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MAD AND MERRY BETS

... trance was a genuine one. we Odds and Ends of f Speculation. ao Eccentric riding and driving wagers were as ne plentiful as blackberries at that time. About the coi coolest of them was the wager of a coachman on tai the Hammersmith road that he could cut off ...

Published: Saturday 26 November 1887
Newspaper: Hampshire Telegraph
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2162 | Page: 9 | Tags: News 

MARKIT REPORTS. badmen . bas bets e.. quietscale,buttieeselhlllhassot been without firmness The sales of Wheat ..

... cooking apples, 3d to ld ; plums, 44 to ; damsons, 9d ; henush cob outs and filberts. Ed to is per lb.; bullices, 4d; and blackberries, Ed per (part. Warring/Tit HAT AND STRATT - A fair supply on sale. Trade was dull, at previous prices. Pinion clover, 90s ...

CRICKET

... and Hay hitting the Wycombe bowling to all parts of the field with the greatest freedom boundary hits were as plentiful blackberries, and 68 runs were made little over half an hour. After two hours' play the telegraph showed 170, and the innings ultimately ...

Published: Saturday 09 July 1887
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2009 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

AMUSEMENTS AT SOUTHAMPTON

... and the evening's amusement is brought to a close we'll a laughable spectral sketch, is which ghosts are as plentiful as blackberries, and the illusions are ezmedingly amusing and mystifying. OF AIR. It• IBERT I'INNUCK, J.P. We have to iecord tl.4jTainfuily ...

Published: Wednesday 28 December 1887
Newspaper: Hampshire Independent
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2356 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE CHILDREN'S HOUR

... ripest, jC And are sweeter than italy s wines ; is They klnow where the fruit hangs the thickest, r On the long, thorny blackberry vines. ci They gather the delicate seaweeds, al And build tiny castles of sand; a; They pick up the beautiful seashells- ...

Published: Saturday 30 April 1887
Newspaper: Hampshire Telegraph
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2102 | Page: 12 | Tags: News 

I m v THE BERKSHIRE CHRONICLE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1887

... year, the prisoner pledged the suit of clothes (produced) for 10s. The prisoner gave the name and address of Ann Smith, Blackberry Bnildings. He was sure the prisoner was the woman. The prisoner had pledged articles at the shop before. Kezia Basden, living ...

Published: Saturday 26 February 1887
Newspaper: Berkshire Chronicle
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2207 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

HERE AND THERE

... Academy quisite statuette of course, nobody supposes that monsters like • Fony in last 's Mr. Williams are as plentiful as blackberries ; but Therneycroft's force and mastery of kis subject. drunken fathers and mothers are unfortunately But he is a sound ...

THS JUBILEE COINAGE

... frenzy by soldier of unsullied bravery and, in certain respects, unequalled talents. Centenaries of all kinds are common blackberries, but the idea of a tercentenary celebration of “an execution and burial * is unquestionably original. Under the auspices ...

ASHTEAD

... Guildford. FRIIIT Trees of all kinds. Roses, Seaksle, Asparagus Broad Leaved Privet, Grape Vines, Strawberries, Anierkaa Blackberries. Fruiting Treesiu Pots; large stock; low peices.—Will Tayler, Nurseryman, Hampton. 9631 CABBAGE Plinti(Antamn Sown) ; Enfield ...

Published: Monday 14 March 1887
Newspaper: Surrey Advertiser
County: Surrey, England
Type: | Words: 2163 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

STRAY NOTES

... agriculturists I. to go in for cultivating mushrooms and blackberries. What a prospect for the country children! Fancy every mushroom meadow tabooed to the early rural rambler and all the blackberries strictly preserved, in the mum of partridges, not of ...

Published: Saturday 08 October 1887
Newspaper: Eastbourne Chronicle
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 5134 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

The Bishop of Dover has bees taldag put la the benison of Doevoestioe

... stnialing near, and who only partia ll y beard the Lj nomiosment, went over and said in • Mil — Miss, don't you do it, take blackberry et a little cam hot on sugar. An Englishman was recently travelling Ma of • first-Glass carriage on • railway when there ...

FASHION IN FUNERALS

... order of events. The trees are only shewing the faintest tinge of autumnal ig yet the fie kis are hare and the wheat- and blackberries lag behind, and are as yet hard as the mountain. ash on and wild berries, such half coloured, elder - rosen are bat k these ...

Published: Saturday 27 August 1887
Newspaper: Aldershot Military Gazette
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2688 | Page: 3 | Tags: none