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Salisbury and Winchester Journal

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Salisbury and Winchester Journal

Importance of Town Drainage.—lt is impossible to over-estimate the importance to community of baring the soil ..

... struggle to come out here ; and so they ought too, because there is room enough for all. Man ! money here is as plentiful as blackberries on the barrack hills in harvest time. No grinding,of soul and body for a 6canty subsistence. Let artisans of all classes ...

Published: Saturday 05 February 1853
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2095 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LECTURE AT THE SALISBURY MUSEUMS

... which have become succulent; tho true frnit the seed like body in each part of the cluster. Although a mulberry resembles a blackberry or a raspberry in outward appearance they are totally different in structure. The raspberry is the product of a single flower ...

Epitome of News

... little boy, aged four, with him to a corn-field for ride, and on reaching there he set him down, and left him gathering blackberries. In about five minutes after the father returned, and found his son banging on a gate with his head between the bars, and ...

Published: Saturday 28 September 1861
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2126 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

©ngtual The perfection of art is to conceal all traces of art. The Baby Towers of Shanghai. —One day we

... stream of life as has been flowing to him through the eyes. There are eyes which give no more admission into them than blackberries; others are liquid and deep wells that men might fall into ; and others are oppressive and devouring, and take too much ...

Epitome of News

... living at Stoke, met with a shocking death on the Cornwall Railway on Saturday afternoon. He, with two companions, had been blackberrying, and were returning home across the Camel's Head viaduct, between Saltash and Devonport, when, warned by a whistle of the ...

Published: Saturday 25 September 1869
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2071 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

FONTHILL GIFFORD

... flowers, beneath which was a valence farm whi c h ni t trar ssi n the hands of trustee., and let at a redocal of oats and blackberry leaves. Its bale was completely rent. Defendant said he had received no rent for a year. Hie hidden with vegetables and ...

AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE

... beloved country. He had to contend against a great deal in his district, for the infamous Copperheads were as thick as blackberries, and he often felt as if he would like thrashing a man to be a Christian virtue, that he might have the privilege of digging ...

artrtif.g, ©ngmal Abstemiousness and frugality are capital bankers. Thev give handsome interest, and never ..

... can shake. I was at home there. As I wandered through the narrow roads, with their thick, luxurious fences, in which the blackberries invited me to feast, as I was wont to do when a school-boy ; as I turned aside to ramble without purpose or goal up the ...

Varieties, Original and Selected

... grape, the orange, the pomegranate, the fig, and other equally pleasant and nourishing productions —not the wild haws and blackberries which, even in nature's most prodigal humour, would be all that would fall to the lot of any poor fellow who should take ...

Published: Saturday 28 September 1861
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2354 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

VOLUNTEER REVIEW IN BOWOOD PARK

... nectarines, and other fruits, such as are produced nowhere in higher perfection than at Bowood, being as plentiful as blackberries. Nothing could exceed the generous hospitality which was shown by the noble Marquis to the gallant volunteers, who have ...

Published: Saturday 29 September 1860
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2496 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Markets and Fairs

... held last week, the quantity of sheep offered for sale being larger than has been known for years. Sellers were plentiful blackberries, but buyers were few and far between. Prices were ruinous, good lambs being sold at 11. per head, whilst culls could scarcely ...

The Literary Journal

... of Gustavus the Third Sweden*' is continued. The other papers are entitled Alternative Voting by Richard Bnssell, A Blackberry Bush in Autumn, by the Rev. J. G. Wood ; Alias, by Compton Reade; Francis Deak: Memoir, by J. W. Tipping; Kaiser ...