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LITERATURE

... traceable to the immense experience of a most successful career. Nd book without an equally distinguished pedigree, so to speak, could bring together such a vast array of Selling details, of valuable trifles, and of sparkling suggestions as this does ...

BALLINASLOE OCTOBER FAIR

... Ifearit till not present any very specia~eatu~e ofintereat, or be, generilly ipeak- zig-mnb cut The Dublin.borse show has, 4o to speak, enuff$ out al local eferta At a horse ?? astracced to itself all that is good in thie reion of Irish-born horse dash. Up to ...

BALLINASLOE OCTOBER FAIR

... collection than one meets at the railway station or on The Green could scarcely be imagined. The houses have all, so to speak, put on thoeir holiday attire. White- wash and -aint have made many of them look bright, clean, and inviting, whilst the hotels ...

BALLINASLOE OCTOBER FAIR

... smaller than I have ever seen before. In fact-although until the final gap returns are available I cannot with confidence speak on the point-it appeared to me that never writhin recent years was the second day of the fair more denuded of its old char ...

BALLINASLOE OCTOBER FAIR

... concerned, and, as i frblmvflgood',hqorses-wiell, of ?? hereafter. p r- Thecuiiston ba grown. grndially of scattering-so to speak-the hone fair over the iveek instead oft r co~irn ?? ?hich oftenB made one think that in later yeass three days .wouldbe qulte ...

BALLINASLOE OCTOBER FAIR

... lots at from £21 to £17. My Kelly, of Castlerengh, sold one lot at £20 los and another at £18 lOs. The demand was, generally speaking, slow; but the earlyhour at which the transactions wereonened shovwed a consilerable and encouraging degree of errnestrees ...

THEATRE ROYAL—HAMLET

... Mir. Sullivan's representation of Hamlet was the ul Dost popular of any on the stage, we think lie -ould have been also speaking what was strictly I accurate. Thousands of thoughtful people in ireat Britain and America have formed their I idea of this ...

THE GAIETY THEATRE—LURETTE

... carries Jt t through pleasantly and leaves an agreeable if not f a very lasting im~pression. The performance was, ti generally speaking, exceedingly good. Miss t] Florence St. John, whosenamue iainDnblinchisly. J asaceintedt with a graceful and intelligent ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... of bMas. S. A. ALtENS' WORLD'S HArE ResTIMatE Iris not a dye; it can do no harm. Every oust -who has need this prepa ration speaks lend in its prie.I you ish to restore your hair ae in youtha and zeta'm it through ?? jbottle..-Advt. ...

LITERATURE

... and gifted woman who began to write at a fifty years of age, and who toiled for and sup- ported the whole family, Trollope speaks with every affection and veneration. and she certainly deserved all the high praises of her son. Anthony in his boyhood was ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... vain, sbabbling, foolish old woman, who fancies herself r a beauty at seventy, and dresses in the most a juvenile fashion, speaking iiu a mincing way of her frocks as if she had hardly passed her teens. The account of the meeting of Lady Maiilevricr ...

THE DAIRY SHOW

... it was regarded as a subject beneath the -gentleman's notice, and to be left entirely be th . ladies. Not that he wished to speak ?? .of what the ladie5 had done, for what would even- tually prove the alvation of the British farmer was t due in a great ...