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DESTRUCTION OF THE THEATRE AT DRESDEN

... DESTRUCTION OF THE'THEATRE AT _ DRESDEN. | r - , . : , ,, - - es, Referring to the destruction by a r s uc- at Dresden, which we briefs A at the orrt Theatre f c ~ro- currne, a corres- 7. - no feed at ...

THE BIRMINGHAM HORSE SHOW

... T ml- r ss. ?? -. .1, Sol A The fourth annual Exhibition of Horses, Carriages. &e.- 1711 to a Show which has attained a success second only to that th 1- held at Islington-wa ...

LITERATURE

... LITEBA T URB. Bcr7:ing ca Butterfly ; or Blanche Ecllerslie's Ead- ing. 3y the Author of Guy Livingstone$ ej1l, Barren Honour, &c. London: Tinsley bod Brothers. Wor Mr* LAWrEIWEc presumes much too ...

RUABON

... ?? i N:. :1 . s i Rft-BpN I ! ;1 . i ! ! . li' ?? I' ,, :laRCIIERX *MEEi'JTG AT PnsN Y GARDDrie, NBA6 RuaBoN;.-On'Friday week an archery meetingwashikeld at .Pon y.gardden, the b'eautissfuil seat of LaduyFMarshall. Her ladyship gave a numb erlof ipripes forthe 6ecauom :amongst therm ' valuab]e gold bracelet 'Tbe!'6ontest coommenced at al 1 } -o'elock a:nd continued tillT3 a3inthe afternoon, ...

GRAND MUSICAL FESTIVAL AT CARMARTHEN

... |GRAND MUSICAL FESTIVAL AT CARMARaTHEN. A second grand musical Eisteddfod, carried on in a similar manner as the one of the lst inst., was held- in the MIarket-place, in this town, on WAediieisday, tile 23rd instant, in aid of the funds towards the erection of a new Church at Llanllwch, in the county of Carmar- . then. A preliminary concert of national music was given on the evening of the ...

FASHIONS FOR JUNE

... pi The materials this season are in great variety, an I the Ii .new shade of pink with turquoise and the early string th green are worn in the more elegant toilettes; some of fo the silks resemble a black net over colours, and is moytly pi used with flounces of black lace. English alpacas and (I foulards are very fashionable .in Paris; dresses of organdy, rp barege, chambery, and gauze, ase ...

CHRISTMAS IN LANCASHIRE. 1862

... CHRISTMAS IN LANOCASHIRE. 1862. I My country, thou bast sinned. This cotton dearthb, With all its bitter-crop of want' and woe;- Caust thou not iead-init thy punishment For wilfuilness and greed ? Couldst thou not find,, ?? Bible-taught England, for thy potent gold, L A nobler market than the slave's, forsooth, To buy in? There was blood upon the bales, The brand of goad, and lash, and gory ...

Poetry

... ~Ovtvm. PROLOGUE e SpokeD on MonDay laist at Wrexlham Theatre. Celebration of the Shakepeare Tercentenary. There needs no trumpet to proclaisn the name Of him whom Milton hails, Great heir ofafnac The Bard, who on the banks of Avon breathed The first and last of human life, and there Buried, for favoured Stratford has enwreathed Endearment and renown, a garland rare: And to mankind of every ...

Literary Extracts

... . wittrarp (extrarto. Home! What snakes a home, I woasder Looking back in the after days, looking back to that queer old Cumberland farmhouse across the sea, thinking of its quiet and its happiness, even whilst surrounded by the warmth, and the beauty and the gaiety of southern climes, Captain Stoudon eatoe to believe that home is not so much one great fact, as the total of an aggrega- tion of ...

Our Library Table

... Our ?Eilofarp Z1,01C. BLACKIVOO1'S Euj.ijjtcccnn MAGAZcINE, for July. Edcli- ?? and London: WV. Blackwood and Sons. In this number of Ma-a there isc an article onl the late Panlic in thle City, which describes its cause and cffects,-tlhe forner mainily arising from thes schemes of unprincipled spcecccaturs,-and suggests a remedy. Ill 1867, ccit tile, fall of the Western Bank of Scotland, ...

Our Library Table

... Our , i-karil B3LxAcKWKOODl 1lAtaAN for del'iisrv.- London ti t Edinburghi: Win. Blalsekioo(l d aolls. I The opening paper in Miga, is on the ques- tionu What wvill the Goverunment (to? The conferring office upon Mr. 1o'urtescu, Mr. Forster, and NIr. Go0-e chen, supplies, the writer thinks, an answer to this ques- tion. Sir Robert Peel, who, with dlI his eccentricities, c lnevel, to the l ...

LLANEGRYN

... Ij_ 4NEG RvN. HARVEST TfnASOI]-Iz{h.G The harvest festival of the above-named parish took place on, Tuesday, the 15th instant. The church during Monday was profusely de- corated with flowers and ears of corn. A large crop of dhalias stood on the rood loft The pillars of the same were entwined with ivy and virginia creepers, dotted with flowers. On the re-table stood six vases of choice flowers ...