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Date

1900 - 1949
373 1900-1909

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Place

Leeds, Yorkshire, England

Access Type

373

Type

370
3

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MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... AG-AZINES A REI N n THE QUEENS BYLIGIOUS TOLERANCE. s The Queen in her Religioam Life forms tho sub- ject of a deeply inr4ereszing artiele by Sarah ?? Tocley: . in the Sunday Strand' for April. Her Maejesty' d religious tolerance is well illustratede in the following Le passage- Y Extreme to n ?? may, I thiick, be noted sas a characteristio of the Queen's religious life. It has sh-we itself ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... I M~t jA7ZS S iAMI) ?? TIHE REYITKWTS AN T IY VTt PRThCA'JTiO)N'S FOR JMTEDFu. STl T, T~he 1baLing reviews fc r Atn-lom dealing with i;rlmr-r~ft pni-. f iThe--. nzt 'h frf-.-.on' iar in. '1 ni X N: .s~ev'n siwb ravien- aprnar int) Nf Cclrnei S~ir Gpo. Sd.t i2C, h2utoa a, vipn 2.rtj r>'u 71f fnr Imnperial ii in rv44 , ht the soxe,--l (itlti&4 wI.' he', ?? ohoof nclod ?? wr- (2) To~, 'Nai'Ly t,, ...

LITERATURE

... L I T E R A TILT R E. REC Mt FICTION. Te Rebel. by H. B. M11arriott Watson, is one of the host historical novels that we heave -met with for some rime, It is a great advance on the author's last bock, T 1he Princess Xenia, and is, indeed, a book- of the vor=y gratest promise.. Its faults ar's those of a. yon 'rter, and its mertas seem to foreshadow a re- putation seon~d only to idr, Anthony ...

MUSICAL & DRAMATIC NOTES

... ¶LSTC XL &- DRINATIC NOTES. * 3t'P. flflPI' ?? aPWtnq~flnpt2>5. 7-- r- rrso'v - hnve t. teok f2,7r aheA 'fl--v d -cc-s ?? ?? :v ?? t ?? c~rro~ ar d the sr-e-saer ?? r C''lo. Soortelr has tho; oyrta'n fallen * r.: .m_ ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... [AGAZIN ES AtN RIEVYThWS, TEfl END OF THE N 3. Mfr. Geoffrey Dr-age, -MP, Chairman of the Tmpcril South African Asenci;4!tui, contrano' s a. st-pigy paper to the curr-ent nuntttr of ` TIe London QuartLerly. Rovie onthe allmtb fny to pic of the w;ar in ~~ot~h Arica. e luzt ieconnolttilog rassa4e:- 'llIts only end of the wvar ?? Grcat Britainl can tolmmie is the hioi.-ting of the, 3-idsis flac ...

THE SPRING EXHIBITIONS

... THE SPRING FMBITIONS. ?? Royal Society of British Artists is a venerable . institution, which at one time had a work, in furtherance of which certain benevolent persons made donations. What that wrork is, or was, now seems somewhat obscure, for membership costs money, anld pictures sold are subject to commission. These methods -might pass unchallenged if the Society was imbued with the ...

THE SUNDERLAND MUSICAL COMPETITIONS

... THE SUNDERLA ND MUSICAL CO.MPETITIONS. CONTESTS AT HUDDERSFIEL. Public disinterestedncess in the, preliminazY tests of the ' Mfrz. Sunderland Mtusical Competitions is 110 new feature in these annual contests. It requires more 1 than an ordinary armount of enthiisiasm to patientlyr sit listenatg for three hours to the repetition oi a, test. piecee Mlle contests for 19013 oomranene` inl ...

THE FARRINGDONS

... '6 THE FARLThIGDONS, UISS FOWLER'S iNEW NOME Those who hare been waiting for the appearing of Miss Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler's latest novel with something of the intense interest- with vwhich other people -wait for the latest despatch from the seat of war, will now have their curiosity satisfied. The Fasringdons is in all the book-se]lers' shops and in all the circelating libraries, and ...

THE SUNDERLAND MUSICAL COMPETITINS

... THE SUNDE RLAND M[USICALP is COMPETITIONS. T=S SUDJICATOfS AWAIDS. The musical competitions for 19000 instituted to per- petnate toe vanae and work of the Yorkshire Queen of Song, iMrs. Sunderland, of Brighouse, were coM- eluded at Huddersfield on Saturday night. For the singing of the quartet parties and 01hoirs, and the Iinal tests for the viclinists, tenors, and basses, the Town lall ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... XLITIERARY ARRIVAL S.G It is in Litenfumir as in Finanee-metch Paper anda much Poverty may co-exist. ThIa he! dat- as~pects of travel in Toe Unchangi~ng 1¾-i' cme ronine~lninto view in MNr. Dashers Ba-rr-i iltest book. IL is a reliurns of vivid firs~t in- p-resstons zif places and people either in the islands or -'nof the -Med~iterranean.Papl , u ?? winrdl-pictures co)nstantly occur in it-s ...

LEEDS THEATRES

... LEEDS THEATIRES. dTHE CHRIETIAAN AT T GRA&ND. There are indifferent plays thiat have been made to appear good by the excellence of the acting which dis- tinguishes them, and there are excellent plays which have been damned at the outset by the inartistic and in- effective representation vouchsafed to thea- Into which of these two categories are we to place The Christian? It is rather hard ...