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South East, England

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Berkshire, England

Place

Faringdon, Berkshire, England

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12

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HAINAULT FOREST

... and jack may caught in the river Boding; them are butterflies and moths to be chased; there flowers in the spring and blackberries the autumn. Beside* the creatures,and the trees, and flowers, them scenery; here and there, hill-sides clothed with wood; ...

A SUMMER CAES,

... the tea-tables of most well-to-do American farmers—vis., fruit shortcake. Huckleberries are much liked; in this country blackberries or mulberries could be used in tbsir stead, and nothingcould be more delicious than raspberry or strawberry shortcake. ...

NICE DISHES

... stove and beat while is cooling. When half cold add sliced bananas, or whole strawberries, whortleberries, raspberries, blackberries, sliced apricots, or jieaches. Serve ice cold. The amount fruit will determined by the taste of the maker. TfIUCALYPTOL ...

A GEOLOGICAL FAULK

... here animal; mmy J, 5, 6. 9,4 you hava a dwelling; 8, 7,8 yon and my 3, you peas away, i*.—HIPDKS Toweb.— Pray reach me blackberries. My cousin Carl Is legally entitled to It Ton must pay the remamder morrow. shall .end Mary or Kate into the country. He ...

THE ROMAN VILLA AT WOOLSTONE

... wo have abundant tokens the good cheer indulged in by the living. Snails, oysters, and beef bones were as plentiful as blackberries with the Romans; and one especial pet dish of the Saxons must have been a Bath chap, as the jaws of several porkers remain ...

7 years, good and clever hunter, np to 13 atone, carries a lady, quiet in single and doable harness, and

... stone. 4— PURTON,’ Grey Gelding, 16 hands, 8 yean, well-known good hack and hunter, quiet in harness, up to 14 stone. 6—' BLACKBERRY,’ Black Mare, 15-3, yean, by The General,’ good, clever hunter and hack, quiet in single and double harness, up to 13 atone ...

Investments in American Bonds

... him open it. Two men named Dwyer were arrested for the mnrder, but he asserted that the name of Dwyer waa.aa plentiful as blackberries in autumn. Impudence to the Coubt. Now the witness made a terrible slip. Sir H. James pressed him as to the Dwyers, and ...

LADIES’ COLUMN

... and white, ready for cutting. Moonstones Old croeidolites, opals and garnets, onyx and aun- Iteues, all as plentiful as blackberries, and stored informally if they were but jackstones. result ot the successive exhibitions South Kensington has been rather ...

THE WEEK

... into the law courts there must 3,000 which do not. Of course, nobody supposes that monsters like Williams are plentiful as blackberries ; but drunken fathers and mothers are unfortunately too common, and young children have no protection against their brutality ...

FORBIDDING THE BANNS

... nu Marriage—Mb, Irving’s Programme. Royalties have been gathering in Florence si thickly, to use irreverent simile, as blackberries on a hedge. Crowned heads have ■imply swarmed, in what newspaper writers delieht to call the “City the Flowers.” Queen ...

BAPTIST CHURCH

... who in Cornwall found the people ready to hear, but ill ready to support him, and be said, brother, let thank God for the blackberries. Look aloft, and yon will find George Whitefield,who in 34 years preached 18000 sermons; you will find John Newton, who ...