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... Confound it they 've gone and stopped up the foot-path. ...
... Confound it they 've gone and stopped up the foot-path. ...
... .3 Dealer Blue but not bluer than the sky. ...
... OUR LADIES' PAGES. SOME REFLECTIONS AND FACTS. As the world grows older, and the ever-increasing surplus population continues to grow and spread, all sorts of panaceas are put forward by the garrulous and unpractical for the amelioration of our over-sufficiency. As far as men go, they generally find their feet, and South Africa will make a capital outlet for another century or so. But the ...
... . The hypnotised heroine of the new Royalty piece, in the charming person of Miss Ellis Jeffreys, is one of the most talked-about people of the day; consequently, a reflected glory is attached even to her clothes, though, indeed, they are quite smart enough to be worthy of notice on their own account. She first wears a dinner-gown which is quite charming, the perfectly hanging skirt of black ...
... No. 198.-- Vol. XVI. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1896. ...
... Why don't you get a new suit, man 1 aitli, I 111 the most ticklish man in all Cork devil a tailor in the place can get the tape round me i} ...
... . By the time these notes are in print I hope to be nearing Nova Scotia, whither business and other matters necessitate my going. During this three months' tour in Canada and in Western America I shall take particular notice of the improvements made in Canadian and in American cycles since last year, at which time the rational costume of the San Francisco cycling Venus was a thing of beauty ...
... . SCENE: BEFORE MUGGLETON'S RESIDENCE. TIME: 2.43 a.m. Muggleton reading Even oil a show visit your overcoat should, be left in the hall hie That '11 b be beashly difficul' an' what about m' bootsh '$s£t*TuEm s ...
... A MORNING BATH. ...
... ESSE f i y J V X No. 199.-- Yol. XYI. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1896. ...
... . SAIHEY GAMP. ...
... . Lucas Malet has put a stumbling-block in the way of her readers' complete appreciation of her new story, The Carissima (Methuen). It is a very able story. Only a very few of our novelists can write so well, and there are pages in it quite worthy of Mr. Henry James. One readily acknowledges that she has treated her subject very cleverly, but a simple reader must be somewhat puzzled as to ...