Refine Search

Countries

Access Type

59

Type

51
8

Public Tags

Graphic

... THE RANSOME TRACTOR with plough in use. This useful tractor and raw crop machine. There are attach ments for cultivating, ridging, potato lifting, disc harrow ing, etc. It can be used for bench work and spraying. THE TRUSTY TRACTOR with plough attached. To the swivelling draw-bar, cultivators, potato lifter, disc harrow Cambridge roller, etc., can be fitted. A bogie with seal for driver is ...

Mainly for Women: Victory Recipes, W.L.A. in the Making and Wren Photographers

... Mainly for Women Victory Recipes, W.L.A. in the Making and Wren Photograohers THE Victory dishes, symbol ising a situation vaguely understood but universally ap preciated by the many who consume them, are occupying still more prominent and appro priately labelled places on hotel, restaurant and tea-shop menus. Kecent recipes, with conven tional names but made up fairly and attractively from ...

Graphic

... GENERAL MONTGOMERY RECEIVING A GREAT RECEPTION FROM THE PEOPLE OF SOUSSE WHEN HE TOOK OVER THAT IMPORTANT TUNISIAN TOWN ON APRIL 16. He is here seen receiving bouquets from the daughters of the town's leading French citizens On April 16, the Commander-in-Chief of the Eighth Army was received in Sousse by the civic and military authorities and was given a terrific welcome by the French and Arab ...

Published: Saturday 08 May 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 225 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

A WAR NEWSLETTER--No. 192

... A WAR NEWSLETTER -No. 192 i, New Oxford Street, W.C.i. A Sharp Lesson.-- it seems to me that the Allies have recently had a sharp lesson of the unwisdom of counting unhatched chickens. The tendency towards resettling Europe, while Europe remains an unknown continent, is one which has wasted much valuable time and spilled many unnecessary words by some of the great as well as by some of the ...

Published: Saturday 08 May 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1876 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: Photographs 

WARDONIA

... MM VmmM SOLD BY I NflflFI 1 1 ah A J 1 1,1' I jlv ...

Published: Saturday 08 May 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 15 | Page: Page 31 | Tags: Photographs 

The Countess of Denbigh and her Daughter

... The Earl of Denbigh married in 1940 the widow of Lt.-Coloncl Paget Fielding Johnson and their small daughter, Imelda Clare, was born in 1941. Lady Denbigh was formerly Miss Verena Barbara Price, daughter of Mr. W. E. Price. Lord Denbigh, who succeeded his grandfather as tenth Earl in 1939, is in the Coldstream Guards. His father, the Hon Francis Feildiug, died in 1936. and his uncles, Lt. ...

Published: Wednesday 12 May 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 95 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

WAY OF THE WAR: Offensive

... M OF THE WAR By Foresight Offensive WE are about to enter a new phase in the war. One which must bring us to closer grips with the enemy, and ulti mately nearer to complete victory. Already the Germans are trying to dodge the blow. They have had a series of invasion alarms on the Continent which have proved false. Troops have been suddenly rushed from one place to another, and coastal guns ...

MYSELF AT THE PICTURES: The War And Hollywood

... MYSELF IT THE PICTURES The War And Hollywood By James Agate LET us not be mealy-mouthed about it-- the war has been a godsend to Hollywood. The Thin Man couldn't go on being thin for ever. Good Little Wives couldn't in the nature of things rescue many more Big Husbands from Vampire's Clutches. And the Gangster was more or less washed up. Then the war broke out and in every Hollywood studio the ...

Published: Wednesday 12 May 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1214 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: Photographs 

The Marquess of Lothian and Miss Antonella Newland

... Are Married in London olonel Howard Kerr, the bridegroom's cousin walked from the church with his wife and son. nother son, Andrew, was a page at the wedding Lady Bedingfeld and Mr. William Bell were at the reception, held at the Hon. Mrs. R. C. Bruce's house in Cadogan Square Captain and Mrs. Michael Angas, who ivere married in November, were there. She was formerly Miss Christian Grant Lord ...

Published: Wednesday 12 May 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 176 | Page: Page 11 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

Pictures in the Fire: Naming Their Shots

... -/4 By Sabretache Naming Their Shots THE ONE: Alexandria, Cairo (including Shepheard's Hotel and the Pyramids), Suez, the Organ-Grinder's Abyssinian Empire, Aden, Iran, Irak, India, Burma, Russia, China, Japan, the British Empire (not excluding Buckingham Palace), and then America. The Other El Alamein, Tobruk, Benghazi, El Agheila, Tripoli, Mareth, Akarit, Gabes, Sousse, Eufidaville (all in ...

Published: Wednesday 12 May 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1673 | Page: Page 21, 22 | Tags: Photographs 

With Silent Friends: Challenge

... By Elizabeth Bowen Challenge A TIME FOR GREATNESS, by Herbert Agar (Eyre and Spottiswoode; 7s 6d.), has made a sounding impact on America. Its appearance in this country was preceded by praise from the Archbishop of Canterbury. The book, in fact, addresses itself to both great English-speaking democracies. It is by now beginning to be apparent, even to the most idle and cloudy minds, that ...

Published: Wednesday 12 May 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2061 | Page: Page 24, 26 | Tags: Photographs 

CHAMPION

... ITTT^TjTTni ^Ljn The British Museum Library, with its collection of nearly 5,000,000 volumes, manuscripts, and other items, is one of the largest libraries in the world. Opened in 1857, it is distinguished by its circular domed reading room-- 140 ft. in diameter and 106 ft. high. A famous rendezvous of study for authors, journalists, playwrights, historians and scholars. Well might we say of ...