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... G0s. ; and straw, 29s. to 38a. per load. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Faurr SHorTcAKE.-Huckleberries are much like, in this country blackberries or mulberries could b, uoel sin usez ir itur d. snd notmn,5 cu.ldbe. more ?? - than Raspberry or Strawberry Shortcake. ...

Published: Saturday 23 January 1886
Newspaper: Ipswich Journal
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1257 | Page: 8 | Tags: Commerce 

EARNING A CRUST

... little tact in handling, as their a prickles were too sharp to be treated carelessly. The I long thorny branches also of the blackberry, to n which a few hardy leaves still clang, flung 1, themselves wantonly from bush to bush with a I charming grace that ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1886
Newspaper: Ipswich Journal
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2825 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

TURF NOTES & ANTICIPATIONS

... represented, bit, of course, not to such a marked degree as at Croxton Park, where dukas and lords were as plentiful as blackberries in esasoon, to say nothing of the tip-top sporting fraternity- the handles of whose names are not quite so highly jewelled ...

jstar of \\t fet

... Society’s Show last week there was exhibited, among other things, large dish of American Haekbcrriet. They are now cultivating blackberries by the acre, and, although much remains to be done by artificial selection, even the short time they have been cultivated ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1886
Newspaper: Evening Star
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 3358 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

NEWS OF THE DAY

... Show last week there was exhibited, among other things, a large dish of American blackberrics. They are now cultivating blackberries by the acre, and, although much remains to be dome by artificial | selection, even the short time they huve been cultivated ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1886
Newspaper: East Anglian Daily Times
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1228 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

ENGLISH FRUIT

... scarcely own any relationship with the punyproductions of bur own soilA afew gkenerii hogag.Our native fruits then were' blackberries, strawberries, raspberries, currants, and perliiipa goose- berries. There were ?? some kinds of nuts, n ?? were crab apples ...

Published: Thursday 22 July 1886
Newspaper: Ipswich Journal
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1895 | Page: 7 | Tags: News 

EAST ANGLIAN DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1888. THE GREAT DIVORCE CASE

... foro Dot even could Induce At that same horticultural show were exhibited hbwfl..dl-)fl-:.:‘-m .‘m - » motive for some hugo blackberries grown at Laicester, which, if &Mhl'lh -‘-Na -“- .vv-_lic.nh\m-ll_--dh were s delicious to est as they were of 1853, when ...

Published: Friday 23 July 1886
Newspaper: East Anglian Daily Times
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 3136 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

DISTRICT INTELLIGENCE

... for it? Would say working man or Y lahourer rather buy that which is sO plentiful (for candi- h dates are plentiful as blackberries) than have a genuile article for nothing P Would tie labourer and the work- lman, who lias to work hard for his Saturday's ...

Published: Saturday 31 July 1886
Newspaper: Ipswich Journal
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1595 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

OUK LONDON CORRESPONDENT

... Sea Captain, Lytton Sothern Miss E. Drunton, Miss Maude Millet and others, constitutes a piece be seen. A piece called Blackberries,'* in the same bill is only tolerable in far as it affords charming Alice Atherton an opportunity of exhibiting her versatility ...

Published: Wednesday 18 August 1886
Newspaper: Suffolk and Essex Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1163 | Page: 7 | Tags: none