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Morning Chronicle

THE NEW YORK INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION

... interest, and recorded with pleasure, the steps taken towards the realisation of the project. As descendants from A common stock, speak. iug the same language with ourselves, and our greatest rivals in the arts of industry, we considered that it w$ doe to the ...

THE DUBLIN EXHIBITION

... the Dublin Exhibition. A committee of management, of the individual exertions of which there will be future opportunity of speaking, having been constituted, communica- tions were opened with all quarters from which co- operation could be expected. Private ...

THE DUBLIN EXHIBITION

... sentiment seemed to pervade the assembled multitude-namely, a sense of gra- tification, that an undertaking, which all who speak upon thesubject admit must bermost beneficial to Ireland, should have been inaugurated with so much order and solemnity, and ...

LETTERS AND DESPATCHES OF LORD CASTLEREACH.*

... written was not only of no interest to them, but, if it ever crossed their minds, was instantly dismissed with derision. To speak of the convulsions which so long tore and dis- torted the face of Europe as the shock of a great social and political change ...

ADELPHI THEATRE

... who have beet. playing SHAKESPEArm is all hii uharaweirq, all their lives, and though they are ready to dtmit thial, Ist to speak, an outside set of actors tire more clever,efiftie, and artistic in thelower dramia, written by Vsoo'oIll COLMAN, and BULWER ...

THE DUBLIN EXHIBITION

... he has been thought of by others than those who make his misfortunes their political stock in trade, it is unnecessary to speak here; and it is equally needless to advert to the value of bringing before the intelligent eye of the Irishman the results ...

LYCEUM THEATRE

... and every insputation which he had thrown out-pleading the privilege of the bar, and declaring that, now that they were speaking in their private capacities, they thought the whole thing a silly quairel, in which every onewas just a little to blame. ...

FRENCH PLAYS

... of Rector, with the fero- Clos tid lady. Nothing can be more artistic than the ,Kcueptist by )l. lEONIEn, as he begins to speak, of his lirimidity an)d restraint of manner and subdued and riocwt tree of voice. In fact, he commences on cliow a key thiat ...