Word: authorizes
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...real name of the writer, as well as by the name which is to appear in the paper. We have received several communications lately in which this condition has not been observed, and which have consequently not been published. We print one this morning without knowing its author, but only because our motive in withholding it, if we did, might in this case be called into question...
...much talk upon the recent books, "Marcella" and "The Yellow Aster." Marcella branches out upon all sorts of feverish schemes and plans for social improvement in England, but in the end she relinquishes all these original thoughts and plans, and marries just like the old-fashioned woman. The author of "The Yellow Aster," though less cultivated and less thoughtful than Mrs. Ward, has nevertheless made it a more artistic work than Marcella. "The Heavenly Twins" from the point of view of art is like chaos, without form and void. Although so chaotic in its art, this book sets...
...author and a lecturer, and an ardent supporter with pen and tongue of the Anti-Slavery cause, and the maintenance of the Union...
...altar contaminated by the sins of men, thus providing an open path by which man can approach the throne. Secondly, the shed blood of Jesus cleanses the man himself making him pure and clean and invigorating him with the energy of a new life. In this verse, however, the author is thinking of the shedding, not the use of blood after its being shed. He has in mind the self-sacrificing of men for the life of others, - Esther interposing herself to save the Jews, or the engineer standing by his engine as it rushes on to certain destruction. This...
...Rachel Booth, W. R. Shirley, Charles Greene, Ella Gardiner and James Cody, will commence an engagement at the Columbia tonight, presenting here for the first time this pronounced comedy success, "The New Boy." "The New Boy" is a comedy in three acts by Arthur Law of London, and the author has reached the very climax of farcical effect. It was first produced in London nearly two years ago and is still being presented at the Vaudeville, Theatre, where it was originally done. It is entirely dissimilar in construction and locality to any of the humorous plays lately presented in this...