Word: barre
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1890
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...authorship of "The Anglomaniacs" attempts to write an essay in a novelist's style with unfortunate results. Her subject is "Maidens and Matrons in American Society." The maidens receive further attention in a symposium "Shall our Daughters have Dowries?" by C. S. Messinger, Harriet Prescott Spofford, Amelin E. Barr, Mrs. Beecher, Mrs. Livermore and Mrs. Rollins...
Cornell-rushers, Straith, Barr, Griffith, Galbraith, Collon, Johnson, Shepard; quarter-back, Gowger; half-backs, Osgood, Ray; full-back, Bacon...
...Barr, James Cummings, Gymnasium...
...Brewer, French, G. Blagden, Loring; Crew 6, J. S. Codman, Hay, Stone, Morton; Crew 7, Richmond, Garceau, Soren, DuPont; Crew 8, Giddings, Payson, Hunt, C. P. Huntington; Crew 9 withdrew; Crew 10. Barnes, Walcott, Abbott, Post; Crew 11, King, Larrabee, Walcott, Put nam; Crew 12, Winslow, Scudder, Irwin, Barr; Crew 13, Hale, Young, Martin, Holland; Crew 14. Lund, Williams, Smith, Curtis; Crew 15, Black, Stults, Paine, Shaver...
...chestnut horse. "The Typical American," by Andrew Lang and Max O'Rell, is of the very frothiest substance. but the Lang half has a sparkle which the O'Rell one is totally without. "Audacity in Woman Novelises," by George Parsons Lathrop, is partly a reply to Mrs. Amelia E. Barr's "Corversational Immoralities" in the April number, and wholly an acknowledgement of woman's continually increasing position and power in fiction and the upon the whole salutary influence of that position. "The Hatred of England," by Goldwin Smith, rather exaggerates the extent of that hated which most of the readers...