POETRY

... are a new device a t Manchester, England. Ten rut of every twelve adult males in Sacramento chew tobacco. The Mississippi blackberry crop is a failure, 05% ing to the heavy rains. Ants are said to be destroying the corn idiom) portions of Stewart county ...

Published: Tuesday 01 August 1871
Newspaper: Waterford Chronicle
County: Waterford, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1142 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

EPING FOREST

... and wild. Bramble bushes, affectionately remembered by so many London boys, who watch assiduously the ripening of the blackberries, struggle for pos- session of the ground with the trailing ferns and the sturdy determined holly. One cannot tell whether ...

Published: Wednesday 02 August 1871
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3383 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

it used to be a ludicrous sight to see one of Her Nlajesty's Judges sitting on the bench in a

... so high in ceiling as that apartment in a gentleman's house. Crime there was • to cousider but civil cases were thick as blackberries, for where ill you find Scotsmen without the inevitable complement of lawyers and lawsuits I toe absurd trial 1 rentenils•r ...

CRICKET JOTTINGS

... ’eui for foor.” Again Clayton acrntatily, but the b».et of his balla were miatored, and cuts for four were a plentiful aa blackberrie*, and every bit timed and placed with tho most unerring judgment. Uowitt, too, nsd his Jtutg use the expression literal ...

Published: Saturday 05 August 1871
Newspaper: The Sportsman
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1668 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

The Echo

... propora) ‘isthis : there are cur two plough horses, the colt that has been in our family these nine years, and his compani n Blackberry that has scarcely done an carthly thing for this month past. They are both grown fat and lazy,. Why should not they do something ...

Published: Saturday 05 August 1871
Newspaper: Echo (London)
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1144 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LONDON DAILY CHRONICLE AND CLERKENWELL NEWS, SATURDAY. AUGUST 5, 1871

... broken and wild. Bramble bushes, attectionatcly remembered by many London boys, who watch assiduously the ripening of the blackberries,” straggle for possession of the ground with the trailing ferns and the sturdy determined holly. One cannot tell whether ...

Published: Saturday 05 August 1871
Newspaper: London Daily Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2959 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

A FAMILIAR TALK. MR. BLOTTER, A CLERK, WANTS TO KNOW ALL ABOUT MINNESOTA

... How about fruit? I don't want to go where I cannot raise fruit. Those native to the soil are strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, gooseberries ' huckleberries, cherries, and plums. I pie ked all of these upon the prairies and along the streams while ...

Published: Saturday 05 August 1871
Newspaper: Bee-Hive
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2052 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

ASSAULT AT COSSET IRONWORKS

... ask it from their fellow mortals. No one who holds the power of granting it can refuse it without guilt. BLACKBERRY Jesi..—Boil the blackberries with half their weight of coarse moist sugar for three-quarters of an hour, keeping the mass stirred constantly ...

Published: Saturday 05 August 1871
Newspaper: Consett Guardian
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 330 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

have nothing to do—who have their abode m the wild uiounUinß, wliere they teach the ignorant and feed the poor,

... was like longing for dead friend. There was I, with and strength, trampling among the gome, skirling the hedgerows mass of blackberry blossom—scenting the gardens of wild flowers; mounting the highest mils, t viewing magnificent panoramas snob I have neveraeen ...

OCCASIONAL NOTES

... excel- lent personage and I ubbock or Lamrnmas Day; then the Teley,-/r suggests a Blue-bell Day in June and a Blackberry Day in October; and a Primrose and Violet Day in March, it says, would not be at all a bad idea. It makes no allusion ...

Published: Wednesday 09 August 1871
Newspaper: Pall Mall Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4297 | Page: 5 | Tags: News 

“V* A. ■ THE BIRMINGHAM DAILY MAIL, THURSDAY, AU

... have not to search far for such examples. Any student of police-court intelligence will know that they are as plentiful as blackberries in October. A sadder case thau usual came before the Leamington magistrates yesterday. A bricklayer named Mucklow, residing ...

Published: Thursday 10 August 1871
Newspaper: Birmingham Mail
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: | Words: 1626 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

DEATHS

... concerning public order, and the every-day administration of our naval and military affairs. We know that excuses are abundant blackberries; it is easy throw odium and the burden of delay upon a factious Opposition for the barren results of the .Session. But ...

Published: Saturday 12 August 1871
Newspaper: Gloucestershire Chronicle
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: | Words: 2497 | Page: 4 | Tags: none