Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 9
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 9

Publication:
The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE MANCHESTER GUARDIAN. mTTAor rv iXll J- At) Xt70 order to recover a position which shW THE SHADOW OF THE SECOND EMPIRE: an Waver imagined, to be in serious danger until she had How did aha look back luuenes Helena," which contain th. I0H PHILIP taecond Empire? Wo think of that mpire as a system based on fraud maintained by incessant intrigue: we recall its stupid-crimes, ite feckless adventures, the UnsCTUDuliwis' tfrirfrR axH MISCELLANY. York Convocation has been considering once more the intractable question of the appointment to bishoprics, and we have had the old complaints against the chance which has put successively a' Baptist and a Presbyterian into the position nominating prelates for the Church of England. Apparently it is not follies which.it sought at the last moment its' fatal errors, trance drew a lesson from, this, spectacle "it lesson that there Tnuist be no more of these blunders, that France- must put her DeSt and Tnnnt.

rlalrWaiii argued that Lloyd George's appointments toreicn policy. Biit she remembered about were bad or that Mr. Bbnar Law's are likely to be bad; it is the principle of the thing. The personal recollections of the Emperor's valet Louis Etienne SU Denis, who accompanied hi-master in his banishment. It has beet estimated that there arc some fifty thousaiK books and pamphlets about Xapolaon in on language.

As one writer put it, "A youth resolved to deny himself all inquirv into even oUier field of knowledge and to pursui Napoleon at the fantastic rate. of one volume day during life, would need for the full redemp tion of his purpose a span of "one hundre years. At the end of the century he would 1 dismayed to perceive that a new rampart treatises had risen around him. The fascina tion that the story of Napoleon exercises ovo us is indicated by the long-extended the plav A Royal Divorce." No- one wii maintain that it is a play of outstanding ex oellence, but it has been running up and dowj the country summer and winter for over thirt years, and one sees no reason whv it shouli not run thirty years more. No man of an period has becu the subject of so extend literature, and it runs through an modei, languages.

-napoieon wnat we dre apt to' forget. She remembered, that he had pursued, policies that directed to European objects rather than to French objects, that he had cherished) generous sentiments, that he had made saori- cynical student oi 'history might tanipted" to intervene with the question, "Who really does appoint bishops?" Is it possible to point to any period, during which we have had a devout nationalitv. and Euronean conf erenow: and I son. of the Church as Premier, as a golden age other, idealist dreams. This man had brought France to a ruin that" had tinAn un.i'nWio i oi prelacy Over a considerable period there is'little doubfc'that bishoprics could be bought, and sold like any other of the mer If France was to recover she must substitute: competent for incompetent diplomacy, but! she must also substitute a.

It was impossible to move about in. Paris' during the Peace Conference without noticing a contrast between England and France. in1 England we. were talking abcit a new world demanding new principles hoping for new schemes thinking of Europe, not as a society in which we had certain palpable interest to defend, but as a society in which we wished iu see certain generous ideas' expressed and" applied. In France men's minds tiirned politely, or sometimes contemptuously, from thU picture.

Amuse yourselves," a candid would have said, "amuse yourselves with these fantasies, if you please our om-crii with this new. world iB of a different kind. It is simple, direct, and urgent. Wo Hsk one question about it. What is 'to be France's placftin it To go to France from England was like passing from hope to fear in tlie English atmosphere there was the air of ardent youth in the French the fatigue of an age that has lost its illusion.

is jr.ie that the England that emerged from the war was vindictive and grasping with' one half of her mind, as she was idealist with the other. The election of 1918 emphasised ilii aspect before the world, with consequences that helped to bring the disaster, of the peace upon But it is none the true that when seriofus Englishmen thought of the future of Europe they thought of Europe, and when serious Frenchmen fought of the future of Europe they thought of France. Some critics of France, affect to. see in her deplorable policy in the Ruhr the expression nf an egotism from which she has never been policy for this romantic European policy i For they argued that while -Napoleon was; lndulsine his iranarnue -FanmVa Tt. 1.

i chandise "of patronage. There a time when the favourites (of either sex) of the Crown had a good deal to do'-with the nominations. Lord Rosebery has remarked that the apartment 0f Lady Yarmouth in the palace of George II. was really an office. There, it was said, peerages or bishoprics might sometimes he bought." In any case ambitious clergymen, did not neglect The newly-published translation of a book b.

been building up German power. This was the keynote of speeches from men of all parties. Take this speech from M. is aescnoed as "a dieam fwn vfe. ii Jules Ferry in 1885 Do vou rnAniW nh.

pitta, la certainly, as your suggests, a curiosity (writes reviewe But it under the Empire we did not speak well of militarism? Do" vou remember the' vaernp uvi impossioie to dream on the insialmen aspirations towards general disarmament, the manifest detachments-from the real militarv Lady Yarmouth. George as Miscellany noted recently, liked to choose his own prelates and to set black marks against the names of those who offended Green Green shall neier be trans spirit, that tendency towards the creating of a sort of National Guard which characterised the democracy of those davs? Thnsn idnji lated." Queen Victoria sometimes pushed her had their partisans. Many of us have pro- own candidates, and it is said that one of the am, i am to believe a chemist friend' i mine, who tells me that he often continues dream, like a ilm serial, over two. cr evei three nights. I confess that the idea of Hnc distance dreaming gains cot with me; rnv owi speciality being the lightning flash variety it which the bottom of the universe drops out and never yet has it returned to catch sleeping.

What accusation of depravity -hi suggests in Freudian science is unknown t. one who hopes some night to sleep long enoucl to hit something solid. ressea tnem, inclined towards them, been taken, in by them. But. I ask.

is tffiwo single one now who has not been converted bv very few occasions when Disraeli showed temper was on emergence from the Royal closet after a rather heated discussion on the filling of an ecclesiastical vacancy. Shaftesbury was a saint rhis country has seen the war of 1870. and has turned its hnrlr far- ror nn on earth, hut were the nominations he made for Palmerston strikingly good? Gladstone took enormous pains, but were his selections notably 'better than those of Melbourne 'or of Mr. Lloyd George? "Whoever makes the choice is human. and whether Sovereign, cleric, states man, or favourite is open to human influences and prejudices.

bir Frederic Kenyon's visit to America is for a good many reminiscent columns about the British Museum Library that are-appearing, list now in the American press, A contributor to the Boston Transcript" writes, for instance, that you. may become in perilous and; deceiving Utopias." Or take those' speeches of Gambefta in which he talked of the two Frances, the France the emancipator of mankind, and the France that was crushed and humiliated. Every Frenchman thinks that France is pitting' her brains, her knowledge, her experience of affairs against the brute force of numbers in a conflict, and that the penalty of failure is another 1870. The emancipator of mankind had to look to her wounds. From this crisis France developed a new cult of patriotism, a patriotism realist, unsentimental, too intent on one object to think of history or tradition.

In that new perspective every question in -the world became a French During the war our-imagination was stirred by memories' of a generous, quixotic France, a France of ideas. But tlhe France who was defending her soil with such grim heroism was a France that was afraid of ideas, for ideas were those perilous deceiving Utopias that had led her to 1870. That is why, though the Third Republic is superior in most respects to the Second Empire, its politician's 'talk and 'think like Frenchmen, whereas the ruler of that Empire talked, and thought like a J. It. Hammond.

"THE BETROTHED." Being Time's revenge on lh hero of th Departmental Ditty" of that tUlc-Trevenfl Hfm tViot i the inform tion that cigars rather smailer and milde Uian those made for men are now bein specially manufactured for Open the new cigar-box! "that's what I lies her say: For Maggie and I have nnaiwlled. and darkane (for me) is the day. But darkened 0r her? Not likely! Sh powdeis an indolent nose. And lights up a "dusky beauty "-and awa her trouhlJe blows'. Open the new cigar-box.

out with her favouril weed, And her lover can sulk till doomsday for a that Maggie will heed Would I make my peace with my despot dignant, if you like, with the Anglo-Saxon, but you can't, lose your temper with the British jauseum it is too large and too muen oi an affable fact. When you go up into that grant rotunda none of the officials seems to be in a hurry, and none the less they get through a vast deal of work. "They twitch less over there." If it is in the winter, and the visitor is an American, his one regret will be that he left Iiis overcoat in this cloakroom. It is safe there, perfectly safe. Xo, you will not worry on this account.

You will worry beeause you are infernally Before he pays the reading-room a second visit the stranger from tree, l.ney say or ner tnat she always wanted .1 French Europe that she always held that tier incomparable gifts and her dazzling history made her Europe's natural mistress that she always believed the ideal Europe to lie. a Europe that reflected her power, her jrraces, her arts, her manners. Consequently she has always been selfish, domineer thrusting her own designs on' the mai of -FJurope. Dries Tiofc this view overlook important ojii-wlo in French history? We often' talk tlif effects' of 1870 on. Germanv: of the piicnimigeiiient it gave to a brutal realism, and to a faith in hard, self-seeking politics.

The last glimmer of generous sentiment was stamped out of Prussia when Bismarck made nood his boast and gave Germany success oh Muws-. in return for her soul. We have jiwlviiw paid too little attention to the effect of 1870 on Franco. This is well worth study, and there is ample material for judging it in nro hooks: one the second volume of M. Hanntanx's well-known History" describing Franco: after the war, the other the admirable hook just published by a Cambridge historian, i "Louis Napoleon and the Kecovery of by A.

Simpson), a contribution nf the first (importance' for the understanding uf the nineteenth "Anybody who undies those -two voliitnes will, appreciate the tenacity--of the temper which makes France difficult a comrade at -this irjprnent. Wo are apt to think of- Louis Napoleon aa upstart who was a nuisance in Europe as he was a tyrant in France. A great deal i-an Tie eaid for this view, but it is an incomplete view. Napoleon many bad things, hut. he was: among other things a man with a i eal European sense, a Frenchman with ideas for Europe that were not merely French.

Mr. Simpson draws a fascinating picture of the chaos -of emotions that ruled or distracted his polities, but he makes it perfectly clear that in certain crises Napoleon took a view of Europe which was much less exclusively French than Palmerstom's view was- ex-rinsively. British. Nobody can follow the xciting. atotyi that -be.

tells without seeing liow jo'eat a kiltlEpe'''owefi-to I or bringing the Crimean "War to an end when Palmefston desired, for reasons -purely British, mere a rival the way; I'm left for a Laranaga. cut out. li w.r.r Clay. America, it is suggested, will take the precau WHAT CONSTITUTES A PUBLIC SCHOOL? To the Editor of the Manchester Guardian. opinion about the 'Grammar School" am asked my term "Public School." And as for that johnny in Kipling, with hi mixture of smirk and whine.

And his rot about Priest, of Partagas." I wis he'd a case like mine! In love there is ohd who ki.secs, and one wh turns the face By Jove, since the Kipling jingle I've droppc to the second place! Perhaps I pay for his bluster I get my no put out tion of providing himself -vrith a woollen waist coat. The same writer draws some entertaining pen-portraits of readers whom he has observed at work at neighbouring desks. One of them has in' front of him pile of books" Who's Who in Albania," two volumes of George Moore, the 1879 "Chatterbox," the second volume of Gibbon, Maine's Ancient Law," and a guide to Exmoor ForeBt. He is very well dressed in the English manner, has a singularly intelligent countenance, is writing in a beautiful hand, and altogether gives you the impression of lofty character combined with great intellectual powers. This gentleman, one is pleased to learn, is a leader-writer.

Yes," remarks the American journalist, he is a. brother in the To even things up for the way he chucke is good enough for me. 'What' is of- importance is that Manchester should raise 10,000 for the Russian Famine Fund. My Committee, welcomes the letter in to-day's issue. Every name appended to it is one that counts for good in our national -life.

Our Committee will gladly forward any subscriptions so allocated to Lord Henry Bentinck, whether they come from public school men or not. The treasurer is Councillor W. Melland, 23. King Street. We have" not touched yet Yours." Patok.

nis weight about. So talk to roe not of -the solace in a Henry CTa or a Bock I'm a case for Mr. Hardy Time's latest Laugl ing-stock Lccio. Rochester Tramwav fien,) a r. Underwood.

Cato. The Manchester Grammar School, February 22. The who died on February 26, ,83. The picture shows him as An article on John Philip Kemble appears on another page. profession, and is turning off eight hundred Trammer" writes from Withington I repn io 1j uioiig tc.

ne story or napoleon's deal To the Editor of'fhe Manchester Guardian. ft me tare iroi Pallowfleld to Dickenson Road was lid meant, of course, to have written Wif.hwtn ings, witn Ataiy is a story or mixed motives, but nobodv danir XnTinlomi run Sir, This question surely has in practice but Words that to-morrow morning- shall leave the world, hetter and wiser." The consla-nt, output of books about Napoleon shows no sign of coming to an end. The latest 'to be published is "Napoleon from the The error does riot affect, my argument, whir THE WEEK ON THE SCREEN. for and for France from a genuine the one answer: A school which is, or whioh is eligible to be, represented on the Head THE OTANDARD EDITIONS OF LES CHOUAN3." By Helen E. Barnes.

ORIGINAL BALZAC'S 81.25 net, sympathy witn Italy or that he had- a sub tciaucu iaj uie incuu-venjence stage, not as an important junction of tra: routes, hut at the following stoppintr-nlace. Masters' Conference; or shortly, one which is sliare in her liberation. We must keep this aspect of Napoleon's career before us if we wish to understand the full effect to 5e found in the Public Schools Year Book (the official publication of that body). The con ditions that a school must fulfil in order that or iKiU on the JTrencli imagination. Til fiTirW-V Tifaal-Af 4- TTVr, its'head master may be a member of the Confer ence are set forth in the "Year Book," though than the shock of the loss of the 1 WXiVTrtO lMAP -n not go precisely as they used to he In considering what sciiool snail be in- Bngiand.

France waa much more sensitive about herposition in Europe than eighteenth- EV.ln...l v.x 1. -x: flashing from gay to grave, from dream to reality of course this is no more comedy than the broadest rough-and-tumble slapstick that Snub Pollardr ever put upon the screen. We laugh at it, but with reserve, "nursing a dread suspicion that in another minute the producer will flick us on the raw. For such is the way of all the sentimentalists, who are the more inveigling because they cannot ever be trusted. There are many of 'them, and this has been their gala week.

We have seen Tom Moore' in "From the Ground Up," always tempting) a laugh with his puzzled brow; Fitzmaurice peppering his production-- of Three Live Ghosts (an excellent picture, the way, and one not to be the humours of Whitecriapel only to underscore -more deeply the story of. the shell-shocked' Spoofy," who catches "little sheepies" for the baby in the park George Pearson and Betty Balfour laying a trap for the unwary in the jolly opening eluded- in the list of members or removed from it- the Committee of the Head Masters' Conference! shall have regard to the -scheme or other instrument by which the school is administered, the'- number of boys in the ii nil jjugimiu iWUUb LI VI la Lllfc) world. After receiving tliis terrible, blow she set herself with roRnllit.inn 111 ijganise her education and-her resources in school, and in tlie ease of schools' in Great Britain aud Ireland the number of resident undereraduates at Oxford and Camhridee educated at the school. The Comr-fiittee may also take into account the proportion. of nuys wxiu, navuig Tiussea iae scawu.

ceruiiiuate or otnex equivalent extuiuiia.iaou, a-re uumiuu- ing their studies beyond that stage. Not only Fashions but Homes as well I Consider for the moment Kendals, not only as a Home of Fashion, but as an organisation for Home creation. Imagine a concern able to do everything for your House, even to building it that is Kendals from the Furnishing side. The number of schools on the list of Conference (in. the P.S.Y.B.') id 1922 was 145, including IS-' Overseas Dominion schools.

The scenes of Mord Ein'ly," a tragi-comio idyll of tiie Mile End Boad. We meet the sentimen talists armed, but sometimes a skilled producer Conference was founded by the Eev. Edward Taring, the celebrated' head' master of Upping will feint and get in beneath one's guard. Jione so deadly as Marshall Neilan (unless it be Henry Edwards) at this' game. The most wary ham, in.

1869. invited .37 head masters to meet him for the discussion of common interests. Twelve attended, and a society was formed. It was incorporated in 1909. One ipicture-goer in the world must have been caught off his guard at.

the end of "Custer's Last notices that it is practically a trade union. In Stand, when -Wesley Barry, in. the middle.of an assurance that the film was a comedy, broke off suddenly, Neilan stepped in, and but that past issues of the P.S.Y.B." ithas been stated that a school to be eligible' must have an aver is the producer's own secret, the secret of a of 20 old boys resident undergraduates at Oxford and Cambridee. It is also on official FURNISHED prince of sentimentalists. Humour or fantasy, farce, burlesque, record that the head masters two eligible schools had preferred not to accept an Knockabout a screen comedy may be any of tion lo jcin.

So, though- of course these 'un-nairied two were in no way lute blacklegs," we see that the union is all. but seab-Drobf." Nowhere else in the North can a larger selection of highest grade furniture be seen nowhere can more expert workmanship, as expressed in terms of cabinet-making, be found. The Suites of Model Rooms and the huge Galleries here contain only that which by, its very high standard of perfection is chosen to represent a House whose prestige has been built upon the solid rock of quality. COMPLETE these. There is room for all, and each has its individual virtue.

The comedy of Fairbanks. A GOOD WORD FOR. THE COMEDY-MAKERS. The comedy-makers! How much we owe to them and how faintly, very we acknowledge tha debt! They have been too long-with us, chasing jostling and rib-tickling since the earliest, days of moving pictures, and we have come to take their existence for granted, have almost ceased, to be aware of it as a matter for criticism or tpplause. They form a pleasant, neutral-coloured background to the -blaze of costume the sharp black-and-white of photo-plays after Zola, the vague outlines of film fantasias.

And, since the comedy is' quite content to remain, a background, the usual fate of modesty cvertakea it. We attach the label "just comedy' stuff with affection and a touch of patronage. Beneath our enjoyment lurks a thought that the thing is- mere' makeweight, its producer belonging to the lowest order, i to any, of the artists of the screen. For Chaplin we make an exception. His place at the top is now undisputed.

But for Se'nnett and Linder and Ray, Fairbanks, Keatoni and the rest there no" such honest recognition. Actually in the comedy fold one meets the masters. Here are great technicians of the screen. Here are the workers and the thinkers, the serious men of the industry. Look at Fairbanks and Harold Lloyd; remember Sidney Dnew.

Think of the four best producers in England Pearson, Cooper, Hepworth, and Henry Edwards, and consider the comedies that have come from their hands, Study Mack Sennett, on whom Mary Pickford pins her faith as the director most skilled in translating thought into visible action." Comedy-makers all, hut no coiner of serious drama was ever more sincere. As craftsmen they would be appalled by the careless construction-, of the average "serious" film, and as artists they would be shocked by its crude sentiment, its conventionality, its' complete inability to ring tr.ue. Better, at the worst, a pail of whitewash and a custard pie well thrown, they hold, than a mawkish little child in a nightdress reuniting father and mother in the last reel. For excellence in serious drama we must go to Europe in England and America the comedians reign. A Matter for Pride.

may be proud of. our comedians, too, and. thankful for every kind of laugh-maker who shelters behind that broad and generous name. There is, for instance, the producer of true comedy, the dry, unemotional comedy of the -cartoonists, such as Paul Terry gives in his jsqp up-to-date. There are the farces of Max Linder, so witty, so polished, such a curious blend of the Old.

World and the Xew. There is the melancholy clowning of Buster Keaton and the glorious chaos of the slapstick-makera And there are films like Get-Bich-Quick Wallingf ord," a daguerreotype of life in a drowsy little town vin the State of Maine-pure comedy of manners, leisured -and simple of What dull dogs we should be without them, all! LMillest, Fhaps, without the sentimentalists for instance, is a- missionary comedy, bringing to use a popular phrase. The organisation seems engaged in many and wide activities. It has 15 sub-committees, one' shortly titled Public School Hymn-book," another "Noxious Litera countless new-comers to the screen. The slapstick comedians have filled the front rows of seats for many a year gone by.

And comedy ture. xours. XRIN. Camb. London, February 21.

It is as easy here, nay easier, to purchase Furniture that will be handed down with pride to coming generations than iris to experiment with goods of uncertain origin and doubtful satisfaction. For the Cottage or Mansion for one a hundred rooms KENDALS provide the best possible service at prices which are very moderate for such high-quality workmanship. CARPETS LINO I SOFT FURNISHINGS AND CURTAINS FOR 200 "VOU provide the house itself and- we provide 1 --ha HOME. 1W. liuine consists essentially of the furnish.

Without proper and substantial 'furnish-i it house is but a shell. in general has -made serious drama possible, has provided contrast and whetted appetite, has To the Editor of the Manchester Guardian. blunted criticism and kept tempers sweet. To Sir, The enclosed. list.

culled from the rule3 of the Isthmian Club, London, which was every maker of comedy, from Chaplin down to Snooky the chimpanzee, the kinema owes a UUUK OrW o.ir'' Parsonage. See the style, quality and "nir. ihe furniture and Garnets and onlv founded, in 1882 hut is now defunct, may be of interest: 200. debt of gratitude and a meed of praise. C.

A. L. BOOKS RbCElVED. Inscriptions' are DINING ROOM SUITES DRAWING ROOM SUITES BED ROO SUITES ALU FURNITURE PICTURES: BEDSTEADS TOILET FITTINGS, etc. 'ini must -visit Your own eyesight'-will ou.

jivery courtesy is extended to visitors, and there is. no pressure to buy. Lancing. Eugby. Loretto.

St. Paul's Schl. Marlborough. Sherborne." Malvem. Shrewsbury.

Merohiston. Stoneyhurst. OratorySphobl, Tonbridge. Edgbaston. Uppingham: Radley.

Wellington. Hepton. Westminster. Rossall. Winchester.

Bradfield. Beaumont. Charterhouse. Cheltenham. Clifton.

Eton. Fettes-. Qlenalmond. Haileybury. Harrow.

Yours. COMB TO-DAY. We have received the following books, From rho 'American- Geograpbtcal Society: ETC. THE PACE: OP THE EARTH AS SEEN FROM THE AIR' "A- study in the Appbcatioo or 'Airplszte -Pboto- J. HUNTER GO, Ltd.

16. IS 28, St Mary's Parsonage, MANCHESTER. An Old Pabxise. crapny to oy, wiuu 1. uto.

From Constable Sc DESOLATE SPLENDOUR- By Michael Sadleir. 7s. 6d, Manchester, February -22. net GODS- By Violet Qnirk. 7i.

6d. DECORATIONS PAINTING HEATING INSTALLATIONS SANITARY AND ELECTRICAL WORK, ETC net. From Hodder and Sfeaugbton: THE-COPPER BOX. By J. S.

Fletcher. 5b. net THE HOUSE OF FIVE SWORDS. A Romance. By Tristram Tapper.

7s. net. ZOJ.A. GALE'S FRIENDSHIP LADY ASTOR'S BILL. To the Editor of the Manchester Guardian.

Sir, It is useful to recall that the principle NOVELS. Friendsnip vuiage. r-eace in. iTieacnaip Village. 3s.

6d. net each. From the Labour Publishing Co. embodied in Lady Astor's bill for prohibiting ENGLAND. A National Policy for 'Labour.

By Harry ADVERTISING the ealo of drink on licensed -premises to per Our Furniture Showrooms are ofien for your free and leisurely inspection at any timestroll through, if not to buy now at any rate to enjoy the' viewing of the beautiful work here sons, under eighteen years of age has already El SMITH Manchester Kooetts. is. From the National Farmers' Union: THE YEAR BOOK OF THE NATIONAL -FARMERS' UNION. 1923.. Is.

From O. T. Olcen. Grimsby: THE FISHERMAN'S NAUTICAL ALMANACK, 1923. 5s -From tha Open Court Publishing APDBESSES TO THE GERMAN STATION.

By Jobaan Gottlieb Fichte. Translated by R. Jones. M.Ai, and G. H.

7. 6d. net. From G. -Philip PHILIPS' RAILWAY MP OF THE BRITISH ISLES.

8howins tha New Groqpms System. 2s. 6d. From Sir-Ifaae Pitman NICKEL. The Mining.

and Applications at been in practice for a time in one part of this country. I refer to the area around Carlisle administered during the later period of the war-by" the Liquor Control Board." In the standard agreement with their Carlisle managers the Board included this. rule The manager shall not. sell-" or. allow to be sold; to any person aoparently; under the -age oM8 for itill and workers in humour, the men who believe, a6 Mr.

Hepworth phrases it in the introduction to his Pipes of Pan," that laughter and DEANSGATE MANCHESTER consumption on the premises. (1) spirits of any description; (2) ale, beer, -stout, or porter, ex-oept for consuinptioh -wiwi meal. It was fruintV thai. the new to the practical tears are twin emotions a teardrop trembles upon the eyelid of every jest." For lack of a exclusion of ypuhg, people, from the pablic- "The Glamour of Manchester" The author deserves a' city to be proud of.W-Manchester Guardian. Miniatures in an oldrgold setting." Co-operative News.

A kind of magic" Manchester City iVea. Very interesting and Robert Blatohford in the Half Crown. better. generic, we call their alms, UOUSe as j-aamAui LLiav ixio Nickel. By nosota nit, o.a.

oa. net. From G. P. Sons: STATUES OF NEW YORK.

By J. Saltua and Walter E. Tien. ninstrateJ. ONE WHO GAVE HIS War Letters of Qalnoy Sbarpe With a ketch ol his life 'jnd Ideals by James -Loby FREDERICK LAW OLMSTED, Landscape Architect.

Fltf by F. Law Olmsbed. and Theodora -Kimball. ToV 1. Years and Experiences.

JOH BA6COM. PROPHET. By Sanford Rohinson- Fioni' A. M. BoonMonv-StB' IKavC -AND COMMENT- By Jama D.

'-Phelan. From tiboTJmvexalty of Press A STUDY OF THE VARIATIONS BETWEEN THE But of course The Pipes of Fan, a fantastic tale Of a tinRer. and his -daughter, who- leave the opinion of adult. cusrewuera me ehangdi and that 'managers met no diffi: ciiltv in. applying- the rule.

Yours, woods at the- call of commerce, Sounder, helplessly in society for a time, and steal away again by night at -the call of Pan a story 38, Frensham Road, Xiemington. February 21. 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Guardian
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Guardian Archive

Pages Available:
1,157,414
Years Available:
1821-2024