UNRECOGNISED HEROISM!
... UNRECOGNISED HEROISM By H. M. Ba4inniSiinio THE COUPLE WHO GO TO A WEDDING WITHOUT SENDING A PRESENT If. M. Bsdteinnisiinio ...
... UNRECOGNISED HEROISM By H. M. Ba4inniSiinio THE COUPLE WHO GO TO A WEDDING WITHOUT SENDING A PRESENT If. M. Bsdteinnisiinio ...
... THE SPIRIT OF THE WANDERLUST. THE BERKSHIRE WANDERERS R.F.C. Drawn by Fred May The county team of Berkshire is noted for the hard and clean game which it plays. Founded thirty-five years ago, the Berkshire Wanderers are exactly what their name implies wanderers. In the good old pre-war days they had a playing member in Constantinople who occasionally received a cable on Thursday to play for ...
... TME CRICKET CHAMPIONS. YORKSHIRE XI. v. THE REST OF ENGLAND Drawn by Fred May The champions, who had to work their passage all the way to get to the top, met the Rest of England at the Oval on the 15th, and that match just about rang down the curtain on the game for the season. Yorks have had a great season, and at the end their record in the County Championship read played 30; won 19. A fine ...
... . AT THE CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS STUDENTS' DINNER Sketches by Fred May A very representative collection of the notable personalities who were at the recent dinner of the Chartered Accountants Students' Society. The president of the Institute of Chartered Accountants is Sir William Plender, G.B.E., F.C.A., and he appears to have been the only celebrity who managed to dodge our artist. Lord Farrer ...
... CAUGMT AT TIE WICEET-AH EESEWInlEIRE I SUSSEX CELEBRITIES-- BY FRED MAY At the more or less recent battle of Worcester, the famous double-turn, the Gilligan brothers, played exactly the same part as did two other famous brothers, Mr. Castor and Mr. Pollux, at the battle of Lake Regillus when the Ancient Romans were having such a thin time. Sussex were very slow off the mark, and disaster came ...
... THE R.A.C.° TWENTY-FIFTH BIRTHDAY. SOME NOTABILITIES-- BY FRED MAY The twenty-fifth birthday of the Royal Automobile Club, at which H.R.H. the Prince of Wales was present, was fittingly and very congenially celebrated at Covent Garden Theatre. Unfortunately the foundation-stone and the popular axle of the great organisation, Sir Julian Orde, was unable to be there on account of illness, and ...
... THE EIGHTH WONDER I By M M. Bateman., THE MEMBER OF THE R.A.C. WHO ACTUALLY OWNS A CAR Ho M. IBafteinniainic ...
... AT THIE TWO-WEIEEILEIRS' DINNER MOTOR-CYCLING CELEBRITIES, AND OTHERS- -BY FRED MAY Some thumbnail (our artist has very large thumbs) sketches at the British Cycle and Motor-Cycle Manufacturers' and Traders' Banquet at the Connaught Rooms a bit ago. Sir Harold Bowden, Bart., who was in the chair, is chairman and managing director of the Raleigh Cycle Company, and Sir James Percy, who proposed ...
... . AT THE ARMY POINT-TO-POINT-- A somewhat belated but none the less faithful casualty list of some of the victims of the caricaturist at Arborfield Cross in the Garth country, where the Army Point-to-Point was run by kind permission of Major L. A. Jackson, M.F.H. The arrangements were of the very best and the racing good. Captain S. G. Howes was responsible for a very large part of the success ...
... BUSY BESILEYo BULL'S-EYES AND INNERS-- -BY FRED MAY Our artist missed the King's Prize winner, Lieut. -Colonel A. F. Marchment, D.S.O., but he has, we think, done fairly well with the ammunition he had at his disposal, and has not, we hope, wounded anyone very seriously. The fifty-ninth Bisley has been one of the most interesting in the history of the meeting. The King's Prize had to be shot ...
... BACK FROM THE ETERNAIL SNOWS. AT THE R.G.S. WELCOME TO THE MOUNT EVEREST EXPEDITION- -BY FRED MAY The first direct accounts of what happened on the Mount Everest Expedition were given by Brigadier-General the Hon. C. G. Bruce, its leader, a half-brother of Lord Aberdare, at the joint meeting of the Royal Geographical Society and the Alpine Club at the Central Hall, Westminster, on the 16th. ...
... . SIX TIMES //INNERS OF THE HOSPITAL CUP: THE LONDON R.F C SPECIALLY DRAWN FOR THE SKETCH BY H. F. CROWTHER SMITH. The London Hospital were the runners-op m the Inter-Hospital Rugby Football Cup, tieing defeated by Guy's in the final at Richmond. They first won the trophy in loS3-4, and hare secured it six times in all. Our artist has pictured some of the fifteen, including Mr. L. G Brown, ...