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Taunton Courier and Western Advertiser

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Taunton Courier and Western Advertiser

AXBRIDGE

... half-past six, she went the street at Wrington, where she met the prisoners. They asked her to go with them and pick some blackberries, and she accompanied them to a field, where prisoners throw her down, and committed the assault complained of. The bench ...

Wednesday, June 14,1876. (lamer

... the little laggard stay ? So swift of foot as she ever has been It is not so far by the meadow way To the lane where the blackberry vines begin Her mother stands in the door-way there, Shading her eyes from the setting sun. And up and down with an anxious ...

ILMINSTER

... upstairs with them, and he bad not seen them since. Owing to the loss of the money he _ had been obliged to live on beans and blackberries ever since, and he was almost starved. He also told the Bench that if they did not do something in it they would not see ...

ANOTHER DISPUTED ACCOUNT

... was impracticable. Mrs Long sent for the defendant, and he did romething to it, but Mrs Lung endeavouring to bake a large blackberry and apple pie she found that it was worse than useless. She paid the plaintiff the bill for repairing, and sent for Gill ...

THE BRADFORD MURDER

... considered by many persons in country districts that an abundance of wild fruit is ominous of a coming hard winter. Sloer, blackberries, and hazel nuts are usually plentiful this season. ...

WEYMOUTH

... the youngest daughter of the postmaster, died on Friday night. Mr. Read’s little daughters, with other children, went blackberrying on the Chickerel-road on afternoon. When they were coming home, Mabel Read ran an embankment by the side of the road, though ...

THE TAUNTON COURIER

... Covent-gardcn, before daylight on December morning, the trades goes in glistening broad-leaved laurel ; ivy, glossy and black-berried ; holly, with its thorny leaves and berries like crimson drops,” as the symbolical writers love to describe it and ound ...

TUE GOOD TEMPLARS’ DEMONSTRATION

... various, and varied according to the degree,” but goldfiligree work and jewels, and monogram devices, seemed as common blackberries ; and oven the liitlo wee bits of humanity of only fow years old, who have solemnly abjnred strong drinks with tho dovotedness ...

SHEPTON BEAUCHAMP HARVEST HOME

... received. The head represented a bank of evergreens, studded with almost every variety of fruit and wild flowers—among which blackberries, wild bops, and bedge-nnts ware conspicuous. Above all was cross made of dahlias and clem itis. On the base of the font ...

KAYE’S WORSDELL'S PILLS

... lost in the of history. My taste for praise it not ike that of children for fruit. If there were nothing but medlars and blackberries in the world, I could be very well content to go without any at aIL old bachelor probably wrote the following:—‘*’Twixt ...

THE GAMEKEEPER

... its. We will tako you to princely property whereon gamo is strictly preserved, and where foxes aro almost plentiful as blackberries. Around, but beyond the boundaries of that property, the grass lands to the extent of full two hundred acres are pretty ...

REVIEW OF THE CORN TRADE

... behind at the winning post. The bonnet of the period is miniature kitchou gardon. It is decorated with cherries, grapes, blackberries, little carrots, bits of parsley, long pale-green beans, marjorum sorrell, and other vegetables familiar to professors ...