Is Our Navy in a Hopeless State of Confusion?
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... lM; i7i„ NEW ILLUSTRATION OF A WELL-WORN PHRASE I BY H. M. BATE MAN ...
... OfJ& /EAR n£ WAS INUNPATEP WITH C1UEHJARS V ...
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... . DEPICTED IN NINE PICTORIAL CHAPTERS BY SEWELL COLLINS ...
... 1 When the Gaekwar Visits Europe UNEASY EXPERIENCES ANTICIPATED FOR HEADS THAT WFAR THE CROWN BY GEORGE MORROW ...
... WILD PONIES DISTURBED BY HOUNDS IN THE NEW iv.---- I FOREST FROM A DRAWING BY LIONEL EDWARDS Our artist's stirring picture was suggested by an incident not infrequently witnessed by those who have enjoyed tie peculiar charm of hunting in the New Forest, which still remains, perhaps, the finest example of old English woodlan^ scenery. The ponies are allowed to run wild in the forest, and have ...
... A Variety Artist. Indeed PROTEAN VERSATILITY OF A NEW RECRUIT TO THE STAGE Miss Lolly Tollendal is n new recruit to the variety stage. She has written and produced a sketch in which she appears in all I the ^ers sketched above, changing her costumes with remtrkahle rapidity. Miss Tollendal produced the piece first at a matinee at the Haymarket Theatre. She then tools It ou tour and will ...
... Musical comedy at His Majesty's! The new version of Offenbach's Orphe'e aux Enfers is a sort of Olympian musical comedy. It has been wonderfully mounted by Sir Herbert Tree. Sketches by Norman Morrow ...
... The Ideal Children's Play AS PATERNALLY IMAGINED BY MR. NORMAN MORROW What do children really like in the way of dramatic entertainments? Juvenile experts whom we have consulted differ as violently as dramatic critics. Jingle and Mr. Norman Morrow this week offer some helpful hints to the providers of Christmas entertainments ...
... PICTURED AT PUTNEY BY OUR ARTIST WITH THE BLUES THE OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE CREWS. We hasten to remark that we do not guarantee the portraiture presented above: even our Artist confesses that his caricatures are wild. Photographs of members of the rival crews will be found elsewhere in this number of The Sketch, We may note here, by the way, that for the first time since 1870, when Jack Dale ...
... J r5' g [Me?1 AT TTJrTE. l LVK I C Anoiher success for mid-Victorian music First Offenbach at His Majesty's, now Johann Strauss at the Lyric. Of course, the libretti are adapted, but it is most interesting to note the vitality of the old airs SKETCHES BY NORMAN MORROIV ...