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JUVENILE DELINQUENTS

... so as to produce the anomaly. Yet it is impossible to judge each series except according to its own rule. A man picks a blackberry in the hedge ; from that he proceeds to pluck a nut; he next tears up a turnip; then digs a stalk of potatoes; finally he ...

Published: Saturday 23 February 1850
Newspaper: Atlas
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 827 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

NEW BOOKS JUST RECEIVED I Owen Jones. Imperial Bvo. Rs. 25, elegantly OVERLAND. I bound. °ranee. . Strawberries ..

... close it doubting whether we most admire the I use' - ous orange or the downy peach, the glistening cherry or the lowly blackberry, the pomegranate bursting with its own luxuriance or the teeming grape. In striking contrnst with these, we have more humble ...

Published: Thursday 28 February 1850
Newspaper: Bombay Gazette
County: Maharashtra, India
Type: Article | Words: 1857 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

WINTER

... may seem instrument convenient nonet) when inserted into a saucer or syrup, applied to the broken •urf ice of an over-ripe blackberry, but often see our sipper of swe -I# quite bnsy on solid lump of sugar, which shall find on cluS3 inspection growing small ...