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Cornwall, England

Place

Truro, Cornwall, England

Access Type

15

Type

15

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GARDEN BLACKBERRIES

... GARDEN BLACKBERRIES There yet remains another class of Raspberries or Blackberries to be noticed. These, though known in England as Raspberries, obviously partake more of the character of Blackberries or Brambles. The oldest and best known of these is ...

Published: Thursday 17 October 1889
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 481 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

HOW TO PROLONG LIFE

... salt will strengthen it; thus we have only to dose the world with salt, and centenarians are to become as plentiful as blackberries or newborn babes.” There might be something in the contention were it not for the fact that salt is a mineral, and that ...

Published: Thursday 22 August 1889
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 250 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Tarictirs

... sighed the poet. * Bosh!” said his friead the broker. “The breast of a turkey is much better to fill up on.” table linen. Blackberry pie is our choice, although a A lady wishes to know the best way of marking baby with a gravy dish is highly esteemed by ...

A WEDDING-KINO’S ADVICE

... that. Beware of naggledom, my dear. The man that will stand being nagged at is saint, and saints ! are not as plentiful blackberries in the world. There’s male nagging, my dear, as well female —male grumbling and never being pleased ; and folds who expect ...

Published: Thursday 20 June 1889
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 689 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE KENWYN RIVER

... daisies and flower cousins in pink and blue. These died away. The fringe was tipped with hawthorn berries, roze hips, tipe blackberries, and a cargo of criep leaves, cup-like in their change, went dewn in convoys to the sea, a blur upon its face. In the Cctober ...

VISITOR

... county, and it has destroyed all lodes to the west of it for many miles away. Therefore I should so soon think to gather blackberries Christmas, or to find pig in Jew’s Synagogue, as to find the Phcenix lode to the west this great slide, as the slide is ...

Published: Thursday 19 September 1889
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 1589 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE INQUEST

... single geraniums. George o, ...

Published: Thursday 12 September 1889
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 3494 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Deaths

... reason to suppose, all parties can but be gratified. ‘TREVAUNANCE UniTED.—Fault-finders, we are told, are as plentiful as blackberries ; fault-menders are few and far between. is from a The following cuttin, London contemporary :—‘‘The notice which has been ...

LATEST TELEGRAMS

... as if that had any connection with moral character, As well might he that John Wesley was not a good man because h2 ate blackberries at St. Hilary; or deny the Divinity of our Lord, because, as the Sov of Man,” He “had not where to lay Hishead.” Toon he ...

GENERAL NEWS

... son of a Rochdale manufacturer. The lad went with his sister to Heysham Sunday, and ate on the way what he supposed to be blackberries. The same night he became sick, and death resulted very speedily, the doctors describing the case as one of atropine poisoning ...

Published: Thursday 03 October 1889
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 7389 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

COLLIE’S

... only be made to extend so far. Cultivation of Blackberries.— Kent is moving for the opening up of new industry, which it is rather remarkable was not thought of sooner—wc mean the cultivation of blackberries for profit. Enormous quantities of this fruit ...

Published: Thursday 26 September 1889
Newspaper: Royal Cornwall Gazette
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 8100 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

[Ee^m.tonTScrfor 1 TRURO. THURSDAY EVENING, JANUAR3I, 1889

... and among those dis- to-day was James Carrol, Jim felt stunned and bewildered, for situations were not as plentiful as blackberries in London in 1884, any more than they are DOW. “Oh, Jim, how late you are!” cried little Mra. Oarrol, as she flew to the ...