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Reynolds's Newspaper

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London, England

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Reynolds's Newspaper

CHRISTMAS AMUSEMENTS

... Victoria pantomime is the World of Flowers; or, Harlequin King Noses, and the Old Woman and her Six Daughters from Baby Land. There came an old woman from Baby Land, With six smart daughters in her hand, COts could brew, and one could bate, And one ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... must certainly be comnpli- mented upon their pluck, To transport a body number- ing nearly a hundred chief performers, and an army of scene-shitters and other auxiliaries, argued a confiding belief in the catholic taste of the British playgoer. When to this ...

BOOKS AND MAGAZINES

... portance of a wider distribution of land in this country. The author suummarizes his conclusions as follows:- 1. That to support a family from agriculture alone, without any other occupation, the smallest amount of land necessary is eight mnorgen, or six ...

UNDER THE SURFACE; OR, FOLLY AND FASHION

... the continuity of historythere are dodges ?? ring. THE Army' and Navy Club have re-elected Baker Pasha a member by three hundred and fifty-nine votes to thirty-eight. The colloquial name of the Army and Navy Club is the Rag. This is irony, evidently. ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... the land The Acadians would have removed; but they were attached to the land, and though the treaty gave them the right to sell and move away, there were none to buy. Even the English authorities induced them to stay, sao s not to leave the land a desert ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... the old school, of the rough and ready type of which Sir a. Napier was such a splendid repro. sentative. He belonged to the army that, under Sir J. Moore, completed its diastrous retreat by the glorious frteory of Corutna. The following is AN lINCIDENT ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... his family by Mr. Fane aroused the anger of Gladys, his daughter, on hearing he was about wedding her bitterest enemy, the woman she believed to be her de- termined foe A STARTLING ANNOUNCEMENT. It was after luncheon on that dismal day on which Gladys ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... instituAtions, sadath as say, appears in the derogatory haracter of a decided tuft-hunter. Her receptioruv theauchess. of. Bather-. land, and that ?? oe-wate phia- thropists, comple sl trrn;2rcle of rose-water philan- she evidently wet tune tthe good lady's head ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... visit England. The social evil, so called, is ntterly and posi- tively tuiknuorn in the land of which I speak. Anything more beautifnl:bhnn the modest ?? of the woman or girl whom one meets on the pathway-cannot be con- oeivcd. Thefirsb impulse is to knel ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... griound, and separated them. The woman laughed and shrieked hysterically, like a hyena; the captain seemed to gasp as if he had the death-rattle in his threat. .dll chic passed in the darkness. Two of us held down the woman. A light was struck, and what ...

DRAMA, MUSIC, AND ART

... undocbtedly a lino rni, full of dramatic sitiations, and deserves to hold the boards for a long tilme. THE LAND OF HEART'S DESIRE, AT THE AVENUE. The Land of Heart's Desire, by Mr. W. B. Yeats, an Irish idyll, precedes the principal play, 'Arms and the 1Ian ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... strong corps de ballet, picturesquely attired, imparted animation and spirit to the entertainment. THE WOMAN IN RED, AT THE VICTORIA. The Woman in Red is the title of the drama specially written by Mr. Stirling Coyne for Madame Celeste's first in ...