A CHAT WITH A FAMOUS CRICKETER
... A CHAT WITH A FAMOUS CRICKETER In the course of an interview with a representative ?KJ$ c ...
... A CHAT WITH A FAMOUS CRICKETER In the course of an interview with a representative ?KJ$ c ...
... CHAT WITH A CRIMEAN HERO. The Dorset Chronicle publishes an interview with Mr. F. R. Everett, a veteran of the Crimea, aud with his wife. Yes, replied Mrs. Everett, to a compliment on tbe husband's looks, except that my husband used to get bronchitis ...
... A Chat About Pawnbroking. A London contemporary publishes the following interesting conversation : A seedy invidual, with expression of pecuniary infelicity on his face, dived into a Surrey-side pawnshop the other day, put his hand on his ...
... temperament. A race- horse has more nerves than a donkey. It requires a delicate organisation to produoe the fine combinations necessary to rank as an expert. Good chess players generally suffer mnoh from their nerves. What do you think of chess as a mental ...
... ESTAB. 23YEA53. An odd is rtp.w.td from Lil!e. A °heroin Have you a Cough 'tamed Payelle, who weighs 347 b., relantly bought • DOSE Wril. MUM IT a third.class ticket for a railway journey, but Have you a Cold? found the doom both of the ...
... CHAT .AND data A nutable tnbate 10be widerpread popularity I of golf is the fact that the Great Eastern Railway Company have found it advantageocs to issue a ' pamphlet embodying particelars of all the pia:rs where the Royal and ancient game a to be ...
... A CHAT ABOUT BOOKS, BY MR. S. SMITH. On Thursday, Bth inst., Mr. Samuel Smith (the Public Librarian) gave very interesting address entitled A Chat about Books, to the members of the Worcester Young Men's Christian Association, at the : rooms that ...
... IA Chat abotjt Books.—Owing to pressure on our space, a report of Mr. S. Smith's lectuie, entitled. A, Chat about Books, ia held over. QUARTER i m * • evasions for the County Worcester the on Monday. The Earl Coventry presided, and there were also present: ...
... Enter Mr. Corbett, a quiet, genial man, with a wide forehead aud a well-formed nose, inquiring eyes, and a slight habitual contraction of the brows, snoh as we often see in mathematicians. I sat opposite him at dinner. There ia a man, I ...
... recognised term for photagraphing distant objects by moans of a camera fitted with a spocial lens similar to a small tele sope. If hydrwu:&:‘ be regarded as too cumbrous, * wate! makes a reasonably good substitute. _The medical profession has in its ...
... innkeeper, » a decded * charscter '—a thin wikl-haired man of fifty, with an extraordi panily high forehead and curiously erooked featurce. A dull dog at school, and evidencing no speciel hterary aptitude as a young man, he did not create a ...
... Moming Leader” has oy a pleasant nopsis of the scenery 1;:3'“ fi R oo M.%Molhbbyfi'um a 8 the Bog Meadows A emall flooded stream called the Blackstafi runs through it, end ‘mrmmfln(‘fik«olfmhflwl laid out. A large hospstal, a large comeolery, ...