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Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News

TENNIS

... TENNIS. If any spectators went to Queen's Club on Saturday, anticipat ing a close and exciting match between Mr. Jay Gould and Mr. Eustace Miles, in the challenge round of the Tennis Championship, they must have gone away sadly disappointed. At no time ...

TENNIS

... TENNIS. THE most successful tennis cham pionship meeting which has been held for many years was concluded at Queen's Club last week. The great match was the final of the singles, which was of an international character. It was between Mr. E. M. Baerlein ...

TENNIS

... TENNIS. MR. J. GOULD v. PETER LATHAM. THE comparing of generations at games is always an interesting if idle speculation. At tennis, a highly specialised game with a history of centuries, and a game where supremacy lasts many years, it is a particularly ...

TENNIS

... TENNIS. Mr. J. Gould v. Peter Latham. The comparing of generations at games is always an interesting if idle speculation. At tennis, a highly spe specialised game with a history of centuries, and a game where supremacy lasts many years, it is a particularly ...

FASHIONS FOR TENNIS

... leather tennis case maybe seen at Fortnum and Mason's. A new note As struck by the tennis racket leather head cover with zyp fastenings. Another novelty is the handkerchief on which the prospective owner's :name may be printed. Among the. other tennis needs ...

TENNIS IN 1917

... TENNIS IN 1917. TENNIS is no longer so cosmopolitan a game as it was during its great days in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries, when it was played in nearly all European countries. Even in more modern times, how ever, since records ...

LAWN TENNIS

... LAWN TENNIS. The Middlesex Championships, with which the rain has interfered in a most irritating manner, were concluded, at Chiswick Park, on Monday. In the final of the gentlemen's contest, Mr. Greville, who won in 1897, and again last year, beat Mr ...

TENNIS IS ILLEGAL

... TENNIS IS ILLEGAL Sir, If every statute were enforced, we should all be in gaol. That sweeping observation of an erudite judge of the last century passed through my mind a few days ago in a London police court. A defendant was summoned for an alleged ...

TENNIS IN FRANCE

... any indication, we believe that tennis in Pau will be in a flourishing condition. The dedans was full every day, and all tne maicnes were watcneu wim great interest. Captain R. K. Price (Prince's), who has played more tennis in France than any leading amateur ...

LAWN TENNIS

... LAWN TENNIS. The London Championship meeting has resulted in A. W. Gore beating A. W. Lavy in the final and Championship round of the Gentlemen's Championship while Miss C. Cooper (the challenger), beat Miss Greville (the bolder) in the Championship for ...

LAWN TENNIS

... LAWN TENNIS Commander G. W. Hillyard, R.N., has issued a cheap popular edition of his Forty Years of First-class Lawn Tennis (Williams and Norgate, 6s.). There is an extra chapter on Hard Courts, in which Mr. Hillyard says Nothing has been discovered ...

FOR TENNIS AND AND GORDEN

... For Tennis and the Garden ONE tennis outfit can be made to look like several if you have different coats to wear when the game is over. The cardigan on the right, from Burberry's, in the Haymarket, would give you con fidence in important matches. Of white ...