Tinsley's Magazine. The first number of this now competitor for
public favour has reached us, and is not bad. The first numbers of new magazines usually are very bad, and we have therefore some hope in the new one. It is well printed, though in those detestable double. columns which ought to be forbidden by statute ; begins with a novel. which will be good, and has some readable padding, notably a savage attack on the arrangements for the Spithead Review. The feature of the magazine is a paper on "The Fashions," illustrated, which a friend who understands what a " jupe " is from practical experience tells us is "excellent, but just a thought too well done for the average petti- coated public."