LONDON CORRESPONDENCE

... Hook or a Dezn Burgon are not to be found every day. Candidates for the City Recordership will soon be as plentiful as blackberries on an autumn hedge. Mr Philbrick, Q.C., is one of the latest aspirants for the honour, and with him, to use a phrase ...

Published: Friday 01 January 1892
Newspaper: Aberdeen Press and Journal
County: Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1359 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

THE PEARL CASE

... numerous. A Dean Hook or a Dean Burgon are nob to be found every day. Candidates for the City Recordership will soon plentiful blackberries an autumn hedge. Mr Phdbrick, Q.C., is one the latest aspirants for the honour, and with him,” use phrase not unfamiliar ...

Published: Friday 01 January 1892
Newspaper: Aberdeen Press and Journal
County: Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1493 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

MR. HERBERT PAUL AND SOUTH EDINBURGH

... PLENTIFUL AS LLACEBEBRIE3. They had uo difficulty so tar as the number of candidates went; they were at* plentiful as blackberries—(laughter)—but they wanted to get a good candidate, and they would ail agree—those at anyrate who bad read the speech delivered ...

Published: Wednesday 06 January 1892
Newspaper: Edinburgh Evening News
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 553 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

TSSE gOOTSMSS 2 DISBDEGH , S-irpEnAl , Janoaxy S , 1 B 92

... also took exception to the Executive going to London for a candidate , when i t iras mmoured that they were as tnics : as blackberries . MEK . WALLACE , M . P . for East Edinburgh , spoke at a political meeting at Pemcuik last night , overwhich Mr John ...

Published: Saturday 09 January 1892
Newspaper: The Scotsman
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2839 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

The Evening News

... away to London for a paltry man candidate- • (hisses) —especially when it was reported that candidates were as thick as blackberries.- Mr Lawson further re- marked that lie thought a candidate' might have been got in. Edinburgh, without the necessity ...

Published: Saturday 09 January 1892
Newspaper: Edinburgh Evening News
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2902 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... colour, and font or five average ones make a quart. The seeds have all been eliminated from onr cultivated raspberries, blackberries, currants, and gooseberries. Their fruit is marvellously delicate in flavour, especially the two former. In all the centuries ...

Published: Tuesday 12 January 1892
Newspaper: Dundee Evening Telegraph
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 946 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

EVENJjm NEWS. TE UItSIJJL JT, l^Z

... it into wee moulds or teacups, and allow it to set; and, when you turn it out, surround each little shape with atoms of blackberry jam red currant jolly. “Flora.” —I have much pleasure in giving you the following addresses of teachers of wood-carving ...

Published: Thursday 14 January 1892
Newspaper: Glasgow Evening Post
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2880 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

I'HE AYRSHIRE POST. FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1892

... that t t., • ODe kw& might well mike the old electioneers tarn in their graves. Members of Parliament were es plentiful as blackberries. They trooped in from all points of the compass, and of every shade of opinion, Nationalists and Orangemen, Whigs and Liberals ...

Published: Friday 15 January 1892
Newspaper: Ayrshire Post
County: Ayrshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 3563 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

JAMS 10; • MN

... have told why, bat his lively imagination sketched a pretty mental picture at this brows-Mired maiden gathenng nuts or blackberries in a Devonshire lane; it seemed to anond with her style beta* than a London ball-tome. (Init. in the fens, she answered ...

Published: Saturday 16 January 1892
Newspaper: Kinross-shire Advertiser
County: Kinross-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 5538 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

HINTS TO HOUSEWIVES

... You ami I probably each want pretty bonnet; not being second cousin to Croesus, can’t walk in ami order bonnets we would blackberries. But I tell you what can do, writes Mrs Mallon in the Ladies' Home Journal. If we ore clever endugh make bonnets for ourselves ...

LOVE’S WON: EVENTFUL STORV By JAMES Watch Fairy” 4c Sc CHAPTER XXXIX A DISCOVERY Uncle Grimshaw thought he had got

... her letter and her presents— the vehicle for carrying off game there came of absent superiority man the night to fall Jam blackberries illustrated Nature don’t heed him deepen Melauio the woods the pondsinoi jar and cover closely of quills to mak necklet ...

Published: Friday 22 January 1892
Newspaper: Rutherglen Reformer
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 5223 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

ENGLISH MINERS AND THE LABOUR COMMISSION

... crammed with and everv common bush fire with God ; but it was only who f>aw that took off his shoes, the rest sat round and blackberries. Their Church I'ugiaiulfriends liad set apart ceruin day and given it name ; hut every day was Epiphany, an outhlaze from ...

Published: Saturday 23 January 1892
Newspaper: Aberdeen Free Press
County: Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2042 | Page: 6 | Tags: none