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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

Counties

Yorkshire, England

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12

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VARIETIES

... plenty of time onl his hands, and he cannot find ?? anybody to cash it for him. nery The editor of a Yankee contemporary, speaking of a lull, drink he once had occasion to indulge in, says he conldn'tb tell whether it was brandy or a- torchlight procession ...

PROPOSED EASTER MUSICAL PERFORMANCES IN HULL

... because it gave no sign of life, it had ceased to live. A still more serious accusa- tion against us is, however, that in speaking of the supposed defunct, we forgot the good old maxim de wrltuitsil nis bonum. We are lreminded that some of the earlier ...

LITERATURE

... knowlesdge onl the part of its posses. o son, while its exercise must entail many hours of anxiou ous n thought. When we speak, therefore, of the Gazettcecr of tfei as he World as a compilation, we use the word in no invidious gC 6, sense, for from the ...

CHINA—ITS PEOPLE AND THEIR CONDITION.*

... mlen wills t wiedoirs and iarudriess;. Tire fact of lucre Isavinig beers iso ii wars nrio airy irnhrcmrtarst ?? for 200 years Speaks mv nantel for their goverrasssert. 'lie country is dying ; it I really is tire ''sick man, ouch rio dysrasty cars preserve ...

VARIETIES

... which, as we learn from recent discoveries, the people of the East were acquainted. See Bonomi's Nineveh, p. 13(6. He is speaking of the account given by Pythagoras of the Aquei- foloi, eitllsr the holm-oak or the holly; and proceeds to state that, according ...

LITERATURE

... long as it lasts. Groat age is but seldom 'to 30attained either by the seative or tics settler. cr4 os The Englishllacoi speaks of intemperance as the Self- n 9t generated curse that afflicts the Accstralians colonies, and fel St upon this subj eat ...

LITERATURE

... yenr vwsicecc fev anitd comcparatis-ely smiali anx-ieties seitcout 'Icav;ing rccocirse to the daily mcce of msa-corics. We speak froics a herg6e exhseriecsce of ciedicel stmideists shelsi se say that thc, intcciilsrate sciokeer is thcs inttemtperaste indulger ...

LITERATURE

... noibtuug theml;-, c -ilc' as, tat to stait until Coxerntmsicnt dlo everylhilg four s tc' ie.. I a-isis, as I ?? said before, to spe-ak of the: cosunty ' j',-isrates witlls that respect solticls I fcel bot.h for the:m -t½eand for thieir ipersonial character ...

HOW LONG!

... unavailing to yon azure skies! Hear, Lord, and do Thy will, for Thou alone art wise. Thy will be done.-Oh, teach us thus to speak While shuddering horror blanches every cheek; Tho' marvellous Thy doings in our eyes, Tho' dark Thy ?? art good and wise. We ...

MRS. WOOD'S GRAND CONCERT

... ItTroratoree; whilst the second part was composed of English ballads. Of the rendering of these selections we call scarcely speak too bighly. The enthusiasm of the audience was aroused on the very first appearance of the young debutantes. and a vociferous ...

LITERATURE

... deeply iuter- ested in the administration of criminal law and in the repression of offences against person and property,-he speaks to them of evils of which they can well under- stand the disastrous consequences to the community, and he is himself not a ...