britsh South African Colonies, together with ani account *t Biitish Central Africa and Britoh East Africa. -Mr Frowde ...

THE MAGAZINES FOR FEBRUARY

... Goadby, on the whole, is sorry, that we cannot dig up a few more such men. Considering that the single gem has made three big wars in five years, we have no sympathy with Mr. Goadby's la- mentation. M. Guizot and the Spectator isnot worth reading. Mr. ...

JACK TO JOHN

... y To slacken mouch Jaw for croalking; But now i'in r, going to sity miv say, Anm it ain't exactly joking. Wave, winl.t and war a truu Jaclk Tiu Shuildl take Wds eliance vith *aily, But thlngoi ?? guipg it sialo too far, And the look.out ?? daily, The ...

THE ANGLO-SAXON ALLIANCE

... lowered from al«ove the terprise. Great Britain will not help us, the Chronicle observes, a war with Spain which can conduct without her assistance. We are war with Spain, w* are told, for the righting Cuban wrongs, and in our new character of chivalrous ...

IN BOOKLAND

... inhiabitant of Central Africa. A hunter and a warrior, tboughltte-s of the morrow, averse to, cul- tivating the scil, with limited desires and few wsunts-tlie sory of li life contains oniy strife anrd reciprocal deattuction. Wars itcrease the cause of ...

THE DUBLIN ARTISANS' VISIT TO THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... ?? llr. 31oran, and Mlr. Powrell, editor of tbe Mid~easd TfE BRITISH IN WEST AFRICA. London. Wednesday. Advices received at Liverpool to-day from &itish Sulymahb West Africa, report that the 17edition secently sent up the Sulymah River by the British ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... fashionable visitors of both sexes, attracted by the singularly interesting exhibition of a group of natives from Southern Africa, now presented for the first time to public view in Dublin. We have, in a previous notice, detailed some of the more striking ...

LITERATURE

... gentleman, acconipsnied by 8 flussian griend and four guides, ascended the DPat d'Ardon, end from the top of it the whole ptrty wars carried down to the valley by an avalanche of 8105 The Russian and one of the guides were picked up deaid ?? is again prostrate ...