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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 25, 1865., [Electronic resource].
Found 645 total hits in 286 results.
Cooper (search for this): article 1
Shelley (search for this): article 1
Cornish (search for this): article 1
Appomattox, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Mining and the miner.
In these cold and nipping days, when the good people of Richmond and Petersburg put their toes on the fender and poke their coal fires into blaze, they rarely think where that coal comes from, or of the labor, the courage, the patience and the skill required to bring its cheerfulness and glow to their hearth-stones.
The coal measure of Chesterfield are worked at two print rest points.
One near Coalfield station, on the Danville road, and the other at Clover Hill.
At the latter place the works are quite extensive.
The strata of coal outcrop there and dip to the westward, descending at about the angle of twenty-three degrees.
These seams or layers of coal — alternating with layers of stone like the cake and jelly of jelly-cake — differ much in thickness.
The richest is about twenty-seven feet through.
Some are so thin that the working of them would not be productive.--The mines are of two kinds.
One kind begin at the outcrop, where the coal comes
Danville (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Mining and the miner.
In these cold and nipping days, when the good people of Richmond and Petersburg put their toes on the fender and poke their coal fires into blaze, they rarely think where that coal comes from, or of the labor, the courage, the patience and the skill required to bring its cheerfulness and glow to their hearth-stones.
The coal measure of Chesterfield are worked at two print rest points.
One near Coalfield station, on the Danville road, and the other at Clover Hill.
At the latter place the works are quite extensive.
The strata of coal outcrop there and dip to the westward, descending at about the angle of twenty-three degrees.
These seams or layers of coal — alternating with layers of stone like the cake and jelly of jelly-cake — differ much in thickness.
The richest is about twenty-seven feet through.
Some are so thin that the working of them would not be productive.--The mines are of two kinds.
One kind begin at the outcrop, where the coal comes t
New Castle, Ky. (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 1
Chesterfield (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
January (search for this): article 2
Fashion.
For the benefit of our lady friends, we give a little gossip about the fashions for January in New York and Philadelphia:
A favorite dinner dress is of violet Irish poplin, trimmed with blase bands of white poplin, arranged to simulate an overskirt.
The coiffure is of point applique lace and violet velvet.
The hair is rolled from the face and caught up in a waterfall at the back.
This is an admired home dress: Ruby reps, trimmed with velvet buttons and ruby silk t be very ugly, utterly destroying the outline of the foot.
The fashions of New York and Philadelphia are not pretty.
There is an air of over-trimming, vulgar glitter, and an all-pervading flavor of shoddy and petroleum.
We have given the fashions, but we entreat the ladies of Richmond not to wear them.
The material points of this article are from the Ladies' Book for January, a copy of which the enterprising news dealers, Messrs. Cole & Turner, laid upon our table several days since.
Turner (search for this): article 2
Cole (search for this): article 2