SPORTING

... agsot Mr. B H. Bartlett's Bertes urf Mr, C. Bison's Beformation age Mr. Q, Taylor's Tad- raster ,d. Mr. E. J. Kenlook's King Blackberry agst Mr. Fleck's aid Fisherman IMr. G. Vocking'l Olpsy Boy agst Mr. T. 0. Cheshyre's 2 Mr. Gree nie's Gamester agst Mr.Mloryan's ...

BANQUET TO THE AUSTRALIAN CRICKETERS

... he wee discharged. The other two defendants were fined r5 each. SAD7 DEATH OF A CitIMEA1J Hzeo.-As some children were blackberrying near a railnday arch at Seabrook, Folkestone, they found the dead body of a man lying under a bush. Information w.as at ...

SPORTING INTELLIGENCE

... the forty.nine trilas were run off in considerably under six hours. Hares were, as nnsua, as plentiful as the proverbial blackberries, and as they ran re- narkably w7ell, a really lirst class day's sport was provided. The weather, with the eceeptiuon of ...

SPORTING INTELLIGENCE

... meeting to-day and that cf ayesterday. On the first day, when the meet was at Cooper's~ Coppice ha~res were as plentiful as blackberries In Austumne, but to-day they Were few And for between at Flaxley Green, and we had some long and tedious waiting to do ...

Sports & Pastimes

... it has shown itself. The honey season for the present year is nearly over, bees now obtain- ing but scanty supplies from blackberry and other late flowering plants. As far as can be judged at present from information received, the honey harvest for 1S83 ...

Published: Wednesday 29 August 1883
Newspaper: Derby Mercury
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2658 | Page: 8 | Tags: Sports and Games 

SPORTING

... Strong's Miss Hastrln ap8t Lindsay ns. Bnowdrift O 1'Cricbtcu'siadyardapt Sir W. Anstruther's Almonds O sad Rn iins d Jardine's Blackberry apt Brundrit's Balm Paterton's Patartli agst Cunlughans' Castle (late ,f tiaview). hr Skeoch an. Seantress a bye. h The ...

SPORTING

... Dutch, German, and American fruit growers All the goosebefies, raspberries, strawberries, black currants, damsons, and blackberries used by me are entirely English-no foreign whatever being used-and to prove that the quantity is not particularly small ...

AMATEUR ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

... and Amersicns .frusit-growecs. All the cocose. Wit berries, raspberries, stmewberrles, black currants, daulsons, and odee blackberries used by me are entirely English-uo foreign what- Mset -ever being used-and to prove that the quantity is net particuairly ...

SPORTING INTELLIGENCE

... thefore wh~enever they arrived, f na i adminbrgwatches,especially in the vicini;ty~of-the T bett-ing lists, were as common as blackberries, but 6not so easy to find. One Irishmaln, from the I broad prlaifect ba o fl fmeath, I saw bemlnendig f the ross of an ...

SPORTING INTELLIGENCE

... twhim. He was working on Fair Oak Form. She left the farm about two o'clock, and on her way borne she sitopped to pick some blackberries in a field between Fair Oak Farm and the Cemetery. She saw nine boys outside the field. Two of them catne towards her, ...

Published: Saturday 03 October 1885
Newspaper: Western Mail
County: Glamorgan, Wales
Type: | Words: 2178 | Page: 4 | Tags: Sports and Games 

TURF NOTES & ANTICIPATIONS

... represented, bit, of course, not to such a marked degree as at Croxton Park, where dukas and lords were as plentiful as blackberries in esasoon, to say nothing of the tip-top sporting fraternity- the handles of whose names are not quite so highly jewelled ...

THE WIMBLEDON [ill]

... the right to get a shot of equal 2aerit. At this tize misses were numerous, outerss and mnagpies were. as plentiful as blackberries, and net a mean who 'was then shneting got a score with which he was co)ntent. ?? Gilmiour wee reckoned very fortu-nate ...

Published: Tuesday 13 July 1886
Newspaper: Glasgow Herald
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3925 | Page: 6 | Tags: Sports and Games