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Cambridgeshire, England

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LSTTES9 EDITOS. [As «e arc wilimg to insert letters all snMects nf general interest. Mr readers mo* not identify as

... them into Dissent. must not P«'t with nub, we cannot afford to lose such, though *»«g*es and llacous be as plentiful as blackberries. Alter •11. *hv-ther no there a grace prevenient, concurrent, or coasequcit, separable or inseparable from the Sacrament ...

Published: Saturday 29 June 1850
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2361 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

OF \ TESTIMONIAL TO THE REV. W CAKUS. 'i-“ mule awrtre various notices ■ . ! present a Tcetimo ;

... and she was not all surprised afterwards see drawer left open wherein £5O notes of the same description were plentiful aa blackberries, and she forthwiwitb commenced cracking up the character of the lodger who was thus conftdiug, ami careless of bis money ...

FACTS, FICTION, & FACETLE

... . He purposes returning to Europe during this month. White Blackberries.—lt is an ancient joke that all blackberries are red when they are green ; but we yesterday saw some 44 blackberries perfectly ripe, but of a beautiful light pea-green colour, ...

Published: Saturday 13 September 1851
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2081 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

NEWMARKET COURSING MEETING. TUESDAY. Derby. Mr. Fycou’f belt Mr, Gillett** Goldfindt r. Mr. Fyioa'i Farmer bent ..

... Mr. Duck north's Bashful beat Mr. Moody's llowens. Mr. King's Ueg.ua beat Mr. Qillett® Mr, Damson beat Mr. Duckworth’® Blackberry Mr. Factotum beat Mr. Donald. EDXEBDA DEABY. il ft yard bent Frank. Farmer beat Lord of the beat Bridegroom. Ides. | Lockaiey ...

Published: Saturday 25 October 1851
Newspaper: Cambridge Chronicle and Journal
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: | Words: 1442 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

CLERGYMAN DECEASED

... drawing-room without Indies was like a year without the spring, or, rather, the spring without the flowers.” Life is a field of blackberry bushes. Mean people squat down and pick the fruit, no mutter how they black their fingers; while genius, proud and perpendicular ...

jnifttial Swltarat. foreign Colonial. ELECTION NEWS. who «

... tithes, and taxes upon them. Again, in parts of Norfolk, Lincolnshire, and Scotland, steam-engines are almost as plentiful blackberries, whilst in some other eounties, they have few or none. In my own, with million of seres, have less than half doxen. Well ...

arcftrntg anO OffrnrrK

... who had wandered out into the fields, were poisoned on Friday by noxious root which they found and ate, while gathering blackberries. One of them died, and the rest ore all seriously ill. A man named James Welch, soap-maker at Deptford, walking on the ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1853
Newspaper: Cambridge Chronicle and Journal
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: | Words: 1705 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

LETTERS FROM ABROAI>. [FROM Ol'R OWN correspondent.] Paris, J illj sth, 1554. We are as loud in our complaints of

... with the simple thanks of the Crown and the nation, and one of those ribbons ami medals . which in Spain are as plentiful blackberries. It is pitiful sight to see the fiir Parisians, on the tempestuous visitations which I allude, huddled up in the abovementioned ...

Published: Saturday 15 July 1854
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2956 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

Facts, Fiction, and Facetiœ

... picture London damsels gathering primroses violets on the rising ground about the office of Household Words, or hunting for blackberries on the site of Exeter Hall, or sitting to rest on the green sward where Drury-lane Theatre now stands. Mary- It bone was ...

Published: Saturday 10 February 1855
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1892 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

neighbouring counties

... wickets. Mr. Tremlett now joined Hales, and the play became intensely interesting: opinions were various, and “plentiful blackberries.”-—“Keep up your wicket Hales.” cried one; “you are our only hope.”- We shall said another. But the wish was father to ...

THE FARM AND THE GARDEN

... (hear, hear). His steam engines, again, were considered most ridiculous, but now steam engines on farms were as common blackberries. Formerly there was a strong belief in that locality that deep cultivation was injurious, but there had been a great change ...

Published: Saturday 20 October 1855
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 948 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Sessions and Police Intelligence

... September, William Hullatt, elderly gentleman and farmer. The complainant saw the defendant in his son's field getting blackberries. He thought she was going get over tbe hedge, and he said to her, •' Good woman, go back to the gate. She said she wonld'nt ...

Published: Saturday 11 October 1856
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3944 | Page: 8 | Tags: none