The butcher, chandler and haberdasher were all nearby, as they'd all been able to afford farms near to the railway. |
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A tailor and a haberdasher enter with new clothes and a new hat for the couple's return to her house in Padua. |
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Of all his roles, however, he's probably best known to the world at large as a haberdasher to celebrities. |
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The stylish haberdasher who caters to style needs of the fashion-challenged, is a rarity in these days of mass production. |
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Originally, the company was mainly in charge of the finishing of haberdasher shop items for men's fashion of the time. |
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He looked, that dreadful afternoon, as if he had just come from his barber, tailor and haberdasher. |
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But this inarticulate haberdasher from the heartland became the architect of the Marshall Plan, NATO and the Truman doctrine. |
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Names of skilled artisans, however, are French: carpenter, draper, haberdasher, joiner, mason, painter, plumber, and tailor. |
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Karan was born Donna Faske in 1948 in New York and raised on Long Island. Her mother was a model and her father a haberdasher. |
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Despite his wealthier background, the president Mr Bush increasingly resembles is the haberdasher, Harry Truman another ordinary-seeming man with a peculiar knack for knowing what the American public wanted. |
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In the immediate wake of Harry Truman's unlikely ascent to the presidency upon FDR's death in 1945, the former haberdasher was forced to grapple with enormous challenges. |
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Haberdasher Mary Tinson shut up shop for the last time on Tuesday after 38 years selling fabric and buttons to the people of Chippenham. |
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