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SCHOOL FOB BOIS

... —Edward Leigh, Ivy House Farm, Cranleigh, Surrey. 746 1 Asparagus, Broadleaved Privet, Grips Vines, Strawberries, American Blackberries, Freitag Tressin Pots; luge stock; low prices.—Will Taylor, Bursaryman, Hampton. 9031 CIA/HUGE Planta (Autumn sown) ; ...

Published: Saturday 02 April 1887
Newspaper: Surrey Advertiser
County: Surrey, England
Type: | Words: 586 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

COMIC AND GOSSIP PAPERS

... agriculturists is, 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 sense of partridges, not ...

Published: Saturday 08 October 1887
Newspaper: Bucks Herald
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1531 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE COMIC PAPERS

... agriculturists is, 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 sense of partridges, not ...

GOSSIP ON DRESS

... clematis, ai,d blackberry blossom. One very original hat is of plaited rush, and the colour absolutely natural; it is lined and caught up with the softest Indian muslin, and trimmed with a lovely wreath of most realistic-looking plums •nd blackberries. It is ...

Published: Saturday 06 August 1887
Newspaper: Croydon's Weekly Standard
County: Buckinghamshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1577 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

WIWI= STUDIIII

... make enough fuss over the uu• wonted luxuries of baths and as much water as they fare to drink. There is a rarethow of blackberries la the hedges, and dewberries among the undergrowth in woods and plantations. A short time ago there was no promise of ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1887
Newspaper: East Kent Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: | Words: 921 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

JOTTINGS

... for I some eat with his blackberries. She refused. j appeared resigned, but added gravely: — You kr.ow. 1 mamma, what happened round the corner. There was little boy, and his mother would not give him any sugar on his blackberries, and And ? And ...

METROPOLITAN SEWAGE SLUDGE,

... for the reception and treatment of the wet sludge on both sides of the river, and would-be-pantentees are as plentiful as blackberries in tieptember. The Board,; however, regards it as • duty to create the supply whieh ought to pro Moe • legitimate demand ...

Sad Suicide.—On Thursday, a report was current the town and neighbourhood Dyrachurch to the effect that the ..

... the tramp (an be said to nave any particular season for his appearance. At all events, tramps are just now as plentiful blackberries, as any travel r in lha green lares and dusty highways Kent and Sussex must be aware. Some are born tramps others, perhaps ...

GOUIP OP TEI CLUBS

... dessrves aoaEhlng more than mare thank, is largely felt, bat the di/lenity is bow to confer the boon. Political am not like blackberries on an antama hedge. Ce 5 y 1. ..17. Sakai la amber, and there is no vacancy. Lord Croon has got that which fells I. by ...

Published: Saturday 12 March 1887
Newspaper: Brighton Gazette
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 811 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

RICHMOND PARK

... Putney Stations, is in itself a pleasure. The common, with its furze, ling, and heather, now in the bloom, brambles and blackberries and many wild flowers, is a delightful contrast to anything in London, ' And then the walk up Roehampton-lane, though now ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1887
Newspaper: Middlesex & Surrey Express
County: Middlesex, England
Type: Article | Words: 811 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE BANBURY ADVEKTISER. THT7RSDAT, SEPTEMBER 1, 1887

... Contract (Fire Brigade).—Mr. Fowle, this town, has the contract for making the Fire Brigade suits. The Blackberry Season.— The approaching blackberry season is expected round here to develop a heavy and productive crop. Local Prize Takers.— John Padbury ...

Published: Thursday 01 September 1887
Newspaper: Banbury Advertiser
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1667 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

JOKE 3 OF THE PERIOD

... 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 sense of partridges, nut of plum-jam. And what a fate for the land of the oak, the apple-tree ...

Published: Wednesday 12 October 1887
Newspaper: Oxfordshire Weekly News
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 718 | Page: 2 | Tags: none