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AMUSEMENTS IN CROYDON

... Maggie May, who puts herself on good terms with the audience, and is both dramatically and musically commendable. A nut and blackberry dance by Kattie Lanner's trained children is sweetly pretty. Business is exceeding -11 expectations. PALACE.-General Manager ...

Published: Saturday 15 January 1898
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 449 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

The Home

... forcemeat or bread and onion dressing may be used. iBLAClEBERlRY WVINE. N~ow that the blackberry season is approaching many folks will be glad to knowl howv to make blackberry wine. Put them mn a cask set on end, open at the top, and with a tap near the bottom ...

NATURE FOR ITS OWN SAKE.*

... and the soul to feel them. A chlimp of hazel on the upland meadow, around which the daisies grow, and through %which the blackberry twines its white blo-ssoms, may he a wonder-world of bemuty if we study it in its formn and colour, its setting, light, ...

THE GENUS BOUNDER

... sctua'ly push thleniesives info promuinent 0] acd wall-atdvertised places in the public service' ,1A they are as thick as blackberries in all the Par1 T, liainents of the w>orld, not excluding our own u voisrra~ble iustitation.m I'ut whyt do thue flounders ...

Place aux Dames

... woollen goods, but they also supply wood-carving, baskets, and all kinds of embroidery. Engagements are as plentiful as blackberries this autumn. Lord Strafford, Equerry to the Queen, has chosen Mrs. Colgate, a sprightly American widow, for his bride, ...

The Theatres

... TWT'O NEW COMEDIES New ideas for the leading matinees of new plays are not, in Falstaff's phrase, quite ' as plenty as blackberries, but fortunately for dramatists they do not appear to be indispensable to dramatic Success. Aryway, play after play comes ...

Published: Saturday 19 February 1898
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 2115 | Page: 13 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

GOSSIP ABOUT DUBLIN.*

... the number of luxurious aristocratic mansions was sxceeding great. In Dublin, lord# and their ladies were plentiful as blackberries. Immediately after the Act of Uuion their numbers began to dwindle. In 1820 but few were left, In 1846, not one, it would ...

The Home

... of mustard, alittle viurser, and a tablespoonfrul of salad oil;. mix to paste well, then spread between brown bisouits. Blackberries end apples make the most delicious of jellies. Wash and remove the ends from three pounids of sour apples; cut them in ...

FASHIONS—SOCIETY

... purple asters rnixed with aspagagus fern. A combination of rose pink, -white, and .silver, with branches of hazel nute and blackberry, laves was another suggestion for 'an autu=. dler table, and dwellers in the country are':rtiqularly: frturiate, in- aszmuch ...

A WARD OF THE KING

... it tasted dry and parched, the girl thought-very inferior to the blackberries of Brittany. 0 *)eanne went on into the wood, leaving her %omen ib-sorbesd in the consnmption of blackberries; she turned to look after them, and found that she had strayed from ...

NOTABLE ACADEMY PICTURES

... transcriber of serene skies, gentle seas, fresh award, and' traillnil iookh. These features characterise 'A Turzlinthel~sas: Blackberries (58),full of lovely green; Idlers 470), boy and girl by the sea, and other pieces quite on ame lines. Mr. PeterGraham ...

PLAYERS OF THE PERIOD

... under the same management in the autumn to play Miss Jenny Daweon's part of the Tiger, in Oliver Grumble, and Rose, in Blackberries. During this tour Turned Up was produced at the Prince of Wals', Liverpool, and Miss Atherton heing ill Miss D nver played ...

Published: Saturday 03 September 1898
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2295 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture