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A STRANOR HISTORY

... nor the one following, but no attention had been paid to On fact. Oa the third day some children, who were I eliciting blackberries near the village, were attracted the normal movements of dog which !sated them, them, to a spot where be was pawing up ...

•OTABILIA OF THE WEEK

... a door, and capable of containing in all about 400 persons. The total number may be about 7000. Babies, as numerous as black-berries, lay about amongst the straw which littered the floor ; and we noticed one young rascal, rising three years old, standing ...

WHEN does • man impose upou himself I—Wbesi bs his memory. - - • A JAYA greedes is coming In

... for tea harvest bands, did a two weeks' washing and the milking, made a colico dress, practised her music lee. son, went blackberrying, gathered a gallon, walked to town in the evening to attend a concert, and walked home again before bedtime. AN OLDEN ...

DRUNCENNZSS AND ITS CURE

... jinglemen and half-starved porters. and 'disallow ers of every description who devoutly believed that gold and fame grew like blackberries upon hed gs everywhere but in poor Ireland, and who, if they did not actually suppose that the houses in London were tiled ...

A DARING PRUSSIAN SPY

... military phenomenon who shot Prussians like sparrows, and to whom the helmets of hie dead enemies were as plentiful as blackberries—abould now tuns out to have bees nothing bet a Prussian spy. must go far towards exhausting the fund of Periaan credulity ...

PUPA RI:01 for the /V.,* Tski. to say goori-iiy to use'. helot...rt. WHAT is th. hest Sunday reading for ..

... of our beset.. Wass a little uesgo boy wanted to attend his father's funeral, he the schoolmaster for a holiday to ge blackberrying. WHIR a man dies, people se:sessile inquires. What property has he left behin t bin' The angels will ask : What good deeds ...

I\ A COUNTRY LANE

... boy pulls forth • monse's meat: ♦nd then the tempting bramblemoths invite the balms again, Their pretty mouths with blackberries so sweet and ripe to stain ; And many a brown not slips its sheath to share, poor little thing. A bunting pocket with a ...

JANUARY 8, 1879

... The method of construction was simple enough. In the charters of the 12th and 13th centuries, Scots were as plentiful as blackberries, and the genealogist, searching only for a name and appropriate date, would only be puzzled whether to choose Gilbert, ...

Published: Wednesday 08 January 1879
Newspaper: Dumfries and Galloway Standard
County: Dumfriesshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 5045 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Vitritttell

... a match lately—and the respectability the Penninghame curlers so unquestioned, elders and deacour being an pleotiful as blackberries in August—• lily visitor who saw the curlers returning with their brooms, escleimed, Dear me ! the times must be bad ...

desefit Xewi. HIS Majesty tbe Queen has appointed Lord Douglas to he Lomildroitenalit of the comity of Berwick, ..

... match lately—and the respectability of thu Penninghenie curlers so unquestioned, elders and deacon+ being as plentiful as blackberries in Augost—a lady visitor who saw the curlers returning with their brooms, exclaimed, Dear roe the times must be bad when ...

11All MORI TRAP DOIYELK TEE 01111CIILAILTION

... engaged for the conflict, and if the committee find enough of money they will find Parliamentary aspirants as plentiful as blackberries. To such a pass has nineteenth century Toryism come. The chivalrous spirit has disappeared, and the battle of the party ...

DUMFRIES AND GALLOWAY SATURDAY STA

... knows ‘ow [ voted !” big Wuaicn Nosopy Cay Dexy.—The Government have been beaten all over the country by an over- whelmi as blackberries, majority. Reasons for this are plenty we may mention ...

Published: Saturday 17 April 1880
Newspaper: Dumfries and Galloway Standard
County: Dumfriesshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1494 | Page: 3 | Tags: none