THE PRIME MUTTON OF OLD ENGLAND
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... AN AMERICAN LADY JOURNALIST. A CHAT WITH MISS JEANETTE GILD EE. The knowledge that Miss Jeanette Gilder, the editor of the New York Critic, was on a visit to London, was sufficient to tempt the journalist of this side, armed with the editorial credential, to request an interview. This Miss Gilder most cordially granted, and one afternoon last week a Sketch representative found himself in the ...
... MR. EDWARD COMPTON AND MISS SIDNEY CROWE IN DAVY GARRICK. FROM A PlIOTOGItAPH JIT CHANCELLOR, DUBLIN. ...
... . THE ENGLISH TEAil. THE IRISH TEAM. Photographs by Lafayette Dublin. ...
... . The theatrical bazaar which was to be opened yesterday at the Queen's Hall on behalf of the Actors' Orphanage has been organised by Mrs. Clement Scott and Mrs. Carson, the wife of the editor of the Stage. Mrs. Clement Scott is the invaluable companion of her husband at first nights. But, unlike the great majority of first nighters, she takes a very great interest in the charities connected ...
... THE DEAR FOUDROYAHT.' Mr. J. R. Cobb is to be congratulated upon having rescued from oblivion ''the dear Foudroyant, as Lord Nelson himself called this, his pet battleship, and secured a precious relic that will remind the present generation of England's glorious naval victories in the early part of the century. Begun at Plymouth in 1789 and launched in 1798, she was at that time only the ...
... . A WOOD NYMPH.-- MRS. RAPHAEL. EXHIBITED AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY'. ...
... . Cannot some firm of makers of aluminium goods design an aluminium outfit for tourists on wheels? Now that cyclists on tour fully realise the advantage of carrying as light a kit as possible, such an outfit would command a large sale. A small brush and comb, a tooth-brush, a razor and strop, and a few other toilet requisites, made partly of this featherweight metal, and stowed away ...
... . Every year, on the second Monday in August, the Swan Upping, or Swan Hopping, as it is sometimes called, takes place on the rivers and broads below Norwich. A correspondent of The Sketch, who has been present at one of these festivals, sends a few notes on the Swan Upping, which in olden times was usually attended with no little pomp, the citizens of Norwich turning out to witness the ...
... MISS LUCY GOLDING. FROM A PHOTOGRAPH BY KITE BLEll, PHILADELPHIA. ...
... THE ELAMBOROUGH HEAD CLIFE-C LIMBERS. Early in June I was persuaded by a friend to pay a visit with him to Flamborough Head in order to see the famous cliff-climbers at work gathering their annual harvest of guillemot's eggs. After spending the night at Scarborough, we took the morning train to Bempton, where we found our friends George Lownsborough, the boss, and George Wilkinson, the ...
... BY HAROLD FREDERIC. Those tourists in Ireland who follow the beaten track, and see only the selected districts for which custom and the guide-books have created a conventional legend of popularity, bring back a distressing mental picture of Irish peasant children. No one who has ever watched and heard them can forget the amazingly ragged and clamorous little nuisances who infest the roads ...