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February 1890
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England

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London, England

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February 1, 1890.] MR. CHARLES OUT (hq.)— AS YOU DID. “GOOD-BYE, SAN DOW YOU CAN LIFT HEAVIER WEIGHTS THAN EVER,

... increasing number vehicles which traverse our thoroughfares. Not only are there more cabs, but omnibuses are plentiful blackberries; and so strong is the spirit rivalry in the breasts of the drivers these vehicles, that the pedestrian is ignored. Drivers ...

Published: Saturday 01 February 1890
Newspaper: London and Provincial Entr'acte
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1221 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

NOTES ON NEWS

... Salts, who gives hints nbout posset and ambassadors, arsenic and asthma, rntt and ankles, baldness and bedsteads, bile and blackberries, flea-bite* and boots—bnt no cold veal. Mrs Balia undeceives those of her sisters who had lingering belief in the “ blueblooded ...

Published: Friday 07 February 1890
Newspaper: The Sportsman
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2151 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

BLOB TROD?

... dropper dashed out into the current, and as quickly dashed back again to the side, not where he had risen but immediately some blackberry bushel, with which the line instantly became marvellously Went/Mid. The bad fifteen minutes which supervened can be easiimagined ...

Published: Saturday 01 February 1890
Newspaper: Field
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5081 | Page: 27 | Tags: none

EATRICAL WRECKER

... proffer this maxim : What is not born to sink will swim.” L. F. A. THE LITERARY WORLD. Professors are getting as thick as blackberries. They are becoming as intrusive a feature of English as of German life. Matthew Arnold, when be was Professor of Poetry ...

Published: Saturday 01 February 1890
Newspaper: St James's Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2859 | Page: 5 | Tags: none