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FASHIONS FOR DECEMBER

... alternately upon the sides are branches of stamped velvet leaves of several shades of green, mixed with small bunches of blackberries. These same berries, mixed with ?? buds and china pinks, of pink velvet with crape leaves, form the inside trimming. A ...

Published: Friday 02 December 1853
Newspaper: Morning Post
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3622 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

FASHIONS FOR DECEMBER,

... alternately upon the sides are branches of stamped velvet leaves of several shades of green, mixed with small bunches of blackberries. These same berries mixed with moss-rose buds and china pinks, of pink velvet with crape leaves, form the inside trimming ...

Published: Friday 02 December 1853
Newspaper: Morning Herald (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2809 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

PENNY MONTHLY STORY FOR LITTLE CHILDREN. By the Editor of the Family EcoHomist.” BUDS and BLOSSOMS. New Series ..

... 11. Alice and her Bird. 3. Little F>ank. | 12. Little Charley. 4. The I.ittle Fortune Seekers. 13 A Doll’s Story. 5. 'The Blackberry (lathering. 14. The Faithful Dog. 6. The Fir Tree’s Story. | 16. Spring and Summer. The Child’s Search for Fairies. I The ...

Published: Saturday 03 December 1853
Newspaper: Illustrated London News
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 148 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

FORFIGN

... alternately upon the sides are branches of stamped velvet leaves of several shades of green, mixed with small bunches of blackberries. These same berries, mixed with moss-rose buds and china pinks, of pink velvet with crape leaves, form the inside trimming ...

Published: Saturday 03 December 1853
Newspaper: Saint James's Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2945 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

CHRISTIANS AND MONKEYS

... Sleeping by turns in the thickest brush- wood, and on the highest tree, living by the rifle, and bring- | .ag dowa nuts, blackberries, and other birds of the forest, to 1 sustain the inward monkey. The truth of these statements _v never been questioned ...

Published: Thursday 08 December 1853
Newspaper: Morning Post
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1220 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

4 BELL’S LIFE IN L SUPPLEMENT BELL’S LIFE. NDAY next, the 18th inst, we shall publish a SU! On SU

... numerical strength of the field, alone sec — “a hundred,” or mere, added, now that such stakes are almost as | tiful as blackberries, the so-cal led “ great” event at nearly every ration. late bas turned out exactly the reverse. It suggests itself, then ...

THE MORNING lIERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1853. COGGESHALL AND UNITED PARISIIES swtaosekenaacbcol eudn tic) for ..

... which he would refer. it - seemed to him an important question, as they weie gutting steam-enginea around thew as thick as blackberries,who was to repair them if then go out of order? (hear). A new era had arrived, aadeouary blacksmiths uiustbecume adifferen ...

Published: Monday 12 December 1853
Newspaper: Morning Herald (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 9268 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

MR. MECHUS BALANCE-SHEET

... which he would refer. It seemed to him an important question. as they were getting steamengines around them as thick as blackberries, who was to repair them if they got nut of order ? Hear.; A new era had arrived, and country blaektoniths must become a ...

Published: Saturday 17 December 1853
Newspaper: Press (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3432 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

II A REMNANT OF BUPEICSLITIoN

... vegetable-garden MI and mended broken fences; glad enough to escape from any thing seemed like work, for a game at ball, or a blackberry expedition. Nor was he free from all restraint, as if he had bean a man—the undieputed possessor of almost two thousand ...

Published: Sunday 18 December 1853
Newspaper: Weekly Dispatch (London)
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 3522 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

LONDON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23. THE HOME SECRETARY-SIIIP

... when great men are scarce. Opportunities snake these, and the time is coming when opportunities will be as plentiful as blackberries, and great men as plentiful as both. Still, for the moment, the public cast about in vain, as far as regards confidently ...

FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE

... for the first time to their astonished gaze, 1he very simple art of eating whortleberries and milk. They apply their blackberries 'i or s moss berries, as they call thet, to a very different purpose, which was, at least, new to me. They dir- til from ...

Published: Tuesday 27 December 1853
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2327 | Page: 7 | Tags: News 

NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE

... will be able to get good cows here at from eight to twelve pounds each. What they most need, money excepted, are haves and blackberry seeds f q hedges, and good meadow greases.. Wr want no griping speculators, but only industrious labouriug farmers, with ...