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SCRAPS FROM VARIOUS JOURNALS

... be felt by tbe police at this imtpotent intefdrence with their functions and duties. (From Fuss,) Mr. H1. C. Riohards, in speaking at Blecmbo, near Lowes oomparea Home Rule to a concsrtina. This is not a bsa oomparison, for it might produce harmony in ...

LITERATURE

... Temperance Publication depot) is a c t'il book for Juvenile teetotallers. rsong its contents we note the following, whose stories speak for themselves, The Wiom ?? Swallowed 'IThree Brickfields and Eight Houses, and the man whose No Bleans Yes. Some interesting ...

CURRENT LITERATURE

... whlat is cefle cvl enization. Thie passion of a naulj is remarkable, and the faculty belongs to feov MtZost men are, so to speak, emunnta .,ui bX iou or inattention fromz he eujoymsn01 r Wtaz Tbephave not the ertthni 3 cosiy bi*itdemands. Othezs ^ho .passed ...

SOME BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS

... by no statesman of his time. Of the letters themselves, and of Lord Carnarvon7s critical estimate of their writer, we must speak on another occasion. Here we need only add that the book is very handsomely printed and bound, and that it is illustrated by ...

SOME MINOR PICTURE SHOWS

... who reports as follows :- The characteristics oftthis exhibi. tion are three-effrontery, eccentricity, and ugliness. I am speaking of course of the show as a whole, and in so far as it differs from other shows . for there are many pictures in it which ...

MUSIC

... that hope fa is dead, and that ?? be cometh not. M;any mere ofa theseries are nearly as good; and there are sundry i otimer speaking and dramatic compositions on a few u inches ofcanvas. The other exhibitions consist of a number of water. colour drawings ...

MUSIC AND DANCING AT NOTTINGHAM

... whether balls and partiesatsuch places as the Mechanics' Hall or the Albert Hall would be required to have a licence. He was speaking with the authority of the Town Clerk, who had the arrangements in charge, as well as with the authority of the committee ...

Published: Saturday 07 December 1889
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2286 | Page: 8 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LONDON MUSIC HALLS

... world, and his many shrewd remarks are piquant and well-timed. Monsieur Beau Terops, frem the Boulevards des Italienis, who speak, ' a very, very leetle English, knows how to judel, and ii even the most acute observer will fail to detect a d movement ...

Published: Saturday 07 December 1889
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3297 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY NOTES, NEWS, AND ECHOES

... another and important competitor who will soon enter the field. NVe refer to Australia, When the immense number of English speaking people of another continent advance far enough in culture and cultivation to create a moneyed and leisured class they -ill ...

An American Christmas: Book

... ,wouldcertainly not have occurred to an English draughtsmnan. This is, by the way, a pretty little child; but, generally speaking, Mr. NAsT is not quite ?? in his children's faces. His young folk ae sturdy, merry little people, but we miss the innocent ...

THEATRICAL GOSSIP

... received with acclamation. Mons. Marins replied, thanking everyone for the assist. ance he had received in all his productions, speaking in the kindliest terms of his friend and colleague, Mr George Alexander, who is about to undertake the management of the ...

Published: Saturday 07 December 1889
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4256 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE MUSIC HALL SKETCH

... Repression and( coercion are, speaking gen,-rally in opiposition to the spirit of thre time. OIf course, arguments were not so numerous or so diff'ie, on subjects of ait years ago as they are now. We may imagine, however, that speak.'rs at the Iieinlatic g ...

Published: Saturday 07 December 1889
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1666 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture