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The Tatler

Standing By ...: One Thing and Another

... One Thine and Another By D. B. Wyndham Lewis LORD CASTLEROSSE remarked with a cheery laugh a few days ago, apropos the most recent large-scale Army exercises, that to see the invaders hurled back every time with heavy losses on these occasions is extremely gratifying. (The same thing has been happening lately on Soviet Army manoeuvres.) So far as we remember he made this the text for a ...

Published: Wednesday 04 June 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1884 | Page: Page 14, 16 | Tags: Cartoons  Illustrations 

At Long Last Uniforms are Issued to the Royal Observer Corps

... Mggg-- At Long Last Uniforms are Issued to the Royal Observer Corns By Wing Commander E. G. Oakley Beuttler Wing Commander E. G. Oakley Beuttler The Royal Observer Corps, the eyes and cars of Fighter Command, has been in existence since 1918, when it was started by Maior- Leneral Ashmore, R.A., with a few posts around London. In 1929 the organisation was handed over to the Air Ministry Air Com ...

Published: Wednesday 04 June 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 187 | Page: Page 23 | Tags: Cartoons  Graphic 

Notabilities at Newmarket

... : Lord Milford trains with Jack Jarvis at Newmarket Eph Smith is the stable jockey. Although his colours are not familiar on the Turf in England, Lord Dillon is a keen racegoer and a good judge of bloodstock. George 'Blackwell, Jr is now serving in the R.A. he is the son of the veteran Newmarket trainer, George Blackwell. P. Maker, now in the R.A.F., won the May Plate at Nottingham on the ...

Published: Wednesday 04 June 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 126 | Page: Page 25 | Tags: Cartoons  Graphic 

Pictures in the Fire

... ■^4 By Sabretache Leading the Field THE sense of exhilaration which it engenders is terrific; but it is not always the best way to win races. If you can get a- break on them, and they are foolish enough to let you wait in front, and if you are jockey enough to know how to do it, sometimes it comes off, and you win with your toes in your boots. But usually these tactics are a rather impudent ...

Published: Wednesday 18 December 1940
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1366 | Page: Page 28, 29 | Tags: Cartoons  Photographs 

THE NUFFIELD ORGANIZATION

... I Things that Endure IW.an's ea^s out^ve his monuments. The Hanonymou' motion which raised those spires whose ■fingers po to heaven the patriotic spirit which His accelerat war production night and day throughout Hour vast n ork of factories these are the things Rhat endi outliving the very tasks they set ■themselves, I For, aftei he sacrifices of war are forgotten, our Hsraftsmen-in-the ...

Published: Wednesday 22 January 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 229 | Page: Page 33 | Tags: Cartoons 

Graphic

... Classic Prospects by The Tout 99 From all accounts, Dantd has wintered well, and on his phenomenal two-year-old speed of last season Sir Eric Ohlson's colt is bound to take some beating in the Guineas, whatever* his fate may be over the longer Derby distance. His trainer, Matt Peacock, has announced that Dant6 is likely to have his first outing of the season at Stockton on Saturday, April 7th. ...

Published: Wednesday 04 April 1945
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 144 | Page: Page 22 | Tags: Cartoons  Graphic 

Oiling a Destroyer in Dirty Weather

... By Wing-Commander E. G. Oakley Beuttler E. G. Oakley Beuttler The tanker and the destroyer steam head into the wind at about eight to ten knots. After certain mutual operations have been performed with the necessary skill and precision, the hose is then passed by the tanker and is coupled into the oiling connection of the destroyer. The hose is a 10-in. armoured flexible piping. The sketch, ...

Published: Wednesday 25 April 1945
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 100 | Page: Page 25 | Tags: Cartoons  Graphic 

Portraits in Print: Christmas Medley

... Portraits in Print Christmas Medley Shakespeare, Mrs. Dccton, the latt* Archbishop of Canterbury, Geoffrey Chaucer, King G eorge V, Joseph Addison, Samuel Pepys, W. M. Tliaek- eray, Washington Irving. William Caxton, P.C. A2112 (Westminster). Charles lliekens and many others WITH great respect, we beg to present to TATLER readers tributes in prose and verse from some of the wisest of mankind ...

Pictures in the Fire

... Sabretache THE erudite gentleman who said that the more things change the more they are the same thing, has often been rated a bit complex; but if he was thinking of the festival we celebrate to-morrow, he was right. It is inevitable that the environment of Christmas must change, but in itself it is eternal. Many things have slipped away from us, but at this time of the year there is no need ...

Published: Wednesday 24 December 1947
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1337 | Page: Page 22 | Tags: Cartoons  Photographs 

BRIGGS

... -- Hair-cut by Graham ...

Published: Wednesday 17 December 1947
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 4 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: Cartoons  Graphic 

Standing By

... B. WYKDHAM LEWIS THAT fuss between the film-boys and the Corporation of Nottingham over filming Newstead Abbey for a forthcoming super epic smash-hit about Byron seems to us a quaint waste of time. Any good platoon of studio carpenters can run up a better Newstead Abbey than the architects ever dreamed of. Nothing to speak of remains of the original Abbey anyway. Enormous Gothic arches are the ...

Published: Wednesday 17 December 1947
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1513 | Page: Page 20, 21 | Tags: Cartoons 

Other

... Show Quide Straight Plays Jane (Aldwych). Somerset Maugham's cynical and witty dialogue and Yvonne Arnaud's unique talent for comedy is most ably supported by Ronald Squire, Charles Victor and Irene Browne. Off the Record (Apollo). This naval comedy of errors is grand entertainment. Special praise for Hubert Gregg, Hugh Wakefield and Tom Gill for being side- splittingly funny. A Sleeping ...

Published: Wednesday 16 July 1947
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 558 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: Cartoons  Other