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England

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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

Counties

Yorkshire, England

Place

Hull, Yorkshire, England

Access Type

51

Type

51

Public Tags

A PERSONAL NARRATIVE BY MARWOOD

... I am not paid by salary nor by the Government. The Sheriff pays me, and I am paid very well. Mr. Maraood then went on to speak of his visit to Sheffieil during the election. It has repeatedly been stated that he is entitled to the clothes of an executed ...

CLIPPINGS FROM THE WEEKLY JOURNALS

... Unable to get a pair, and write P, after his name, rather mixed after thenew.5emberforGrass- twenty one hours' con- borough speaks of tie tinuous sitting, be says, House as *Call this the present 5The jolliestClubinLon- Parliament ! It's the late don ...

FACETIÆ FROM FUNNY FOLKS

... though place he may like, there's Dilke won't wawnt a place on The footstool of Forster or Hartington's knees. The effort to speak must perforce become weaker *When elbows are macking one's 'ribs blue and black;- Antd taking the chair will come hard.'to ...

THE HULL RADICAL CLUB

... follow in the footsteps of Cromwell and Payne. Let them push forward their propaganda-not offensi'vely-and have the conrege to speak out boldly. Whenever an opportunity arose let them express their opinions, to showr that they were true to their opinions. ...

SO INNOCENT!

... being either rogues or fools. They 'differ in e the manner of their scoldings more than in the al matter. Prince Bismarek speaks as an angry pedagogueI lecturing a school of unruly boys; Air. Gladstone a( as a violent woman denouncing as rival vendor ...

LITERATURE

... w~itI. e loi'i -- ' - - draggte - f began to Cry, ing the cry was ' - we-hid' formed a little co. ..nd no one da'ree t:lo a speak first. Finally, fy pretty cousin.Dorothle, a the most talkative little girl of the house, and now ithe grave superior of a ...

EXTRACTS FROM THE MAGAZINES

... was a father? One diy his little ; wife, herself a slim ,but rather careworn- 'lassie, called in a clergymanto speak to Jack 'Speak- if ing to Jack meant that 'Jack listened, that Jack 1signed a pledge, gave up drinking, and attended Ithlle services ...

CLIPPINGS FROM THE COMIC JOURNALS

... of Friday that, after the ceremony of opening Parliament, the Queen passed out, not stopping, as on former occasions, to speak to the Princess of Wales, whomi she passed on the way. This, coupled with the fact that the Princess did not accompany the ...

THE MUSICAL MAN

... real reason is to be found in quite another quarter. If there is a subject upon which society considers it has a right to speak, it is music. Any amount of. nonsense, any quantity of dogmatic assertion, any foolish'jia'gle of empty wordy, passes in. society ...

THE TWO SIDES OF THE PICTURE

... not been raised up, furnished with fresh dressing, and put before the electors to influence them. 'Personal rudenes4, evil speaking, 'lying, and slandering, have taken the place that ought to have been held by good humour and fair' hitting. It has seemed ...

CHRISTMAS IN GRIMSBY

... world. But, sir, if I were not afraid of trespassing too niuch upon your space and your readers' patiencep. I could go on to speak of Mies Roper's German fair, Air Barton's fancy repository, Messrs Smith and Son's and Messrs Guy and Smith's ball-room costumes ...

REVIEWS

... lengthy quotation we are at pretent precluded, but we may speak of this work as possessing a great value not only to l those who have charge of young men, but to the young men themselves. Heroism speaks in all its pages, and the book bears the impress of an ...