A CHAT WITH A COXSWAIN
... A CHAT WITH A COXSWAIN. [BY A StAFAER.]R:| It was blowing a strong breeze of wind, and I stood under the lee of a high and dry boat watchiug the fine-alternation of colours upon the ridged seas as the white ...
... A CHAT WITH A COXSWAIN. [BY A StAFAER.]R:| It was blowing a strong breeze of wind, and I stood under the lee of a high and dry boat watchiug the fine-alternation of colours upon the ridged seas as the white ...
... l.A. CHAT WITH A KINCARDIND,,HIhI IA C1ROFTER. [FaROM A fSPEIAL CORrbSPONzrENzd] E3veryone who knows anything of iDeeside must know B-. If lie has not in his rambles over the Queen's Country dIropped dawn upon this sweot little BI)ot for ...
... sewing machine trade with a view of forming a trades union. A N0VZL kind of strike has now just come t a peaceable conclusion at St John's College, O:ferd. The undergraduates went oaton strike for better dinmiers and more of them. A com- ...
... A ?? ERE AT THzUE aC, C'T A!OM ? (Fr:OM out7: OWNE ccRE~SiONDENT.) lr Paris, November 16. A pi'>: - c at the Cha KNoir is a'ways a tk ana int rtifl' eflnctr' meit, whicfl t deaws th~e &iitexo: 5paista saciety to the stuffy, Ip itL~es~xI ...
... A C(HAT ABOUT SWAZILAND. A corresuondent of the Globe writes as t follows -He was just home from Swaziland, and p I took the opportunity of having a long talk with n hini. As he had passed some time in that country, fi .rnd lie had mixed with all ...
... es So also each fever, like a living Ameri days, thing, has a period of incubation ~.r develop -_ think mont-a growth towards maturity, and a period anD thtof decline or death. Idach of these diseases,tae ce of moreover, as a rule breeds ...
... A CHAT BETWEEN A GRANDFATHER AND GRANDSON. t t t D f B B I '.'GEoRGE, your mother tells me they Are moving the post office to-day--where is it going? ' Oh, it's going to the fit o' Market Street-to the old Fish Market stance. That's a dirty hole to ...
... Square. It - Pall Mall Gazette. if A VIoLIN . Two HUNDRZD YzAII5 OL,.-It it is stated that a dealer in London has a violin in said to be 200 years old. As to the history f the le first hundred years of this violin'a existence there is sr some doubt, but ...
... have built a handsome house, but built it in one of the most ex.f traordinary of situations. Itstandsabout aquirtber of a mile back from the main road, and is only accessible therefrom by a rough waggon-way, where you feel like driving across a ploughed ...
... the first writing; a revision next day before a old the autograph manuscript goes to a copyist's a es of second and third revision upon the copyist s manu- script a fourth on the prooft: a fitth on the ...
... go West, It is a glorious country arld a s glorious life; no heartaches or headaches there; 0 a so stovc-pipe Iats or hald-faced shirts, A ran can't hell) miklinig money iu thl:Lteontry, and if e ho has a little 'stlul' wherewith ti make ...
... island a question of local political excitement ie was the topic of conversation, and some one speculated I on the possibility of a revolution of Maltese. -Upon Hwhich a high military authority of the place drily ob- served that if there were a revolution ...