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Daily Telegraph & Courier (London)

Wee pkWILY HERALD SUPPLEMENT. NEW TEARS DOUBLE NUMBER. THE SIN OF INTENTION. 1 A Owenlete Novel more doubt. toe ..

... eelenee), It being the th• nAtreds for the seed-thotailde ritheldeentletheentur. of W. Lora. IL leleetoureet. Iroton. THX SPEAKING VOlOl. Sy Mr.. EVIL BEIINKE. Tremor of Vara Pan Pert ed.; or topether,eontpkask 4e. . Illav commended br n the newer. ,nol ...

VATICAN AND THE BRITISH

... South Africa. and warmly praises the document !or its patriotic spirit. It deelaren that the Cardinal does not set when he speaks of the Divine wiedom which permits and ensumps the extraordinary expansion of the British Empire—ea expansion which naturally ...

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, MONDAY, 'JANUARY 1, 1900

... . containing air moms (including bath room), scullery. pantry, bicycle house. tc. Pitted with tradesmen's lets, imbuing, speaking tooth electric belle. oc. Porter In Sc. Perfect sanitation. Three minutes' soak from two mews, stations. 'Buses zed can from ...

GREATER BRITAIN'S AID

... scouts and sharp : - shooters in South Africa. WELLINGTON, Saturday. The Right Hon. P. J. Seddon, Premier of New Zealand, speaking at Westland on the Transvaal War, said that fighting men were not faultfinders, and at the present juncture the former were ...

BOOKS RECEIVED

... to which it was addressed, Sir James Paget's great experience as a master of diagnosis and a man of genius entitled him to speak on such a subject I with undeniable authority, so that it is scarcely possible to overrate the importance of his !words. In ...

LONDON DAY BY DAY

... out of his carriage and asked the name and address of the offender, but he was a German, and either could not or would not speak the English necessary for identification. The doctor, however, did not intend letting an unsober man loose in the fog to damage ...

GERMAN STEAMER CAPTURED AT

... Chamber of Commerce, dealing with the great progress which the German Empire had made during the past century, Herr 16ffe, speaking on behalf of the firma trading with South Africa, asked whether the Chamber of Commerce was doing all that was required for ...

TICE DAILY TELEGRAPH, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1900

... The Gentian lion enntsta'sded by Lieut.-Colonel Keennis, Dep ut y-Liet a e nant for Qneen's Count y, a fernier travels and speaks to every man in his own High Sheriff of that county. This will nemesis tongue, while the English merchant is content to tate ...

12.30.-AVIiNUE THEATRE

... pietureaque pantomimes teen In North London fur rear.'—Thally Chruniele. the way which the pan is put on tt It hardly Pe► ethic to speak too highly.--Morning Post. Mien. tuneful. witart, laughable. and InbenHOWAIT from %Lart to hnish.—The Sun. ten to tot end ...

ARRIVAL OF WOUNDED. FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT. I PLYMOUTH, Monday. This afternoon the Castle Company's steamer ..

... heved that the good maintenance of the British Empire was in Gods programme, because it meant the good order of the world. Speaking from his expert, once, we were, on the whole, the greatest colonising and Christianising force in the world. He was not a ...

BOOKS ON ART

... canvases. There is one statement, in Chapter XI., against which we feel impelled strongly to pretest. The new biographer, speaking of those masterpieces of the first order, the Gentleman with the Hawk and the Lady with the Fan, at Grosvenor House ...

—olenfwd. WWW.IOII6-(1146

... L. 11.5. math. AITE& H otel W or reetaurant. Engab. aged 22. Good 42, Valmar-road, Camberwell. B.E. by wnert young Swim. Speaks lane emarally neetuL 4s. or 5. weekly. Highly recommended. llatiewlatraL—Foreign Agasey. 50, Ckieletteesrdem. Flterey-egunge ...