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THE KENTISH GAZETTE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 3,1880

... big white convolvulus stare with wonder-wide eyes, the honeysuckle is out, the wild geranium blooms the long grass, the blackberry bushes are ia full flower, and the poppies blaze forth in great clusters at every turn of the road. The corn ia only just ...

Published: Tuesday 03 August 1880
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 3885 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

– 'AU ROAM aiil9ll4) By • LADY

... few %Heti peeping through here and them (Jibe no are composed entirely f fruit. Emu his of sod vine leavea black and red blackberries and such like. or all tleed in the u.mhfacture of caps which are Aoki, far more eccentric 1 x.king than elegant. Nothing ...

Published: Saturday 07 August 1880
Newspaper: Kentish Express
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1897 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

... Park, and in the Recreation Grounds, C 7& ac. be fruit-hearing trees? And could there not he .1_02 goeseberey, currant, or blackberry bushes planted in -A many grounids and hedges also instead of these at present SI [gat, growing? If fruit-hearing bushes ...

Published: Saturday 07 August 1880
Newspaper: Hampshire Telegraph
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1666 | Page: 2 | Tags: News 

literature. Srieuce. au& &rt

... I’m afraid. Ibid. . . . . Deep Thiskebb.—Visitors coal mine, wondering , whether thej will ever get ont alive. , . . The blackberry so named because it is blue, in order to distinguish it from the blueberry, which is black. When you see man sit down in ...

Published: Saturday 07 August 1880
Newspaper: Berkshire Chronicle
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1672 | Page: 7 | Tags: none