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Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland

Access Type

89

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87
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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 ...

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 ...

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 ...

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- ...

MAGAZINES

... abilities of the many 11ritish clergyluen who occupy pulpits in the seaboard cities of the States. MIr Commissioner IMacCartliy speaks, on the whole, rather hopo- fully( of the future of Manufacturing Iadustry in Ireland. He quotes Lord Salisbury's speech ...

THE FIRST MUSICAL SOCIETY OF ABERDEEN

... of some importaiico, mana'-ing to Sus- tain a large family on the money she made atconcert- giving. Long before she could speak Dlaiiily little Adeialna wvould humn all the airs she had [earned at her F iim'thers knee a iLh amazing faicility. Nothing ...

LITERATURE

... surely far too sweeping; it could only be accepted if all those competent critics with a rigLt to judge of whom MIr Morley speaks were agreed, and this is far from beingv the case. The late Mr Matthew Arnold ranked Laodamia (1814) among the poet's finest ...

AMUSEMENTS

... w, and Miss Marianne Sautry makes the most of the character of the guctapercha girl. Of the others it is not necessary to speak. The Nettle' precedes the piece proper, and proves very acceptable, The Arabian Nights will uccupy the boards every night ...

MAJOR DE CARON'S CAREER

... French accent. I asked him how it was that he had no French aocent, and he explained that he had lived en long amid English-speaking people that he had lost it. DIe Ceron was gentlormanly in manner. and evidently educated. The leading priest in the town ...

MAGAZINES

... position i au an o incettti! part of thle United Kingdom. With enemnlie.~ in atlt uitts of the worid-euetnies, sotns of whotti a speak our own language, while others are within our d own borders-the present is no time to gamble with the laity ilterts-t of the ...

MAGAZINES

... and a continuation of Mr Tinsley's delightful recollections. From these we cannot resist making the following, extracts. Speaking of the rise of ' Onida ' into popularity, Mr Tinsley says Pereiaps Lord Strangford'm aavage attack upon soeie of ouida ...