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Birmingham Daily Post

NOVEL AND INTERESTING EXHIBITION

... able profusion wvith which exporters ii EDirope ?? America poar goods into the cbloniaL inarkel'. Tile 1 Ministry of tile province of V rictolria had in' t1i Le -i ture with a new RefErini Bill * it pirinciple i thiit 01 ?? Clectoral districts, and a represent ...

NOTES OF NEW BOORS

... the year 1745, and educated at Eton, he became in 1763 a student of Christ Church, Oxford. In 1765 he was ad. mitted to the society of the Middle Temple. In 1708 he took the degree of M.A., and in the same year was called to the bar, and went the Northern ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... yarns. The Wits and Beaux of Society. By Grace and Philip Wharton.-This most entertaining work, which in some partsremindsusof Thackeray'sLectures on the Humourists, is designed as a companion to the Queens of Society, not loeg since writtenby the ...

FANCY RABBIT SHOW

... Svte rabbits which bavs also con- eiderable length of ear-a circumstance which Indicates that the society maintains Its well-enaned posilion In the provinces. Mr. Coleman nes been eucceseful in carrying off six of the dist prizer, a feat which lies never ...

A ROSE SHOW FOR BIRMINGHAM

... the Royal Horticul- tural Society, and in the beautiful gardens of Kensington. Organised and established (the writer conthaues) by Fellows of the- Royal Horticultural Society-by them it lies been banded over to the society's parental care ant tutelage ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... ON NEW BOOKS. OI F THLE GREEK REvoLvrIoN. By GEORCE FINIAY, LL.D., lon. member of the Royal Society of Literature, member of the American Antiquarian Society, corr esponding moiiibel of the Archteological Insti- tute at Ilmo,, &c. Author of The History ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... who, even in what may be regarded as the minor details of life,ever kept his eye fixed on the improvement and welfare of society. The Diske supposted the turf in a isasser befittiig a true' English nobleman; not for the love of gain or gambling, but for ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... composition of this passage admirably exhibits the writer's superior faculty of observation and his great knowledge of French society. )That appeared to strike the author of the Cruise mostly in the course of his tour was the extraordinary cheapness of French ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... has been taken, while the leading features of every year as it passed have been dwelt upon. It would not come within our province to call in question the accuracy of the thousand and one elaborate critiques which Mr. Chorleylias written; and our notice ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... intitution to the earliest scenes and times of Christian religion. Professor Stanley, in his introductory remarks on the province of ecclesiasticel history, admits that the subject of which he treats is repelling by reason of the haze in which it is ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... Acsedemy continued to be the only art society in England, aind its'exhibition the only source of attraction for lovers. of pictures, the oldl Free Soeiety of ArtistA lhaving held, itsalast exhibition in 1779, dnd the Society of Artists (out of which the Academy ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... the Aas tralitan fournals devote little space to sneh matters. Per- petual changes of Mlinistry in each of the foar gicet provinces of the contijeent ; political Squabbles; and current affairs genceally, leave them little leisure and space for indillginig ...