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THE revision of the Parliamentary voting lists for the bherongh of Liverpool has just been More than 3200 ..

... a brickmaker named | Smith was fined the sum of 12s for trespassing in a and taking therefrom, on the 4th of October, blackberries (wild brambles) of the value of 6d, or thereabouts. The gamekeeper stated that he had cautioned the defendant more than ...

Published: Thursday 10 November 1864
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2300 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

EDINBURGH CAITHNESS BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION

... brings back to our recollec- tions the ‘days of auld lang syne,’ when among the heather hills of our county we gathered the blackberry, or at the New-Year season its almost Siberian winters. Then the young leapt for joy, for the manhood w Im assem this, he ...

Published: Thursday 12 January 1865
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2171 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

TO THE EDITOR OP THE JOHN ©’©BOAT JOURNAL

... now such a pressure the time of Parliament when railway bills were •‘thick leaves in Vallambrosa,” or, as might be said, blackberries the hedge, but something would gained by joint committees of Lords and Commons in this way, saving the necessity of a separate ...

Published: Thursday 07 February 1878
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2012 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

I\ A COUNTRY LANE

... boy pulls forth • monse's meat: ♦nd then the tempting bramblemoths invite the balms again, Their pretty mouths with blackberries so sweet and ripe to stain ; And many a brown not slips its sheath to share, poor little thing. A bunting pocket with a ...

RESULTS OF THE BARRA HERRING FISHING

... Fruil Juices.—Take a quantity of any kind of fresh berry fruit (red currant, black currant, cherry, gooseberry, raspberry, blackberry, cranberry, &c. ; also plums and rhubarb). Clean the fruit, and put it into an enamelled goblet or jelly pan. (Rhubarb should ...

THE ART OF LEASE-MAKING ONCE MORE

... not choose to take the trouble.” Might we ask what trouble there would be in sending us a copy if they are plentiful as blackberries on the other side of the Firth? But we suspect it would give him some trouble to find a parallel to the documcnt which ...

Published: Thursday 06 February 1862
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2392 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE REV. DR CANDLISH AND THE PRIEND OF INDIA. — TO THE EDITOR OF THE JOHN O’GROAT JOURNAL. find you

... in parti bus infidelium, or even in Christendom might not cut such a figure at home, where the ‘order’ is as common as blackberries on a hedge. The writer in the Friend of intimates that the great men of the Free Church have pa sed away, or ‘ like Dr ...

Published: Thursday 01 October 1863
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2405 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

PUPA RI:01 for the /V.,* Tski. to say goori-iiy to use'. helot...rt. WHAT is th. hest Sunday reading for ..

... of our beset.. Wass a little uesgo boy wanted to attend his father's funeral, he the schoolmaster for a holiday to ge blackberrying. WHIR a man dies, people se:sessile inquires. What property has he left behin t bin' The angels will ask : What good deeds ...

•OTABILIA OF THE WEEK

... a door, and capable of containing in all about 400 persons. The total number may be about 7000. Babies, as numerous as black-berries, lay about amongst the straw which littered the floor ; and we noticed one young rascal, rising three years old, standing ...

Opinions of the Press

... keeniag overttock of that plant mdigenou. everywhere, yclept factorlike Torndon and Inverinate, where they arc plentiful as blackberries or hob-nails—and other, a lack of common sense, or a .ingle .park o{ nature', fire. How pleatant it i* be*tow compliment ...

Published: Friday 04 October 1850
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2630 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

FIELDS FOR EMIGRATION IN AMERICA

... be a great fruit country. The Indian apple and peach trees, though few in number, bear well every year. And as for wild blackberries and raspberries, both as to size and flavour, there is absolutely no end. They serve all the inhabitants, and millions ...

Published: Friday 09 March 1855
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2840 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

MISCELLANEOUS

... increase the liscomfiture of the planters, most of them are short of hands, many of the people having gone off to sather blackberries. The alarming condition of the cotton crop has caused the corn to be neglected. A similar state of things is represented ...

Published: Thursday 20 July 1871
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2722 | Page: 4 | Tags: none