News from 04/08/1888
1888; Gale Group; Linguagem: English
Autores Resumo
Frontmatter: The Radical Leader. News: Several Ladies in Society Who Are Burdened with Girls Who Wont Go off, Think of Joining the Match-Makers Union, The Libel Law Amendment Bill Seems to Have Been Considerably Spoilt by the Lords, Political Leaders I.—The Right Hon. John Morley, M. P, The Number of Workmen on Strike in Paris Is Close on 10,000, Peckham and Dulwich Radical Club, Told in "Truth", Scribner's Magazine Seems Hardly up to Its Usual High Standard This Month, M. Lockroy on Ancient and Modern Classics, Emilio Castelar, I.—The Eleusis Club, The English Illustrated Magazine Holds Its Own Remarkably Well, Justin Mccarthy's Paper on Mr. Forster in the Contemporary Review Is Notable as a Tribute to a Great and Good Man from a Strong Opponent, "Secular" as Well as "Free", The London School Board and Its Work I, A Watery Peroration, Mr. Harrison's "Cromwell"*, Mr. Adolphe Smith Is to Be Congratulated upon Having Completed the Investigation Which He Began in 1884, When His Special Report, Published in the Lancet of May 3rd in That Year, upon the Polish Colony of Jew Tailors in the East End of London First Drew Public Attention to the New Phase of the "Sweating" Grievance Resulting from the Russian Emigration to This Country, Lord Wemyss Says That Rifle Ranges in Richmond Park Will Be Quite Safe, and He Seems to Think This Settles the Matter, In North Africa, What "The World" Says, Signs of the Times, Knowledge This Month Commences a Thoughtful and Far Reaching Series of Papers on "The Scientific Orgin of Religious Doctrines", Rents Increased by Charity, The Magazines, Royal Weather, There Is a Letter of the Author of Modern Painters Now Lying in Puttick and Simpson's Rooms for Sale on Thursday, Written from Denmark Hill on a Certain December 16th, There Seems to Be a Great Deal of Demoralisation among Her Majesty's Ships at Portsmouth Just Now, Introduction, Foreign Affairs, The Vicar Foiled, John Mandeville's Farm, Royalty at Bristol, The Fate of the Fisheries Treaty, Too Much Water for Teetotallers, Democratic Vistas, Walter's Paper Pays, Bishop (Dining with the Family), Shot and Shell, Honest Irish Tenants, Another Cremation at Working, Lord Colin Campbell Is Evidently Dazzled with the Income of over £10,000 Which the Bombay Barrister Who Appeared for Sirdar Diler Jung, at the Deccan Inquiry, Is Said to Make, for He Thinks of Trying His Fortune at the Bombay Bar, Geography of British Genius, Multiple News Items, Jottings and Pickings, One Who Knew Him Gives in the Pall Mall Gazette the Following Account, Taken down from His Own Lips, of the Trepidation with Which, despite His Practice, He Felt upon Painting Mr. Gladstone, The Nineteenth Century Opens with an Article by That Amiable Essayist, Dr. Jessop, Entitled "Who Owns the Churches?" It Is a Plea for the Preservation of These Natural Edifices from the Desecration of the Restorers, Plunder and Blunder, The Confidence Trick, Radical Clubs Introduction, The Demon Has Arrived!, A Just Judge, Dr. Jekyll in England, Mr. Hyde in Ireland, Russell Lowell on London, Parnell and Chamberlain, Roadside Wastes. Classified ads: Multiple Classified Advertisements, Notice. Poem, verse: The Tale of the Tory Emeu A New Ballad. Editorial: We Have Heard a Great Deal Lately of the Removal from the House of Lords of Those Peers Who Have Actively Disgraced the House by Incurring Either the Penalties of the Law, or the Ban of Society, or the Vengeance of the Law, or the Ban of Society, or the Vengaeance of the Sporting World, and the Cases of My Lord Misdemeanant, His Grace the Duke of Divorcecourt, the Most Noble the Marquis of Roping, and Various Peers Who Have Attained a Notoriety More Peculiar than Desirable; but We Hear Nothing, or at Least Very Little, of the Lords Fainent Donthing. Arts and entertainment: The Devil's Chorus.
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