[ill] CHIT-CHAT

... 7r, iuderittNlrd, lexi h.Itlti 1dm a vry caur rS rna- nuscript diary, vwhich! Ci ictc a nitait t 1Wory ut xiii, Fbilih Ciut, Ai) a-ddte, o: Ih th i-tili/. i ;, g .ether ii*elr ;'P, , , Stlt FPlOceg,' al tAir t:.1:. a mettia-,. Inc ud!lg iAwwisev1 the bill ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... have induced a few Individuals connected with the Metro- politan Theatres to consider the possibility of instituting a a General Theatrical Fund, to which every person attached to the profession throughout the United Kingdom might become a sub- scriber ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... boue will still give pain, in the same manner that a common splinter would Irritate the surrounding parts. Mr. Chiunock men- tioned a case, in which a noted advertising dentist took out a tooth from a lady, and having produced great ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT. Mr. Pierce Butler, the gentlemen to whom Miss Fanny Kemble Is to be, or has been, united, is reported to be at fine young man, with a fortune of 4,0001. a year. Miss Smnithson has been lately married la Parls to a celebrated musical ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT.. There is now very good reason to believe that the effects of Mr. Kean will realize sufficient to discharge his debts. Bate Cottage, to which Is attached 38 acres of land, at a rental of 451. per an- num, has been valued by a competent ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... Mrs. Becher) was a mua who posaei8ed an abundance a of Irish anecdote and humour; mtuch of the former he had gathered In the pursuit of his profession, aS the manager of a II travelling Company ; arid in respect to the latter, nature had A done much for ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... Fcaucts Stern, residIng at Hisnoirrgh, otealir g and tasitmg wvitt hinr a carriage painted gree., viitr L S. otn each sido, arid is ir tire form of a low pha- a tom ; I cases, one cnntinirng a quutita y of clothes, and the otrtler fJour /thiunld ed sovereigns ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... amusements comprehend a splendid isoc;'.caltural exhibition, a concert, by Mr. DOrN, the celebrated horn player, a concert of sacred music at f;t, James's Church, and a fancy fair at ths Imperial Spa. AnErYaa.-xEcopting alwaysIt a hhitsv, ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... Samuel Russell has proceeded to Norwich to fulfil a short engagement previous to opening at Dcurylane on the 1st October. The Inslabitauts of Richmond have made a strong subscription for the erection of a tablet to the erremoory of ICean ; but It is feared ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... timneemployed in their comletion. 'A line of rail-roads is nlow in a course of projection (and of completion, indeed,'in part), whic~twill conuect Avvery State in the land, from Maine to the Miseids sippi, and epable a mam to rurh from ioston to New OIleans ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... aoother-4%ying been ruln over by a cab in the Ha*ymarket, by whirh accides.t his arm was broken. Buockstone, the ir'defatigable and successful author, has a ne w Operetta nearly ready for tbie.Haynarket; and Mr. Lutn has a farce of musb comulc humour, ready ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... denmand of a Dukedom and a nsstioual grint iess caused a schisrm betowaen the Noble Lord and his Rojyal father. Tho shortest answer ta this statement happens also to he the most appropriate-it is fals-n ! L-ord rMunster isa5 not even as.ks]t for a Dukedom ...