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Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer

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Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer

NOTES AND COMMENTS

... addition the valuable publications already issued from the Central Conservative Office. There will remarkable influx of American and European Baptists to this country in July next. They arc coming attend World'* Congress. Dr. Whitley, of Pre*ton, and Mr. Harold ...

NOVEMBER 6. 190 T

... illustrious predecessors. That he has decided weakness for thus arousing criticism is clear from this and from such efforts as Tour d'Auvergne. The Knight who came from Avelon. and Rizpali's Lament. This perverse challengiiag is scarcely successful and ...

THE YORKSHIRE POST, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 3. 1911

... which, starting from one fixed point in the physical world, returns that world few points, also fixed, after a transient passage through the animal organism.” Such is the broad outline of M. Dastre’s main hypothesis, taken over from Claude Bernard. does ...

AX EIGHTEENTH CENTURY COUNTESS

... was created count of the Holy Roman Empire prevent his bride from forfeiting her sovereign rights. William Bentinck appears to have been a man of excellent parts, but the match was far from success, and the quarrels of the two ended in law suit* and intrigues ...

THE YORKSHIRE POST. WEDNESDAY. MAY 13. 1914

... bombarded and Benin captured. The onlv mistake Rawson over made, was, far make out from this conscientious record of his life, when he brought reproof upon himself from the Admiralty for indiscreet speech ou our naval insufficiency 1900. His popularity ...

BOOKS TO READ AND BOOKS TO USE

... Stocker seems to admitting more than denies. Many of bis quotations from Nietzsche’s works which are made for the purpose of detaching him from Beruhardi aro either vaguely remote from the point issue, or quite in tune with Bcrnhardi’s glorification of ...

(Br WinirarD JAMES.)

... niight force the seat to become longer, and thus increase the distance that rolled between. Two easy chairs in wide circle from the fireplace held two more, one brown-haired in non-committal crepe chine; the other black-haired, angular, middlingly young ...

BOOK NOTES

... dramatic critic to the “Sunday Times,” has rescued from the oblivion of the files number of his articles, which now appear as volume under the title Some Dramatic Opinions (White 4s. 6d.), with an introduction from Mr. St, John Krvine, sometime dramatic critic ...

THE YEARS NOVELS

... sandwiched in between them. Debits ami Credits (Macmillan) is not (terhaps dynamic in all parts, as the earlier sublimated scrap-books were ; also, Stalky does not altogether stand reviving; but there is one tale—the lastthe story culled The Gardener —that ...

THE YORKSHIRE POST, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 192 T

... Tuesday at Hign Wycombe, and will visit the Red Lion Inn, from whose balcony Benjamin Disraeli made his first political speech. From High Wycombe the party will proceed to Hughenden, only a short walk from the town, where Major Coningsby Disraeli, a nephew of ...

THIS WORLD OF OURS

... THIS WORLD OF OURS. The Radium Appeal—Driffield’s Benefactor —Mr. Justice Roche—A Victorian Scrap-Book. INTRODUCTORY. Tii these sophisticated days the writer “Social Gossip” somewhat xxeux jcu. first, liis übiquity was very enviable. those pleasant luncheons ...

THIS WORLD OF OURS

... THIS WORLD OF OURS. A Businesslike Conference —The Original of Roland Williams? —A Matter of C's and X's —Blunders in Phraseology. The Head Mistresses* Conference. A colleague, who was privileged to attend the conference of the Association of Head Mistresses ...