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Kentish Gazette

Omnibuses in the West Indies. —Omnibuses have been established in the island of A itigua. These conveyances now ..

... thousands. W have cheap trips of all sorts, and those to London, Birmingham, Bristol, Canterbury, and Hull, are plenty as blackberries. Similar projects in the direction of Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece, will now become equally so, jaunt to Paris having ...

Published: Tuesday 20 May 1845
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 764 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE KENTISH GAZETTE

... holiday clothing ot the sworn enemies of Protestant England—and the pith of O'Connell's speeches, which were plentiful as blackberries, was in peifect character with the effusior.3 of the heroes impersonated, and ir> in one quotation— 1 have the fullest ...

Published: Tuesday 17 June 1845
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1070 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

PRISONERS CONDEMNED TO DEATH. Every prisoner condemned to death shall confined in some safe place within the ..

... compensation for the nothing-to-do taken from them. for our Pottingers, Sir Robert Peel's account, they are plentiful as blackberries (though Chinese empires to open to us are not) ; and not a week passes without the denial of just claims to reward for ...

Published: Tuesday 17 June 1845
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 2125 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

EXCERPTA FUNERARIA

... howling wilderness, now walks a hale and hearty man among 2,000,000 of inhabitants.— American Paper. The common English blackberry thorn improves in appearance on transplantation to the Australian colonies; but we believe it has not yet fruited either ...

Published: Tuesday 11 November 1845
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1884 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

PROVINCIAL INTELLIGENCE

... Dcsford and other villages the county have deserted their stocking frames and betook themselves to the woods to gather blackberries, for which they find a teady market in Leicester, and realise more this means t they cau at their usual occupation. Fire ...

Published: Tuesday 29 September 1846
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 2011 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

GAS IN DWELLING HOUSES

... Macgregor—pine ; M'lntosh—boxwood ; Mackay— hullrush ; M'Kenzie—deer gass; M'Kinnon —St. John':; wort; M'Lachlan—mount .n ush ; blackberry heath; M'Leod—red wortle berries; M'Nab— rose berries; M'Neil—senware M'Pherson—variegated boxwood; M'Quarrie—black thorn; ...

Published: Tuesday 19 January 1847
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 2881 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

DeatH or Fokt-Masor Cancn.—The death of this veteran officer took place on Tuesday forenoon last iu the Castle. ..

... enough when inserted into to the broker surface ofan & saucer or syrup, or applied see our sipper of sweets quite as b pe blackberry, but we often which we suall find on close usy.on asolid lump of sugar, inspection growing ‘* small by degrees, uuder his ...

Published: Tuesday 05 March 1850
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1527 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE PULPITS

... that if our life bad been as short as theirs, they would have totally defeated us in the competition for nuts and ripe blackberries. I can bardly agree to this extravagant state- ment; but I think, io a life of twenty years, the efforts of the human mind ...

Published: Tuesday 11 February 1851
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 6035 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

GLEANINGS FOR ALL HEADERS

... pacing school, through the rough and miry way of that half-rural district. his play-hours is soon in the fields, picking blackberries Hedge Lane,or flying his kite the Windmill Saint Giles's. His father la lair plain, industrious, trusty man. But young ...

Published: Tuesday 23 September 1851
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 2481 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

GLEANINGS FOR ALL READERS

... views of it, and readers are visitors. The imperfection of tho English language exhibited when we state the fact that a blackberry is red when it is green. The Wheel whereof there's no Revolution. —Tho British common weal, which the nave is the Sovereign ...

Published: Tuesday 13 January 1852
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 2311 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

GLEANINGS FOR ALL READERS

... manufacture. One was placed in an old tower at Westminster Hall, and the other in Canterbury Cathedral. Life is a field of blackberry bushes. Mean people squat down the fruit, matter how they black their fingers ; while genius, proud and perpendicular fiercely ...

Published: Tuesday 24 February 1852
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 2407 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LAND LEGACY DUTY

... priated. The spontaneous bread-fruit of the Marquesas does not grow on the British islands; and we cannot subsist on acorns, blackberries, and hips and haws. A secure property in the soil, therefore, is the first step towards cultivation. Appropriation is primarily ...

Published: Tuesday 10 May 1853
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1559 | Page: 2 | Tags: none