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REVIEWS

... The Leisure Hour; a Family Journad of InstrUc- certi tion and Recreationr, or This is a new literary periodical of great promise and and merit. It is well got up, is neatly illustrated, .. and contains a great variety of instructive and to t amusing reading, and is cheaper than most of the give: weekly publications of the same standing and Inde size. shou land Yational Force. Economical ...

THE SAVINGS BANKS' QUESTION.*

... It is generally understood that a new bill for the better wI regulation of savings banks in this country will be intro- Ot duced in the next session of parliament, containing various clauses similar to those in the bill introduced by Sir C. Br Wood, the chancellor of the exchequer, in 1850, which, an at that time, were considered by many persons as ques- tionable in their expediency and ...

REVIEWS

... ?? ?? ?? 9. ?? - A . l --X1 - ?? ?? ' 'I . ?? A.A ?? Z w 1 Report on tlhe C(re of Cataract. By John Not- (Ti tingh1am1, Esq., M.D., &c. Liverpool: Deighton poi and Laughtonl. eve This is a remarkable pamphlet, giving the particu- eov lars of an operation by which blindness from cata-no ract had been removed after a duration of ten tioi years. What renders the case peculiarly inter- of esting ...

THE GRAVE

... FROMS THE QERMAN. U Oh, grave I Oh, grave I l There ia a spot on earth, a Though but a narrow bed, I Where all that aire oppressed, And weary and disqulieted, And struggling since their birth, Mlay lay their aching head, And find at length a rest. Sorrowfal-heavy-hearted- Here ye shall be at peace; Here all the world's departed Have found their sufferings cease. Oh, grave! oh, grave I Gate of ...

REVIEW

... to WJhat A1re Yea At I A 1'1ainc Qwist-oa, adidresseds to n thc Earl of Derby. By ?? Farmier. Lou- but don: James Ridgwvay, No. 169, Piccadilly. heE Poor Lord Der~by, whose moet ambitious aim, in entering doi upon the duties of his high office, was to be tolerated, to tif3 have his ministry judged by the standard of thinge which he, servo at a pinth, will not carry his point by having fixed ...

LIVERPOOL HORSE FAIR

... 1f-l. i IloRS1A FAIR WILL BE URBIA IN 18 W jlOI TB IORBB FAIR WILL BK URLD IN 1862. ?? Ap I PY Ju. nJyI Aug Sep. Oct. Nov DCC. 25 . 22 2.0 I u30 ! *gb222 201 ...

THE EARL AND COUNTESS OF SEFTON AT THE SATURDAY EVENING CONCERTS

... THE EARL AND COUNTESS OF SEFTON AT THE SATURDAY EVENING CONCORTS. la a Saturday evening last Mr. Henry Phillips gave u another of his popular musical entertainments before the c INS frequenters of the Saturday evening concerts. The hall a ok- as crowded, the interest of the occasion being enhanced a ily by the prosnce iof the Right Hon. the Earl of Sefton, the IT be lorda-ieutenant of the ...

[When Mary Jane C * * * was only three years old, these were her words of comfort to her aunt, who was going ..

... Wben SMary Jane C I * I was only three years old, these v were her words of comfort to her aunt, who was going i away, and who, she fancied, was sad eO account ,oQflCavig9; her pretty Bower in the garden.] Although no tears betrayed that The mind was ill at rest, Yet her Infant eye discovered My heart wva much oppressed; Then she offered consolation An aged saint might grace, And she seemed so ...

REVIEWS

... whic Blentley's Miscellanyj, for March. the I The new number, without restricting the ample range of and subjects characteristic of this miscellany, is particularly inter rich in interesting and valuable information connected induE with the history of modern times, or the biography of the I modern personages of literary or political eminence, of ag by tti The Dublin University Magazine, for ...

PROTECT! PROTECT!

... PROET IT PROTECT! Protect the labourer, whose honestca5e - Provides his bread by daily toil; J Let no rich, selfish millionaire, V Him of scanty crumbs despoil. c Protect the widow'd mother, whose Crust is soaked In orphans' tears; Whom poverty, flend-like, pursues, While her fasinsh'd ones she rears. Protect the maid, who, woak and wan, From her needle seeks support; Let not the lordly bread ...

ON HEARING THAT AN UNOFFENDING ANIMAL HAD BEEN STRUCK, FOR NO OTHER REASON BUT THAT IT WAS A CAT!

... ON HEARING THAT AN UNOFFENDING ANIMA HA BEEN STRUCK, FOR NO OTHER REASON B THAT I IT WAS A CAT! Is the merit thine that thou Art formed man, and not a cat? Nay, but think if God had pleased ?? might have made thee that. Where, then, was thy justice when Thou gav'st the cat a blow, Because thy God saw fit It should be fashioned so? 'Twas an insult to the King, Whose dwelling place is heaven; ...

CHRISTMAS AMUSEMENTS

... s Far the amusement of young and old there is no lack of va- ?? l riety this year. The Thsat.re-ltoyal, Willlausson-equate, wit be the opened on Monlday, as we have before announced, with a splen- thes opening ndw story te ?? teistlfroms the pagegnd ofd Mr.addril e uckitoice, and the s~erviceso~f a ~hosit oef ar tiots have been ° e theiree ecured to rendder t~his opne of the ?? ieces ...