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THOMAS GEORGE’S

... really tho so-called honour of knighthood is hardly worth the expense and the fuss of taking it up. Knights are plentiful blackberries, and they have been mode knights for such droll reasons in many instances that the honour has become a very doubtfu one ...

Published: Saturday 04 January 1868
Newspaper: Yarmouth Independent
County: Norfolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 3945 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT

... the so-called honour of knighthood is hardly worth the expense and tho f usa of taking it up. Knights are plentiful as blackberries, and they have been made knights for such droll reasons in many instances that tho honour has become a very doubtful one ...

Published: Thursday 09 January 1868
Newspaper: Suffolk and Essex Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1600 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

by man the would. MAEKtAOB. • wife, who trusted so, should always her own way in matters of the house

... ill-hnmour be reserved for the Celestial Empire. It's cowardly and brutal thing to do, let me tell yon although «* common as blackberries in the hedges with that chivalric thing we call gentleman. don’t stint your wife with pocket-money. If she so unmindful ...

EPPING

... cherry trees, 1,500 plums, six acres of quinces*, twenty acres of strawberries, twenty acres of raspberries, eight acres of blackberries, eighteen acres of grapes. greater part of the trees are already dug, and ready for early spring planting.—Boston Adesrtiser ...

Published: Tuesday 04 February 1868
Newspaper: Essex Herald
County: Essex, England
Type: Article | Words: 23705 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

SATURDAY, KER 8.1B«S

... 2,000 cherry trees. 1,800 plains, six acres of quinces, 20 acres of strawberries, acres of raspberries, eight acres of blackberries, 18 acres of grapes. A sensation bsiug caused in the religions world by the preaching of a converted actor, formerly of ...

Published: Saturday 08 February 1868
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 10427 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

BRITISH AND FOREIGN

... 2,000 cherry trees, 1,500 plums, six acres of quinces, 20 acres of strawberries, 20 acres of raspberries, eight acres blackberries, acres of grapes. The Sheffield rattenere are coming to the surface again. Last Thursday night two brothers named Marshall ...

Published: Saturday 08 February 1868
Newspaper: Watford Observer
County: Hertfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 4613 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

FOREIGN MISCELLANY

... ooodwarf. 2,600 cherry trees, 1,500 plains, six acres of qpinces, acres of strawberries, 20 acres of raspljerriet, acres blackberries, 1H acres The part of the trees are alrend? dug, and are ready for early spring planting.— Boston Advertiser, Jan. 61. ...

Published: Saturday 15 February 1868
Newspaper: Herts Advertiser
County: Hertfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2130 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

PICKINGS FROM THE PAYERS

... fire. catch your heir, then hook him. Every plum its pudding. Short pipes make long smokes. It's a kng lone that has no blackberries. Wind and weather come tovether- A lower in the button-hole is worth two on the bunk. Round robin is • shy biol. There's ...

Published: Friday 03 April 1868
Newspaper: Essex Weekly News
County: Essex, England
Type: Article | Words: 2279 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Huntingdon, Bedford, Lynn and Peterborough Gazette

... common (hear, hear). His ground of objection was fatal to the whole Establishment; antl yet the abuses were as plentiful blackberries. Them were 1119 parishes in Ireland, connected with the Establishment, which had no one who went to them, while the same ...

Published: Saturday 02 May 1868
Newspaper: Cambridge Independent Press
County: Cambridgeshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 13340 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

The meeting terminated at about three o’clock

... the way, a did Shakapeare uses the word in the sense of scold ”. It prevails in the Craven district 306. Scaubberkies, n. Blackberries. In Yorkshire ll*d bumbLelcites. SOT. Schollabd, ». It is the word “scholar”; but the form is not unreasonable, following ...