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Belfast News-Letter

BELFAST MONTHLY FAIR

... were picked up. These ranged from £25 down to £10, according to quality. The supply of cattle was not large, comparatively speaking, especially of springers. This class is hard to be got just now, and consequently owners were hard to satisfy as to the figure ...

THEATRE ROYAL—BENEFIT OF MR. BARRY SULLIVAN

... nise the value of this imnersocation of M\r. Sullivan's. Miss Mlaude Brennan acted with delicacy and relunement as Portia, speaking the famous lines in the third act with dignity and effect.. The mounting of the piece was in every way admirable; the dresses ...

THE GRAND DUCHESS AT THE THEATRE ROYAL

... short engagement at the new ,zeatre Boval to-night. Daring the week Offenb~oh's celebrated comic opera will be pre. sented;, Speaking of the performance, the Cork h'it mfiter says:- Qffivbsch's charming mari most popular opera, wherei9 are represented the ...

MISS ADELINE STANHOPE AT THE NEW THEATRE ROYAL

... acy of the House were afflictedwith obscure vision, He complained, amid loud protestations from the Left, that people should speak with so little re- -spect for the King. The rescript, he said, was entirely justifiable, and its legality was not shaken by ...

THEATRE ROYAL—THAT BEAUTIFUL WRETCH

... sides of the Atlantic. With regard to the representation of the part of Stiplianie-we mean Adelaide-by Bliss Stanhope we can speak in terms of high praise; her acting has gained in many ways since we last had the privilege of seeing her ; it is now want ...

OLD-FASHIONED ART

... Our artists seemed then to delight to take their inspirations fromr the pages of their novelists. The late'LorcdCarlisle, speaking some years ago of Oliver Gdldsmith said it was im- possible to walk through the galleries without year after year meeting ...

FASHIONS FOR FEBRUARY

... slight alterations only, many in their actual condition. The outline of a fashionably dressed lady, the silhouette, so to speak, is unaltered-i.e., the bodice, whatever its shape or style may be, show- ina the figure to advantage, and closely moulding ...

LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART

... called for, will be takeu, and who is resipon. sibie for neglect in case they are not, are matters on which it is not easy to speak with confidence. Probably theatrical managers would not lose their equanimity were a few critics roasted. Still more sixpenny ...

THEATRE ROYAL—THE WORLD

... ship in mid- ocean was almost faultless so far as realism is concerned; as to the explosion of the infernal machine, we would speak with rather more hesi- tation, never having been aboard a ship when such an accident occurred; however, we dare say it would ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... triumph. It would have I been imrdesible to refrain from feeling last night, while all the members of the conapriny were speaking their lines with such grace and natural- l ness, how much of the geniality of Shakespeare's humour has been lost by the 1 ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... excellent in many ways; it was N natural and humorous in every scene. Of the s other parts in the piece it is unnecessary to speak; , most of them are commonplace, ard nearly all 'c were represented with a corresponding want of X originality. It would be ...

EXHIBITION OF STUDENTS' WORK AT SCHOOL OF ART

... amateur artists an opportunity of comparing their own work with that of others. The success which attended Mr. Cooper in Dublin speaks well for the future of his Belfast class, and, under the superintendence of such a skilled iustructor, the exhibition is secured ...