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Ir:E LONDON THEATRES

... . THE A DELPHI. On Wednesday, Aug. 2tth, for the First Tiue, a New Drama, in Four Acts, by Messrs Haddon Chambers and Ucissyns Carr, entitled BOYS TOGETHER, Frank Villars ?? Mr WItLtI1e TaaRIss Huco Forsyth ?? Mr W. L. AeIiNoDON The Earl of Harpenden ?? Mr C. W. SoMsERsEr Torn Wrake ?? J. D. BsVERIDGE Viscount Ayot ?? Mr HARrP NICssOLLS Rudolphleln ?? Mr MACrIuSTOSII Hassan ?? ?? lr Luies ...

Published: Saturday 29 August 1896
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 7502 | Page: Page 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Jokes of the Day

... Iofter of the mga HOKEE MADnE. Huxntra AT HoseowuG.-Little Amerieau Girl; Mumma, wby do you drink so many glisses of this nastywaterP-Mumma: Hush Virginia,-hece-comes the Pr-ace of W-l-sl- Punch. MUhs 11w VEaBB: Where- are you going for your holidays, Mr. Smythe ?-Smythe (a Cockney Sport);: Oh I I'm-going a riding tour on my new mount, don't you ?? De Vere: Don't forget the air-pump and the ...

DRAMA, MUSIC, ART, ETC

... DR.A[&, MUSIC, ART, ETC. BOYS TOGETHER AT THE A'DELPHI. The honle.in-uhief of melodranmis. s gonerally pretty sure of a success, and this is thle word to apply to the new piece by Haddon Chambers eand Comyns (arr. Boys Together is out end out sensational. There is no make-believe whatover, no posing with the object of suggesting that here Nye have gone one hioe r ln the type of s ...

THE COLONIAL IMPORTS EXHIBITION

... THE COLONIAL IMPORTS I IEXHIBITION. (FROM A SPECIAL COBR1SrONODENT.) cot fro In November last Mr Chamberlain issued a eat despatch to the Governors of all the British an( Colonies asking for information regarding the Ba goods imported into each colony from any of foreign country or countries. The despatch in was dictated by a desire to adopt every means pai for promoting the trade between the ...

ART NOTES

... ART N OT'E S. FoR a short season the interest in art matters is transferred from London to the provinces. On Monday next the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, opens its annual autumn exhibition. Mr. W..L Wyllie and Mr. J. J. Shannon have on this occasion been the experts who are yearly called in to assist the local committee. Members and associates of the Royal Academy have contributed some ...

THE AUTUMN EXHIBITION

... X A A TUTIN EXHIBITION. i rRPFATE VIEW DAY. b ?? large number of leading citisens v vatr ad an opportunity of privately' .wsgthe pictur-es in the Autumn Exhibition. rfen,,tuite of rooms were 'crowde ...

REVIEWS

... MODERN SCIENCE AND THE FUTURE LIFE.* MATERIALISTIC and agnostic theories have not yet uprooted and effaced the instinctive beliefs of men in a future life. On the contrary, they seem to have awakened fresh interest, and to have led to profounder exa-mination of the facts and sources whence these universal beliefs spring. Hence, To be or not, to be -is still, of all others, the question of ...

THE THEATRES ON TYNESIDE, 1850 TO 1896

... In casting our thoughts back into the past our memories bring to recollection tbicgs interesting in some shape, form, or admiration, and glancing back to the early '60's it is interesting to compare that period to the present in respect to the theatres that existed then and what is now. In 1850 Newcastle had but one, the Theatre Royal, in Grey-street, managed by the late Mr E. D. Davies, who ...

Published: Saturday 29 August 1896
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1445 | Page: Page 20 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE STORY OF CRETE

... TIME STOSlY OF CRETE. ,hre are not man; isdaurca wsih a, rnoer stsormy or ro-re heroir history than toot of Cr- to. Inr re-mte anti- Quaty (.ays a writer in cho N iw Ymrk Trbine' ) in) wese the redoubltable Ioll? L One Hundred Cii- and bau an i hustrirous line of 7ie.ge, emsug whom wvero 3hadamaji- thas- (sins, and ldooauie-s. Tre lawt-teamed led a lien of 8J suips CC) :asis in CLiE conzues ...

A HERITAGE OF PERIL

... &LLT R1IGHTS RESTEVED. A HERTTAGE OF PERIL. Bly A. XV. MTARC IMONT, B. A., iithbbt of By WaOS2 HAoND' MISEIa HOXLFAS JCt T, ?? (ito ;\iar L MYSTERY, ' ?? S. TirsurCo'S Tim.ct, O T'D M rt PccSO- MAIMOZi=uE Sycaxuri, Sint JA5F~I.AY S \V It'E, &C. CdUPTER XX. DAPUXE AGAIN. kMr4 Dlavenant was much disturbed and pro;trundlrc per- jlersed by the interrieiv with Deie, anl on bo; wray to 3mu ...

A PARISIAN DUEL

... Snake !1 CHArrEt T. Viuer . WVorm ! Toad !I These epithets were hissed forth in front of the Hotel Coutiuental, -by the Marquis de Chainbeau and Count Roux, ;who had just come from suc- cessive interviews with -Miss Virginia' Tncson. the Arizona heiress. Both had been rivals for the position of her steady company since her arrival in Paris, and it had been predicted more than once that ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... (nROx OUR OW\V COfRESPONDENTS.) ABERDARE. Nmw THsATRA.-Proprietors, Public flall Company, Limited; Manager, Mr Will Smithson.-Mlrs Bandmann- Palmer and her well-chosen company opened here on Monday in 3lfary, Qusean of esots. The title-part was undertaken by IMrs Bandmaun-Palmer with her usual ability. A word of praise must also be given to Mrs M'Laren, whose powerful acting as Elizabeth, ...

Published: Saturday 29 August 1896
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 13071 | Page: Page 24, 25, 26 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture