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 ...

ABERDEEN ORNITHOLOGICAL CLUB

... examining each cage-with great minuteness vz amld care and exeroising much discrimination in the tic balancing of points. Speaking of the created lb birds the judge remarked that they were as !il good a lot as could have been put forward, and were hi certainly ...

THEATRE ROYAL—ESTHER SANDRAZ

... an unosual amount of interest to be attached to her return to this city. Four years ago. Mrs. Langtry was. comparatively speaking. a novice in the art of acting, but she displayed so much intelligence in representing every character she undertook that ...

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 ...

MR. BALFOUR IN SCOTLAND

... ani ex muple aend as a proof that if yon leave Irish- men to manager these educational mlatters every s~ection of Irishmen, speaking gener.ally and broadly, will throw in their lot with the denotninational rystem, atid when you say. as perhaps somec of you ...

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 ...

BELPEB BOARD OF GUARDIANS

... Mr. Davenport, and the wood occupied by Mr. Pearson, and the colliery occupied by Mr. W. C. Hasl&m. He was proceeding to speak when the Chairman told him he could nut discuss a notice of motion. — Mr. Pearson continued his speech, when he was ruled out ...

MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS

... Chiicago, he speaks S4 in hopetul and sometimes glowing terms. As a t; r it erceur he is empecially pleased to note that tile love of the Almighty dollar has not altogether destroyed the desire for culture in these places; and he u speaks very highly ...

MR A. J. BALFOUR AT GLASGOW

... MIR A. J. BALFOUR AT GLASGOW. Mr A. J. B3alfour, speaking at a dinner in Glasgow on Monday, devoted himself entirely to the question of university education for Roman Catholics in Ireland. There were, he said, three conditions absolutely necessary before ...

CHUBCH OF ENGLAND TEMPERANCE.SOCIETY

... for his heart was too full with the sab- ject for him to compose beforehand a formal speech to dictate to them. He should speak a few plain words jnst as they came to bis lips, bat they would be words wbicb came straight from his very heart, and if they ...

THE DECEMBER MAGAZINES

... Lit. F. J. Phelps, ?? Srtrtes Minis or to Eiglau'l, hlas in ?? Tire Age of W ords sumoe s-tie' ciiet cziim~ on public speaking, thre wri-shg of Jict' in, -nd utt ittec pt-traz jottnalisio. As rea-sianhsesof contesits, ?? dbes- -Ftie ' %r i-s anead ...