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THE BOARD OF GREEN CLOTH

... Birmingham, and other places with the moans of rare sport, and orders for fifty, sixty, or hundred dozens arc plentiful blackberries in autumn. With some amount of travelling yesterday managed to discover Great Dover-street, Borough. The day was not enchanting ...

Published: Friday 17 December 1880
Newspaper: The Sportsman
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 11389 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

z HERE AND-

... old4asbiowed and enures us that in =ld Ireland, at least in the part be comes from, these ghosts are as plintifnl as blackberries in Beptimber, and the people there never wind them in the lute. But there— Familiarity breeds contempt in things spiritual ...

Published: Saturday 18 December 1880
Newspaper: American Register
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1525 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

THE COUNTY GENTLEMAN

... have published, but they are decidedly amusing. Can it bo that Mr. Bennett has not seen them? They are as plentiful as blackberries in England. I understand that Mr. Marwood, on the occasion of turning off Messrs. Pavey and Herbert, confided to a reporter ...

Published: Saturday 18 December 1880
Newspaper: Sporting Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3877 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

The Guy’s Hospital Meeting.!

... Doctor is only recognized as sterling when conferred by qualified home institutions. Doctorships hare long been as commou blackberries. Dr. Thomas, of Clapham, writing on American degrees, in repudiation of assertion that ministers, next medieal men, bare ...

Published: Saturday 18 December 1880
Newspaper: South London Press
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1380 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

THE COUNTRY HOUSE. nllOl WITh SPANIELL

... expect or allow • al that Ise and east to do sash work ; this is a duty for a dog. Pea old Bake ; I fancy I me him in a thick blackberry hush, held at all as het if he were in the arms of an octopus, until liberated by badly brads sal knives. I have never heard ...

Published: Saturday 25 December 1880
Newspaper: Field
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 999 | Page: 32 | Tags: none

FRENCH SPORTING NOTES. own «oRPShro.vDCNT.) Paris. Sattrdat. The old year his been sees oat, and its sncoior. ..

... front of the second colours, seriously compromising the right side of his ouster’s book. Examples like this are plentiful blackberries on bom. The jockey, while he feels his horse lull under him, declines to pull up. He spares the mettle of his mount, end ...

Published: Monday 03 January 1881
Newspaper: The Sportsman
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1597 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

46 hind Wood. The paeo became tresseadoue here, and no one could get near them for some time. Then Kent's

... the way bock to Kent's Grove, Pheasant ' s Neet, and again over brook by Hanoi-land Wood, over Newland House Farm, and Blackberry Farm. Here he tried the rabbit-holm, but failing to shelter, went ou, leaving Rowley's Green to the right, crowed the brook ...

Published: Saturday 08 January 1881
Newspaper: Sporting Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1104 | Page: 20 | Tags: none

THE ATHZUTOII

... they got out and over the brook, therm inertheed, theyok us nicely for Corby Rook, and to the t el Aah Green, armed the Blackberry Farm, and ran to the right Exhall Grange, when be was headed and brought them down to their noses ones more. They hunted ...

Published: Saturday 08 January 1881
Newspaper: Field
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 915 | Page: 17 | Tags: none

WIT AND HUMOUR

... drunk. A cexrary man calls his wife the red, white, and blue, because she has red hair, white teeth, and blua eyes. 4 T'ne blackberry is so named because it is blue, im order to distingwish it from the blucberry, which is black. y Ir you have s pretty danghter ...

Published: Saturday 08 January 1881
Newspaper: South London Observer
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2550 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

GARDENING

... the open lorders, and is useful as a hedge plant All the privets dower in the summer, and many bear clusters of shining blackberries. Rhododendrons are propagated in various ways. The common poutioum, which has flowers of a light purple colon-, and grows ...

Published: Sunday 09 January 1881
Newspaper: Reynolds's Newspaper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2131 | Page: 7 | Tags: News 

LIFE SKETCHES. BY MRS. ADOLPHUS BELL. 1.-TRIED •111 D TRUE

... had loved Rata ever since she was a little girl, when he, a lad, had carried her school-books and found her the ripest blackberries and sweetest dog-roses. She carried then • light basket on ber arm, as she to weed her way back through the village to ...

Published: Monday 10 January 1881
Newspaper: Magnet (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2059 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

JAN. 15, dewberry, be passed without mention. Every. where throughout State the bushes are inclieenous. In the ..

... woods and in the tie,ds, an pr soils sod on rich, covering the mountain tole and flourishing in the alluvial toitonis, the blackberry bush 'supplies a rich, healthy and delicious fruit, and in quantities sufficient to supply ten times the present population ...

Published: Saturday 15 January 1881
Newspaper: American Settler
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 400 | Page: 2 | Tags: none