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South East, England

Place

Fenny Stratford, Buckinghamshire, England

Access Type

13

Type

13

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PEXIY IBTRATIPORD

... good singing was given. Won't you buy my pretty flowers was well sung by Miss 'Welch. Master Owen Sear's reading Ripe Blackberries was very laughable, but should have been studied a little more by the reader. Altogether a pleasant evening was spent ...

HORRIBLE TALE OF THE SEA A BOY KILLED AND EATEN

... overtaken in their meandenag by the pitiless nighthill. Whether the birds fed them or whether they fed ghtemisleas apes blackberries and such other luxuries as their wandering eyes coul find, is a which they alone can solve. But they were mimed he the ...

WESLIIYAN THANK•OFFBRI4OB

... apricots, plums and pears. By either side of the preacher stood the gas pedestals converted into pillars of hedge fruits ; the black-berry, hawse, and rose seeds, sprays of barley, wheat and oats waving amongst them like glad cereal banners of welcome. The panel ...

bung cS'rittforb Guts, • WOBURN & WOBURN BANDS OBRONIOLI THURSDAY, OCT. 15, Isn

... and joy. In the decoration there seemed nothing wanting to make the and the occasion beautiful and completefnun the bumble blackberry to the highest saki. rated fruit: nets, apples, vegetables, own of al kinds in abundance, and &weirs of every conceivable ...

-LADIES' COLUMN

... English blackberry. An idea seemed to prevail that it was a hedge fruit which wee beet left alone, as being wild, and not worth the cultic*. bon. Our Canadian brethren thought differently, and the result of planting acres of ground with blackberry bushes ...

BUSINESS ABROAD

... production of good wholetionie and very cheap wines distilled from apples, pears, currants. gooseberries. raspberries, blackberries, and wle.rtleberries, daily increasing,thus affording • new seen of profit to certain classes of the population. tivirk ...

LADIES' COLUMN

... yellow, purple, and white, ready for cutting. Moonstones and croeidolites, opals and garnets, and all as plentiful as blackberries, sad stored as informally as if they were but jackstones. Once more we are approaching that nidwinter season that tries ...

1,011111114.4.111011 Or 01111111611

... and are much setr a terest and gate than Mee pin. The jam ah be mad atom, rejecting dune The moansordid fruits,. each as blackberries. Mrs. ra.pberroa, wararele. and OtralibOrTlON. may be araong the MO and medicines. The sager in sa makedoes. the acid is ...

LADIES' COLUMN

... trees are only 'hewing the faintest tint ri of , m autunal colour, yet the field s are sad the wheatsbeafs garnered. The blackberries lag behind, and are as yet bard and green; and wild berries, such aa the mountain ash, and yielder - roses are but half ...

Coos/rummy.% CI. 11RANTh, •ND

... When Planted to be trained against an espalier the plants ?nay be - !ft. apart, and between the espaliers. Brambles, or blackberry, may be planted at • similar distance to raspberries, and trained similarly to espaliers. The Lawton and Wilson Junior are ...

THE REV. WILLULII TOCILIVELL. To the Editor

... niltnn. The liberality st too well known to ess4 teethes Premises then will he by Captain Vass, mad treads n pleatail me blackberries, Tina theta fooling thee. Comm sines but sot jet fres OUT inlaid.. Lst as sit as Igrerieg sees to look at the bylimo ...