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HOUSEWIFE'S CORNER

... what not generally known, that pumpkins, minced small and mixed with blackberries, make an excellent preserve, the pumpkins being good substitute for apples. this may add that blackberries of themselves aUo make an excellent preserve. ...

IRELAND

... Shortly after met a young wan at Blackberry-lene he was walking smart and was smoking a new pipe. lIe was going towards Aliltown. his dresswes dark, and from the lightness of his step he probably wore shoes. Blackberry-lane leBd& from liathinines church ...

LONDON POLICE

... inquiry learned they were a native t fruit of the State, found near Lake Erie. The fruit of resembles the' common native blackberry, but is in larger and finer. I introduced a few roots into my C garen,, and find' them constant bearers from June lo until ...

WORCESTER ASSIZES, MONDAY

... Gentlemen, I do not say that that nobleman was the Earl of Plymouth-for a trespass. The trespass consisted in the taking a few blackberries from one of the nobleman's hedges. The Jury were compelled to give a farthing damages, because the Judge said it was a ...

WHOLESALE POISON BY EATING THE DEADLY NIGHTSHADE BERRIES

... Saturday after- noon, when an old man, ?? the appearance of a country- man, Cams in, and showed the deceased and his wife some blackberries which he had in a basket, and described them as good for making wine. Mrs. Parker bought a part of them, for which she ...

OXFORD, Saturday, Feb. 3

... are making. Meetings to carry put the principle on which they are established are like alastaff's reasons as plenty as blackberries, and their success is no longer a matter of doubt. '1'hank GOD, the farmers are at length roused to a knowledge of what ...

LOCAL JUSTICE

... own, and that freely, and when they do get it, the dose does them a power of good. As for subjects, they lie thick as blackberries upon the local papers, albeit not quite so distinctly to be seen at first sight. Let us look to the latest doings of ...

Published: Sunday 11 November 1849
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1417 | Page: 10 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT—FRIDAY

... month the prosecutor, along with a companion, was pro- ceeding to a wood in the neighbourhood of Highgate, to look for blackberries. On his way he iet the two prisoners, who were in company with two others. Ile was accosted by them, end asked what money ...

THE ROBBERY OF PLATE AT COVE

... in the woods and copses which deck that most picturesque of all the southern counties of England. A plentiful supply of blackberries, 'with which the hedgerows abounded, de- lighted the palates, of the strollers; and present appetite having been allayed ...

NISI PRIUS COURT, THURSDAY, MARCH 11

... addreesed the Jury for the defendent. He was C not there to deny the promise. They had had promises proved plentiful as blackberries, for It teemed that whenever any of the il woman's relations came across the defendant he renewed his pro. I mises of marriage ...

POLICE

... He contended that if such petty cases were to be the subject of summary convictions, any individual for gathering a few blackberries or other wild fruit by the road-side, or the weary traveller who quenched his thirst at a pool of water belong- ing to ...

OXFORD CIRCUIT

... Mr Black, onl the 21st of April, wrote the following reply :- Reasons, my dear Sir, as Falstaff says, c are plenty as blackberries-but I will give no man a reason on compulsion.' I refer you to Canon 101-' No license shiall be granted but to such per- ...