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Glasgow Herald

LITERATURE

... RATT-TRE. Tits CLEVER WOMAN OF THEt FAMITY. By the Author of The H.tir of Redclyffe. 2 Vols. London and Cambridge: Macmillan & Co. 1865. Turan is no need to rehearse here a story which all well-regulated mothers and daughters in the land must already possess ...

CONCERT IN [ill] OF THE GARIBALDI ITALIAN FUND

... subscribing for Gee. City Eall ' to aid the fuad at preo. ' hirn fibting for the Ga ribaldi, and the. brave men nrot- witu. - land TheII civil and religious freedom of their natil ' audience was very large, the hall being almost goampletely thued;* and ...

SATURDAY EVENING CONCERTS

... an- ocrs httecnet r o itrteecrin di are for ummer, ad w~ trst that hey, to, wilt r~eive a al Ole like suppert. - ?? ist - LANDS VALUATION (SC0110OTLAND) DILL h b rie- - to the Editor of the.Glasgow Herald. i he -118 Union Street, Glasgow, April 23-86 ...

LITERATURE

... the f,3 colonytbas drained the ?? ate to the total of eighty fo maillions sterling-it is as yet a signal failure, when the land ji, is regarded as the field of profitable Cultivation and coloni. am zation. The French have fought as hard with the Arabs' ...

LEAVES FROM THE CLUB BOOKS

... Field-Marsha' Leslie, whose counsel General Montrose followed in this business. Then, in seemly order and goed array, this army 'came forward and entered the'burgh of Aberdeen, about ten hours In the morning, at the Over Kirk gate-port, syne came down ...

LITERATURE

... Uganda ; an army must be formed of one to two thousand strong, to plunder Unyoro. The Wa. soga have been insulting his subjects, and must be reduced to subjection; for this emergency another army must be formed of eoual strength, to act by land in conjunction ...

LITERATURE

... in favour of free.trade in land. He is against the laws of primogenitnee and entail, and does not believe that the gradual abrogra tion of both would endanger our Ooustitsstioii, He sayS: Since the inheritance of landed property by one child to thle ...

THE LIFE OF SIR HOWARD DOUGLAS

... eldest boys entered the navy; but I Howard, ?? his strong desire to follow his It I father's profession, was destined for the army by guardians ja who, Mr. Fullow says, applied to have him nominated a for admission into the Royal Academy at Woolvich without ...

LITERATURE

... previous'marriage; and, ithe event of the daughter's death, the whole funds ivere to revert to Dr. Thornton. But the young woman was not at all likely to die, so the Doctor' became impatient, and one day he took the opportunity of mixing a quantity of ...

LITERATURE

... ice-raft began to sik. Tbere was a shout of Leap for your lives, sad one leapt into the water and swam. They all reotsfe to land at last, but there were hundreds out- ide, and the whole sea was opening. It was a wild an fear f ll scene. Distracted women ...

LITERATURE

... qualifications)-a woman comes in through the opposite dbor, wiping her hands, and apologising for being untidy. Themes-is no apology requieite, however, so far as ber personal, appearance is concerned; for-she is a neat, cleanly, ruddy-faced woman, in a blue ...

HORRORS OF WAR IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.*

... ;-more than one UP army was encamped in his neighbourhood,-the ruffian one soldiery robbed him of all he had, and if he managed to hide plu-m anything, they forced him by indescribaltorture togiei and unp. The fighting men of the armies were followed Some- ...