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FIELD AND GARULN

... in a condition in which they are unfit for any useful purpose. BLACKBERRIES. —There are many persons who are fond of this frait, but have seldom tasted 1+ since their young days. Blackberries might, and ought to be much more plentiful than they are especially ...

NEWS NOTES

... the Atlantic. Blackberry-growing is voe of the latest developments. A farmer in \#‘iummiu. Mr. C. B. Hamilton, koown ae one of the most «uccessful small-ruit growers in the States, wakes, it 14 stated, the growth and sale of blackberries w lucrative occupstion ...

grounds for their complaints of people's wastefulness of water

... promise goes, for the wild fruits of the earth, the hazel-nuts and the blackberries. It is necessary to speak with some reserve, for last year was also one of uncommon promise, the blackberries especially showing a great bravery of blossom and immature fruit ...

Published: Saturday 26 August 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 5944 | Page: 17 | Tags: none

BY A PRACTICAL FAKMER

... mvnign-u:d plots, which have found occupiers, mflmw-—mwfl a-half per cent. on the investment. Such concerns are as common as blackberries. But the peculiar province of this en-pl‘hwhieh was to provide easy means for the tion of land, on much the same lines ...

356 L eyswood Stud, which was one of the earliest of those founded in the South of E ngland, were

... years. The fi sh should be tench, which are fair eating, or, if the owner is enterprising, American lake trout. American blackberries are much finer than those of our lanes, and the American black bear's liking for them gives a pleasant excitement to the ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2949 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

Aug. 19th, 1899.] sound of the Master's horn with frantic eagerness, and, the door beir.g thrown open, crowd ..

... and in spite of the insects, it has been a good fruit year, good both for the garden produce and for the hazel nuts and blackberries in the hedges ; on the whole, an unusually good year for the British agriculturist in the South of the kingdom. In Scotland ...

Published: Saturday 19 August 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2500 | Page: 41 | Tags: none

SCOTCH BREACH OF PROMISE CASE

... that ina place of that sort I had given me by an old lady two recipes which you may use if you like. ONE 15 FROM BLACKBERRY JAM. Put blackberries not quite ripe into & jar, and cover it up closcly ; sel the jar in a saucepan of water over the fire, aud when ...

PUZZLERS

... Absent Friends, Forget me-not ; AClock, Thyme ; Anger, Passion-flowers ; A Sheep, Phlox; A Donkey, Thistles ; A Nearo, Blackberries ;An Industrious Woman, Thrift; A Roadside lon, Travellers' Joy; A Dancing Master, Hops ; Chignon, Maiden's Hair; Three ...

Published: Friday 26 December 1890
Newspaper: Brighouse Echo
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 867 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

j. !J)ege ~:Jon3,

... side. The effect was admirable. Cherries are also to be met in combination with grapes, on hats.of coarse white straw. Blackberries are the only other fruit patronised by the authorities as adaptable to modes millinerial. Answers to Correspondents. THE ...

Published: Saturday 04 June 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2753 | Page: 43 | Tags: none

COUN7I-cY LirE I do not know whether the plan that l introduced among us Ly their means. Ido not know

... barberry, black thorn, the double-flowered als( Seedlings of all Then again tt-: e mountain ash wou:d Other useful fruiting blackberries, p·articularly Rubus l aciniatus, Cotonea~tel Simon;i, gorse or furze from seed, common holly, Myrolcella plum, snowberry ...

Published: Saturday 11 November 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3289 | Page: 46 | Tags: none

The Hent Geaminer AND ASHFORD CHRONICLE

... of scandal is mot. And the vile beings whose one aim is to blacken their neighbour's character, are still plentiful as blackberries, When, however, these beings—for they are unworthy the name of men or women—attempt to carry out their designs by sending ...

(From The Woodbridge Reporier.)

... providing of the tea was a huge affair, and it was remarkably well served. Shortly after six o’clock a meeting was held on Blackberry Hill, and was attended by a large number of persons. Mr. J. Roberts, Someroy, opeaed the meeting by congratulating the promoters ...