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KILLED ON THE RAILWAY,

... KILLED ON THE RAILWAY, Some boys were blackberrying in the neighbourhood of Bolton on Saturday when two or three of them crossed the railway at a place where they had no right to do so. Another boy. naqiel Smith, wee about to do so, hut 3A a trata was ...

Published: Saturday 02 October 1880
Newspaper: Liverpool Albion
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 419 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

MARPLE MINERAL MILLS

... errand by his mother to his grandfather's coal wharf. at the Top Lock, and then went along; with some other boys to gather blackberries. When near Mr. Bowden's timber yard, on the Macclesfield branch of the canal at Marple, the boys commenced to play on a ...

ECHOES OF THE DAY

... Mrs. Rachel Dederick, wife of Frederick Dederick, a waggon-maker of Cairo, Greene County, X.Y., passing through field of blackberry bushes, when she heard a queer noise. She stopped and listened, and, the noise ceased, she again went upon her way. After ...

Published: Monday 11 October 1880
Newspaper: Liverpool Echo
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 829 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

FOXHALL WARD

... wife of Andrew Nickson, of Hey•houses, was on the Sand-hills, near Lytham, she picked up what she took to be a bunch of blackberries, and w- - (ATERLOO WARD. mediately bitten in the finger by what -in this ward, on either side, con- •1 adder. her husband ...

Published: Friday 08 October 1880
Newspaper: Blackpool Gazette & Herald
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 957 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

LONDON NI A K ETln

... pomserranates,34 per dozen ; filbert., cud Kentish cob note, 10d to 26 ; lychees from China. 4.; and Sapacain nuts, 61 per lb.; blackberries, 4d per pint. Flowers ts,• Civic* tribes in blossom, 6s to 12s; and common, 44 64 to per pot ; cut flowers, Is to Is 6d ...

Published: Saturday 30 October 1880
Newspaper: Cumberland & Westmorland Herald
County: Cumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 938 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

PCOR-LAW EXPENDITURE

... Mr. Bernard Wake, {ceding eldetheid solicitor, been fined II and coma for savagely beating I man whom he found gathering blackberries in a wood on his beat. The remote Fait Macleod, in the Rooky Moontains. of Clasde, tea its newspaper. The Ike. J. McLean ...

MYSTERIOUS DEATH ON THE UNDER. GROUND RAILWAY

... Bernard Wake, a leading Sheffield solicitor, has been fined El and costs, for savagely beating a man whom he found gathering blackberries in a wood on his beat. The remote Fort Macleod, in the Rocky Mountains, Dominion of Canada, has its newspaper. The Rev ...

Smarms! —On the 10th lost, Weal Bud 2nd. of the Edgehill herd, calved • roan burl cal, by Sir Roland

... interwoven with grain and flowers. Great p tins had been taken with the pulpit and reading desk, tht wreaths being composed of blackberries, red leaves, and grain, with a bunch of dahlias at each corner. The font had also a very chaste appearance, having a groundwork ...

COUNTY POLICE COURT

... consenting oarty. On Sunday last, about four o'clock in the afternoon, tae girl, along with two other eirls, was Iplcking blackberries, in Clo»e-brow, about a m'i.e from Risht»n. They were near the prisoner's h use, and he came out and went to tbem. He asked ...

Published: Saturday 02 October 1880
Newspaper: Blackburn Standard
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1123 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE CHORLEY STANDARD Saturday. October 2 isso

... aged 12 years, residing in Velvet Walks. Deceased ami several other lads were in Heaton on Saturday afternoon gathering blackberries. Two or three of them had crossed the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway at Loetock, and deceased was about to follow when ...

AN AMATEUR PRIZE FIGHT

... often see a constable there, I observed no fewer than four before we reached the Boathouse. There they were as thick as blackberries* Indeed, the Superintendent seems to have been about with a strong body of men from an early hour in the morning waiting ...

Published: Monday 25 October 1880
Newspaper: Manchester Evening News
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1751 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

WIT AND HUMOUR

... have been pretty drunk. Whether the stone hits pitcher or the pitcher hits the stone, it is always bad for the pitcher. The blackberry is so named because it is blue in order to distinguish it from the blueberry which ia black. If yon pretty daughter, you ...

Published: Saturday 02 October 1880
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1617 | Page: 14 | Tags: none