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ALTCAR SECOND COURSING MEETING

... arrangements to the day's sport, and by his urCianity to the satisfaction of all. The hares acre almost as plenteous as blackberries in autumn, and in many instances the coursing was very severe. We may also odd that the moving . accidents by flood and ...

VARIETIES

... casks to ferment, are said to produce an ex_ c-alletit wine. The colour of wine is often rendered darker by a mixture of blackberries with the grapes.—Louden's Gardener's Magazine. CHANGE OF TIMES.—About the middle of the Seventeenth century, persons hiring ...

FRIIjAY:

... c-i3odfrey W Noble 3 Sir John Gerard's bk c Erebus. .Artluir 4 2 to 1 on The Best of Three obtained customers plenty as blackberries, and the knowing ones were for once right. The Best of Three proved to be the best of four,by winning in a common canter ...

Published: Monday 22 July 1844
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1072 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

TO THE EDITOR OF TIIE ALBION

... puddle; if they want to fly their kite, the common is at their door. The woods are theirs, with their early violets and late blackberries, their squirrels and birds' nests. To their imagination, trees are made to be climbed, rivers to be bathed in. The free ...

Published: Monday 08 February 1841
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1339 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

LIVERPOOL: 31 - 0-YDAY, APRIL 13. 1846. Highway Board, like the silly old monarch of the fairy tale, is seeking

... and laughter has free scope. But if we look for instances of the absurdity of the Highway Board, they are plentiful as blackberries, and the last meeting furnishes an abundant crop; more, indeed, than can at once be conveniently gathered. In the first ...

Published: Monday 13 April 1846
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1473 | Page: 16 | Tags: none

STANZAS

... child's play; our pleasure trips are as extensive as the voyages of ancient explorers; African travellers are as plenty as blackberries; familiar accounts of the gorgeous East are worn threadbare • and even China is no longer a mystery, for we know a lady ...

Published: Monday 31 July 1848
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1234 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

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 ...

SOLUTIONS TO THE ANAGRAMS

... office, a branch of a blackberry bush, plucked the cI . day before Christuas day in ara dow, Town Green, ,Aughten. It has on it a considerable quantity of blos- . sm, the unripe red berries, and a number of fine rina - blackberries. It vies acronwl3anicd ...

Published: Friday 01 January 1819
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: | Words: 2588 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

THE MAIL AND THE DOCK COMMITTEE

... Mail, Weal with a magnanimity equalling that ?? Falstall; when Lormt auidc he declared that if reasons were as plenty'as blackberries ape 0O he would 'not give one on compulslion,-aununoices his ora' y' flat'determin'ation to give up no corresposidence ...

Published: Friday 14 June 1839
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: | Words: 1358 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

A TCSV.-1 fnm Egypt has to 3,785 bas'iUs of 10- . Las n-.«r.:«l havin lUeAtUatia t.m«»a f 1 Mn ~,

... about to he drained. There cannot more primitive soil for an estate occupied for centuries by a funny distinction. The wild blackberry grows in the middle of what is called the lawn ; and the whole place, betore some late improvements were made, was in all ...

Published: Saturday 24 October 1846
Newspaper: Liverpool Mail
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1346 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE REV. DR. LIDDELL

... and plough and harrow; mushrooms growing in the meadow, sportsmen, and many other appropriate objects, including even blackberries in the hedges. This was a good representation, but the figures, plough, &c., were rather too large in proportion. This ...