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IpESIONS RFAASTERED

... defendant and others prowling over the estate. After the lily gathering was over he would be troubled by those nutting and blackberrying, then mushrooming, and afterwards gathering watercress ; in fact, they were stealing all the year round. The defend. ant ...

Published: Saturday 29 May 1886
Newspaper: Brighouse News
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 489 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

forthwith

... see and saw is in•tenee. W HAT berry Is thug described : As white 4 milk, as green as silk, is red as fire. as Kick u real blackberry. WHAT le the diffe'renee between an emperor and a beggar I.—The one issues mandeetose and the manifests Wee without A SUBSCRIBER ...

Published: Saturday 30 January 1886
Newspaper: Brighouse News
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 654 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE LOST CHILD OF THE MOORLANDS; A TALE FOUNDED ON FILMS. BY WILLIAM HEATON. The last flowers of summer were

... lodgiug for myself and my little boy. Quickly she arose, and in silence wandered down the glen, picking here and there a few blackberries, and giving them to her child. They had not wandered far when a gentleman passed them ou horseback who looked steadfastly ...

Published: Saturday 20 February 1886
Newspaper: Brighouse News
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1371 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

I I GOSSIP ON DRESS. Tim Owe* has the following As yet, nothing striking in the way of dress has

... and feathery pampas grass. The glistening white honesty is now seen towering aloft in vases, mixed with pampas and black-berried privet. The trailing stag-horn moss from Scotch moorlands is arranged on dinner tables, laid fiat, in and out of dower ...

THE CHRONICLE. SATURDAY, AUGUST 21. 1886,

... obscure, that their prickly branches prove a very thorn in the flesh to the botanical student. Li the days when we went black-berrying, A long time ago. We were prepared to admit that there were three kinds, the common bramble, the dewberry, and the stone ...

Published: Saturday 21 August 1886
Newspaper: Richmond & Ripon Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1743 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

SCRAPS AND HINTS

... nonsense talked la the belief that intelligent people could be galled by it, especially teachers, If not as plentiful as blackberries. are yet almost immediately obtainable by reason of the supply so greatly exceeding the demand. The ratepayers would be ...

Published: Saturday 06 February 1886
Newspaper: Huddersfield Daily Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2064 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

THE CHRONICLE. SATURDAY, AUGUST 28. 186,

... Sunday night previous to her death, and on Thursday night, about eight o'clock, was in her own kitchen engaged picking blackberries by herself, Mr Peat being in the garden. Feeling unwell, she knocked at the window for her husband, who hastened to her ...

Published: Saturday 28 August 1886
Newspaper: Richmond & Ripon Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2785 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

111% 11 1J DDERISFI MAD DAILY WIKOI4I 'UL . MON DAY. MAY d 1866

... edge the lake. I wan shard to they for the fish in daylight, for the Great Life, bad eem to thine, bad their keepers as blackberries, and thee. rillyans were always oat to get a decant boy into toroable. Well, sir, I get oat me tools, an' novas' swathed ...

Published: Monday 03 May 1886
Newspaper: Huddersfield Daily Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3232 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

SPECIAL LETTER DELIVERY

... great favour again, as is ivy—the flowering ivy--oak apples, with shaded oak leaves in all tints of green and brown, and blackberries with bramble leaves. Of hats, the most novel French shapes are the Roland, with a round tarned•up brim; the Auvent, resembling ...

' APRIL 9, 1 sE6 -S GOSSIP ON DRESS. a pretirliin At the back is a quaint little WILE/I GLADSTONE

... es a crowning point which closely resembles a brandy snap in form. No strings, bt.t kept in place by large-beaded jet blackberry pins. • As a rule, bonnet strings are not worn for fall dress. The hair is arranged high, and the spots is perched on the ...

THE HOKEW4RD BOUND:

... they may spy at chips in toe offing, pick up shells on the will continue t until the frosts of autumn die- beach, gather blackberries in the moors, play kW-intuit them, and, require less care than most plants the-ring on Sunday-school anniversaries, but ...

THE HOME RULE DEBATE

... ways which have proved so disastrous. There may be other expedients. A London correspondent nays they ure plentiful as blackberries in autumn, and that the Government whips are in constant communication with gentlemen who think they have found a better ...

Published: Saturday 17 April 1886
Newspaper: Richmond & Ripon Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 6941 | Page: 5 | Tags: none