Refine Search

Countries

Place

Dewsbury, Yorkshire, England

Access Type

18
10

Type

27
1

Public Tags

No tags available

FRUIT

... FRUIT. Apples Is 6d to 2s 3d per stone Pears 2s per stone Blackberries 2s 4d to 2s 8d per stoae Pomegranates 7d to 9d per dozen Grapes 3s 6d to 6s per 12lbs Lemons 10d to is par dozen Walnuts • 3s per stone DEWSBURY AND SKl.—Yesterday's prices of the ...

A SUMMER CAKE

... tea-tables of most tvell-to.d. American farmers—viz., fruit shortcake. fi uck le ben les are much liked; in this country blackberries i.,r mulberries could be used in their stead, and nothing could be more delicious than raspberry or strawberry shortcake ...

FOR TH-F 1 LITTLE FOLKS

... have as much blackberry pie as I want. Don't you have as much now as you want? You Mways share with us. Yes, mother, I have one piece, sometimes two pieces, but I want a whole one, and when! get to be man I mean to have a whole blackberry pie. 0 Well ...

CRAIIMED TIT A SNAKE

... Sallie, to be treated for snake bite. About six o'clock in the morning, the little girl left the house with a pail to gather blackberries near Stone Spring. She was absent a long time. and when Mrs. Redden went in search of her she found the child seated on ...

Published: Saturday 20 July 1889
Newspaper: Dewsbury Reporter
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 309 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

POETRY. - - A MEMORY. Still' sits the school-house by the road, A ragged beggar sunning; • Around it still

... - A MEMORY. Still' sits the school-house by the road, A ragged beggar sunning; • Around it still the sumachs grov-,, And blackberry vines are ril enn i n g. Within the master's desk seen, Deep scarred by raps official; The warping floor, battered seats ...

FROM PUNCH

... Correspondents' Inventiveness.—The Gay science. Street Nomenclature (change of name.)—Melbury-road to be in future Blackberry•road. Government War Song (a propos of the militia.).—We mean to do without them PROPOSED SCHOOL FOR SMOKERS.—Cavendish ...

THREE SNAKE STORIES

... the Burnt Bridge, in the vicinity of Clifton, Pennsylvania, with my rifle on myshoulder, when I happened to see an immense blackberry bush. loaded down with dead ripe berries. It was up the bank a little way, and I stood my gun up by a stump and went to ...

Published: Saturday 02 November 1889
Newspaper: Dewsbury Reporter
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1122 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

SINGULAR POISONING CASE AT MORECAMBF

... Morecambe during the past fortnight, walked to Heysham, on Sunday afternoon, with an elder sister, and gathered and ate a few blackberries from the roadside hedges. During the night be was taken ill, suffering from sickness and diarrhoea, and, on Monday, his ...

Published: Saturday 28 September 1889
Newspaper: Dewsbury Reporter
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 559 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE GARDEN

... currants propagate by cuttings. All kinds of fruits plant-- particularly gooseberries. currants. raspberries, and American blackberries. Lift fruit trees that are growing too freely, shorten their tap or thonglike roots a trifle, the❑ replant theta in the ...

Published: Saturday 16 November 1889
Newspaper: Dewsbury Reporter
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 582 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

COLLIERY EXCURSION

... the 1887 report would be found an addition to the Flora of Britain, viz:— Rubus Podophyllus, a continental formof the blackberry, which he discovered not far from Howley ruins. He first found it in 1885, but it was not till the early part of 1887 that ...

WHEN ALL IS STILL

... evidence that the girl, who is small for her age, was sitting on a wall watching her sister and other children gathering blackberries, when the Earl of Galloway came up, entered into conversation with her, and behaved improperly towards her. The defendant ...