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THE INCOME TAX

... room detailed the last w-tnos, and was perfectly correct. the inquest Police-conslable Dooly deposed that remembered having Blackberry lane, Sunday morning, at lour o’clock, three men company, who were walking rapid pace towards Dublin. Witness has no hesitation ...

Published: Saturday 31 December 1842
Newspaper: Silurian
County: Brecknockshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1287 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

PAVING AND LIGHTING COMMISSIONERS

... the sweepings of Westminster Hall is perfectly aware that for the last ten or a dozen years silk goon.' were a• plenty se blackberries, and that three-sixths of the men why wear them are as fit to be judges as they arc fit to be admirals or field-marshals ...

Published: Friday 09 October 1846
Newspaper: Welshman
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1856 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

3 30 5 43

... grounds for a proceeding thus senseless and absurd, he would give no reason upon compulsion though reasons were as thick ns blackberries;” would rather cover the nakedness and poverty of his imagination under shied lorn from Sir Robert Peel’s ample robe. Mr ...

Published: Saturday 26 March 1842
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1570 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

MANSLAUGHTER BY A POLICEMAN

... soldier ! Not in the eves of Spain alone, but of every disinterested power of Europe, may he more than retrieve the past. Blackberries are very abundant this year. The editor of the Lirerpool Times says that the wife and children of a labourer on Lis fern ...

Published: Friday 25 September 1846
Newspaper: Welshman
County: Carmarthenshire, Wales
Type: | Words: 1881 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

- FATHER MATHEW

... in casks to ferment, are said to produce an excellent wine. The colour of wine is often rendered darker by a mixture of blackberries with the grapes.—Louden's Gardener's Maga- zine. CHANGB OF TIMES.—About the middle of the Seventeenth century, persons ...

«be Ðerambulator

... WALK FROM NEWPORT TO CARDIFF. [Continued from our last.) About five miles from Cardiff the hawthorns, wild rose bushes, and blackberry brambles, were strewed with ears of pilfered from the heavy-laden harvest wains. The heart ...

Published: Saturday 03 October 1840
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Merlin
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1580 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

THE CARNARVON AND DENBIGH HERALD Journal’ of Rev ''’Radeiiffe ffcwon firing Id old pluck-in in offence girl's ..

... behoves them all must ensure fulfillment their peculiar functions let alone their girls alone are nothing more than picking blackberries game-preserver is anomalous s' rion birds thieves by the tenant-farmers to preaches In their estimation his and break the ...

Published: Saturday 10 October 1846
Newspaper: Caernarvon & Denbigh Herald
County: Caernarfonshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 5664 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

VARIETIES

... flowers, and fi»hes ; sometimes many colours once, like the peacock ; or changeable, like the ; or successive, like the blackberries, which are first green and (hen red, and then purple? Surely (here objects for ornaments, as well as things for useor wherefore ...

Published: Saturday 17 April 1841
Newspaper: Silurian
County: Brecknockshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1636 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

NEWSPAPER REFORM

... possible for the public to detect and appreciate the true prince 1 While geniuses are, or are pretended to be, plenty as blackberries, it cannot be wondered at if the few really self-inspired, the authors distinguished from book- makers-are lost in the ...

Domestic

... at the Queen’s Head Inn, when it appeared that boy named Alfred Hemming saw the box on Sunday morning, as was gathering blackberries. The hoy called to his assistance a weaver named George Harris, who was walking near, and on the hitter dragging the box ...

Published: Saturday 16 September 1843
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 2016 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

AMERICAN ELECTIONS

... cistion, ani, lastly, tte pleasantness, amenity, and I variety of the putations. c AtReasons, therefore, are as plentiful as blackberries, 0 and habit becumessecond nature. 7 * #e d I have mentioned the principal causes to which c must be assigned the propensity ...

Published: Tuesday 14 January 1840
Newspaper: North Wales Chronicle
County: Caernarfonshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 2241 | Page: 4 | Tags: News