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EXTRACTS FROM THIS WEEK'S PUNCH

... can't see their ribs. (Before the Pigeon Matcah.) SageWortley to Carver, ome , no palaver! Says Carver to Wortley, paon't speak so ccrtly.y BETTOR AND VERSE. In tho case of Galloway v. Maries, Islutdw Justice Lopes asked- Suppose the person wore an ...

THE HUDDERSFIELD MUSICAL FESTIVAL

... Mr. Joshua, Marshall, and the remark-of Mr. Htalt, that there was hardly any necessity for him to come to the rehearsals, speaks volumes as to the efficiency of ala chorus and the good training which Mr. Marshall has bestowed. The secretaries, Messrs ...

LITERATURE

... Ot books he read, that he made it his a9iclpa i . in wrting The New Playground, to aim tt , -Iia irim tile clouds and speak of it as he 1: -f f ?? ?? iPau. or Torjuity. Iu other words, W''picieS 'the regions of fact to those of f Incy, b3 5ei .rSat ...

THE EXHIBITION OF ELECTRICITY IN PARIS

... square yards. Everything will be in move- mnent from morn till eve. The force produced will be w sent telegraphically, so to speak, into all the corners'of the Palace.' A wire extended to the apparatus, with thbe pressure of a knob, will set the machine ...

LITERATURE

... eminent a;r acrusts, both English and foreign, will be made by J 3r3De Durand, of whose skill in such work it is r/.oucy to speak. A series of papers on The 1-.l Abbeys of Yorkshire will be contributed by C W. Leofroy, and illustrated by M. Brunet-Debaiuies ...

BEVERLEY AND EAST RIDING HORSE SHOW

... sgjite upto the standarld of previous years.* JVM ._IAMTORIBANS, M.P., ON IUi GOVERNMENT POLICY. Mr. Marj oribauks, M.P.i speaking last night at Greeni law- Berrwickshire, said the three, great charges brought ,aganst the Government by their oppnnbnts ...

LITERATURE

... The hook is charmingly and prof usely illustrated, and.~ has an excellent map of South. Africa. The frontispiece is ~ a speaking- likeness of Frank Oates himself.t ay 5, Asecond volume of OLD YouxniRsna (2) has bees4 issued I The readers of the work ...

THE FRENCH YELLOW BOOK

... ated, but 3 ser still only as a ?? sadoi and to the Turkish Ambassador. By a curious oversight, Mf. Saint-Hilaire did not speak to the last of the 1 Ambassadors interested till a few days later, when heli aye called to explain that he had fancied he had ...

FASHION AND TRADE

... raised against his own at Lambeth a-whilst those figures of saints and apos~tles escaped celnsure: to Yet lewould not further speak of this lest he' shoulad si ?? thereby set some furious spirit in work to destroy those w harriles goodly windows to the just ...

THE POPULAR USES OF MUSIC

... their horror of Puritanism, p d rushed to the xtremen, if not of advising people to go to ti 1 music halls, at least' of speaking so indulgently of them 'L d that it amounted to the same thing. As they~at present a existed, the tendency of music halls ...

LORD ROSEBERY ON ART EXHIBITIONS FOR THE WORKING CLASSES

... the e town. (Hear, hear.) D THE HON. E. STANo1'OEfM.P., ON TEE GOVERNS SENT FOREION Poaxcy.--The Hon. F. Stanhope, M.P., speaking last night at Newport, Isle of Wight, after t contesting the claim of the present. Government 'to the s credit of retrenchment ...

LITERATURE

... ratrbirsra n P LpabU~ga ossd Ke~sazc Jdta 1 just at the very Pl~ce wheiQ i~t has~ thp grgatest tendlencyv to stumble. Strictly speaking, it is not a Li Uaof Christ, but, as it Professes to be, simply a. series 6f 1 studies1 in that r life. In this respect ...