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OUR LIBRARY CHAIR. In these days of light and versatile reading, ma Plentiful as blackberries. To read and to ..

... OUR LIBRARY CHAIR. In these days of light and versatile reading, ma Plentiful as blackberries. To read and to notice c of them, would be a serious labour and not alwa l ove. Happily, those which are now upon our tai we can still recommend. Indeed, with ...

UR LIBRARY. In these d ays of O light and versatile C readin HAl g ß , plentiful as blackberries

... UR LIBRARY. In these d ays of O light and versatile C readin HAl g ß , plentiful as blackberries. To read and to notice them, would be a serious labour and not alwl 'e. Haly, those which are now upon our tal can stileecommend. Indeed, with the new 3 ...

be had of the Collectors on board tee ' 4 errace Pier, Gravesend. THE NEW REFORM BILL. lie‘er_Plentiful as ..

... be had of the Collectors on board tee ' 4 errace Pier, Gravesend. THE NEW REFORM BILL. lie‘er_Plentiful as blackberries in season upon the r Bill : of the many parties who long o - Acd, e „ fe tized when it is announced that, of three two are alike. Of ...

Published: Friday 28 November 1851
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 360 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

POLICE COURTS.--YESTERDAY, LIVERPOOL. FOR BLACKBERRIES. John Walsh, a very small boy, was charged by officer ..

... POLICE COURTS.--YESTERDAY, LIVERPOOL. FOR BLACKBERRIES. John Walsh, a very small boy, was charged by officer 660, with stealing 21 lbs. of butter. The officer stated that he met the prisoner in Scotland-road on Thursday afternoon, with the butter in - ...

Published: Saturday 15 October 1853
Newspaper: Northern Daily Times
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1197 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Oh, but they who promote this complacent

... the surface that if the sinful treachery of alienation has crept into the heart it will suggest pleas as plentiful as blackberries for strife and discord on either side ? Instead of differences happening by lamentable accident, causes of discord will ...

ROUSER-OLD ECONOMY

... ROUSER - OLD ECONOMY To MAKE BLACKBERRY JELLY.—II - mipe blackberries, picked from the stems, boiled in a jar three hours, pulp them, and add double the weight of sugar, or rather less. GREEN-GAGES. - --PriCk them with a needle, green them with vine leaves ...

SCONE

... suffered much from the frost. Gooseberries will, in many came. not be • tithe of a crop. The more expiated branches of the blackberry are all bat bare, an d from a third to a half crop may be realised fro the snore sheltered branches. The red currant ap ...

iecount of the Laplanders

... account of those torturing little insects, The Mosquitoes and Gnats of South America; a chapter in Roman history; and a Blackberry Treat to finish off with. CORRESPONDENCE (To the Editor of the Lady's Newspaper.) a,—ln your review of The Dennes of ...

commenced well. It will not be the last telegram which Mr. REUTER will receive on similar points. Prussia is, of

... Elm-court, Figtree-court and Greenarbour-court, were each respectively leafy evidence of the origin of their sylvan names. Blackberries were picked along the skirts of Tottenham-courtroad ; and St. Martin's-in-the-Fields was by no means regarded as altogether ...

Published: Friday 28 January 1859
Newspaper: Sun (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 176 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

say such a response would be made as would not only render it unnecessary and superfluous to retain a single

... within the four seas of Great Britain, but open an inexhaustible source of recruitment to the army. Reasoys are thick as blackberries, as we antici- pated, for the sudden resolution of the Bank of England on Monday. The demand for money at the Bank is very ...

Published: Wednesday 14 October 1857
Newspaper: North British Daily Mail
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 216 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

SomE months ago we were favoured every week by communications from a most prolific correspondent, who signed ..

... they appeared to resemble the invectives of some of Russia's paid agents, who, as all the world knows, are plentiful as blackberries. In this free country they may spea k and write without let or hindrance, and they do scruple to use the privilege ...