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111 E ALABAMA CLAIMS

... popularity. But they won't make England budge. Nowadays big words are as common, and happily they produce as little effect, as blackberry leaves. It the American nation should persist in the mysterious delusion that England trembles before it, it will provoke ...

POTASH AND LITHLA WATER,

... anything. On the contrary, he put it, it was moat likely that Mrs. bight had bought the pouches. which were as common as blackberries in autumn, from some one who had come to her shop. The Bench considered the case was one of very grave suspicion, but on ...

Published: Wednesday 06 March 1872
Newspaper: Cheltenham Examiner
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1699 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE STROUD NEWS AND GLOUCESTERSHIRE ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1872

... Their diet consisted of sundry vegetables with a few seeds, about equal to • dish of boiled duckweed and a dessert of blackberries. and be could say that if the happiness spoken of by Archbishop Manning did exist in Italy, it was not owing to the high ...

AGRICULTURAL LABOURERS' STRIKE

... keep three on 71- a week. One speaker to-night has talked about dry bread. I amid not get that-1 had to fill my belly with blackberries (hear, hear). You know a little about it, 1 dare say. Two farmers who used to employ labour at that rate have lately died ...

Local linos

... ornamented with large benches of flower's ; each of the five sides of the pulpit was bordered with a small wreath of wheat, blackberries, and acorns, on • wound of moss, and on the front aids was a large 'mkt and yellow cross from which ears ofey radiated ...

CHELTENHAM POLICE

... the daughter of Harriet Pys, the 15th instant. Esther said that on Sunday week she went into Badgworth-lane to pick some blackberries. Some one had picked Mrs. Church's flower and pat it op the hedge. Mrs. Chnrch came out and hit her on the head and pulled ...

Published: Tuesday 24 September 1872
Newspaper: Cheltenham Chronicle
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3279 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE STROUD NEWS AND GLOUCESTERSHIRE ADVERTISER, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1672

... the ear and straw. The pillars in the nave were encircled by bunches of fruit of various kinds, such as grapes, apples,, blackberries, fie., and the window ledges were all nicely laid with flowers and evergreens. The gate at the entrance to the churchyard ...