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A Frenchman, who rrsulved get rid of lit , went litlle brfuir high tide to a jiost the s«e.-n»id He

... ia • • a stream life aa has been flowing to through the eye*. There are eves which give is more admisaioa into them than blackberries: otli. •re liquid and deep well* that men might fall int ; and others are oppressive and devouring, and take • .. much ...

Published: Thursday 28 July 1864
Newspaper: Southern Reporter
County: Selkirkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 310 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Varieties

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

Published: Thursday 06 August 1863
Newspaper: Southern Reporter
County: Selkirkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1493 | Page: 4 | 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 ...

KIRKHOPE FLOWER SHOW

... Pelargonium —Ist, Mitchell; 2d, H« M'Morran; 3d, A. Thomson. Phloxes— Ist, James Kerss; 2d, H. M'Morran; 3d. I>. Mitchell. . Blackberries—lst, Thomas Johnstone; 2d, A. Dalgleish; 3d, Esther M'Alorran. Gooseberries—lst, J. Kerss; 2d, D. Mitchell; 3d. George ...

Published: Thursday 28 July 1864
Newspaper: Southern Reporter
County: Selkirkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 474 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Ristrict Ittos

... which occurred in the end of May is only now beginning to be fully oomprehended. In the gardens potatoes, strawberries, blackberries, gooseberries, and red and white ourrentshavesuffered severely, and will in most caries prove • very light crop. In the ...

Foreign Miscellany

... this only one division of Bengal. Other parts the country would furnish equally startling figures; for tigers are plenty blackberries in the swamps about the mouth of the Ganges, and indeed all along the Gulf of Bengal. In Assam, during the same period ...

Published: Thursday 27 June 1867
Newspaper: Southern Reporter
County: Selkirkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 771 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

RAISING THE WIND for LIFE-BOATS

... crowned with success, which is neither morally nor physically impossible. For if Morn/Its are not quite as plentiful as blackberries, they tuay be no scarcer than Nabodies, and one Moffatt equal to a Peabody would be almost the making of the Lifeboat ...

THE WAR IN AMERICA

... beloved country. He had to contend against a great deal in his district, for the infamous Copperheads were as thick as blackberries, and he often felt if he would.like thrashing a man to be Christian virtue, that lie might have the privilege of digging ...

Published: Thursday 14 May 1863
Newspaper: Southern Reporter
County: Selkirkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1148 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

REMARKABLE CASE OF MISTAKEN IDENTITY

... that day nor the following, but no attention had been paid to that fact. On the third day some children, who were picking blackberries near the village, were attracted by the unusual movements of a dog which accompanied them to a spot where he was pawing ...

Published: Thursday 05 July 1866
Newspaper: Southern Reporter
County: Selkirkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1455 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT

... (be. distinguished viei tors •' (to quote a favourite phrase of your London contemporaries) wiil be as pleoti- , ful as blackberries. The prices of admission are on , a scale sufficiently liberal to ensure the attendance , of a very large number of vi ...

ALAS, FOR THE POOR BACHELOR!

... understand that they are going out to work; and that husbands are not in Australia, any more than in England, plenty as blackberries. Perhaps it will be difficult to get this well into their minds. It has been the popular belief in England that single ...

Varieties

... Varieties. the frost Sa'urdav last, ripe blackberries were frequently to found in the hedgerows in Devonshire and tile bor lers S nnerset. Amkkican Railways.—Mr G. A. S ...

Published: Thursday 14 January 1864
Newspaper: Southern Reporter
County: Selkirkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1819 | Page: 4 | Tags: none