Word: closed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Next week will close the long and pleasant engagement at the Tremont Theatre of Miss Rosina Vokes and her capable company. This engagement has been the most successful the has played in Boston. It has been signalized by the production of two new plays which have proven of exceptional merit. Her departure will be a matter of regret to all lovers of the genial, bright and wholesome in stage offerings. During next week Miss Vokes will present two separate triple bills made up from the most interesting of her one-act plays. On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday the bill will...
...handicap cross country run will be given by the Boston Athletic Association. This run will be over the same course as the Thinks giving run, and will be open to all amateurs. There will be six prizes given and the entrance fee will be 25 cents. Entries close with H. S. Corbish, Exeter St., at 8 p. m. Thursday, December 4th. The entries must be at the club house at that hour, and no entries mailed or received by mail after that lour will be accepted...
...Rise of the Modern Historical School in the years about 1815 Close relations of this School to the Romanticists...
Merry Monarch.The third week of the "Merry Monarch" at the Gloge, shows that Francis Wilson is still inimitable in his line, and no better witness of this fact could be than that his appearance on the stage calls forth bursts of laughter which close only with his exit. Marie Jonsen commands a generous share of applause and although she is not so bewitchingly pettle as in years one by, yet she still evinces a charming dexterity in dancing and can still be called "nimble footed." The "Merry Monarch" continues this week and next...
...over the Springfield victory, we have neglected to comment on some features of the occasion which must not, however, be overlooked. There were several particulars in which the accommodations for spectators were sadly deficient. The seats on the right of the field were so insecurely erected that towards the close of the game they swayed dangerously. If many persons had not prudently stepped down from the upper tiers, and if the excitement on that side had not considerably abated soon after Harvard's second touch-down, there must have come an accident as terrible as that at Eastern Park. That...