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FRANCE

... undertakers of course excepted, by the indefinite deferment of the necessity for inhumation ? Are Jenkinses as plentiful as blackberries, and Old Parrs as numerous crab-apples Are mural tablets, to be fashioned without the relief of a single vice, gone at ...

Published: Friday 10 February 1854
Newspaper: Durham Chronicle
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 4473 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE ELECTION FOR NORTH DURHAM

... good deal of vapouring oil the part of the Liberal journals, aud caudidates, as usual, have represented as plentiful as blackberries, quite embarras des richexses in fact, still no Liberal champion lias ventured to show face in fight, and there can be ...

Published: Friday 24 March 1854
Newspaper: Durham County Advertiser
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 277 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

VEGETABLES

... baking—lst, Mr Harrison ; 2nd, Mr Wilson. extra prize was awarded to Mr Beverly, Darlington, for small collection of cherries, blackberries, and red currants. ...

Published: Friday 09 June 1854
Newspaper: Durham Chronicle
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 200 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

Gnat commanders, famed for standing still

... enemy's wounded. He rushes through fire and flood if to merry-making, and plucks grapes (as coolly as a schoolboy would blackberries) in vineyard ploughed by grape and canister. He lays about him like a devil iucarnate, and then has * great sport with ...

Published: Friday 20 October 1854
Newspaper: Durham County Advertiser
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 3368 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

tary is never at home, and the Home Secretary is always abroad—in which the Exchequer Chancellor should be one of

... then, shew a bow-sprit end beyond the protecting granite. Hugo useless 70 and 80 gun ships of the line were plentiful as blackberries! but the only availing media of assault, for the only places worth assaulting, were never supplied or dreamt ofgun boats ...

Published: Friday 01 December 1854
Newspaper: Durham County Advertiser
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 1064 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE DURHAM COUNTY ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1855

... goodnatuted or simple minded person should be supciflnoas enough to require proofs of this, abundance are ready : “plentiful blackberries.” Indeed, the last few mouths alone supply them liberally ; as the mere names of Flaherty—Stoner—Lawlcy—Sudleir—and, “though ...

Published: Friday 26 January 1855
Newspaper: Durham County Advertiser
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 5671 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

MR. LDtDSAY AND THE GOVERNMENT

... plainer language, things utterly unfounded. cannot pretend to instance them in detail, but they may be picked up plentiful as blackberries in any part of Sir Charles’s annihilating speech. One must suffice—tho first come to. Mr. Lindsay had charged authorities ...

Published: Friday 29 June 1855
Newspaper: Durham County Advertiser
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 568 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

By Xr. Brough

... Fruit Stall, Goodhall • The Mother, and Irish Cabin, by D. W. Deane, being fine specimens of this very rising artist; Blackberry Gatherers, Witherington, LA.; the whole forming a most attractive and beautitul collection of modern art, well deserving ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1855
Newspaper: Gateshead Observer
County: Durham, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 395 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Vic elb liff o man's Cana

... his burial! . . . Blackberries have been selling at higher prices in Liverpool than damsons. So says a contemporary; and a housewife at our elbow makes the same report of our own locality—the prices per quart being, for blackberries 5d., for damsons 4d ...

Published: Saturday 27 October 1855
Newspaper: Gateshead Observer
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 3249 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE BRITISH EXPEDITION

... ground till the principal races were over. Divisional generals, brigadiers, coloneis, and stafl-officers, were plentifal as blackberries, and though the only representa- tive of the fair sex was Mrs Seacole, who presided over a sorely invested tent fall of ...