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MEADE AXD COMMERCE IN THE NO! iTH OF ENGLAND

... consequence of the date of our markets here:; and the reports of injuries to the new Cotton crops were as plentifu Las blackberries. Little attention, however, is paid to these rumou for the breadth of land under cultivation, and the present stock of ...

Published: Sunday 16 October 1853
Newspaper: Weekly Dispatch (London)
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 231 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

I am, sir, Your obedient servant, EDWIN L. GODKIN

... following passage, descriptive of a schoolboy's holiday, as a fair specimen of the style of the work : THERE were green blackberries in the hedges, just tinted with a roseate hue and there were thick gre e n cree p ers on the road-side, and filberts looked ...

Published: Saturday 01 October 1853
Newspaper: Eastern Star
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1703 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

Railway Accidents. A Hint to Prevent Collisions

... British Preference. The Samuel Douglass Testimonial. Testimonials are in these days of railway commotion as numerous as blackberries on a bush. It is quite right to testify to a man's merits. We say nothing against the prin.. ciple of the thing properly ...

Published: Saturday 22 October 1853
Newspaper: Herapath's Railway Journal
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1877 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

PEACE, PIETY, AND PARADOX

... rarity in military talent? Let a revolution shake up society, and you have heroes, commanders, conquerors, as plenty as blackberries. It may be questioned whether the game of war requires much more skill than that of chess. And as for the moral purity ...

Published: Sunday 16 October 1853
Newspaper: Weekly Dispatch (London)
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 2272 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

(tio.4-4

... cultivation—to be pestered after all for 6 reason !' If definitions grew wild in the ditches, and reasons were as plenty as blackberries, not a reason would she give, on compulsion or auggestion, from field or garden. Still, cultivation must be something. ...

... them. Then come your red, white, and black rasps, your early and late strawberries, your wild rasps and strawberries, your blackberries, wortleberries, and cranberries ; and last of all, some fifty bushels of various kinds of peaches, and eight hundred bushels ...

Published: Saturday 15 October 1853
Newspaper: People's Paper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4917 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

4 BELL’S LIKE IN LONDON, OCTOBER 30. 1853-PCBLISHED IN TIME FOB ALL THE SATURDAY MORNING MAILS AND EARLY RAILWAYS

... possibly assign for the horse’s retrogression the market. The rumours trials during the intervening week were ” plentiful blackberries,” the German crack, Seahorse, amongst others, being reported to have done wonders with bis stable companion Ksbel, which ...