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Tlirc SOUTH AIM PTON TOWN AND COUNTY METIAUn

... com- ibject presence of the Emperor, to be accommodated with a room lings of the made her and the a present and at the west Blackberry Jam.—A corre at the total of re am the mother of a tam | be somew! own experience can affirm that 1 ment at least in conserve ...

Published: Monday 26 September 1825
Newspaper: Hampshire Advertiser
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 623 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

The most prompt and efficient measures for circulating Hie new and withdrawing the old Irish coin have been ..

... Thursday morning se'nnight some children, who were rambling through the fields near Kingston-upon- Thames, in search o( blackberries, discovered in hedge, a considerable distance from the main-road, a young woman, almost perfectly insensible, and nearly ...

NEW Ji’MET

... ednesdav last, about five o’clock in the evening, two children, the one eight, and the other tour years of age, were gathering blackberries in a field near Hastings, a monster, in the shape of man, enticed the eldet infant to the other side the hedge, whore lie ...

Published: Monday 17 October 1825
Newspaper: Hampshire Advertiser
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 925 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

FEMALE FASHIONS FOR MAY

... easterly winds and frosts. LAMENTABLE SUPERSTITION. The Sherborne Mercury says, a. species o:' blight grub has settled the blackberry leaves, gnawing them a serpentine manner, that the dead fibre shows through the remaining green. It will hardly credited ...

Published: Monday 09 May 1825
Newspaper: Sussex Advertiser
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 1221 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Agriculturists will probably think the follow comparative statement of Hie prices of Gra' Dantzic and England ..

... afford to purchase clothes, dress themselves in linen trowsers and jackets, and take delight imitating European fashions. Blackberry ' Jam. —A correspondent of a Sunday paper ;,ays— I am the mother of a large family, and from my own experience can affirm ...

Published: Monday 26 September 1825
Newspaper: Hampshire Chronicle
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1324 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

aiPtDU ILifr

... lon metier, et mui le mien). Give the book at any rate. Lamentable Superstition. species blight or grub has settled on the blackberry leaves, gnawing them in a serpentine manner, so that the dead fibre shows through the remaining green. It will hardly credited ...

Published: Monday 16 May 1825
Newspaper: Hampshire Advertiser
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2489 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BETTING AT STARTING

... and necks, having no possible means of riding otherwise. W. Scott rode Memmon. The ground was run in minutes and seconds. Blackberry Jam.—A Correapondcnt says,” 1 am Hie inother of a large family, and from own experience can affirm, that have found this ...

IRISH FAIRY I.SGEND

... purse and pay me like a gentleman.’ I pay you ?’ said Billy: could 1 not just take you up and put you pocket as easily as blackberry ?’ Billy Mac Daniel,’ said the little man, getting very angry, you shall be my servant for seven years and a day, and that ...

Extraordinary Kobuery.—On Wednesday inorninglast, on the Wigston road, near Knighton, about a mile distant from ..

... mile distant from this town, and not more than 150 yards from the tollgate, two lads were out for the purpose of gathering blackberries, when they observed a pocket-book lying near the road-side; one of them ran to pick it tip, and perceived, the same time ...

Published: Saturday 12 November 1825
Newspaper: Berkshire Chronicle
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3034 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

OXFORD, Saturday, Oct. 8

... sufferer was found lying on the ground, quite dead. There was no mark of violence on the body, and on exa- mination a few blackberries were found in the sto- mach. Two medical gentlemen gave it as their opi- nion that death was caused fronm want of nourish- ...

Published: Saturday 08 October 1825
Newspaper: Oxford Journal
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2765 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

Emprrial iiarliamrut

... occasion of his fall.— Dublin Patriot. Dorsetshire. Lamentable Superstition. A species of blight or grub has rested on the blackberry leaves, gnawing them in a serpentine manner, so that the dead fibres show through the remaining green. It will hardly credited ...