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CLIPPINGS FROM THE WEEKLY JOURNALS

... CLIPPINGS .FROM THE,- :, WEEKLY JOR N ?? - - I t4: , N PICKINGS FROIt PUNCH. X X Are Welsh rabbits included in 'Ground Game 7 PRILHELLENES.-The Lord'Mayor and aldermen who filled the King of the Hellenes and his suite, when they nresented him with an ad&ess, and gave them all a lunch, the other day, at Guildhal). LIVE WHILE YOu MAY.-Timid Passenger (as the gale fresbenel) : Is there any ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... ILITRAR EXTAcTS. : ADAM IMOXET'S TROUBLE. t ws t ae fie ai=ernonin June, when Madame [ S~i~bntet'must~go-from hiome. So proceeding along £hvdusty read,'she went' on' with:' some net-work 'e'r handil,' stopping 'from door to door, to have aspihat with her neighbours. 'Why ?? We must divert ourselvres; and when the heart is !1ieavy with grief, it is a relief to find an ear atten- ire to the ...

CROWLE SHOW

... CROVWLE SHOW. Il -b l Thei~tth 'A'wsual poultry, pigeoni-and dogi show was ooenedon ?? inst., and extended over the, next day. The lfatber~ras varyw .nnavourmble onl the -opening day, and the. receipts at ;the gate fell soff by £25i as compared with the corresponding day 'of 1879. The collection of birds, asa wrhole, was simply superb. The black aid brown reds -were magnificent. The pile birds ...

REVIEWS

... ? 1?11-1-- ?'RE 17 ?? 1, ? ? Iq 1;11 ?? ? ?? -- vm ?? ? I 1? TxE Rusoui~tirs ;or `UEEa SLt DL . d . G. Street and Co., 30, Coinhill, C}2An're1iable' work pertaining to the Co10nies and e'milgration is- sure, in these times, to ;nd' ml.titudeB of fers; On the subject,of Queenalaild'w kieow of nof ?? that contains so large a fund of information in al small compass as the one under notice, by ...

THE NAVAL CADETS

... I 11- _, The Naval Cadets, which is to be played at the Hull 'heatre Royal next week by Miss Emily Soldene atd her London Company, is adapted from a popular French vaudeville, and set to music by M. Richard Genese. The story on which the libretto is founded was used by an ELglish dramatist as far back as 1842, ,when it was played at the Adelpi i Theatre (then under the management of Mr. ...

CLIPPINGS FROM THE WEEKLY JOURNALS

... CLIPPINGS FROM THE| WEEKLY JOURNALS. + - ?? PICKINGS FROM PUNCOH. CL BOoTS.-Cobbler William: A bad out, and poor Cgr Bull, but we must make the best of 'em I We 'tab the holes -and give 'em a new sole-and touch ops a bit! Meanwhile, we must get another pair p hsud I've the length^ of your foot/I . OF FIRST SEEING LORD SHEEHOOKE IN THE HOUSE OF (By Lord B.) How fearfull And dizzie 'tis to ...

CLIPPINGS FROM THE WEEKLY JOURNALS

... CLIPPINGSX :FIOM THE M -WEEKLY~ JOURNAS. PICKINGS FROM, PUNCH ?? Uet us hope that the election of Signor Fadinl ?? Presidency of the Italiani Cbaasberof Deputies may hep the clesring up of Italian Parliamentary diffiulies ,which seem even worse than our own. Yet, perhaps, if we too had a Parini, he might help to a .friendly Zul tion of ?? difficulty; one on the worst of the many damnosce ...

THORNE AGRICULTURAL SHOW

... On Wednesday the 28th annual show of the ih Thorne Agricultural Association was held in the beauti. ful park at Thorne Hall, kindly lent by, Makin Durkin, 21 Esq. The Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire, G~reat Northern, and North-Easternl Railways ran special express trains from the neighbouring towns. The com. C mittee, with their able secretary, Mr. Charles Haycroft. n had made ...

THE MAGAZINES

... THE M-AGAZI S it I CRICHTON AT MANTJA.k Os Early in 'the summer of 1582 a well-gra' ed rf horseman might have been seen wending his way 6g Along the road from Padua to Mantua. H6 'was k not more than twenty-two years of: age -but had s .alieadv filled the whole of lettered Europe with. 'shis fam ?? Descended on his' mother's sid from: St Robert IIt of Scotland, the Admirable Crichton- for it ...

CLIPPINGS FROM THE WEEKLY JOURNALS

... C CLIPPINGS, -FRO-M THE WEEKLY JQRALS.. PICKINGS FROM PUNCH. LABOUB AND ItST.-Ex-Head Gardener (retired from business): Well, William, yer don't seem to be makin' much progress-do yer 1-New Head Gardener: Why, no, Benjamin; you left the place in such a precious mess I 1 THE TWO GARDENERS. Ben (aside). Pheugh I Ain't he a pegging away (puff/ puff!) Now I call this pertikler good fun. ...

THE HORSE SHOW AT THE AGRICULTURAL HALL

... The seventeenth annual horse show, which is now open at the Agricultural Hall, will be found to bear comparison with most of its predecessors, both iR the quality and the number of the entries. In the hunter classes more espeeially does this year's show bear the palm, whilst in the other classes appropriated to riding horses there is a fir sprinkling of sterling merit. For Arabs, this year is ...