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Wick, Caithness, Scotland

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WHEN does • man impose upou himself I—Wbesi bs his memory. - - • A JAYA greedes is coming In

... for tea harvest bands, did a two weeks' washing and the milking, made a colico dress, practised her music lee. son, went blackberrying, gathered a gallon, walked to town in the evening to attend a concert, and walked home again before bedtime. AN OLDEN ...

•OTABILIA OF THE WEEK

... a door, and capable of containing in all about 400 persons. The total number may be about 7000. Babies, as numerous as black-berries, lay about amongst the straw which littered the floor ; and we noticed one young rascal, rising three years old, standing ...

DRUNCENNZSS AND ITS CURE

... jinglemen and half-starved porters. and 'disallow ers of every description who devoutly believed that gold and fame grew like blackberries upon hed gs everywhere but in poor Ireland, and who, if they did not actually suppose that the houses in London were tiled ...

A PLEA FOR THE POOR

... clamorous jiaglemen and half-starved ters, and adventurers every description who devoutly believed that gold and fame grew like blackberries upon hedges everywhere but in poor Ireland, and who, if they did not suppose that the houses in Lon- don were tiled wi ...

Published: Thursday 01 December 1870
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 7997 | Page: 3 | Tags: none