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RAGGED SCHOOL HOLIDAY

... tree, longing to pluek them, and were much surprised when informed of their poisonous nature. Some inquired eagerly atter blackberries, saying their mothers had told them they would see them in the hedges. A large party was taken to the dairy, and expressed ...

AND OTHERS,

... smaller quadrupeds, yet bis food is principally derived from the vegetable and insect worlds. Chesnuts, roots of all kinds, blackberries, heechmats, and all manner of beetles, with the larvie of wasps and wild bees, furnish is ordinary supplies; while even ...

- § f MORRIBLE MURDER AT SHEFFIELD. (From 7he Times of Monday.) On Friday evening about half-past 7 two children,

... MORRIBLE MURDER AT SHEFFIELD. (From 7he Times of Monday.) On Friday evening about half-past 7 two children, who were gathering blackberries in a hedge-bottom at Eastbank, about a mile and a-half to the southeast of Sheflield, discovered the dead body of aman ...

a & (~. ] y – @he

... table in character—not destitute of talent, adapted for real usefuiness and permanent popularity, are now plentiful as blackberries. Under these circumstances it is amusing to read the report of a meeting recently held in London, under the title of the ...

Published: Saturday 17 May 1856
Newspaper: Buteman
County: Buteshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1877 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

LOCAL INTELLIGENCE LEIGIITON BUZZARD WOOL FAIR

... Mr. Biddulph, banker 3 Mr. Theodore arris, 2 hanker; Mr. T. Bennett, of Wobnrn g Mr. W. Cooper Expricir.—There is o white blackberry deseribed | 3 3e.'if. Coopors Messrs. C. Eve, Newport; E. Lav ford, as heinz, when fully ripe, ofa light greenish brown ...

]

... home—pimpernel, flawering rushe and bundreds of others of the brighiest hue s in antumn to glean the fruits of the hedges, the blackberry, the sloe, and the searlet hips and hows; and when old Winter had stouped down from his honse of fog and shaken his honry ...

BEDFORD MARKET,

... trembles as the wind comes whist. ~ ling up, And slips with gentle force from out its perfect moulded The hedge is thick with blackberries, and little children know The lanes where they are plentiful and where the finest grow : They cull the sweet and simple ...

Pramnnal

... are attacked in full strength. SINGULAR DIsCOVERY oF A strrosep Suvicipr.—On Tuu;i‘:f' afternoon, while some boys were blackberrying in Anerley-wood, the property of Mr. Kogers, one of them, a youth named Osborn, got into a close thicket to pluck some ...

Published: Saturday 06 September 1856
Newspaper: Buteman
County: Buteshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3106 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BUCKINGHAMSHIRE RAILWAY

... choleran that island. The disease has been making terrible ravages in the potaioe heaps in Lincolnshire, A fruit called a white blackberry, of excellent quality, has been met within a wild waste in the United States, Such was the force of the wind at Sudbury ...

THE EARTHQUAKE AT NAPLES

... help it, if yon will not allow my reasons to be of any value. Falstaff would give none, though they were as plentiful as blackberries ; why then should a poor woman trouble herselt with any ““It is really a pity, good Gratin, that you never keep, as we ...

MURDER OF A BOY FOR A PAIR OF SE BOOTS

... discovered. A number of boys were playing near the Forest, and one of them, either to re. mvcv a cricket ball or to get some blackberries, got ~over a hedge into an edjoining field, we believe, just - within the limits of the parish of Lenton, This lad ; was ...

DEATH OF MR. HUGH MILLER

... 12th inst., tells the following thrilling tale :—* Last fall a woman residing in tne vicinity of Worcester was picking blackberries in a ficld near her house, having with her her only child, a bright-eyed little fellow of less than a year oh“. The babe ...