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ri)te eastern -4rgus gorougli of rijuitrug Zino. SATURDAY, APRIL 11th, 1885

... head at the last, and candidates will have to crop up at the eleventh hour, when they will probably come up as thick as blackberries. The Countess of Airlio has been elected a member of the Lintrathen School Board. Her ladyship, who it will be remembered ...

FLORIDA ORANGES. Br IDA A. HARPER

... fast in Florida. Put down a poach tree switch and in two or three years you will be gathering peaches. Plums, cherries, blackberries, figs and other small fruits grow in profusion and grape vines clamber over over everything. You can have garden all the ...

Published: Friday 10 April 1885
Newspaper: Anglo-American Times
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1568 | Page: 18 | Tags: none

THE FIELD, THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN'S NEWSPAPE

... peaches, and plums. The season of small fruits begins with strawberries, raspberries, gooseberries, and currants dewberries, blackberries, and huckleberries grow wild in great profusion. In the grasses I have seen heavy swaths of hoards, orchard, timothy ...

Published: Saturday 18 April 1885
Newspaper: Field
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1804 | Page: 44 | Tags: none

BRIGHTON

... through rotting, where late summer flowers still linger fondly on their stalks, etherelhedges are loaded with ripe and juicy blackberries and where tbe twin rodents limp about in the hazel copse discussing the relative merits of Purdy and Kenton. Away, through ...

Published: Saturday 04 April 1885
Newspaper: Holloway Press
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1901 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

TROUT FISHING IN THE ISLE OF MAN. Omen earth has her sons and her daughters, And these have their guerdons

... been sometimes surprised when I have scrambled among the bracken and the rushy little bogs, and endangered my clothes among blackberry bushes and on the loose stone walls which divide the poor pastures of the glee, bow few and small have been the trout which ...

Published: Saturday 18 April 1885
Newspaper: Field
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2058 | Page: 26 | Tags: none

p,rt. THE CROYDON OBSERVER, APRIL 23, 1885

... to recommend that negotiations be opened with Mr W. B. Waterlow in the hope of making some arrangements for opening the Blackberry road to the public. The Mayor then ivierred to the estimate for the coming six months, sod explained that the sum of £3 ...

Published: Thursday 23 April 1885
Newspaper: Croydon Observer
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2269 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

~~ THE CROYDON EXPRESS. SATURDAY, ARPIL 18, 188 b

... supply material for half-a-dozen melo-dramas. Your breath is taken away by the fluctuations of fortune which crop up like blackberries through the four acts of this wondrous creation, a play which is spoiled by recourse to action of • comic kind, but which ...

Published: Saturday 18 April 1885
Newspaper: Croydon Express
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2943 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE CITY CHARITIES AND THE

... to look after, have been sent packing to other dutriote filched of all they are heirs to. Churches in the City are thick blackberries, to wit, St. Msry-st-Hill, St. George’s Botolph-lane, Margaret Pattens, St. Dunstan-in-the-East, St. Peter’s, Cornhill ...

Published: Saturday 04 April 1885
Newspaper: Shoreditch Observer
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3055 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

I THE MAN ABOUT TOWN back to town again on Monday, and sinc e a steady invasion. The Prince's set,

... consult the wishes of those concerned neither my play nor ita title will bo wroth a Tichborne bond. Well, the title shall be Blackberry ; or the Brown Girl who Loved the Green Guardsman. The least ambitious of the Eater programmes at the theatres have proved ...

Published: Saturday 18 April 1885
Newspaper: Sporting Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4691 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

THE AMEER OF CABUL'S VISIT TO INDIA

... from his capital. a He has brought his esecutioners with him, and 1 there was a rumour in camp-rumours are as plentiful as blackberries-that he had beheaded 8 one chief in Peshawar, and another siucs his s arrival here. There was no foundation of truth t ...

Published: Wednesday 29 April 1885
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4623 | Page: 6 | Tags: News