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... li. As to canvass, I can best describe the promises I hare received in the word. of Falafel'. theY have keen plenty as blackberries, and sat. thif important question how tar they can be relied oi. I Wait A may rely on th e m im P ikitl Y' and for this ...

Published: Thursday 05 November 1868
Newspaper: Weymouth Telegram
County: Dorset, England
Type: Article | Words: 879 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

A failure, airing to cotton speculations, u anoolincoo it with lisbilitiss itniounhug, it is said, to I,SUV,UOU ..

... On Wednesday, the 7th instant, witness and deceased, and two other lads, were at Walthamatowe. They were out gathering blackberries in the forest. At five o'clock they set out for home. On the way they met two lade, named John Mordaunt and George Meadows ...

Published: Saturday 01 October 1864
Newspaper: Stroud Journal
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1948 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

District Mins. MB. POWELL, _Q.O., AT WEYMOUTH

... borough. As to my canvass, I Can ameribe the promises I hive received in the words of Falstaff, they have been as plenty as blackberries, and as to the important question how fa they con be relied on. I trust I may rely on them implicitly, and Ice this mama ...

BAPPERTON

... have been the largest, but the expenses have been greater this time. EXTRAORDINARY INCIDENT.—A gentleman whilst gathering blackberries in the neighbourhood of Almondsbury, discovered a blackbird's nest with four eggs quite warm in it, and on breaking them ...

THE FISII E U Y

... length swarming with fish. I have been two or three times . becalmed there and caught cod as big donkeys and plentiful blackberries.’ Upon that information Capt. Rhodes acted. had often thought of trying but it lonely place to alone. St. Hilda being the ...

Published: Wednesday 07 August 1861
Newspaper: The Cornish Telegraph
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 833 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

than that set nu by the proeecution. The jury retired a verdict of Not guilty. WAS HE M.AI) I—At the

... Manhattan, in his last letter). At his reception, one evening lag week, in the White House, the negroes were as thick as blackberries' in Jersey. Among we a coloured barber named Burke; he was an appl: c..nt !Of an office in New; York Custom House. The ...

CONFIRMATION AT CHURCHDOWN

... The bushes, gathered in thick clumps or spreading in luxuriant hedgerows, glistened in green leaf or showed promise of blackberries for the autumn time. From the top, Gloucester to the south, —with its Cathedral pile, looking dead and dim in the misty ...

Published: Tuesday 31 July 1866
Newspaper: Cheltenham Chronicle
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1081 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

•1:T11O89IIIP OP

... enactedthat every occupant sleeping there, the first night dreamt the tragedy through. Ghost-haunted house. are as common aa blackberries. A dream-haunted house is certainly an original invention. In the eginning of a series of articles, Things that I remember ...

Published: Saturday 02 June 1866
Newspaper: Gloucestershire Chronicle
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: | Words: 918 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

PRICE ONE PENNY

... exhilirating exercise. At Stan pit there was a capital sheet of ice, and the venturesome might be seen gliding as far as Blackberry Point. But our climate has maintained its character for changeableness, and just as skaters became skilful, and skates obtaining ...

Published: Saturday 16 January 1864
Newspaper: Christchurch Times
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 936 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

AGRICULTURISTS

... two * Angels’ at Islington. (Illustrated W. Brnnton) The Belle ofl.a Garrison Town. (Illnstrated H. Sanderson) Among the Blackberries. (Illnstrated R. Barnes) Office: 49, Fleet-street, London, E.C. The Well-thumbed Page. (With an Illustration by D. H. Frs’on ...

Published: Wednesday 04 February 1863
Newspaper: Frome Times
County: Somerset, England
Type: Article | Words: 822 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

SPORTING MATTERS

... pleasure occasional departure from the uniformity of the children’s dietary. allude to the introduction apple, currant, blackberry, and gooseberry meat* in the shape of puddings, pies, &c. There can be no more doubt of the benefit to health of such indulgence ...

Published: Monday 29 November 1869
Newspaper: Western Morning News
County: Devon, England
Type: | Words: 973 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Wiafs Straus

... wreu, who stay with us all the winter, continue to pipe merry stave for our amusement. Then we have the pleasures of blackberrying and the delights nutting. Can any boy or girl, even in this age of premature aud women, resist the temptation of ripe brown ...

Published: Thursday 29 September 1864
Newspaper: Dorset County Chronicle
County: Dorset, England
Type: Article | Words: 825 | Page: 13 | Tags: none