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THE IRISH MIRACLE:

... latter so nearly melee.. The castle is a fine buiAing, in the very centre of the city, sud though no more like Windsor than a blackberry is to a peach, yet it as worthy of inspection and admiration. Bait the noble College in College Green, the old of Parliament ...

ANOTHER GOVERNMENT JOB

... matter as to their position or station in society,) and the job is done! Government Receivers will become as plentiful as blackberries. Is not this measure, then, rightly described by us when we say it is an act to create Government patronage Have we not ...

Published: Saturday 18 June 1853
Newspaper: Yorkshire Gazette
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1071 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

1836 1837 ...... 1838 1839 1843

... substance whioh forms the delicious fruit; , touched upon our more cumraou fruit—the raspberry, the strawberry, and the blackberry, conclusion he stated that he had endeavoured show the true structure of the flower, and in his next and last lecture he ...

Published: Saturday 25 June 1853
Newspaper: Halifax Courier
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 4605 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS

... thle prospect of grouse C shootitig for the ensuing season. V ?? SEAS's.-Candidates for Tralee are becoming tc as thick a~ blackberries. Mr. John Macnamara B Cantwell has addressed the electors. The mere in- mour that Mr. John Sadlier lied intended to offer ...

Published: Friday 01 July 1853
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 7923 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

WHITBY FLORAL & HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY

... raspberries, 1, Mr. R. Hamilton; 2, Mr. J. Willison. Best 12 gooseberries, 1, Mr. W. Main ; 2, Mr. J. Willison. Best pint of blackberries, 1, C. H. Appleby, Esq.; 2, T. Richardson, Esq. Best pint of red ditto, 1, Mr. M. Weighill; 2, Mr. H. Knaggs. Vegetables ...

Published: Saturday 30 July 1853
Newspaper: Yorkshire Gazette
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 872 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

'Dare. ONCE UPON A TIME. LY )IRS. SOUTEIZT. I mind me of • pleasant time A season long ago; The

... morning mist and evening haze (*Unlike this cold grey rime), Seetn'd woven warm of golden alr— When I was in my prime. And blackberries—so mawkish now— Were finely flavoured then: And nuts—such reddening clusters ripe ne'er obeli pull again. Nor strawberries ...

BRADFORD FREEHOLD LAND SOCIETY

... show of horses of good quality was very small; screws were plentiful enough, and screw deal- ers as plentiful as blackberries, but very little business was trans- acted amongst these worthies, there not being sufficient flats to maintain the sharps ...

Published: Thursday 01 September 1853
Newspaper: Bradford Observer
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3153 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE MUSICAL FESTIVAL AT BRADFORD

... combinations assemble together to prosecute their vagaries greater or less numbers, while German Jews are as plentiful as blackberries. The town of Bradford is very curious in its formation. It is built on the flat before mentioned and the sides of the hills ...

Published: Saturday 03 September 1853
Newspaper: Leeds Intelligencer
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 12304 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

PARTNLL.,IIIPS DIssOLVED

... another of the boys, named Evans, also (..11 down, and he, too, appeared to be in a fit, and vomited Riau seemed to be unripe blackberries. Hey worth took them to a house in the road, where the boy Guest began to vomit blood. The other children were also taken ...

THE CHOLERA AT NEWCASTLE

... them. Death by Poison.—Four children who had taken laroble into the fields near Liverpool, on Saturday last, to Either blackberries, were on their return taken alarmingly ill One died on the following day, and two others are ret in danger. They had i ...

Published: Saturday 17 September 1853
Newspaper: Yorkshire Gazette
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1659 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

quarter Utlemion

... another of the boys', maned Evans, also fell down, and he, too, appeared be a fit, and vomited what seemed to be unripe blackberries. Heyworth took them to a house in the road, where the boy Guest begun to vomit blood. The other &Ashen were aleftekereill ...

Published: Saturday 17 September 1853
Newspaper: Hull Daily News
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 3524 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

| Straps of Netos

... of a college there for educating ministers of the English church. Four children at Liverpool on Friday were gathering blackberries. They eat the root of some poisonous plant, and two of them shortly afterwards died, while the others remain in a dangerous ...

Published: Saturday 17 September 1853
Newspaper: Huddersfield Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1912 | Page: 3 | Tags: none