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Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News

From Cocktails to Port

... if(rc4&cus& A VERY convivial sportsman who had gone to Cowes to see the yachting was pressed into service by an owner who was one short in crew. It was a choppy day, and rounding a certain mark, the amateur yachtsman was very neatly decanted overboard. He was recovered almost immediately, but not before he had acquired a gallon of neat brine. As he lav panting upon the deck he was heard to ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... . ASH WEDNESDAY as an institution is about the most unwel come event in the actor's year. His theatre is on this evening closed, his most succulent morsels of talent are laid aside, the voice of praiseful patronage is mute, and he is fully conscious of the fact that one night's salary is, upon this festive occasion, absent. Therefore, being a creature that requires to be enter taining or ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... nUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC. [communicated ARRAH, Mr. Boucicault, darlin,' what the divil do you mane by trying to humbug the English in your old ago with your gingerbread sintiments about the Ould Counthry? Sure they see through ye as clean as if you was Parnell or a pane of glass. At your time av life you ought to know bether. Sure, you've made pliaty av money wid the dramas you've already written ...

A LATIN WIMBLEDON

... . BY H. R. CARSON. IT was, thank goodness, the executive com mittee's last meeting. At 10 a.m. to-morrow our Grand International Tennis Tournament, as advertised by the local authorities, was due to start. Publicity had not been spared. Across our narrow streets blatant banners had for weeks tugged savagely and not entirely in vain at their precarious moorings on the housetops. Twice had the ...

THE LADIES' CUP

... . By A. S. Barrow. CARDOZO was a kuch-nahin-- which is tantamount to saying that he did not count-- because he did not belong to the Calcutta Saturday Night Club, and was not on the Government House small-dance list. But he was extraordinarily rich, and a rather handsome, fine figure of a man of the Othello type-- and colour. He said he originally came from Old Castille, and was a direct ...

THE APE WHO HUNTED THE FOX: And the Fox that Went lip the Chimney-- A Sad Tale of a Bagman

... THE APE WHO HUNTED THE FOX And the Fox that Went lip the Chimney A Sad Tale of a Bagman By SIR ALFRED PEASE, Bart. SINCE I wrote a history of The Cleveland Hounds as a Trencher-Fed Pack, in 1887, I have collected a good deal more about the early history of hunting in the North Riding of Yorkshire. This is, of course, more of local than general interest; yet amongst the material one can find ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... . It would have been surprising indeed had Mr. Alexander Henderson's new campaign at the Folly opened unsuccessfully. There has been an amount of determined liberality, not to say luxurious extravagance, displayed in the entire casting and mount ing of the comedy-bouftés, as they are called, that is almost overpowering. Following a judicious plan, Mr. Henderson has been careful to engage the ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC: MLLE. SARAH BERNHARDT

... OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC. JILLE. SARAH BERNHARDT. By One who has Neveb Seen Hee. Compiled from Contemporary Criticisms, c. LIKE Mr. Hollingshead, of the Gaiety Theatre, himself, I chose other fields of dramatic exercise than the Comédie Francaise in the Strand, as a matter of study, on Whit-Mon- day, when simultaneously were produced that great moral show, Drink, at the Princess's, and the varied ...

IN common with many well-regulated persons, I have a natural antipathy to attend funerals

... In common with many well-regulated persons, I have a natural antinathv to attend funerals. Some men of whom T'have cogni sance take to it with all the enthusiasm of amateur mutes. The regularity of their attendance at the obsequies of public men arises, I imagine, less from a desire to pay respect to the dead than from a wish to see their names in the newspapers. I should not think of making ...

A RACE-MEETING IN PALESTINE

... . By Antony Bluett. AS was to be expected in an Army largely composed of cavalry, the E.E.F. in its leisure moments looked to a little horse-racing for amusement. One thing, at all events, could be said for the country: there was plenty of room. Wherever you chanced to be, on the Shephaleh or Maritime Plain, you could lay out your race track without fear of pushing a town into the sea or ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... . ALBEIT, I am called upon to write about Actors Out of Doors, I must remark that the subject is a much wider one than can adequately be dealt with in the limited space at my disposal. I can only offer a few general remarks thereanent, merely pre facing that the exercise is somewhat perfunctory. Xn the present day when the actor takes his walks abroad he is forted by the knowledge that his ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... . THE approach of Easter is a time when, many managers find it not altogether easy to fill the benches of their respective houses with audiences. The result is that a theatrical whip is performed by sagacious acting managers, and the dead heads of the metropolis are called upon to come and dress the house. There is a large portion of the population which is constantly going from theatre ...