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North British Advertiser & Ladies' Journal

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Lothian, Scotland

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Midlothian, Scotland

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North British Advertiser & Ladies' Journal

isispapt agredloniadr

... meld eel, rum emu M admired.. awl were mural domed hew, while to the sided bet •h. were Me picked eff • boo a. ho woold • blackberry from • ead ha. by Here, bold year sad Seger mad du explained that • was • dives ask), Wet 4,0 • hay. 120 power at ...

o 4

... aro mat to Ragland for the manta. to,. of raorllant, atmeig-bodied for which purport, it.. A few the of the importance of blackberries wee drat it war at, sod millions of prods through the North Combos Railroad country to the regarded no an article of e ...

EXPERIMENTS IN TEA PLANTING,

... localities in India, Ceylon, Fiji Islands, &. When Mr Cruickshank finst }:M&A—-‘l‘-w,h—o‘-h gathered were only the size a blackberry {currant), but by a:‘d-lcdn‘v'docnn‘uperiments, exten: over the short .Jmmumwmud-m _'N'—igu‘_bn.m' than those with which ...

Jent, half in eornest,

... abusdant correborstion of Colonel lu-z':-khm When he first joined the Company the seeds be gathered were only the size of a blackberry (currant), and they h-fi only £25 per aunum to the Company ; careful eultivation aml experiments, ext over the ‘nflrd(wmhm—d-fi& ...

()DDS AND E\

... hood of Sydney such fruits as the peach, neet•rhie, apricot, plum, fig, grape, cherry, said orange are an plentiful as blackberries. The urengeriee and ercherds of Sew South I Wales are among its sights; and lathe neighbourhood of Sydney and round Port ...

POACHING IN THE PANT

... put his hands to various ways of living; he can collect birds' - eggs, shoot wild rockpigeons for a farmers' club, gather blackberries, or, an therm}, in Scotland, In ambles, pull young ash saplings in plantations, and sell them to grooms in the livery ...

ODDS AND ENDS

... operations are structive ; be has planted 100 acres n , th strawberry plants, and 60 acres with raspbertl canes, whilst his blackberry bushes 228,000, all of the best sorts Add to those thousands of plum and trees, mid magnitude of Lord Sudeley's fruit-gros4 ...

NORTH BRITISH 'AbilatilitErft I i iLlitIES' JOURNAL, OCTOBER 4, 1884

... and tricking. Is that of some children who (shocking to state) Have dared to go blackberry.picking! Oh, how can we hope to depict in this rhyme This plucking of blackberries? Horrible crime! Just fancy small children, so tender in years. Yet so criminal ...

NEWFOUNDLAND

... the whole surface of the marshes yelluwiutheirseason. Another berry equally plentiful upon the heaths is vulgarly called blackberry. but has no relation to the black or bramble berry of England. There fruits are of great value, not only in the diets of ...

das- 4-4 th wlkieli wee* I.4Aste.ll, Andric akrtitics in Salt. ODDS AND ENDS

... Orleans Exhibition. A little salt (say a spoonful to a bush) scattered under a bush wia be found beneficial to raspberries, blackberries, currants, and gooseberries. A doctor considers tight-lacing a public benefit, inasmuch as it kills off the foolish girls ...

TIIE GARDEN

... ground would be sefficient, by a judicious arrangement, for the supply of an ordinary family with strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, currants, &e. The sanitary advantage is of consequence enough to induce their growth; it is beleved that. there is nothing ...

THE GIPSIES

... betw.en big old-fashioned hedges, under the still shade of the spreading boughs of ivy-clambered trees, among knots of blackberries, honeysuckle, ! and dog-roses in their blossoms of white, and ' gold, and pink! We are all descended from first parents ...