Refine Search

POLITICS AND SOCIETY

... apples-apples of the best quarity; udin ins fruit might just as well be grown in England. lears, cherries, raspberries, blackberries, and straw- berries are quite as easily cultivated, provided know- llge and skilll are employed, for, take it ever anl ...

Published: Friday 21 December 1888
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2854 | Page: 5 | Tags: News 

SATURDAY, DRCENBIR 22, MS

... thanked him and retired, having secured our whole object. The rest of the drive to Youghal was through a country in which blackberries grew luxuriantly in the hedges, but little produce of any other description was to be seen. About one o'clock we mashed ...

Published: Saturday 22 December 1888
Newspaper: Huddersfield Daily Examiner
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: | Words: 9936 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

A LAUGHABLE GHOST STORY

... of “Blackberry Nose,” so called from, the high colour that prominent ir-shaped organ, .-wad visits the “C rkscrew hoase, wl.ore the boys for b.m commg, out. and him by hatting, “iley, ?• •ad get yir nose whilewftshed-Blackberry Nrnc-, Blackberry then ...

Published: Saturday 22 December 1888
Newspaper: Sheffield Weekly Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 816 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

BRITISH CHARITY. SOME USEFUL. INSTITUTIONS. 1 —TUE LONDON cornwe

... elevating Many of them, perhaps, have flower seen cherries or apples growiug on a tree, or never plucked a wild flower or a blackberry, so that their joy on finding themselves transplanted in the Runny days of August to Elysian tielda where they can romp ...

Published: Saturday 22 December 1888
Newspaper: Wakefield Free Press
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2181 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

$ortlj (Eoimiru #*tos

... to the fourth and fifth scenes, which mechanically changa from a lovely summer landscape to a bright wintry scene. ! The blackberry wood scene aud the village green ! are both conceived with a high degree of taste. How great a:i advance has been made ir ...

c a•Tic x v m

... that molting Orford and Cambridge beat-race with two logs of wood, afterwards sealing our acquaintance with a feset of blackberries. How well I remembered the day, and since then what an immense deal we have both been through ! Presently .sny thoughts ...

MORE NEWS OF STANLEY-

... the red cardinal bird said Robbie. Well, it alnt • bad ides. She gave me some bread and jam, the night I got lost, blackberrying on the hills, and told me such a nice story about Fortunatue rid he Parse, when I was 'citing on her sofa. Yes, and ...

Published: Saturday 29 December 1888
Newspaper: Richmond & Ripon Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 7610 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

FARDLNING GUSSIP

... the blackberry ; our American cousins, however, who are far more wide-a-wake than we are in a good many points, do so, and have their named varieties—Lawsons, Kittatinnies, Wilson Juniors, and so forth, and why ghould not we? A well-made blackberry pudding ...

Published: Saturday 29 December 1888
Newspaper: Loftus Advertiser
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1470 | Page: 4 | Tags: none