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EXTRACTS FROM THIS WEEK'S PUNCH

... been completed, and we understand that . other pevesois are likely to be proreesed against. aLs Our Kirkwall correeponslent, speaking of the above e- charge, eays-This ease gives rise to a most important Be question as to the Customs regulations for the ...

LITERATURE

... to deduce from these pages tue feelings with wnich wa segard tbe present celebration of the American Centenary. Generally speak- ilug, the practice of anuiiversaries belongs to young corn. nunities as to individuaiR. We selaos keep our birthl doys in ...

NOTES ON THE IRONWORKS OF PHILADELPHIA, AND THE IRON AND STEEL DEPARTMENT OF THE EXHIBITION

... other hand, it has com- polled me to p-ay Miore atteition to the things I have really seen. First let me speak about iron, anl as ili duty bound, speak first about Einglish iron. Well, Eng. land is not representoed here. Not even of Yorkshire iron, the best ...

LITERATURE

... idolatry. To this disfigured style must be added a decided tendency on the part of the author to speak for her characters instead of allowing them to speak for themselves-a tenieniy by no means confined to young novelists. It must be confessed, however ...

WOOLLEN GOODS AT THE PHILADLELPHIA EXHIBITION

... join the gentlemen who were deputed to report upon the m machinery, and therefore could not speak so practically I of tbe matter as lie should have liked. Speaking of the E probable future of trade in America, Mr. Mitchell was of I opinion that the barbarous ...

FINE ART EXHIBITION IN LEEDS

... him- 3sif to the interpretation of seacoast scenery in calnu or atorm. 'He has Eome iunportant works in hland of which report speaks highly, aud of which more inaty be heard hereaiftor. A Couple of large Iaudsocaltes by Banks, who resides, we believe, near ...

LEEDS PHILOSOPHICAL AND LITERARY SOCIETY

... 'with matrer; but this Wiias ili apt-to carry many of us tcoe far.- ?? maintairued that the. right rendering, in reading and speaking, of passages by id tie voice, 'deserved to he regarded, not only asliea atbu as nar bse on cirija 1 te aiid ' phsmoeoplsicul ...

LITERATURE

... the subject so ably treated in his Christ and Mais, and here perhaps we have one of the finest chapters of the book. In speaking of the Fatherhood of God, we notice that Mr. Bathgate does not run in the lines of the old Scotch theoloy, as exponused ...

LITERATURE

... case of the Par- C liameut against Laud was even stronger than it appears to be in Rushworth and the 'Breviat. The Dean l speaks very strongly of all those with whrm the Arch. bishop came into codlision during his troubles. Abbot, his predecessor at ...

THE AMERICAN EXHIBITION

... them just as well. She is distinguished from the rest of her country- women in the north by another grace: she speaks without an accent-speaks the English, in fact, instead of the American tongue. It would be impossible to leave Boston without seeing BunkerBs ...

THE AMERICAN EXHIBITION

... their number. He would pass very well for an English gentleman. He is tall, rather portly, past middle age, and groy..' ::He. speaks our language fluently, though not without a trace of aqccnt. He' was on. this occasion the guest of Mr. George W. Childs, ...

TENNYSON'S NEW POEM

... 3IoncAU. It glares in heaven, itlares upon the Thames. The veople are us thiik as bees below, Thev huun like bees, they cannot speak, for awe; Look to the skies then to the river, strike T'heir hearts and'hold their babies up to it; I think theybwold hllochize ...