-J AM S
... -J AM 2tß. IjABS. 3LB. JABS. PLUM AND APPLE «* ...
... -J AM 2tß. IjABS. 3LB. JABS. PLUM AND APPLE «* ...
... 3-J-d. per packet. JAMS— ™ ~. 21b. Jars. 31b. Jars. Plum and Apple 6§d. 9d. £ lums ••; • 7.1 d. lO^d. Rasp and Gooseberry, Blackberry and Apple,and Damson and Apple Ba. d> Black Currants -^,2 Raspberry and Strawberry.. lofd £ amso ?- lOd! 1/2 Marmalade ...
... ammo. for Sister Agnes from Lady Pollee., To-morrow, if the weather hold fine, we will go to Clarke Forest and gather blackberries, said Sister Agnes, as she gavehme • parting kiss. That night I went early to bed, and never woke till daybreak. -- CHAPTER ...
... for >• £ ctompe or P. 0.0., from Manufacturer*. BleawWe, Beil and Co . York. -AdvU Buckmbbt.—No .hould to J • Hartley’s Blackberry Apple J»Uf. from E. H. Monte, 7i, Sotodto. WU* UMn, Bteb, and Üb. |e«^A**t jj* 10 BOW * \ m in log wot purohaaer v worn ...
... which he ueed to feed one or two animals was now enclosed by the farmer, and heavy penalties were imposed for picking a blackberry.—Major Craigie said sta- tistics proved that the wages of men in North Durham, Cumberland, and Yorkshire, were'twice as ...
... 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 ...