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Date

1900 - 1949
43 1900-1909

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Counties

Bristol, England

Access Type

43

Type

43

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MAGAZINES FOR MAY

... Tl commeniced by AIr 1. Zangwill. Mr E. E. Easton hi commerces a series of articles, Inside the Boer Lines, In which he speaks very sympathetically of ev the burghers, and draws attention to the calmness or with which they departed from their wives ...

PRINCE'S THEATRE

... tbat distinctness which is desirable in rendering blank verse. Puck, at least, did not make the mistake of aome others in speaking with their backs to the audience so that nothing could be heard. Apart from this, Miss G. Houghton was a etately Oberon and ...

THE COUNTESS LONYAY

... love and friendship, philosophises on marriage and Court etiquette, and the difference between a palace and a hovel. She once speaks of herself as deserted by parents, relatives and friends, and all, and at other times yearns for what she calls 1 home love ...

PRINCE'S THEATRE

... held it to be an artistic mistake, if not a crime, for an actor to drop the character he might be Imper- sonating in order to speak to an audience in his own person. There were times, however, when such a courseof action was not only excusable butailowable ...

BOOKS OF THE HOUR

... having reference to events which would come within a reasonabl& period after the prophet's time, and the seed of which, so to speak, might be said to have been already sown, His Identification of the ffth kingdom Is, of course, irreconcilable with the views ...

BOOKS RECEIVED

... edition of the great Devonsbire story, which was arranged for just before Mr Blackmore's death, as we are told in a note ?? speaks of his pleasant relations with his pub- ?? for 30 years, Tiur MuNNG MANUAL. (London: W.R81.kilner.) 21s, The 12th edition ...

MAGAZINES FOR APRIL

... Methuen, but does not seem to realise that they are o3 quite right and that their language speaks of him by fly his exact title In the peerage. The writer also speaks ,b- of the pictures at Corsham Court, but we understood ha these had been sold. Mrs Sarah ...

GAS COOKING EXHIBITION AT FISHPONDS

... the minds of the people; and, lastly, the wise and farseeing policy of the Bristol Gas Company -and of course we are only speaking of Bristol now -in arraeging for the cooking ranges to be hired at what is really a nominal figure, has had the effect of ...

BRISTOL CARTERS

... men to he careful about. their horses' feet. By so doing they would save a wonderful amount of pain and lives very often. Speaking of the practice of cutting the horses feet to lit the shoes, he said that the shoes ought to be made to fit the feet, Pinally ...

MAGAZINES FOR SEPTEMBER

... and From Reveille to Lights Out, a well written and accurate description of a day's work in a frontier camp. The writer speaks of smoking after lights out going on very extensively, but this is only on the first night, the men get too sleepy afterwards ...

Our Library Table

... wastes her substance upon a gang of religious humbugs, who desert her as soon as they have abstracted all her money. Plain speaking on such a subject from such a quarter Is particularly valuable. Mr l-ocoking has drawn a very charming heroine, and altogether ...

Our Library Table

... LFOURTH NOTICE.] In Scribner's Magazine Mr v. Higham writes about tle lighting in Methuen's campaign at Modder -liver, and speaks of the enormous range of the Maiser rifle. He thinls that Methuet's want of siucoess was due to the fact that he was very ...