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STANDING

... make one anything but sleepy. Peaches are abundant; they turn out their pigs to feed upon them they fall from the trees. Blackberries were ripe in July, and very abundant this year. We have few apples here ; no gooseberries or currants of any colour ; we ...

Published: Friday 20 September 1850
Newspaper: Nottingham Review
County: Nottinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 7942 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

Baptist Chapel, Grey Friars' Street. Northampton. —On evening last eloquent impressive lecture was delivered in ..

... Claridge. Cauliflowers, William Cadd. Third Class.—Apples. James Soden and Joseph Chapman. Potatoes, Ditto and James Soden. Blackberries, Richard Garratt and Sarah Sabin. Wild Flowers, Clsridge Mawby. Some splendid Pears were sent by Mr. Russell, gardener ...

Published: Saturday 12 October 1850
Newspaper: Northampton Mercury
County: Northamptonshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1825 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

deruvshire courier, chesterfield gazette, and general counxv advertiser

... assaulting her on the 12th instant. Complainant stated that on Saturday the 12th inst., two her children had been out to gather blackberries, and on arriving near home two of the defendant’s children struck and abused one of her children ; one of them struck one ...

Published: Saturday 26 October 1850
Newspaper: Derbyshire Courier
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 6444 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

►N, RUTLAND, AND NOTTINGHAM ADVERTISER

... health, bonny Scotland, to thee.” At the sixty-third in-go they were 43 each, when sage opinions became as plentiful as black-berries, but the prophetic wisdom stopped there. Hutton once more led, scoring 46 to 43. So close a shave was the sixtyseventh ...

Published: Friday 08 November 1850
Newspaper: Lincolnshire Chronicle
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1162 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE ELECTRIC INDICATOR

... make our word)—tho miracles of art and invention and discovery have become so very plentiful, even to exceed Falstaff's blackberry crop of reasons, that we no longer feel or express any astonishment at the impossibilities and improbabilities yesterday ...

Published: Saturday 28 December 1850
Newspaper: Leicestershire Mercury
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 374 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

local istrlllignut

... pattern is formed by a groundwork of ferns and beautiful grasses, from which spring trailing branches of the biambh or blackberry. gracefully wreathed with tendrils of the coevolvolus, prottisely but not heavily decorated with dowers. The whole of the ...

Published: Wednesday 16 April 1851
Newspaper: Nottingham and Newark Mercury
County: Nottinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 9807 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

A FEW SAMPLES OF ROMISH CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTY

... some cases the persecutors are caught and committed for trial. But under the sanction of their Church oaths are plentiful blackberries; and when convenient, witnesses are not to be had. Still more convenient use is made of the influence of the confessional ...

LOCAL NEWS

... pattern is formed by a groundwork of ferns and beautiful t?r ?? e !ll roin wh,ch P n * trailing branches of the bramble or blackberry, gracefully wreathed with tendrils of the con- volvolus. profusely but not heavily decorated with flowers. The whole of ...

Published: Thursday 17 April 1851
Newspaper: Nottinghamshire Guardian
County: Nottinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 5409 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

LOCAL INTELLIGENCE

... Cbicket Match helweeu the villagers of Bottesford and Woolsthurpe, for the prize of £5 given Lord John Maimers, will come off Blackberry Hill the 1J uf June. The Duke ok Rutland.—We lenru from the morning papers Tuesday, thai his Grace the Duke of Rutland was ...

Published: Friday 30 May 1851
Newspaper: Leicester Journal
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 5453 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

LEICESTERSHIRE

... between the villagers of Bottesford and Woolsthorpe, for the prise of 51., given by Lord John Manners, will come off on Blackberry Hill, on the I Ith June. Loughborough. —Fishing by Twilight.—Between one and two o'clock in the morning of Tuesday se'nnight ...

VARIETIES

... re- plied Miss C; is it not perfectly natural and proper that • lady should like a good offer, sir ? Life is a Geld of blackberry and raspberry bushes. Mean people 6quat down and pick fruit, no matrer how they black their fingers ; while genius, proud ...

Published: Saturday 28 June 1851
Newspaper: Leicester Chronicle
County: Leicestershire, England
Type: | Words: 2429 | Page: 4 | Tags: none