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AMUSEMENTS

... you not move on yourself '? I did not try to tin speak to you, did I I I wanted to speak to Mr Dick, D who has been my good friend since I was a boy. i Now come, don't lean your face on your hands wh Y speak up like man. At this stage Tough turned Sta h ...

SHOW OF INDUSTRIAL WORK BY THE BLIND

... he thought, also have been adjudicated upon. Speaking of those so afflicted, he thought his friend was always amongst b them to speak to them as if they had all that those who could see had, and not to speak to them as if they were wanting in any one sense ...

THE THEATRE-ROYAL

... the nonce when he may safely do so, n speaks in a voice which is clearly that of the I natural man, and in so doing brings el ) shrewdness and 6unning under the microscope. P r If it were necessary, one might Speak also of the v play of eye and even of ...

HILLHEAD CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERT

... fact that Brahus's quintett op. 34 and Beethoven's cmnartettI op 13 lhave only now been heard for the siest time in iasgow speaks volumes in favour of such an as-ociation as that now established, and throws a rather unfattering light on the apathy and ...

A LAMPLIGHTER'S STORY

... anywhere within the linsits of our town, he wcilt he sure to find a well-wisher of John Manley. While his life h:Lo. genensll Cc speaking, bees an unevetftul one, lie h;LS nevertheless, during w those twenty-nine t3 6.rs, suet with some strange experiensces. ...

GLASGOW INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... weather thronghout the day t was entirely favourable, beingr warm and sum-i ,nerlikc. There were, however, no special ?? to speak of from other parts ; while I I cur own citizens, though for most part now on holiday, are' evidently setting their faces to- ...

THE JAPANESE PICTURE EXHIBITION

... is rolled up when not suspended for exhibition. On the other hand, a mri;?in-ou is a roll, that is a picture painted, so to speak, panoramically, along a number of continuous strips of paper or e:i- fastened together. Such rolls are often nauy yards in ...

THE THEATRES

... night, the play with which her name has for many years been peculiarly associated. It isunnecessary at this late period to speak in detail of Miss Lee's wonderful impersonation of Jo. It must long a o have become familiar to playgoers. But although it ...

FINE ARTS

... leetionof pictures in oll and water colonar by WVm. Young, a Glasgow artist whose work we j have frequently had occasion to speak of favcur. ably. Mr Young is a landscape painter whon 's subiject rsacciates sea and loch and stream with, ' the hills and ...

MAGAZINES

... to speaking names, he describes their use as a a little joke between author and reader not pushed obtrusively far, and yet establishing a policy of mutual understanding and companion- ship in secrets. Passing Bunyan, who pushed the speaking name ...

MAGAZINES

... obleeged, in a King's speech, and yet he is as enthusiastic as a youth In sketching the future confederation of the English-'speaking races. Full of first-hand information, from an acute, humorous, and cultured observer, 'the: article is entirely different ...

A STUART EXHIBITION IN LONDON

... painted in oil, or inminiature, or drvawn in pastel. Royvl palaces and X the great houses of England and Scotland, not to speak of collections of recent formation, possess large numbers of pictures by Gaussen, Van Somer, and Mytens, by Jamesone and Van ...