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English Chronicle and Whitehall Evening Post

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English Chronicle and Whitehall Evening Post

lained often , e been :he neol often y faith 'ER, Slaves. s were he 14th IMr. Eddr. two r

... All the roads ement of Mr. be said to be aces does not the limestone repaired. trance of the f the quality , re bedecked blackberry, they grow Ithe foxglove, iety of others, .vated nature. itries are un'ranee, being Id the yellow shine in the id gets ...

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 ...

CHILD MUnDER

... MUnDER. It will be recollected that a few days since, a bag containing a dead child was found by some boys, whilst gathering blackberries, in a small coppice between Sharrow and Crooksmoor, near Sheffield. Suspicion having attached to a woman named Calverly ...

MARLBOROUGH-STREET

... Nobleman. And so you thought to get a Nobleman for two *billings? said Mr. Harmer.— Why, if Noblemen were as plentiful as blackberries you could hardly hope to buy them at two shillings a piece. Oh ! but I gave her a great deal more, Sir, replied the ...

ItKEI n—THIS moRNING,

... from 78 to 188 • and small Cucumbers, for pickli ng , from Sd to Is per hundred—hfulherries from Sd to Is per gallon; and Blackberries from Gd to Is per gallon.—Red cabbages, celery, French beans, leeks, French walnuts, and hazle-nuts, were cheaper than ...

DIVINE SERVICE AAD COURT NEWS

... Intellect is marching over the land in aeven-league boots, as it were, and scattering her improvements among us es plentiful as blackberries, no wonder some of them escape your Editorial notice; and therefore I hope you will allow me to call your attention to ...

UMMARY OIJSERVATIONS or A TOUR THROUGH NORMANDY; BY A TRAVELLER JUS7 BETURN.ED FROM THENCE. You were pleased to ..

... last, about five o'clock in the evening, as two children, the one eight, and .the other four years of age, were gathering blackberries in a field near Hastings, a monster enticed the elder infant to the other side of the . hedge, where he succeeded in mangling ...

CEt 1, (lINT(C IL i;43 EVENING POST

... putting him to stand by himself; and whilst she was in the act of doing this, one of them, jumping at her, like a cock at a blackberry, gave her a shocking thump on the under lip. . Mr. Chapman now thought it was high time to call the watch; he did call; ...

WELLS

... select dined together with his Worship the Mayor in the very venerable the Town Hall, where compliments were as plenty as blackberries ; and the un-select dined where they could, and got drunk at their own cost—which is but fair, now that the election was ...

A WALK TO LONDON (CovinsTuED.) From Caverswall to Cheadle was a beautiful walk through shady lanes and over ..

... mile from hence, on a road that winds round the breast of a hill, through thick woods and lanes, almost bowered over head. Blackberries were banging by bushels, and as large as plums. It was the dusk of as fine an evening as ever closed. The ten thousand ...

LONDON: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6

... would have the 4 0 believe inflicts a penalty of five pounds ot rt . any person who takes a single nut, apple, De r ,re.n blackberry. We know that there are Iw. ° r considerable eminence who doubt whether this 13 pl ic b! to such cases at all • and who ...

whole weight Of that uncertainty upon the Court. Ile was convinced, from the child's being lull-sized, and to ..

... first stone of th e : Ahuaoleum, about to be erected to the memory of the late lamented Duchess of Rutland, was laid on Blackberry Rill, by his Royal Highness the Duke of York.—The site of the intended edifice, although but a short distance from the castle ...