TO THE EDITOR OF THB DUNDALK DEM'CBAT
... James’s b Whirlwind; Mr .M’Koni’sb! Manota, beat Mr James’s f d Ned llannigm ; Mr Lindsay’s bl f,ysan‘Usp. beat Whyte bl w Blackberry (late Widow), Foley’* bl and d Lamplighter, beat Mr Whytes M ire. ...
... James’s b Whirlwind; Mr .M’Koni’sb! Manota, beat Mr James’s f d Ned llannigm ; Mr Lindsay’s bl f,ysan‘Usp. beat Whyte bl w Blackberry (late Widow), Foley’* bl and d Lamplighter, beat Mr Whytes M ire. ...
... is all Hamm, Roe solos, al dedle. Loy a— a GripHer..,(aged), by :dale by Dreamier/M. traiud to all sant. Lem 7..— Blackberry,' • famous Birk Mom by DfusamuSli. dm. by Weborom End Houma. wed hot. Lot ills, Grey Oak, $ ma of Crinot. by Bran ...
... -ll—A Powerful Grev Horse, (aged) by Young Leander, datn by Dreadnought, trained to all harness, and perfectly quiet. 7 Blackberry—A famous Bla>k Mare (aged) by Dreadnought, dam by Welliugion, used to all harness and very fast, 8 Rifl —A Beautiful Grey ...
... these means will ra . be found destitute, and he who relies uiwn any other will generally become bankrupt.- I.ife field of blackberry bushes. Meanjumpie squat down and pick the fruit, matter how they h?.ck their fingers ; while genius, proud rfu'ular, strides ...
... (ten. Marmors, and Sir W C> drington were present. The divi>i gens, brigadiers,cols, and staff-officer* were plentiful as blackberries, and though the only represe utstise of the fair Sex was Mrs Seacole, who presided over a eotely invested lent fnll of ...
... burst on*, with incompressible leproey, from the dock-weeds, the nettles, the rank grass, the daffodils, the nightshade, and blackberry butbas with which ia hem- • Entered according Act Congreaa, in tb« ear IM6. by Thooiaa Franeia Meagher, in Clcrk'a otter ...
... amid Mart* The Rev. Dr. Ileamsoat, Rev. R. 5. Haill, Rev. W. Chalmers, LW., Rm. W. Reid, Ths Rev. J. eteaghtea, Rev. John Blackberry The Rev. Wm. Y. Basting, B. Anna; The Rev. William Brock, The Bev. F. A. Cos. D.D., LL.D., Esehey, Be., Ac. I. coma, MII ...
... possible baste keep the press going, and his curious epistles ‘come out,' not like angels’ visits,' but almost * nunerous as blackberries.’ fear bis reputation as preacher will suffer, if should continue to write be is doing ; for, certainly, cannot study his ...
... purposes, about Gtd. per lb. Peaches one dollar per bushel. Melons, larger than your head, cents each. It great country for blackberries; they preserve them here • every season. My wife and the children went out one day, ■ and gathered about a bushel of plums ...
... modestly retired far into the back grounl. Strange tossy, however, the morning after the discussion precedents plenti'ully blackberries pres ntid thuniselve-on all -ides The thing is quite common among th- dignitarie- of the Protestant church. Sydney Smith ...
... gig, in the presence, it has been stated us, of several persons— Freeman. New York journal notices a singular growth of black-berries” of a pale pea-green colour. Donnyurooe Fair.— The crowds visitors to fair from town and the surrounding localities were ...
... immense stick of hay, the property Runnette Wiea—SALT roa Born:lL—Good of a dairyman named Patrick Reddy, took in a yard blackberry may he made as follows :—Gather the in Herety'sdane, at the of Fitswillians-square west, fruit when hilly ripe, and on a ...