Refine Search

Newspaper

Liverpool Mercury

Countries

Regions

North West, England

Counties

Lancashire, England

Access Type

23

Type

20
2
More details

Liverpool Mercury

Advertisements & Notices

... fallacies itself, sanems expert 0 ineciojsaiug the fdllacies of the monopolists, which abound on fr every hand, 1plearyas blackberries. that it ran offord to give for t up alsy thing of Otto ind that happens to are P into ist pages. atret Mitt~e orasW ...

District Intelligence

... rc Half ~ORMSKIRK. Cu ire NAR~tow ESCAPB paoai DfaowrNsN'. - On Saturday no )rrs last, as some children were gathering blackberries in a blar) or field inisar the town, one of thema girt named Fives, f~l- In into a pit, but acire men who were at work ...

Published: Friday 14 August 1846
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3903 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

Letters

... a few berries that aB In are called apples, cherries, &c. ; but they are not so quil rd large nor so good as our common blackberries. Plumbs hI mn are larger, but the fruit is very thin, and the stone large. nsa; FY' Melons, Peaches, and other firuits ...

Published: Friday 13 November 1846
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2672 | Page: 1 | Tags: News 

HOUSEWIFE'S CORNER

... considerably less than siitsevenths of a halfpenny per hour. Blackberry Syrup.—The following is the recipe for making the famous blackberry syrup, a remedy for bowel complaints:—To two quarts of blackberry juice, add half an ounce each of powdered nutmeg, cinnamon ...

Published: Tuesday 20 July 1847
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 894 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE LIFE, WRITINGS, AND GENIUS OF ELIZA COOK

... branch, pomegranate, date, and vine; covet not the rarest fruit exotic region shows, While England has its hazel nuts, its blackberries, and sloes. Again, in the piece entitled The Englishman, which is filled with exalted sentiments, are the following ...

Published: Tuesday 03 August 1847
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3357 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

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. ...

MR. STRAGGLES HAS A DAY'S FISHING

... next moment was wildly fighting his way through the wet trees and underwood, aod trying his strength against that of long blackberry brambles, which, if tliev did not lie on the ground and coil about his ankles, hung in festoons at the level of his face ...

Published: Tuesday 14 September 1847
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2459 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

MANX ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE

... prosecuting, could not exist in the atmosphere of Douglas. If it did, criminal indictments for libel would be plentiful as blackberries. No man, however fairly quizzable, could be safely quizzed, as long as the Manx libel law remains what it is, and Mr. Deemster ...

THE COMIC ALPENSTOCK

... Switzerland. Tortoni's beats Chamouni hollow for ices, even tor strawberryice, though strawberries in the Alps are plenty as blackberries elsewhere. As to peach-ice, apricot-ice, and pine-apple-ice, when reach the summit the Wengern Alp, or the Faulhorn, you ...

Letters

... been committed in d and around the borough. In fact, violent and outrageous ,, highway robberies are now as plentiful as blackberries in - September. srAnd what provision have the authorities, having con- e, trol and command of the police force, made to ...

Published: Tuesday 18 January 1848
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 6924 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

Advertisements & Notices

... the trustee for the babes in the wood.' Just so I F But I preferred an appeal to the Loids of the Treasury F to eating blackberries, and so I take my leave, for the t present, of Sir James Weir Hogg and Mr. Baillie. Sir o Charles Napier has received ...