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ABERDEEN ART GALLERY,

... occasion to remind the Art Gallery Committee of the fact that they had received from the Artists' Society a sumo--he was speaking from memory-of nearly £500, which was a Iarger: ansount than the society had yet been able to put to their own credit at ...

LITERATURE

... th thoroughly, and to be so well versed in the ways o, of the little ones that she has bit their taste eil exactly. We can speak with confidence, for be we have submitted the story in exlenso to the th verdict of just the class of children for whom it ...

THE ROYAL ACADEMY WINTER EXHIBITION

... genius may bes 3 obtained. I ?? first thing that ocours to us to say I is that Holl's repute is mnuch greater 7 than his work, speaking generally, warrants. There is no sign of the great master;* there is. above alL b-t .tieht tra of thle io~nu. Itenee of Velasquox ...

LITERATURE

... especially of Christian women, which gives tire book its worth. M-r Lovett, however, claimns too much for his hero when he speaks of Tyndale's maintenance of the view that the true seuse of Scripture is tire literal meaniag, as if it were sonaething altogether ...

POETRY AND VERSE

... Blunt cannot but lament, however, that these influences should so soon lose their power. Yet there is some consolation; for, speaking from experience, he declares that faI as we may from the higher level, they do not wholly perish, but remain for us a wholesome ...

NEW MUSIC

... had i'b by ! broken. Asked if she woulil like to ask 1 he he and witne;ses about that she repI ed that she Neednn oF M. speak againstt a bobby. Ilaillie MIAarns said it wai I | probable that the accusAd had oommnitted tie offence A I in ignorance, ...

AMUSEMENTS

... nearly Li perfect as it possibly could be. Of Mr T. W. .PobPrtson's impersonation of Dick Piienyll it would ein be ditticuit to speak too hizhly. he not onlv PI look-; the character to tbe life. but, his' th acting ie char'acterizt'd by so much vigour, while ...

LITERATURE

... bh 'fam . able to move about much unless they i fell, r know Spanish, but there is now plenty of MC CEnglish and English-speaking society both in Poo -Puerto and Sauta C ruz. ir ldwardes appends boo a chapter for the benefit of the intending traveller ...

MAGAZINES

... Sport weighls the ad- Li vantages and disadvantages accruing. to pos- Al session of a grouse moor, and contains some plain speaking on the subject of poaching. hae How to Catch Tigers Alive and New- c market in the Reign of Queen Anne are m: interesting ...

GHOSTS

... of Mr A., says the account, looked fixedly at lier, but did not speak. Not dream-1 ing that she was &.holding other than the actual form of her husband, she said, Why don't youI r speak ? while at the same time she sat down in an attnchair. At that ...

SATURDAY POPULAR CONCERT

... W'agner, and its? admirable repro duction by the orchestra gave Ievident pleasure, We have already this winter had occasion to speak of the solid worth of Herr Sons' attain- a ments as a sole performer, and the performance k Iby him en Saturday of Visuxteinp's ...

MAGAZINES

... what is the end and aim of all this folly'? The laws of nature cannot be suspendse in favour of any men merely because they speak Gaelic. To root these poor people in the sol), which they have iiot the kimowledge, or the skill, or the industry to culti- ...