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MARTYN WARE'S TEMPTATION

... had been in it fifteen years, when Mr. Sewell died, and I then succeeded to a share in it. On the whole I have been very prosperous, Mrs. Wsare. ihtyes, sobbedHelen. aAndre , Rutt? is she alive Sho died six months ago, he answered, glancing involuntarily ...

FROM DUSK TO DAWN

... opportunity to speak with the l friends who had stood by him in his distress. Old Rippon took no not ice whatever of the vil- 9 lagers assembled in Ben wald to hear the result I of the trial, and lie spoke to none of them save .to Mrs. Marsh. I She ran out ...

Theatrical Mems

... r ;ays, has a very youthful son, who, being a perasoage c of tastes already manly, not long ago askel his father A to eive him a pony cart. I can't afford it, my boy, f raid Mr Trec; it would cost t0o much. And then the youth, who had evidently ...

THE EDUCATION OF THE WORLD

... fire. .Of It is nothing against the drift of this argument, that the ow three friends whose companionship is most deeply engraven a r on the memory of the world were no friends one to another. yel This was the lot of mankind, is it is theis loto not a few ...

THE NEW THEATRE ROYAL

... Eaden is an admirable exponent of the part of Sir Georgze Ormond, who, afflicted with the plague of friends, baarszhimsclf with dignity, and in the trying scene in the third act reveals dramatic power deserving no niall commendation. It was on even performance ...

A REMARKABLE DREAM

... but was distnguisaed for his kundnessof heart and benevolence towards the natives. He anda friend of his of like spirit, Captain Oakes, were the means of saving the inhabitants of a town daring a frightful famine. They purchased a shipload of rice, and ...

Literature

... reading. For this reason, while placing a cheap edition of his works within general reach, Mr. Bohn has included them in a dis- tinctive cover, ranging them as 'Extra Volumes of his Stand- ard Library, with the memoirs of the witty Count Grammont. The ...

Literature

... Pulaic Services of James A. Garfield, Twentieth President of the United States. By Oaptain F. B. Mason. London: Trtibner and Co. Save for a little extravagance in its eulogy, this book is all that can be desired by English readers interested in its subject ...

PRINCE'S THEATRE PANTOMIME

... oesi¢. My name s Tornado, strange it may appear, But as-a Shipbuilder' I've started: hereo I am inkleague with my deep friend, old bave.. Tornado having ftrthe exptessed' his intention that in the ship ?? e wrccked,3Enterprise, a fairy ?? Timily Hughes) ...

MISCELLANEOUS

... rising tear bhen I think how that faithful animal saved my life. He grabbed may red bandanna kandkerchief from my preket, ?? towards the train, and signalled it, and, by U.errz l1 stopped it, 'and saved me-yes, air. But in his deathb he exhibited a greater ...

Literature

... !I's-y and Try Again; befssq an outline of the lives of taco youths who became clergymen of the Church of Ea.plostd. Dy Old JonathanY-W. MacIntosh, 24, Paternoster-rOW. THE name of the 10ev. D. A. floudney is well known to lotal readers in connexion ...

Literature

... more market- able artle c. Prentice boys can understand this; statesmen and sinisters cannot. Parliament men continue in thle dis- reputable course of pretending to ignore it. Mteanwhile tlle Meclhanics' Institutes know and understand it, as clearly as why ...