BLACKBERRIES AND NUTS

... in the newspaper to themselves. There is coming forward the most prodigious season ever known for blackberries, nuts, and elder-berries. The blackberries are so thick, the nuts so big and bunchy, and the elder-berries so suggestive of mugs upon mugs of ...

Published: Thursday 17 August 1865
Newspaper: Dundee Courier
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1140 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

TWO BOYS SHOT FOR THROWING AT A PLUM-TREE

... afternoon, two Irish ly twelve and ten years, went into the coun to gather blackberries. wi as faras Warle igorn, where the prisoner resides, and began gathering blackberries from a hedge which separated his garden from the :meadow the boys were in. berts ...

Published: Thursday 12 October 1865
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 287 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

TWO BUT SHOT FOR THROWING AT A PLUM TREE

... appears that on Saturday afternoon, two Irish hide, aged respectiedy twelve and ten years, weut into the country to gather blackberries. They wandered as far as Wadley Wigurn, where tle prisoner resides, and began gathering blacklarries (ruin a hedge which ...

VariftifS. A Narrow Escape.—The gentleman whose lips pressed lady’s “snowy brow,” did not catch cold. Tall-Talr ..

... better than crabapple. There would blackberries, perhaps, bigger than the biggest mulberries, and they might even come to lie worn upon ducal coronets in place of the strawberry-leaf. Hut the poor plebeian blackberry is like the honesty and the patience ...

Published: Wednesday 23 August 1865
Newspaper: Dumfries and Galloway Standard
County: Dumfriesshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1464 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

CRICKET. A match was

... appeared among them to some extent, which will hnrt growers. The wild fruits are most abundant, luxurious, and delicious. Blackberries the Onest and sweetest of all these fruits, are exceedingly plentiful; no need to go bunting to fill the as they de in ...

SFOHTiHU i* J fSLLWKNOM

... Provisor, —3O r*n. Qceen’s Plats. Breeze, fir.it; Trzpeze, Mcood—3 ran. March Stakes. Shrapnell, first; Alberta, second; Blackberry, third —II ran. Handicap Sweepstakes. Thallassius, first; Wild Agues, second; Lord Doug* las, third—lo ran. Nursery Stakes ...

Published: Saturday 29 July 1865
Newspaper: Glasgow Morning Journal
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 229 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

urns TARN

... under the canopy of a spreading tree formed all that was necessary. And as chairs, trees, and people, were as plentiful us blackberries, no young gentleman who wished to exhibit ...

Published: Saturday 21 January 1865
Newspaper: Huntly Express
County: Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 381 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE BANK AT BADEN BADEN BROKE]!..AGAIN

... the race week, when Princes md titled people from almost every European country (Prance especially) were as plentiful as blackberries, a young Brazilian won close on ._;JO,OUB, and on Saturday evening the process known as breaking the bank ' came to pass ...

Published: Tuesday 24 October 1865
Newspaper: Dundee Courier
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 393 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

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 ...

LONDON GOSSIP

... There are plenty of Cockneys still in London, but you go to the various watering places you will finl them as plentiful as blackberries, murdering their h's' with as much persistence as they do in Cheapside. The pure Cockney always keeps to the beaten track ...

Published: Thursday 03 August 1865
Newspaper: Stirling Observer
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 882 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Vortry I•ASTLES. Prom Atiavti: Then Is picture In uty bawls That only tad. to woe Annan The tunthrbt. throuun •

... some girls, who, under the guard of their governess, strayed from a footpath to this British tarsier's hedge and picked blackberries. Whereon this creditable specimen of Zumnierset flew at them, and beat two with his stick till he drove them, shrieking ...