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BURNTISLAND

... backwardness of the season the specimens exhibited were not equal to the average of former years, particularly as regards blackberries ; there were none of these brought forward by the practical gardeners. Several superior geraniums were exhibited by Mr ...

Published: Thursday 19 July 1866
Newspaper: Fifeshire Journal
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 464 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

To erase wirrTre—th—s eszier shadow dittedowhias In the sun

... ny schooltitay name; The-sigible squirrel mire ran skippiag over the The blackbirds among The nolsilraung, Avehmler the blackberry teseavvhistled ae serious Tata, CAM., remembering well How any little shadow fell Awl/painfully reached and wrought to :sere ...

EXPLOSION OF GUNPOWDER

... respectively twelve and ten years, went i!lto , the country to gather blackberries. They wandered far as Warley Wigorn, where the prisoner resides, and began gathering blackberries from hedge which separated his garden from the meadow the boys were in ...

A !RISS

... above the parapet, for the Yankee sharpshooters, armed with rides of a long range, with telescopic sights, were thick as blackberries in the woods to the front, and were excellent shots. Darn the blue-skills any how; who's scared the blue-bellies (i ...

Published: Saturday 21 November 1863
Newspaper: Strathearn Herald
County: Perthshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 452 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

GLOOMY PICTURE OF AFFAIRS'AT*RICHMOND

... that there is full supply. Dysentery is the prevailing malady, for whose cures the only medicines that can obtained are blackberry juice and boiled flour. Jeff. Davis* proclamation calling in the absentees from the rebel army remains a dead letter, and ...

Published: Tuesday 01 September 1863
Newspaper: Banffshire Journal
County: Banffshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 495 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

ODDS AND ENDS

... anecdote of the Warrentou Rifle Corps. One day he told us that a countryman had come into camp with a quantity of blackberry pies. Blackberries America are a much finer fruit than those ripened by our faint English sun, sod are quite popular in their season ...

Published: Friday 21 August 1863
Newspaper: Elgin Courier
County: Moray, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1646 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

OUR HONEST PREMIER

... retired allowances, and other devices for the extension of out-door relief, are still thick as leaves VaL lanibrosa, or as blackberries in autumn. According to Mr Hume's return, 1849, they amounted then to L.975.849 annually, exclusive of annuities to the ...

Published: Tuesday 30 April 1861
Newspaper: Dunfermline Press
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 449 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

TROUP HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY

... were large, and re, markably well flavoured. Strawberries were not so very large, but were well matured. The tlrst prize blackberries were tempting lot. This class might have been irore extensively represented, but os it was, they were decidedly a superior ...

Published: Tuesday 10 September 1867
Newspaper: Banffshire Journal
County: Banffshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 457 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Just Published, BUCHAN'S DOMESTIC MEDICINE,

... made the best of by weaving it into our report of the Review. As fur our poetical friends, seeing they are es numeroais as blackberries will soon be, we are not afraid of them. The Bankruptcy business don't suit our twenty shilling per pound prompt pitying ...

iptcratuvc

... is average specimen of this kind. (Grammatical blunders are abundant, violations of every principle good taste arc thick blackberries, ami lame metaphors and decapitat -1 images abound in every page. Ntill, So long the author keeps matter of fact, the ...

Published: Tuesday 04 June 1861
Newspaper: Brechin Advertiser
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 461 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

POLAND

... bloodhounds been so fiercely on the scent as within the last few days. | Transportatious to Siberia have become as frequent as blackberries ; and as for punishment in a Russian jail far away from the woody tracts of Poland and the sound of its language, why, ...

KEITH

... Keit!t Grammar School Club. The match comas of at Keith on Saturday. Lauob turnips, like large eggs, are getting plcnrital blackberries. Once more. Mr M'WiUism. MsisHr, sends Graystose turnip measuring In girth feet and some Inches. ...

Published: Tuesday 31 August 1869
Newspaper: Banffshire Journal
County: Banffshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 412 | Page: 5 | Tags: none