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DOMESTIC RECEIPTS

... invaluable remedy for diarrhoea. Blackberry Jam.—Stir gently over a slow fire for a quarter of an hour as many blackberries aa you wish to preserte, then add half a pound of coatee sugar to everyponnd of blackberries, stewing the whole gently for another ...

DOMESTIC RECEIPTS

... drachms. Twenty thirty drops in little hot lirandy-and-water. Effervescing Fruit Drink*. Put strawberries, raspberries, or blackberries into good vinegar, and then strain it off, adding fresh fruit till the flavour is agreeable. Bottle it, and when about ...

THE NEWRY REPORTER, SATURDAY, (X’TORER IT, 1808. OUll POUT AND lIAKDOUU

... cork and gream-. calling themselves Ciiristy’s Minstrels, or some of those Professors,” who have get to as plentiful blackberries, arc pretty sure to secure* “good house” in Newry, while real merit and respectability are so frequently underrate I and ...

Published: Saturday 17 October 1868
Newspaper: Newry Reporter
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 788 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

ARRIVAL OF THE NE'V LORD LIEUTENANT. Earl Spesceia arrive !on Wednesday morninj; at c 0! jpERENCE THE GREEK ..

... Regiment, and afterwards in the Life left at office> on Christmas eve, a branch bearing Guards. IIIFI __ _ Her two large blackberries, and a strawberry plant, with 1 Ecclesiastical Commissioner for Ireland- fruit and flower, which he plucked off bank m ...

Published: Saturday 26 December 1868
Newspaper: Downpatrick Recorder
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 5909 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE NEWRY AND DUNDALK EXAMINER

... of vegetation, there is not any in the development of candidates for the forthcoming new Parliament. They are plentiful blackberries. Not only the opposition, but the government suffer from fnb'irras richest*, and the free and independent” electors propose ...

THE LAND QUESTION

... supper for ten harvest hands, did two week's washing and the milking, made calico dress, practised her music lesson, went blackberrying, gathered a gallon, walked town in the evening attend concert, and walked home again before bedtime.’ The postage stamps ...

OUR HOLIDAY

... which is fortunately in June, when the baymaking is, and the roses are in the hedges. John used to say he wished it was blackberry-time instead ; but I thought—for I was only child then—that there was fun so good as getting into a bay-field, nn I making ...

Published: Thursday 20 January 1870
Newspaper: Newry Telegraph
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2330 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

A GRIM HOUSE

... were uijust to him, but then it was in the old days hppant House of Commons led flippant leader, vhen jokes were plenty blackberries, and the irst Ministerof the Crown regarded the first question »f the day chiefly as a joke. But now have got an wo not ...

LOOK AHEAD

... security and honesty. But it is one thing to resolve to insure; it is another to select company. Agents are as plentiful blackberries in the autumn, and companies, ranging from the most reliable to the most dishonest, flourish on all sides. To insure in ...

Coughs and Colds

... about this “ exoelleut personage” and Lubbock or Lammas Day;” then the Telegraph suggests a Blue-bell Day” in June and a “Blackberry Day” in October; aud ‘‘a Primrose and Violet Day” in March, it says would not be at all bad idea. It makes no allusion to ...

Published: Saturday 19 August 1871
Newspaper: Downpatrick Recorder
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 5794 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

MISCELLANEOUS

... to accompany him. Sending the children into the cabin, Hayes tried to coax the elderly people, who were not the sort of blackberries” he wanted, to return to shore. All complied with his request, except an aged man named Moete and the woman, who persistently ...

Published: Thursday 31 August 1871
Newspaper: Newry Reporter
County: Down, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1614 | Page: 4 | Tags: none