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THE BIRMINGHAM DAILY GAZETTE FRIDAY AUGUST 6 1880 TRADESMEN’S umkn'8 Clothing I rial for jn-wwiit I TROUSERS ..

... called common rights show their results in the total absence of anything getting You never find a nut in hedge a getting or a blackberry i3 ripe the person who sees them Eays I not gather it it will be plucked by someone else the of landlord or tenant is stirred ...

Published: Friday 06 August 1880
Newspaper: Birmingham Daily Gazette
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: | Words: 5730 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

The Ladies” Column, 18 [BY A navY.]

... and there. Others are mmpm«f' entirely of fruit bunches of grapes and vine leaves, black and red currants, barberries, blackberries, and such like, are all used in the manufacture of caps which are certainly far more eccentric looking L{:n elegant. Nothing ...

Published: Friday 13 August 1880
Newspaper: Stratford-upon-Avon Herald
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2248 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

WIT AND 11113101 TR

... marry.' , Two laisumrx were passing some blackberry bushes. .• What's these, Mike i inquired Pat of vf his companion.—•• Nothing but blackberries,” said the latter.—.' But they're red, Mike.-- Well, let, blackberries always red when they're spawn. llstaY ...

Published: Saturday 14 August 1880
Newspaper: Potteries Examiner
County: Staffordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2838 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

– – --- -- THE MURDER NEAR ST. ALBANS

... wan formerly a hotelier, fumed acme, sad had a lugs of est..o. home clothes, jsoiret, end waistcoat, fueled hidden under blackberry bashes in a coalfield, are now identified as having belonged to the deceased. A large quantity of plate stoles from tem ...

Published: Wednesday 25 August 1880
Newspaper: Wolverhampton Express and Star
County: Staffordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 624 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

A PLAGUE OF SNAKES

... which were racers, horn-tail adders, gray adders, and pilots, in as old, worked-out fiag-stone quarry, while he was picking blackberries. They were all coiled in together, and when he disturbed them they made • terrible !liming. He and an Irish boy, named ...

Published: Friday 27 August 1880
Newspaper: Nuneaton Chronicle
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 621 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

A PLAGUE OF SNAKES

... which were racers, horn-tail adders, gray adders, and pilots, in an old, worked-out flag-stone quarry, while he was picking blackberries. They were all coiled in together, and when he disturbed them they made a terrible hissing. He and an Irish boy, named ...