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THE CHILDREN'S COUNTRY HOLIDAY

... district—just the place for bird-nesting in the spring, for flower-hunting and hay-making in the summer, and for nutting and blackberrying, corn-carrying and apple-gathering in the autumn. In this extremely secluded and thoroughly rural district is a benevolent ...

MAULDEN

... of the font was very effective. The bowl was encircled with moss, interspersed with white and crimson dahlias, rprigs of blackberries, accrns, nuts, and bright coloured berries of all sorts, with trails of ivy hanging down, and sprays of maidenhair fern ...

INCORRIGIDLE

... was a boy named James Chapman, who was in company with the | prisoners on the 24th. They went to several houses |to sell blackberries. The two accused went into ove house and on coming away Ager produced & muslin bundle from under bis coat, and on unwrapping ...

APPLICATIONS

... et, a boy, zaid he was with the two prisoners on the evening in question, It was proposed that they should go aud se!l blackberries up Black Tom. They went, und in one of the streets ho saw the other boys go into a house. When they came out Ager had something ...

BEDFORD CHESS AND DRAUGHTS CLUB

... wild flowers in the district. Complaints now come to hand that the hedges are pillaged of their fruitinasimilar manner. Blackberrying isapleasantand apparentlyinnocent pursuit, but when the hedges for miles are stripped by mere pleasureseckers, who probably ...

LONDON LETTER

... function of fashion goes without saying. All the available Royalties were there: duchesses and countesses were as plentiful as blackberries, but it was noticed that there were some members of the avistocracy conspicuous by their absence. The gardens behind Devonshire ...

Published: Saturday 21 June 1890
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1715 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

SOME REASONS FOR ENGLAND’S

... of these tins, Have our soil and climate so changed, then, that we cannot grow these fruits? American cherries, American blackberries, American everything! We can only suppose that our soil has ceased production. Yet we have vivid recollections of hedgerows ...

Published: Saturday 25 October 1890
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1762 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

FINANCIAL TIMES GOSSIP ON DRESS,

... rbbon sash was tied round the waist, matching that which surrounded the crown of the white straw sailor hat. A girl with blackberries garlanding her large fancy straw hat wore a pretty gown of pala yellow striped ...

Published: Saturday 23 August 1890
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3929 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

% ] .'rrn, 1890

... did not see Smith handing round the bottle produced, which was taken from him, and ask the other lads to have some of his blackberry wine. He wag not very near to Smith at that time, but he was close to him when the whipping took place and could see everything ...

Published: Saturday 15 November 1890
Newspaper: Horncastle News
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 11639 | Page: 5 | Tags: none