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LOCAL TOPICS

... while singing the prais t‘*e House Lords is the goodness of the Duke Bedford ! Well, good Dukes are not s » plentiful a.- blackberries autumn. one would wish to under-rate or decry the goodness of any man, especially when it practised ducal scale with ducal ...

Football

... the play was in their quarters to the finish. Dixon was kept continually on the alert, and corners were as frequent as blackberries iu autumn. At last, Gallagher, beating three opponents near the line, centred beautifully ; Galbraith shot, and Prentice ...

Published: Friday 25 January 1895
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 865 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE O'BRIEN PIPE

... O'BRIEN PIPE. Many years ago, ere betrayals and cheque scandals, political bankruptcies and party scalpings were plentiful blackberries, it came to pass that an enterprising manufacturer turned out the O'Brien Pipe, in clay. Ordinary common clay, too, which ...

Published: Friday 05 July 1895
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 220 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Gossip on General Affairs

... women will paint, it is better, observes a medical authority, to resort to simple methods which will not injure the skin. Blackberry or strawberry juice rubbed slightly the cheeks and theD washed off with milk gives a beautiful tint which cannot be called ...

Published: Friday 09 August 1895
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2639 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

DAIRY FARMING

... through poisoning, the victim being little girl nam>d Florence Smith, five years of ago. It appears that the child went blackberrying with another youngster, and that during the afternoon she gathered some berries which she thought perfectly harmless, and ...

V- LARGEST CIRCULATION IN THE DISTRICT

... an almost unprecedented fashion. Marriage bells, wedding marches, white favours and bride cake, have been as common as blackberries, and even the insatiable taste of many of our neighbours for ceremonials of the kind has been well-nigh satisfied —at all ...

KEMPSTON

... approaching. If the opposite were also true might led to expec* that mild weather awaited us this season. Wood nuts and blackberries are more numerous than hips, haws, and sloes, and the yield of acoms is greater than last year. Hauvest.— Owing to the ...

RUSHDEN

... fields, and the two defendants went over into another field, where the hovel was situated, whilst he remained behind getting blackberries. When he went to look for the other two ho could not see them, called them by name, when Hodges came out of the hovel and ...

LITERA&T

... beautiful flowers.—From *'Cottage Gardening for November, How to Grow Blackberries. —l see in your issue September 18th one of yonr readers has been disappointed with his American blackberries. I know some other cottagers who have been disappointed in the same ...

MR W. S. CAINE AT SHARNBROOK

... Gibbard, would come when the Bill was passed. They would then have to gather the publichouses in the same way they dtd blackberries - first take those that were ripe, and in those places where the public-houses and the people were green, gather them in ...