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INEXPERIENCE IN THE CHORUS: To the Editor of THE STAGE

... To the Editor of THE STAGE. Sir, T ltave read wkh much in- terest M. K. S.'s letter deaisr^ with Uk que-flt^m fti chorus inexperience. I my sell have had a thorough musH al tiainintg from ooe lest kno ...

Published: Thursday 18 March 1920
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 269 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: letter 

INEXPERIENCE IN THE CHORUS: To the Editor of THE STAGE

... To the Editor of THE STAGE. Sir, Please allow us a little space in your paper. We are two who worked in a touring pantomime for seven week,s. Four weeks we did not receive fiull salaries. In the last ...

Published: Thursday 18 March 1920
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 222 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: letter 

INEXPERIENCE IN THE CHORUS

... . To the Editor of THE STAGE. Sir,--The letters that appeared in THE STAGE last Thursday regarding inexperience in the chorus interested me greatly. I fully endorse M. F. S. ...

Published: Thursday 18 March 1920
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 366 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: letter 

MINOR THEATRES

... . To the Editor of THE STAGE. Sir,--Would you allow me space to reply to Mr. Frank Roy's letter in THE STAGE of March 4? I am one of those managers who occasionally farm companies in the ...

Published: Thursday 18 March 1920
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 274 | Page: Page 17 | Tags: letter 

MANAGERS' LICENSES

... . To the Editor of THE STAGE. Sir.--With reference to licensing of managers, which I myself, as a concert party manager of nine years' standing and with twenty-two years' experience ...

Published: Thursday 18 March 1920
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 569 | Page: Page 22 | Tags: letter 

CORRESPONDENCE: EVEN CHANCES

... CORRESPONDENCE. EVEN CHANCES. [7To the Editor of the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News Sir, WITH reference to an article on this subject, lately contributed by me to these columns, a correspondent points out that I based my calculations respecting the length of the longest series (mathematically) due, on the results furnished by one table alone, and says, We have to consider the total ...

CORRESPONDENCE

... . We have been aslted to insert the following Headquarters of the Army in South Africa, Pretoria, 3Qth September, 1900. [To the Editor of the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic Wetcs.] SlK, Will you kindly allow nte, through the medium of your paper, to make an appeal to my countrymen and women upon a subject I have very much at heart, and which has been occupying my thoughts for some time ...

WILDFOWL DECOYS

... Sir, In your issue of October 2 Captain Paul Curtis refers to a book on duck decoys by Joel D. Barker. Can you give me further details of this book and where it is obtainable E. L. Parish. Ashlea, Swavesey, Cambs. [The book in question is entitled Wildfowl Decoys and is pub lished by .Windward House, 127, East 34 th Street, New York. We can recommend it most highly. Editor.] ...

BOOKMAKERS IN CLOVER

... Sir, When I'm in England I like to have a flutter occasionally, and out here we have a good number of meetings to pick from. Just as a matter of interest to home readers ana home bookmakers in particular, I enclose the results of a meeting at Quetta. The second race betting shows seven horses at 3 to i and under Can this be beaten If you publish this letter it may cause a stampede of book- ...

MILK LICENCES

... Sir, Until recently those who owned a few cows or who sold only a gallon or less of milk in the village did not have to take out a retailer's licence from the Milk Board. A recent order from that body makes it compulsory for anyone who retails milk other than to his own employees to take out a licence. Application for a licence entails bother and expense. The result is that many people, some ...

TRIALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF BLOODHOUND BREEDERS

... . To the Editor of The Illustrated Sport ing and Dramatic News. Sir, I trust that you will allow me a small space to take exception to some of the remarks in your editorial of last week. I am sure that you would not be knowingly unfair, and that these remarks must have been caused by a misreading of one of the reports of the trials. You say: It has been said that one of the hounds entered ...