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... are in previous months. IL/Amt.—Plant as in February, transplant tomatoes, egg plants, melons, and vines; mulberries and blackberries are now ripening. APRIL—Sow mullet, corn, cow peas for fodder, plant butter bean, dig potatoes Onions, beet, and usual ...

Published: Saturday 02 January 1886
Newspaper: American Settler
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 290 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

– –

... crops can be grown during a season, and improved machinery potatoes, every variety of garden vegetable; the strawberry, blackberry, huckleberry, plum, pomegranate, red quince, coffee, cassava (arrowroot), indigo, cochineal, Sisal hemp; the orange, guava ...

Published: Saturday 02 January 1886
Newspaper: American Settler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2139 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, ISM

... to my, of the kind whidi dose not beer Mrligation— are, in fect,• drug: to the market. Hauntol homes aro plentiful ea blackberries, and thee a ho have seen or heard —or. rather, to bo mum au:aimed those whine friends hero own or beard --strange things ...

Tiff ANCLOPMAERICAN 1110 g

... correcting the proofs M'Cann increased his advantage by 275 ems, or 11 lines. Here are some piofits of truck farming :— Blackberries grow wild in profusion, and in Middle Florida, where labour is abundant, they are dried for shipment and command 14 cents ...

Published: Friday 08 January 1886
Newspaper: Anglo-American Times
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 615 | Page: 11 | Tags: none

1 Iwçc7

... 1 23 - blackberries. But Mrs. - Wadsworth thM this no =ass for Trot. The of it was that she made a os a sheet of paper, of doe things Trot could ro. mamba,. gm him this paw, and also two dollars, with instroodoos to go at coos to Mr. Martin, privately ...

Published: Saturday 09 January 1886
Newspaper: Alliance News
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 355 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE ECLIPSE STAKES-

... sums £2,000 to be won single effort, as, for instance, nt Leicester and Manchester, while £5OO stakes are plentiful as blackberries. That this a healthy state affairs cannot I think denied, inasmuch as it makes the sport more intrinsically dependent upon ...

Published: Monday 11 January 1886
Newspaper: Sporting Life
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4849 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

expert pickers than the whites or Chinese, though the latter are eening into the field quite rapidly. In the ..

... aprioota, grapes, quinces, plums, peaches, cherries, strawberries (which on Puget Sound are often ripe on May It, raspberries, blackberries, gooseberries currants, and vegetables, suc h as on cabbages, turnips, bests . carrots, parsnips, cucumbers, celery. no ...

Published: Saturday 16 January 1886
Newspaper: Field
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1703 | Page: 24 | Tags: none

F4•_ _ _a_a_ _a a a_a_a_ab_a_ •_& ait' %si 4

... correcting the proofs M'Oann increased his advantage by 275 ems, or 11 lines. Here are some profits of truck farming : Blackberries grow wild in profusion, and in Middle Florida, where labour is abundant, they are dried for shipment and command 14 cents ...

Published: Saturday 16 January 1886
Newspaper: American Settler
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3459 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

literary t3Otifto

... gardeners. Under the heading of Small and Bush Fruits, by D. T. Fish, assisted by W. Carmichael, currants. raspberries, and blackberries are taken, and a Area importation of the latter from America described, the fruit of which are said to measure 41 inches ...

Published: Wednesday 20 January 1886
Newspaper: Middlesex Independent
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 666 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

SPECIAL SUNDAY MORNING EDITION

... (Saturday) morning, when arrested on his release from ] Chelmsford geol, lie said that lie found the strap wrhen lie was out blackberrying.-Mr. Talbot said that the rail- way company were sg anxious to press the charge.- Mi'. Phillips said that as the prisoner ...

CRICKET: A WEEKLY RECORD OF TIIE GAME

... as he is the most dashing of batsmen, who always goes in to face any bowling, confident of making fours as thick as blackberries, and makes them with glorious cuts, as well as big drives. There is no batsman in Australia whom the Australian public ...

Published: Thursday 28 January 1886
Newspaper: Cricket
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2808 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

RIOT AT AN IRISH CATTLE SALE

... took place on Thursday in Athlone, in consequence of the sale of fifteen head of cattle, the property of Mrs. Kilduff, of Blackberry-lane, for arrears of rent amounting to £9B. Country contingents from the various branches of the National League thronged ...

Published: Saturday 30 January 1886
Newspaper: St James's Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 168 | Page: 12 | Tags: none