Refine Search

More details

Liverpool Mercury

FARMING & THE CORN TRADE

... disorderly conduct in the streets. S. e says that ehe had been in an English convent . since last September. I EHave you any blackberry pies ? asked a hungry traveller of the mistress of a tumbledown shanty by the roadside in one of the upper counties of ...

Published: Tuesday 28 August 1877
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 732 | Page: 7 | Tags: Commerce 

Liverpool Mercury

... Our own growers have paid a good deal of attention this subject in recent years, but it appears to be only lately that blackberries have been thought worthy systematic gathering and preserving. Now, however, it has occurred to persons engaged in the industry ...

Published: Friday 20 September 1889
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2642 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE LIVERPOOL MONDAY SEPTEMBER AMONG THE WILD FRUITS Free all unless indeed the deals in barbed wire the wild ..

... tangible sweets There is little doubt blackberries all wild fruits are the universal There is scarcely scarcely a soil which does produce blackberries We ignorant think blackberry is like another will that kinds of blackberries and them more formidable their ...

Published: Monday 07 September 1903
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 5762 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE DROWNING OF TWO CHILDREN AT CONWAY

... depth of the water would be from five to six ?? James. Edwards, eleven years of age, said he was near the pool getting blackberries. The girl Mary Jane wvas ,oing across when she fell into the water. Then the other one came there, and Mary Jane, in trying ...

Published: Tuesday 05 September 1899
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 432 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

THE AUTUMN ROBIN

... flocking birds to slay: Yet shohld'st thou ?? the danger run, He turns the tube away. Tihe gipey boy, who seeks in glee Blackberries for a dainty meal, Laughs loud m~l first beholding thea, When called, so near his precunce steal. ?? surely thinks thou ...

THE SCULPTOR'S MODEL

... the letter of Offended Father? As regards the model being no Venus, it is well known that they are not as plentiful as blackberries. consequently an artist must get as good a one as he can for his subject out of a very limited circle. An offended father's ...

Published: Saturday 14 September 1878
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 521 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

FRUIT CROPS OF AMERICA

... buoldleberries, are by nO means a ful crop, being best on Cape Cod and in the berry pastures of New Jersey and Penusyl- rania. Blackberries are the fullest crop of the small fruits. Even the hardy currant is not gene- rally abundant, while red rsgpberries, bLackoap-A ...

Published: Friday 19 August 1892
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: | Words: 487 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

BIRKENHEAD POLICE COURT

... Church-street. 6ocho5 Do not fail to order along wth your Grocerie, a Two-pound Jar of Williata P. Hartlev's -New Season's Blackberry Preserves, the Cuality of Is which will be found to maintain the usual standarc ig of excellence. oczl A NICE LITTLE PRE`ENT ...

Advertisements & Notices

... signled ARTLEY E 'S C BLEBR ATE D PRESERVES. Pih Stone Jams Plum, Qd. each. 21h ,, Raspberry and Geebem, Is. eseL 21at ,, Blackberry ls. each. ab. B. tvaberry. . id. eacdL d PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS, &n. Prince of Wales Theatre.-Smetbin'. New, Posterity. Royal ...

PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S LAST JOKE

... and laughs as heartily as ever. At his reception one evening last week in the White House the negroes were as thick as blackberries in Jersey. Among them was a coloured barber named Burke; be was an applicant for an office in the New York custom house ...

Published: Saturday 26 March 1864
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 520 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

THE MOUNTAIN ASH MURDER

... After get- ting John Davis to make an engagement to go with me in the afternoon to Dyffryn Wood, for the purpose of picking blackberries, at one o'clock I went to borrow the hatchet. I carried it to the blacksmith's shop and hid it outside under a bush, where ...