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Literature

... Robert Hichens, Barry Pain, Mary Wilkins, and Ouida. The Navy and Army rll'ssfrated is a very fine number, full of admirable pic- tures and interesting letter-press describ- ing the Native Army of India. The number is double the ordinary size, and the pictures ...

COURT AND FASHION

... Prince of Saxony, accompanied by a unmerous suite, arrived at Dover, on Monday afternoon from Calais, and was received oi landing by General Crauford, Colonel Ponssliby, Majors Doyley and Barnard, Captain M'Ilwaine, and a guard of holsour of the 11th Regti ...

Published: Sunday 04 April 1858
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 680 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Magazines

... writes a capital illustrated paper on 1 he Bloodhound.-Miss Helen Campbell may also be read on Certain Forms of Woman's Work for Woman, and Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer on Corot. the Artist. Dr. B. Ward Richardson contributes to Longmran a paper ...

Published: Saturday 15 June 1889
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2056 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... anticipating almost the fulfilment of the Czar's wishes-even the extinction of the allied armies before Sebastopol, under the overpowering attacks of the Russian armies, which, it is assumed, caa he unlimitedly reinforced. Let us hope and believe that this ...

Published: Sunday 10 December 1854
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2201 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LAST OF THE MAGAZINES

... insurance, and papers on Obstacles to Imperial Federation, The Clothing of the Army, and the Suez Canal ; whilst the flhresfaeed dis- cusses recent changes in the German army, the American naval war of 1812, Britnih battlefields in Portugal, military ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... of respectable daughters in Eng- land to save them from the awful life into which I, in blind ignorance, plunged-a life of which the associa. tions are vile, the hours long, the wages miserable; a life which no woman who respects herself can come out ...

A Mirror of the Turf

... is a very good young woman, who lives among people of various deqrees of goodness, and, though she has her troubles, they are not of a' serious or lasting character. The- chief of them comes from the besetting sin of the young ;woman of fiction-not knowing ...

Published: Saturday 04 June 1892
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1144 | Page: 21 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE DEMOCRATIC WORLD

... there are thousands of acres of land tbat could ho brought into practical use, They could be kept in tourh with military service on the same ;irinciple as our volunteers. In this way my correspondent thinks a colonial army and nary of well-trained und season- ...

LORD HARTINGTON AT DARWEN

... Murder,and immediiately afterwards Irs. Carter fell out on to the landing and shrieked. The wit- ness heard Mrs. Carter threaten to give the man into custody. She was a sober woman. On the following day Mrs. Carter told the witness that the man had ...

A SEARCH AFTER SUNSHINE

... two things-the destruction of religious education and the promotion of the Jews to places of honour in the council and the army. And in deploring the way in which the Sisters of Charity have been forced to surrender their schoolrooms to secular teachers ...

MADRID, July 3. Letters from Barcelona of the 28th ult., contain alarming accounts of the state of some parts ..

... Garoz, had started for Tarragona, conveying all the troops it could hold; while General Pavia marched by land towards Reus, faking U a column of the army upon his way at MoKns-el-Rey. It appears that the motive of thin gtir is, that a Carlist band, consisting ...

LITERATURE AND FINE ARTS

... asid unburdened, were allowed to accompany the army to Turkey ; and they were suffering, uneared for, and in some cases dissolute. Self-respect was lost ; and the women were a burden, a disgrace to the army, instead of being, as they should have been, ...