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MUTILATION OF CATTLE AT MILL HILL

... the line are eacured atrong iron faatening, but thia time of the year there are many treapaaaera the land (earthing for blackberries and mnahrooraa, and it ia oonjecturcd that aome of tbeae thoughtkaaly left the gate open. Thia accident points to the danger ...

Published: Friday 05 October 1888
Newspaper: Hendon & Finchley Times
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1523 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

AMONG THE HOP-PICKERS

... the hop and fruit gardens. A short walk down country lane —where the hedgerow sweet with late bramble-bloom and ripening blackberry, where fern and wild - strawberry plant flourish without touch of human finger, where from bush to bush the busy spider ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1888
Newspaper: Illustrated London News
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1698 | Page: 16 | Tags: none

RURAL NOTES

... the shrewd hint of a north-east wind. The haws and the mountain 5 ash berries seem plentiful this year, but there are no blackberries. Even on the sunny landslip of the Isle of Wight they have never g ripened, and in most places they lack even a touch of ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1888
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1333 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

re•PriAL) KEPT SECRET

... to meet Sir George Hainerton, as he cam e the afternoon train. it was easy enough to coneeai herself. A thick growth of blackberry bushes and holly, forming a fitting underwood for BOMB jnegniticent oaks and beeches which grew in the hallows of the park ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1888
Newspaper: Wallington & Carshalton Herald
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3230 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Harvest Festival at Bt. Philips

... , apples, peers, plums, grapes, pose, benne, carrots, turnip., melons, onions, potatoes, flour, nuts, eggs, cucumber., blackberries, currant., and indeed everything which harvest pooduoes. The sermon in the evening by the it.,. G. R. Thornton was a very ...

aurora (lamrrtr, assault or hadlkt woona

... deposed that an tbs gtenoon of September ITth, aha rent Nelly Sparrow, who was visiting hat at the that, to Hadley gather blackberries. Whan tbs girl returned at about hall-peat p.m. aha waa erriog, aada|onst made a complaint which sanood wilnast Ukp bar ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1888
Newspaper: Barnet Press
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 4179 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

MUSTARD AND CRESS

... thick as blackberries on a September hedgerow. Or should it be October, and are the blackberries in my neighbourhood specially backward ? I have been waiting for a blackberry pudding for weeks, and can't get one. If you never tried • blackberry pudding ...

Published: Sunday 07 October 1888
Newspaper: The Referee
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1421 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

SAUL AMONG THE PROPHETS

... to that burly protoype of Sir William, Sir Usti& To which the fat knight makes reply, Wire 1111•110 US asJr-- fel as blackberries, I would give none upon compulsion. Sir William Ilareourt, without so amphatis a refuel, failed all the SO give to his ...

Published: Wednesday 10 October 1888
Newspaper: Evening News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 785 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

TRUTH

... Launfal.) Nor dream before July enslaving off my respirator. Moods elodor.) And in Anima's heat. (./..1. Platt, Th. Blackberry Farm.) Green rye in September, when timely than past. Points of Husbandry.) And till October', adteWag ham. D. aghaw,••• ...

Published: Thursday 11 October 1888
Newspaper: Truth
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 284 | Page: 40 | Tags: none

GIRLS' GOSSIP

... thing like me with a mighty sweet tooth at each side of my head, and one somewhere in the front as well. Mrs. Schoonmaker's blackberry pie, liberal in size as a lover's vows, was trimmed all round the edge with the daintiest, fairiest lattice-work, and the ...

Published: Thursday 11 October 1888
Newspaper: Truth
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1757 | Page: 30 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRYING

... about the blackberry which commends it to me hugely. The peach and the nectarine are not for all—not even in tins The mangosteen is still harder of access, and the luscious durian one only reads of in the pages of Mr. Wallace; but the blackberry, like the ...

Published: Saturday 13 October 1888
Newspaper: Illustrated London News
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1877 | Page: 16 | Tags: none