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East Midlands, England

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Hints for Ladies

... campaign.- lFarehouse- men ated Drayer8' Trade Joinrnal. A WHOLESOME WINTER SAlAD. Very few people are probably aware that-blauobed dandelion leaves make an excellei1t winter salad. Years ago, we annually grow a few rows of dandelions for the satse of their ...

STRAY FLOWERS. BY JAMES F. CLARKE

... HOLIVIES. -,The spring and playtime of the year That calls the unwonted villager abroad ~to pltick A oheap but wholesome salad froin the brook- Cow skea SHE leaves her bed while yet the dew Is sparkling on the flower, And ere Aurora's golden hue Hath ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... and'eold meat. That at Is. 6d. will be cold meats, with hot vegetables, salad, bread and cheese, and beer. The half-crown repast will consist of a choice of two soups, with meats, lobster salad, hot vegetables, bread, cheese, beer, and sweets; while that for ...

BURTON-ON-TRENT FLOWER SHOW

... gooseberries (flavour), black currants-, vega- table marrows, ea, bbage lettuce, Coo lettuce, red round potatoes, onions, salad; 2nd for peaches, nectarines, cherries, gooseberries sq (weigh~t),towstes, ?? round potatoes, cullinary herbs; 3rd for 9c r~black ...

[ill]

... borders, and suitable am pliances for screening and forwarding early crops. Such things as tender young radishes, onions, small salads, lettuces, spinach, ca bbage, and horn carrots never come in too early; the trouble often is that they are seen in the market ...

BURTON-UPON-TRENT FLOWER SHOW

... for cucumbers, &c.; the Rev. Henry ur Day, Lichfield-street, first rhubarb; Mr. B. S. Tomlinson, r of the Woodlands, first salad; Mr. Guy Nadia, of Stapen- d hill, second black grapes and extra prize for apples; and M, Mr. C. Bentley, of Nottingham, first ...

BURTON HORTICULTURAL SHOW

... for geraniums, red celt.ry. ait parsnips; 2nd or six early horii carrits, bix carots of other variety, turnips, beetroot, salad. (This exhibitor also took is, six 3rd prizes). Mr. T. Wilson, gardener to Mr. J. Nadin ma Burton, was first for Deas. Mr. ...

Horticulture

... hottied ; give them plenty of ;light, with free ventilation as weather allows, and modes rate supplies of water. , CORN SALAD.-Corn salad thrives well in any soil not particularly heavy, the best being sandy or a fertile loamn. 1 Sow in drills six to eight ...

BURTON FLOWER SHOW

... fruits, lime, black grapes, Muscat grapes, pluains, red currants, Frenich benns, cucumbers, parsnips, capsicim, cos lettuce, salad, mussimoonis, and collection of vegetables. Mr. A. Sinupsot, gar- deuer to John Hardy, Esq., L.P.-Bouquet (arranged byVI rs ...

VARIETIES

... expectetl around once every 322,683 years.-Hawrkeye. Bratus was an honourable man. He never mixed hair oil with Marc Antony's salad, nor did he borrow Causar's wife for picnic company. B I am wvaiting, my darling, for thee, he warbled; and yet when the ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... Mammon had gone into his cave to pay his se devoirs to his golden god, and became a sacrifice to his devo- hs tion. -From Salad for the Social. as _ _ _ ?? _ _ _ _ ?? mn ...

AN OLD-FASHIONED EASTER

... as e a man on horseback, and consisted of the m It not very promising ingredients of a red-herring Y set up in a corn-salad. The old-fashioned D gammon of bacon was also a sine qulel nHey, as vas le that less generally appreciated complement of the ...