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From the London Correspondent of the Freeman

... Five ©’Clock—Nothing is known as yrt as lo the result of Lord Derby’s visit Osborne ; rumors, however, are as plenty as blackberries. Notwithstanding the opinion given the of this morning, that Lord Aberdeen was the coming man. said in the best-informed ...

tPrnrrnl Urns

... it would fake several shiploads o! University phenomena to moke half a Disraeli. Gladstones have alvays been plentiful blackberries in England; and thev will continue to he, till Macaulay’s photographic New Zealander daguerreotypes what may loft of St ...

Published: Saturday 25 December 1852
Newspaper: Coleraine Chronicle
County: Londonderry, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2234 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE FOREIGN DEPARTMENTS

... public may rest assur 3 elapsed such an admini istration will be announced as —eoupled mours, however, are as plenty as blackberries. with the support to be announced at the same time—will | the opinion given in the Times of this n as of the that Lord ...

Published: Wednesday 22 December 1852
Newspaper: Derry Journal
County: Londonderry, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 7268 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

POPERY A PERSECUTING SYSTEM

... little boy named George Renton and another named Joe Dixon were in a field railed Appleyard field, near Sheffield, gathering blackberries, and they found man in a hedge bottom quite dead. They obtained the assistance of a man named Somerset, who was working ...

Published: Friday 31 December 1852
Newspaper: Londonderry Sentinel
County: Londonderry, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 4911 | Page: 1 | Tags: none