AMERICA

... AMERICA. PRESIDENT AND FREMONT'S PROCLAMATION. SPAIN THE SOUTHERN CONFEDERATES. GREAT BATTLE IN MISSOURI: DEFEAT OF THE CONFEDERATES. REPULSE FEDERALS IN KANSAS. IMPORTANT NEWS FROM THE SOUTH. ABOLITION OF PORTS OF ENTRY. PUB SOUTHERN NATIONAL LOAN. The ...

AMERICA

... AMERICA. Yesterday we received news from America ty the Cambria, which arrived in the Mersey on Wednesday afternoon, having accomplished her homeward run in days. She left Boston on the Ist, and Halifax on the 3rd. A portion of the following news appeared ...

AMERICA

... appear All blood-stained 'neath their blushing skies, 8 And servile despots sink in fear; 4 America! thy ringing voice Shall-yet a patriot world rejoice! America ! whose trackless plains, And boundless forests yet untrod, Ne'er echoed to a tyrant's chains ...

AMERICA

... AMERICA. The Hibernia (as briefly stated in the electric telegraph de- spatch in our paper of Thursday) arrived at Liverpool on Wednesday, with advices from New York to the 14th, and Halifax to the 17th ult. The Cambria, from Liverpool, arri ved at Boston ...

AMERICA

... AMERICA. (BY EXTRAORDINARY EXPRESS.) ARRIVAL the HIBERNIA.—THE OREGON QUESTION SETTLED. LIVERPOOL, Sunday Evbnino. We have again most rapid communication with America. The Hibernia steamer, Capt. Ryrie, has arrived, and brings the all-important news of ...

Glimpses of America*

... no booe gives a more con- vincing impression of what America looks like and feels like. The Silver Question and the Presidential Election were the things which the author ostensibly went to America to study and observe; and his remarks on the former matter ...

Published: Saturday 13 February 1897
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 455 | Page: 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SWITZERLAND AND AMERICA

... SWITZERLAND AND AMERICA. Bxkni, Tdtodat. — Mr. Richard Cobden has propceed Swttzsriand should act mediator the senses the States of Amerioa> The Fsdera I Cornell hss deoHnsd the proposal by deefadagit ImpraetfaaUe. ...

SHAKESPEARE AND AMERICA

... SHAKESPEARE AND AMERICA. In the FhiVaddjpla Bunletin we find a Shakespeare -Ode'3by-a well-known Ataerican poet, Mr. C5harles Sgague. The whele is too-long for quotation, but we extract the dosing staz5s:-5 Down, trembling wing I-shall insect weakness ...

MUSIC IN AMERICA

... MUSIC wIN AMERICA. trox A &P=AL ooa 9Dos .] pie ens An Uniersal caacteristio of the American ,g : people is the race after weaWlth, Qan pour ihg might be their motto, and little thbsgbt is a sa!rcely given to any matter but tbat of getting ea ce. rsch ...

THE GOAT IN AMERICA

... THE GOAT IN AMERICA. The goat has not bad a fair show in modern times (says the New York Tribune). Amnong the ancients he was highly esteemed, and figured extensively in serious literature. Now he is only the butt of funny pars- graphers, whose acquaintance ...

GRAPHIC AMERICA

... railway carriages) are by no means to be despised. In America. as in England, the modern tendency is towards luxury in travelling, and probably a Continental would say that in luxurious travelling America is rather ahead. Imagine travelling for days in a ...

Published: Saturday 09 July 1870
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1948 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture