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SAGAS BY AUCTION

... oranges In syrup, preserved ginger, cherries and raspberries in jelly; green gage, apricot, barberry, raspberry, currant, and blackberry jams ; black and red currant, and apple jelly; green gages, peaches, apricots, plums, damsons in jelly; quinces and pears ...

Published: Friday 13 February 1829
Newspaper: Morning Herald (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 578 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

DELVOiU

... progress for sume time past, as not only the coffin of her Grace is removed from the church at Bottesford to the tomb on Blackberry-hill, but those of the three Dukes of Rat- land, the 'renowned Marquis of Granby, with the va- rious members of their families ...

Published: Monday 21 September 1829
Newspaper: London Evening Standard
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 700 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE MARINER'S SONG

... 'There *as no external mark of 'violence. She died from grad fatigue and exhaustion. tier stomach contained nothing but blackberries. Egan, the father, on being recalled, said his child left home in perfect health. The prisoner (a dull, heavy-looking young ...

Published: Saturday 01 April 1826
Newspaper: Star (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 621 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ON THE PLEASURES OF THE TABLE

... march On the dairy-Maid. and laughed at her from behind the hedge, when she found the cows, had been milked. And then the blackberries—the crab-apples—the skes—the sop in the pan ! Bur why raise in my readers these mouth wareriog reminiscences ? why conjure ...

SPORTING

... Figaro-Gadaboot SI;: , *- Mr. Foljambe’s br f by W bisker, dam by Walton Mr. Houldsworth’s b c Beagle, by Whalebone br f Blackberry, by Sherwood Mr. Leigh’s b f by Whisker—Brenda Lord Sligo’s br Brine, 1 ope - b Canker Mr. Pcirse’s ch c Tip, by Swiss Mr ...

FREEHOLD ESTATE for

... be asked, will all be resolved at the coming meeting, we presume, when, doubtless, we shall have reasons as plenty as black-berries,* and a most animating display of that ardour for public improvements which so highly distinguishes the age in which we ...

Published: Saturday 31 July 1824
Newspaper: Carlisle Patriot
County: Cumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 3339 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

POLICE

... POLICE. BOM'-STREET. A COXSTABLE, HIS OWN ItIOHT, —Y««» terday constable hi* own right, of Kensington Pariah, named Blackberry, appeared before Sir Richard Bimie, the Sitting Magistrate, to answer to a charge of assault preferred against him by Wm. Street ...

SPORTING

... Mr. Redhead's Lancer bent Marquis of Huotly's Virgil. Mr. De Burgh's Quicksilver agat Mr. Edwards's Zeluco-n© Mr. Rust's Blackberry beat Mr. Wright's Wildfire, [course. Adm. Wilson's Urchin beat Mr. De Burgh's Quality. Mr. Buck worth's Kimberley agst Mr ...

Published: Saturday 03 December 1825
Newspaper: Morning Post
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 556 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

SEPT. 20

... expired long ago. Saturday se'nnight some boys who were rambling through the fields without St. Giles's-gates, in search of blackberries, discovered a female !ying under a hedge, almost in a lifeless state. The circumstance was soon after communicated to the ...

ADULTERATION OF FOOD

... the juice of buckthorn berries frhamnus catharticusf, made from the fruit of the blackberry-bearing alder, and the dogberry tree. A mixture of tbe buckthorn and the blackberry-bearing alder, and of tbe dogberry tree, may be seen publicly exposed for sale ...

Published: Friday 04 February 1820
Newspaper: Stamford Mercury
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1581 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Provincial

... Wednesday the 1st inst. the first stone of the Mausoleum about be erected in memnry ofthe late lamented Duchess Rutland was laid Blackberry hill, by his Royal Highness the Duke of York.— The site of the intended edifice, although but short distance from the Castle ...

Published: Saturday 18 March 1826
Newspaper: Northampton Mercury
County: Northamptonshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 677 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Natural Appearances of October

... The hedges are no longer bright and blooming; the dog-rose and the honeysnckle uo longer bestow their fragrance, bat the blackberries hang in tipen- ing clusters about us, to afford a treat to tlie schoolboy and a meal to the linnet ; and the hips aod haws ...

Published: Friday 10 October 1828
Newspaper: Leicester Journal
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 752 | Page: 4 | Tags: none