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Leeds Mercury

THE AMERICAN EXHIBITION

... durinu last mnthe tti o ital iio of the fish landed on the English atil M'eish Corn s r la £307,711, as compared with £297,612 in the coae no last year. For the three months ei-l,,u 'lic tiai vhai5 of fish landed was S872,672, as Comprared with '.7in1 in ...

THE FEBRUARY REVIEWS

... Irish Land and British Legislators, r. W, E. Bear advocates the acquisition of Vihe land by the State in Ireland, Ho would give in exchange to the present ownera a moderate aun in terminablo annuitisa, and thou redisteibute and let the land at qedliciutly ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... oats are; and I on the recdaimed lands, and those lands overflowed by the freshets on sorne of the rivers, the vield is from one ! hundrd and twenty-five to one hundred and fiftv bushels to the seae. Some of these low lands have been raising oats steadily ...

THE DECEMBER REVIEWS

... conscription for home service, has a wholly separate army for Nether- lance-India. France moreover has been obliged to com- mience, aud-will probably'carry further, the creation of a Lseparate army for Tonquin and Annam ; and other nations are contemplating ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... solution. 'The eiernal woman question has no terrors for our leading dramatist, and he defends himself and his characters with spirit. It may surprise some Lreaders to learn that he prefers the simple, trustful, ignorant woman,'i as a woman, and as being more ...

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS

... received titles ftisirl include* masy tn* leaders the musical profession. The War Office ha* given instructions for to* Army R**erv* Cora* Army Signaller*, formed from the l'o*toffiee Rifle Volunteers, to be disbanaed and the men from the serve. is stated that ...

GLASGOW INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... Clyde, 'where the Knight of ?? hid from' his pursuers when the Saxon grip was upon the land; and a few hours' journey will introduce th6 curious stranger to the land of Burns, I where are shown the cottage in which the poet was born, the ruins of the ...

LITERATURE

... talut is to be dressed in the Army uniform, or something like it, or to have at least a red bnnd of some kind on; and the parents have to sign a register declaring that they hare given the child to God and tie Salvation Army. Iu another place we read ...

THE BISMARCK DYNASTY

... right of woman to the recognition of her faculties regardless of her sex, and he paid to the genius of his wife the homage to which sha was entitled as an intel- lectual force, without stinting the measure of hie devotion because she was only a woman. If ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... take his place among the creatures of gladness, even for a single-day. le gives us sun, moon,~ stars, earth, clouds, man, woman, bird, and beast-nal in colossal -szihotette. Not content with discovering a moral and intellectual resemblance between Asohylus ...

THE DAIRY SHOW AT THE AGRICULTURAL HALL, LONDON

... the sale of their books of devotion in the kio.sk Alboi t. The sale of the heeolts-a paper which approves the murder of Irish land. lords, and advocates the destruction of every exist- in- inistitationl-goes on without lot or hindrance, and presumably with ...

MR. TENNYSON'S NEW POEM

... in a God and hope of a life to come, and being utterly miserable in this world, resolve to end themselqves by drowning. The woman is drowned, but the man. is MOWu~ by a minister of the sect he had abandoned. Mr. Tennyson has therefore imaginad an extremely ...