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Glasgow Herald

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... with the death of Paul Sutton, an army pensioner, who had been found dead in a pool of blood in a yard traversed by a raised gallory. upon which it is alleged the tvro men quarrelled._ W}FS MkTtRDEnn.-John Pierce Evans, land- owner and gentleman farmer, was ...

LITERATURE

... n on the other of this 'W¶estern land. Mr Legge went ouit neither as a settler, nor as a, land speculator, noras a globe trotter, hut to spend some months with his sons in their prairie .home, and to spy out the land generally. He has nothin to do with ...

NEW BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... Rhymes and Tales. -Ssngs froeh Nursery Land.-Tales from Nursery Land.-Rhymes from Nursery Land. All Illustrated by Constance Haslewood.-Spell ?? Touches, a Painting Book.- Bow, W1onw, Wlw.,-The Bible A, B, C.-A, B, C Land. By Alf. J. Jeohnsen.-The Dear Old ...

LITERATURE

... been a mistake, it was not hen line. There would have been a fanatical reac- tion. shere is always a tendency that wa in Scot- land; as it is, at this moment the Estatlishment and the Free Kirk are mutualfy sighing for some compromise which may bring then ...

LITERATURE

... and cynical temperament, will behave on -icoming into an enormous for~tane after, loving .1one woman who. rejected him, promising to e marry another woman whomn he did. not love, 1,and who ended by being in love with a third Iwho would not look at him-at ...

LITERATURE

... striles of policy. and by intermarriages, the chiefs of IRintal vaxed great and powerful. The sunny brae lands of Ross, the nvell-cultivated church-lands of Chanonry, the barony of Plusc:rden, in the fertile lu iyh of TMoray, even the remote island of Lewis ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... delight in learning how it is done. Close by, Mr Thomas Stevenson, Princes Street, Edinburgh, has a stall in which there is a woman engaged spinning with an old-fashioned wheel, very sug- gestive o' what one is accustomned now-a-days to see in pictures of ...

THE VIENNA EXHIBITION

... evening some have are great personages are dining with -some other pic u -ed, tremendously distinguished beings, and a mere lands iwn civilian is an eminent and welcome exception. build the On Tuesday the Emperor gave a great military quart on dinner to ...

LITERATURE

... ary of the charm lnarie q Exception, if ary, should be descr:pii rvoll of his occasion.;i touches oc tha tl of his native land. His attitude to hisdo -a te 3i aaml broght out in a letter to S~ntev fror~d i5ara lar~dot, the famous a2U~ b,'o t Cou it ...

LITERATURE

... stirriag production, filled with tales of the Army, and with rousing instances of rescue fromn peril. It is also illustrated with considerable spirit. Aft the lforld, the monthly organ of the Salvation Army, also issues a special number, to which Commissioner ...

NEW BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... American Nobility. By Pierre de Conlevain. 'M (London: Sampson Low, MarstonX& Co.) n 'The Revolt of the Horses. By Walter Cop- land Perry. (London . Grant Richards.) i POETRY, VERSE, AND DRAMA. k The Dead Prlnet, and Other Poems. By = James M. Slimon. (London: ...

LITERATURE

... Madame Coillard seems to have been a woman h with more than the average passion for domes- ticitv, who sacrificed her oawn desires and t devoted her life to the most arrduous of a1 l w work for a delicate-woman. M. Coillard gives an extremely interesting ...