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ALLEGED ADMIRALTY NEGLIGENCE

... convinced if he lived at a naval port, where sailors and marines most do congregate, that such cases are as plentiful as blackberries. Scarcely a day passes without some similar distressing case being brought to our notice, tending to prove gross negligence ...

Published: Saturday 27 January 1855
Newspaper: Hampshire Advertiser
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 639 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

FACTS AND FANCIES

... picture London damsels gathering primroses or violets on the rising ground about the office Household Words, or hunting for blackberries on the site of Exeter Hall, or sitting to rest on the green sward where Drury Lane Theatre now stands. Marylebone was then ...

Published: Saturday 17 February 1855
Newspaper: Reading Mercury
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1768 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

THE NEW MINISTRY

... the materials for Cabinet are not to picked up in the highways and The men who are lit stuff for ministers are not like blackberries autumn ; and whatever the ability of an individual, he must possess, addition to many other valuable attributes, a certain ...

Published: Tuesday 27 February 1855
Newspaper: Sussex Advertiser
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 526 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Advertisements & Notices

... directed to .lnnolunce JL for AUCTION SALE, on Monday, April the 9th, 1855, -A quantity of ?? OAK and ASH TIMBER, standing in Blackberry Coppice, inidway between Ieomb and Bled- ington, near Stow-or-tlre-Wold, being a portion of the Wyck llill Estates. Particularos ...

Advertisements & Notices

... -The under-mentioned valuable Maiden OAK and ASH TIMBER TREES and SAPLINGS (standing), ASH POLES and FAGOTS, all situate in Blackberry Coppice, midway between Iomub and Blcdington, near Stowv-on-the-Wold, being a portion of the Wyck Hill Estates; consisting ...

PORTSEA, Saturday, Aprii 7, 1850

... present moment is,—mediocrity, !, ffan t of one pre eminent commanding governing “■ i. have statesmen and politicians plentu blackberries,” but then they are of an inferior ' ,d rate class: Since the days of Napoleon, and ~,. decease of our own great Duke, ...

'.OXFORD, 126, HIGH-STREET,—SATURDAY, April 7, 1855. TIMBEB, next Monday. ICOSIB, mar NTQ W OS’-TIIH- WOLD, BE ..

... tho undermontionod valuable maiden OAK and ASH TIMBER TREES and SAPLINGS (standing), ASH POLES and FAGOTS, all situate in Blackberry Coppice, midway between Icomb and Bledington, near Stow-on-the-Wold, being a portion of the Hill Estates; consisting of ...

Advertisements & Notices

... under-mintioned valuable 'Maiden OAK andi ASH TIMBER TREES and SAPLINGS (standing), ASH POLES and FAGOTS, all . situate in Blackberry Coppice, nildway between Ioomb and .Bledington, near Stowr-on-the-Wold, being a portion of the i Wydk Hill Estates; ?? of ...

A SMART CHANGE

... harrowing even in a stable field. sen. ' My gracious,' says Iv hackmetacks, it seems to the me, is as thick in this country as blackberries in the Faln, om after the robins have left them to go to sleep for the her winter. Who on earth would have thought there ...

Published: Saturday 14 April 1855
Newspaper: Hampshire Telegraph
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1855 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

CRANBROOK

... extenuation, and tine of *2os. and costs was levied on the rat-destroyer, which he at once paid. Complaints, plentiful blackberries in autumn, have lately veloped themselves here in reference the clouds*of dust which have winged their way through our ...

FACTS AND FANCIES

... us to the Rule of Three, if ozs. cost Id., now much will lib. I cost ? Answer, 4d. Knowledge at 4d. per lb., cheap as blackberries. It is fortunate that the test one of weight, and not of measure, or we might have had to search for two intellectual ...

Published: Saturday 23 June 1855
Newspaper: Reading Mercury
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2038 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

or that inestimable Jiircl, reputation, which MichaalCaaato deemed the immortal part of himaolf, it ie thing ..

... racing powers before the Derby day, be must have wonderfully and trained amatingly of late ; for assurances were plentiful blackberries that St. Hubert, before he became a cripple, could easily defeat him in spin after spin, at any distance, wit* heavier ...