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Leeds Mercury

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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

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Yorkshire, England

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759

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759

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Leeds Mercury

LITERATURE

... the modern Ritualists, who claim to have b that Priesthood which Roman Catliolics arid the Oriental Churches, generally speaking, have,' and to have o received by their orders sacramnental graice, endowvilng th cns with supernatural powers and enabling ...

LITERATURE

... auriferous gravel beds; of Calif-ornia, arid the quartz tI 'lie rocks of the ?? colony, and ?? mrodes of working. is Ito Speaking of the fulture( sujjpply, lie says- ft ?? i~or~ustraha, as for Caliifornia, there appears totec aloang ti ry fetore of g ...

LITERATURE

... declared in words, must at least assure one another of its existence. We extract part ef this confession:- AoIrsn. Oh let me speak. fow could I less than love Dei rig near thee day by day asid heur by hour Witatching thy life like to a steadiaset stream ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... Germany of our gifted pianist Miss t Agnes Zisnuermana. WVe have received cuttings from various German papers, all of which speak in the highest terms of her playing. No better proof could be given of the walrmth of her reception then is contained in the ...

LITERATURE

... Ihe tie Imperial government ef ?? colonies and i ,re alt dependencies of the empire, but his very zeal I of enables bim to speak more forcibly, because moreI te- earnestly, on the various points to which the question f u's naturally gives rise. Suibst ...

LITERATURE

... lluth bad -;zlL e to -repeset thins mattier psroplerly whilst ft. Asll ie pllts it, it can scarcely he conrrect. lia;co lie speaks of Buckle as having been a : Pntni'' I'erIahS Mr. HInch1 thiniks Calv'inists ?? frequenit Execter 1-all reguhir-ly ?? children ...

LITERATURE

... il--v, cheerful spirit whtich! reigned throughout the PC (Li- l e to thle inifueecce of Sister flora. One of her Sa afaitis, speaking of hter in her hospital work, seys- up *s1,,J had ever seen ?? a woman as this before, so co' so) goodl, so fendles-Iearted ...

THE BURNING OF A DUBLIN THEATRE

... to us, saying, ' Where? ' He cast his eyes round the burning circle, andi ran calling out behind the curtain. I heard himi speak to a man, and lie, viths my husband (Mr. Joe Eldred), a servant, and auothernman in another minute emerged, holding alhose ...

LITERATURE

... February, 1l6t. The R'ight liou. John Evelms a Deuison, Alolleber for Nottinghcameshire North, was uca- ad scineoulsly re-elected Speak-er. This Parliament wvas dissolved on tlhe 11th of November, 136j, haviss' lasted OD tevo years, nine mouths, and ten days ...

LITERATURE

... usiefral amfile il; slitlt C( [heart it was a great fatvourite wihen ralive ; it wvas hleonrlred v thetrl dead. IHcrodotus speaks of the great concern swhich the Egvptirmrs felt at the deaths of a cat; aill the inmt^ates of the house shaved their eyebrowvs ...

LITERATURE

... seeptics, but of A thouscnds of amiable and well educated Christians. It is ascepticism, uot of iron, but of ]saze; it has, so to speak, th neitlerpoist nr denit. elfor t-tht veryre-asonlit ursy he be orroe dangerous; as itis morel terrible to live dlay af ter ...

LITERATURE

... history of the testimonies to thle existence aud writers of the Gospels frouit ?? fourth century to the first. Generally speaking, apologists begin 1 witi the first century alnd go dowvnivards; lie reverses this ) procedure-wiscly, too, as we think-for ...