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CIRCULAR NOTES

... opinion that he was lucky to beat Wavertree, who had been knocked on to the rails, so severe a bump that Dris- coll cut his boot and hurt his leg. The following day Mr. Bibby's colours were to the fore in the Palatine Hurdle Race on St. Tudwal, who not ...

CIRCULAR NOTES

... had trod in blood of the murdered lady is a suggestion that the hounds hunted the boot, not the clean boot, as it is absurdly called. In fact, they never do hunt the boot when they follow a man, but are just as competent, or the reverse, to follow a man ...

The Sportswoman

... Burnham, and when the final count was taken it was found that Hayling had 27 supporters and Burnham 29. The summer meeting of the Kent County Club was held at Chislehurst on June 8th. Mrs. Stanley Stubbs was in great form, and secured the Scratch Prize with ...

And the World said

... a one to write home about) spent the opening day on the sociable, which Victorian piece of furniture, formerly relegated to boot shops, is social climbing again. It allows occupants to have eyes in the backs of their heads and ears all round. How too ...

Published: Wednesday 23 November 1938
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2418 | Page: 6 | Tags: Photographs 

The Passing Hour

... famous golfers and lawn tennis stars took part in the Sporting Gymkhana held recently in the i Leeds Castle, near Maidstone, in aid of the Kent County Playing Fields Association. Miss Molly G our lay is seen above drivim i:\S the mixed Joursomes competition ...

Published: Wednesday 06 August 1930
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3086 | Page: 9 | Tags: Photographs 

GOLF JOTTINGS

... Mr. E. N. Kent was performing in precisely similar fashion against the same foe. He was playing for the Quarterly Prize, and as he took two holes from his formidable opponent, I am not at all surprised that the prize went his way. Mr. Kent's success is ...

And the World said

... Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Gordon-Thomson taking on a fox-trot in good earnest at the Stirling Memorial Ball, which was held at the Golden Lion Hotel. Mrs. Gordon- Thomson is a grand-daughter of the late Andrew Carnegie and heiress to his millions. Mr. Gordon-Thomson ...

Published: Wednesday 16 November 1938
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2606 | Page: 6 | Tags: Photographs 

ALL IS NOT GOLD THAT GLITTERS

... foil to her shapely lines. She evidently had been recently fitted out, and her shining black topsides, snowy decks, and tall golden spars glistening in the sunlight, quite won my heart. Her dimensions, I gathered from the particulars furnished me by the ...

And the World said

... Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Gordon-Thomson taking on a fox-trot in good earnest at the Stirling Memorial Ball, which was held at the Golden Lion Hotel. Mrs. Gordon- Thomson is a grand-daughter of the late Andrew Carnegie and heiress to his millions. Mr. Gordon-Thomson ...

SMALL TALK OF THE WEEK

... boys in Mr. G. B. Phillips's Puss in Boots pantomime, at the Broadway Theatre, Xew Cross, is not only one of the handsomest and most shapely young ladies on the British stage, but is very bright and clever to boot. Both as actress and singer she has rendered ...

Published: Wednesday 07 March 1900
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 7211 | Page: 9 | Tags: Photographs 

SMALL TALK of the WEEK

... includes a good part of Llandudno town. The Flintshire tenants lighted bonfires on the hills in honour of the day. Lord Maidstone's coming-of-age will soon follow that of his cousin, the Hon. Eric Upton, son of Lord Templetown, which occurred this month ...

Published: Wednesday 28 March 1906
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 4055 | Page: 9 | Tags: Photographs 

The Letters of Eve

... military standards or so they seem to think anyway. Don't hate me, E v e, writes one of 'em who is train ing here some- where in Kent, but we Western men are so accustomed to real, slap -up-to-the-last- word in girls that I'm hungry for the sight of it over ...

Published: Wednesday 12 September 1917
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3324 | Page: 6 | Tags: Photographs