LAST NIGHT'S THEATRICALS

... Mr. Mark Melford's success in fitting Mr. Willie Edouin and his clever company with such amusing pieces as Turned Up, Blackberries, and A Coming Clown has been so pronounced that it is not surprising the astute manager should again seek the same ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... silence, you may be sure. It was autumn,' and the blackberries were ripe. Now and then they came across a black- berry bush, and stopped to gather the berries before they went on. But as they met many a blackberry bush, and had a dispute over each one that they ...

GRAND THEATRE

... mounting of the play is: rather pretty,' owing to the scene being laid among the upper reaches of the Thames. A short farce, Blackberries, by the same author precedes Turned Up, but something R little more substantial is required to ?? op the evening, and ...

THREE NEW NOVELS

... picking leathers off a toad, or clothes off a naked man, and i} you squeeze a crab apple you get only sourness. Sloes and blackberries grow in the:same hedge, and their natures are as they began. Older they grow, they grow either sweeter or sourer. A screw ...

PRINCE'S THEATRE

... performers after each act. Everyone who goes to the theatre for ia hearty laugh should see '-Turned Up. lb is preceded by Blackberries,' by the samam author, who calls it a comedy-drama, though itis rather a comedietta. It is specially-designed to show off ...

THE NEW THEATRE

... Thursday, Friday, and Saturday in this week a capital farce has been played, Turned Up, preceded by a comedy drama, Blackberries, by the saime author. Turned Up takes its name from the unwelcome appearance of husbands and wives supposed to be defunct; ...

GOSSIP WITH THE CHILDREN

... a distance greater than usual, some twenty miles, but I hope to tell you something about it another time. The luscious blackberries are most abundant and of great size, and seem to cry alond to all who pass by, Take me to your lips. But no gatherers ...

THE THEATRES

... acting keepsishe audience revelling insmerri. mnent from the rise of the curtain to its fall, Turned Up is preceded by Blackberries, a clever and diverting farce in one act, by the same author. At the Rotunda Theatre Mr. Edward Compton and his company ...

New Novels

... to be hoped that there no~ ;licence in the matter beyond those literary coincidences v ricir 2 a l*ecumring as common as blackberries. Wife, or No LA Ic * itot be regarded as worthy of the author of 'The M cur, l f IHerors Dyke, and is one of the i ...

LANCASHIRE BIRDS

... domestication, and it is alosw. this condition that we must look at it now. few days prior to the advent of October, the blackberries hang lascious on the bra:j and the brown nuts drop from the cluastere, the lea, goes, as is his'wont, to the coppice of ...

LIVERPOOL THEATRES AND THE LICENSING SESSIONS

... Apple Jelly is tree from artificial coloring, the natural tint of the fruit only being presened. Hartley's New beason's Blackberry Jelly now ready, Lret delicacy. del?7 ToeaccoXrSrS RaAnL-AoW to Open vemnuerm- tively from any amount. however ?? for I ...

NOTES IN LOCAL STUDIOS

... Southern's only contribution will be a large oil, The Fringe of a Pine Forest. James Towers has a large oil painting, called Blackberry Time, Barton, Cheshire ; fir trees, fern, and bramble, with meadows sloping to the Dee. Also two water colours, A Chat ...