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THE DUBLIN SOCIETY'S MUSICAL RECITALS

... drassncharacter of Lay' t t BrotlierP~elican. ,AsBoleslas Mr. Westlalk6 Perry sang-particularly. sell, -and made, g'enerally speak- ' ing, a typiral -ahd sefficiently ferocious gipsv. Mliss~ L'-Julia Middietoo is the landlady of .the inn,-and' subsequentiy ...

THE MAGAZINES

... Kr. Gil contends that the House of Commonis has eu followiog the example of the American House of Represeltatives in, so to speak, c hnanging its base and preparing t6obecame more of a legislative and less of a de- liberative assembly than it has been ...

FAIRS

... which was held yesterday, showed some signs of improvement. The supply of black cattle was much better, and demand, generally speaking, fairly good. In the beef departmtnt, flrst-elass sold from 50s to 55s per owt.; second, 43s 6d to 498 per ewt.; third, 3Bsto ...

MESSRS. RODMAN & COMPANY'S EXHIBITION OF ETCHINGS

... Meissonier's equisite picture, At the Window (5). 'Of the choice character of M. Le Rat's work it is scarcely necessary to speak. He is the i only etcher who is capable of dealing with the I 'delicacies of the great F-rench painter. The amount of labour ...

MR. GLADSTONE ON BOOKS

... circum- stances of the time, but which often becomes our snare. By speaking I mean export, by reading I mean import (laughter). You remember the saying of Lord Bacon about speak- mng, which made a ready man, and reading, which made a fuli miza. ...

THE ROYAL VISIT TO GLASGOW

... view- of the da'is. Dr. MsnxcxcIO then read the Corporation address of welcome. THE PRINCE'S REPLY. His 'RoYAL HIGHNESS, speaking in' clear, mea- sured tones, replied as follows :-My Lord Provost and gentlemen, I have received your address with feelings ...

GLASGOW INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... Messrs. Barbour have made a speciality of this thread, which they dye in all the most approved airt colours, and we cannot speak too highly of the perfection at which they have arrived, They aire also manuf'acturers of the finest white linen threads for ...

LITERATURE

... breeds, when merit is handicapped and depre- he ciated, and when offices which should be its re- ds ward and birthright, so to speak, are disposed of and manipulated in the interests of nepotism and 15cabal. n- Th& condition of the schools and the organisation ...

LITERATURE

... as wenl or with great devotional fervour and earnestnems. T, method of his treatment is as follows. In ?? 1first sermon he speaks of Devotion to tis Sacred Heart; in the second he gives us the IIL tory of the devotion, dwelling with inseresth ed l ...

THE IRISH EXHIBITION IN LONDON

... important function. They I. have furnished opportunities for a kind of rough- d and-ready international stock-taking, so to speak, e: and suggested to those who have the means the c best and readiest mode of supplying the deficiencies at of their neighbours ...

THE IRISH EXHIBITION

... the executive committee. There are still a number of exhibiters who are in the laggard class- a day behind the fair, so to speak-whose exhibits up to yesterday still re- mained unpacked. and who had made little or no 'progress with the erection of their ...

THE IRISH EXHIBITION IN LONDON

... I they now rivalled the most complicated and ap- proved of Scotch tweeds. In five years these. Donegal peasants, who could speak no, English, I and neither read nor write, had, at a wage of 4 tenpence a diy, and mainly by correspondence, 4 learned to rival ...