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FASHION AND VARIETIES

... question he discusses-viz., the 2. placing of the Irish language and history on next D year's programme. H~e truly reniarke (speaking of the neglect of the Celtic language in our colleges) 'y ?? if any of them, have tak-en up the matter pin a spirited rnanner;- ...

NOVELTIES

... are easy to sew on, an eye being made at the back. Whbile mtent~ioning the froaks of fashion, it may Dot be out of place to speak of thre new clasps for closings riding habits to be worn at a hunts thesie are of small ivory hoofs, with gold nails, caught ...

FASHIONS FOR OCTOBER

... than is generally supposed. Obesity is undoubt- edly a not infrequent cause of fatty degeneration of the heart and liver. Speaking of the heart, a late author says- Some of the instances of sud. den death of fat people may be reasonably as- cribed to ...

MR. PARNELL, M.P., AND THE REV. E. SHEEHY IN CORK

... feelings of pride, of confidonce, end of hope than at almost ,any previous period in our history. When we speak of Ireland as a nation, wo speak to some ex- tent of the future; but ever since the notion of natioltlood took possession of the Irish mind ...

THE CAIETY THEATRE

... the performiance last evening, the piece hasY been coma .iderably ctir. tailed, and the con iensation has becn, gienerally speaking, satisactorilv accanplijlied. It was thc only work by Mrs Cmul.ly that sutccee del il oh - taimilag any position ui p'iwallar ...

BALLINASLOE OCTOBER FAIR

... Frid.iy and. Satulday: but usually a onsaiderable number' change hands at an earlier period of the week. It is too early to speak of the prospecti of the horse fair, which is nominally fixed for Thursday, but which practically is Epread over the entire ...

BALLINASLOE OCTOBER FAIR

... train to-day, the 4 ;tyit of hlis puwrc'hasesh cling three aninal-, and thesi/not equal in value to those of last year 'Ibis speaks olutiues whei it is remembered that the horse fair is nrit supposed to begin until to-morrow. A record of pyices ot horses ...

THE GAIETY THEATRE

... permitted, that we should trace the story. It contains many eloquent speecher, full of true loetic feeling, but, generally speaking, I the text is stilted anid aflected to a ?? that U deprives it 4f much Lucma interest. It wavy no y doubt, be that the Poet ...

MONTHLY PUBLICATIONS

... with a point in It. The story to which we refer 3has no semblance of a point of any sort ; and its moral is that one should speak when one is spoken to, especially when one is a curate in search of preferment. The second short story is entitled Lord ...

DR. KILLEN'S ARTICLES ON THE WESTMINSTER DIVINES AND THE USE OF INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN THE WORSHIP OF THE ..

... opponerntof instrumental music in Church worship than even Calvin. Wylie, in his History of Pro- testantism (vol. 1, pp. 4213-7), speaking of Zwingle, and his friend Leo Juda, says:- When the hours of labour were fulfilled, the two regaled themselves with song ...

THE LYCEUM COMPANY AT THE ULSTER HALL

... absolutely everwhelming. Of the ffarvehloua acting of the dream witbint the- dream, and its weird effect, it is not necessarY to speak. It seems to us in its intensity one of the most vivid pieces of the representation. The silence that succeeded the pronouncing ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... enclosed programme) are a sufficinet answer to thoie few who cavil at the education t given by the Christian Brothers, and speak more h eloquently than any language of the efficiency of o the system adopted by these gentlemen, who have been, perhaps more ...