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Horrid Murder near Sheffield

... called East-bank. about a mile and a half to the south-east of the town of Sheffield. The locality in question is noted for blackberries, and it was by two little children gathering that wild fruit, that the body was found. Oct Fridley, the 3rd of September ...

Published: Saturday 25 December 1852
Newspaper: Hull Daily News
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 1779 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

PROVINCIAL NEWS

... various fam, all of which will be fitted in the most elegant style. The Lawyers Durham.— Of verity i a days are plentiful as blackberries. Within some thirty miles we find no less than eight gentlemen of the long robe quitting their leg jj avocations, aud aspiring ...

Published: Saturday 24 April 1852
Newspaper: Yorkshire Gazette
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2266 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

STANZAS ON MY EARLY HOME

... rings, no beds of water-crew, No woods to play tbo truant in when pedagogues oppress. No hedges and no gutters where the black-berries may hide, And wild rose-trees luxuriant trail in all their summer pride ; No none of these ! — I therefore feel to wish ...

Published: Saturday 09 October 1852
Newspaper: Leeds Intelligencer
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2077 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

i MURDER OP A SCOTCH DRAPER AT.SHEFFIELD

... i MURDER OP A SCOTCH DRAPER AT SHEFFIELD. On Friday the 3rd inst., two children, who were gathering blackberries in a hedge-bottom, at Eastbank, about a mile-and-a-half to the south-east of Sheffield, discovered the dead body of a man almost concealed ...

Published: Saturday 11 September 1852
Newspaper: Leeds Intelligencer
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2261 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Varieties

... True, said the superintendent, but then there were seven scholars waiting all that time for you. Lirva is a feld of blackberry bushes. Mean people squat down and piok the fruit, no matter how they black their fingers; while genius, proud and perpendicular ...

Varieties

... -True, said the superintendent, but then there were seven scholars waiting all that timefor you. LIPE iS afield of blackberry bushes. Mean people squat down and pick the fruit, no matter how they black their fingers; while genius, proud and perpendicular ...

Review of the Week

... for any increase which may appear in said esti- mates excellent reasons would not be given. When reasons are as plenty as blackberries, who would be without capital reasons for asking for more money. What with France, with her half million of idle bayonets ...

Review of the Week

... for any increase which may appear in said esti- mates excellent reasons would not be given. When reasons are as plenty as blackberries, who would be without capital reasons for asking for more money. What with France, with her half -million of idle bayonets ...

Review of the Week

... any increase which may appear in said esti- imates excellent reasons would not be given. When reasons are as plenty as blackberries, who would be without capital reasons for asking for more money. What with France, with her half million of idle bayonets ...

FOREIGN MISCELLANY

... like ordinary children.” Lola Months. —The anecdotes current in the American paper!*,, about this danxetme, are plenty as blackberries in season. Here are few of them. The Boston Gazette describes an incident which lately took place that city. It appears ...

Published: Friday 07 May 1852
Newspaper: Hull Advertiser
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2447 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

ATROCIOUS MURDER

... The bottom of the valley is rough, broken ground, in which blackberry and other bushes abound. The fields have bi ...

Published: Saturday 11 September 1852
Newspaper: Sheffield Independent
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 16036 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

NOTES FROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT

... also, that I cautioned them against investing their money in the gold companies, which are almost as plentiful as blackberries. Private letters from Australia show that I was right. One of these documents says—, Edmund Burke said Osaian's poems ...

Published: Saturday 23 October 1852
Newspaper: Yorkshire Gazette
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2895 | Page: 2 | Tags: none