Refine Search

LITERATURE

... Son. The learned and venerated Bishop of Newport and Menevia, in his eloquent introduction to this v valuable publication, speaks of it as a most 2 charming work, ad cengratulates the competent and industrious reverend treaslator en having ( furnished ...

THE MAYOR OF CORK AND THE DISTURBANCES IN THE THEATRE

... Liberals, and one Liberal Unionist, Mr. T R Buchanan. TEA es 3. MI'FARLANE'S 2s TEA. Extin;oruiiuary valae, The feiloving speaks for itself -- , Boyle, 23rd Sopt, '86. Sit-Send ine rube more of your is Tea. What I got .lst nwas better thanr what I would ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... look after them. '2 __ ?? MR. CHAMBERLAIN'S VISIT TO ULSTER. London, Saturday. ?? Daily Tedegraph says-Mr. Chamberlath -will speak in Belfast on the 11th October and at Coleraine on October 13th. Mr. Jesse CoUings swill accompany the right hon gentleman ...

THE CARL ROSA OPERA

... of Elster will sustain thlir representativee in vindi- eating their rights and liberties. and that I may be able again to speak and act for the bravo- anI no7 ble race that. saligned and slandered, need fear no ?? while truel to their fathers' principles ...

FAIRS

... every fair beld in this, town, which is some- wh~at singular, a s the class of horses thlrougrhout tlbe Ards is generally speaking remaurkably good. ?? Towvn C~ommissioners, a few- month~s ag'o, ?? considcring the advisability of establishing a good monthly ...

GAIETY THEATRE

... heroine' t form a number of excellent dramatic pictures. Of Mrs Fendal's portraiture of Lady Clancartyit is impossible to speak too bighly. From first to 3 last she invested the part with a pathos and grace that left nothing to be desired. In the first ...

THE CARL ROSA OPERA—NORDISA

... silence; but beyond doubt they do not pass unlotice-d even by an uncritical audience They constitute the background, so to speak. of the broad picture, the, prominent features of which cali for opei? admiration. In 'Norllisa. it may be stated at once ...

THE CARL ROSA OPERA—MASANIELLO

... worked out. and as to the realism of the riot no inconsiderable portion of the audience were doubt- | less in a position to speak from experience. The B: exacting, but certainly grateful, tenor part was Cm taken by 31r. Francesco Runcio, and it is needless ...

MR. JUSTIN M`CARTHY ON THE LITERATURE OF '48

... he had Lnade of both (cheers) ; he waet also there because lie had sympathy with the subject on which Mir. M'Carthy was to speak, and lastly from party sympathy with those as- sembled as they Were far from Ireland, thut re solved that they would not forget ...

LITERATURE

... may thus become again what she was in the last two centvries-the battleground of her more powerfal neighbours. Major Wachs speaks of the possibility of France attempting to strike at Southern Germany through Switzerland, but the details he gives go to ...