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MARIEGOLD IN SOCIETY

... of the most famous racing stables in France, wore one of the new pastel shades that suggested the colour one gets with blackberries mixed with plenty of cream. Lady Michelham, whose new name I cannot remember, is here with her husband and her son, Lord ...

Published: Wednesday 18 August 1926
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2212 | Page: 11 | Tags: Illustrations 

LAVEROCK'S A True Story

... trees were all gaunt and dead, the smaller ones gone altogether. The desolation was relieved somewhat by a white carpet of blackberry blossom and the magenta red of the tall fire weed. The silence was intense, save for an occasional boom, boom, boom, boom ...

Published: Wednesday 08 October 1924
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1994 | Page: 35 | Tags: Illustrations 

Standing By...: One Thing and Another

... Hugh Walpole, and it would ire an agreeable innovation to mount him on a horse closely resembling Wordsworth's own horse Blackberry, who was so often mistaken for the poet himself, and is said to have written many of the Sonnets. We 'd also like a little ...

Published: Wednesday 05 October 1938
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1802 | Page: 15 | Tags: Illustrations 

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... once a Christmas supply of the good things for which farmhouses were famous in the good old days.-- Richard B. Thirlby, Blackberry Lane Farm, Ibstock. Famous for home-cured Hams since 1812. DEST EJECTOR GUNS wanted for substituting new aligned 0-&-U or ...

A BUTCHA'S FIRST TIGER

... art, and cursed by all who come in contact with you, especially forest officers. The nearest home equivalent to it is the blackberry bramble, if that may be imagined with its thorns reduced to small rasping prickles multiplied ten times, robbed of its delicious ...

Published: Wednesday 07 October 1925
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1977 | Page: 35 | Tags: Illustrations 

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... dam Nell of Ibstock. A great little pal. and just killed his first big rat in fine style. 5 gns. Richard B. Thirlbt. Blackberry Lane Farm, Ibstock. TWO Smooth Dogs, 1 Bitch cham- pion bred, and winners Dogs cost £40 and £16 accept best offers. Pressley ...

MOTLEY NOTES: Nosebag or Saucepan?

... Woolton's thesis is that nearly all of them have to be wafted across the high seas, whereas porridge (so to say) grows on every blackberry-bush. Then why not (in a manner of speaking) gather it while ye may _ Though mvself an addict rot uc nosebag variety of ...

Published: Wednesday 22 January 1941
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2318 | Page: 5 | Tags: Illustrations 

HISTORY UP TO DATE

... the park to look at the pheasant chicks. Now you wave your hand and smile to them, my dear Millions like his don't grow on blackberry-bushes, though I 've known the day when no country family would look at an American Mary was definitely shocked. If life ...

Published: Wednesday 01 April 1931
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2237 | Page: 54 | Tags: Illustrations 

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... dam Nell of Ibstock. A great little pal. and just killed his first big rat in fine style. 5 gns.-- Richard B. Thirlby, Blackberry Lane Farm, Ibstock. THE Celebrated Cappotal strain; I 2 champion-bred pedigreed wire Fox- Terriers, 8 months, sound, healthy ...

CARS FOR SALE, ETC

... once a Christmas supply of the good things for which farmhouses were famous in the good old days.-- Richard B. THIRLBY, Blackberry Lane Farm, Ibstock. Famous for home-cured Hams since 1812. T EARN TO SKID. --Prepare for wet 1 weather. Gentleman gives ...

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... dam Nell of Ibstock. A great little pal. and just killed his first big rat in fine style. 5 gns. Richard B. Thirlby, Blackberry Lane Farm* Ibstock. YV70RKING Fox Terrier for Sale, the W late Lord Chumenly breed by Slipper, good Dog for fox or badger ...

BLIND JUSTICE: THE STORY OF A RUSTIC TRAGEDY

... about then by7 things and people he can't see. So it was only when the village boy7s came to pick primroses, or nuts, or blackberries in the w7ood that Es, sitting in the porch, could hold converse with his kind, and hear %Qi/s/ande7 H ofliort f; news of ...

Published: Wednesday 20 August 1913
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2154 | Page: 30 | Tags: Illustrations