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ALASKAN NATIVES

... woods and meadows and open spaces along the shores are full of them huckleberries of species, salmon-berries, raspberries blackberries, currants, and gooseberries, with fragrant strawberries and serviceberries, on the drier grounds, and cranberries in the ...

Published: Saturday 14 August 1897
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 486 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

LADIES’ COLUMN

... the at the stalk with pair scissors. Like all wild fruits, blackberries require given sugar if the preserve is to be kept more than a few weeks. Stingy housekeepers have Idea that the blackberry is common and aheap unnecessary to treat it with the same ...

Published: Wednesday 05 October 1892
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1612 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE BISLEY MEETING

... totals of 33's and 32's used be in the days the Snider or the Martini- Henry. Scores of 33 on Monday were as plentiful as blackberries, and totals of 30' were of no account. Over the two ranges—2oo and 500 yards—to which the shooting was confined Monday ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1897
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 545 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

Lecture by the Rev. J. B. Johnston'.—At h usual weekly meeting of the Falkirk Free Literary Society held in the

... variety the thane might have had s ' beetroot, or apples, and perhaps cherries too certainly he could have had both brambles blackberries, unless, by the way, those two W■ one and the same fruit. And that meal he would wash down with ale or beer, jje ing out ...

Published: Wednesday 25 December 1895
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 540 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

PRETTY VISITING COSTUME,

... cloth, Brackserey jam is improved greatly by adding half a pound of pecled and cored sour sharp apples to every pound of blackberries. Tugre is an old saying that a woman can throw out with a spoon faster than a man can throw in with a shovel. Without reference ...

AUSTRALIAN GARDEN FLOWERS

... country have been ruined by it fcr pas' es. The sweetbriar, also i some counrri°s. has thriven N control; and tbe common blackberry ias become a nuisance in romp places, and to eradicate*. Numbers and numbers of beautiful trees, and flowerif ilants grow ...

Published: Saturday 27 June 1896
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 646 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Tur mate of a Norwegian steamer was fatally stabbed at South Shields on Saturday evening by a member of the

... ArreMPTED SUICIDE. —An extraordinary case of attempted suicide was discovered on Friday ab March, Cambridgeshire- A boy blackberrying found a man lying under 2 hedge. with his throat cud. The wounds were severe, and the windpipe was ially se . After being ...

Published: Saturday 30 September 1899
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 696 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

HINTS FOR THE HOME

... colour, but Y Would do well to choose those of yeilow, nhs’ Lite an ideal colour for shading either gas or _TO- PRESERVE BLACKBERRIES. wy jam: Crush a quart: of fully ripened Dut it With of finely pounded cane loaf Rentle in a preserving pan, and Jet. it ...

Published: Wednesday 18 September 1895
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1656 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

FRUIT TABLE-JELLIES AND FiIUIT JUICES

... fruit juices.—Take a quantity of any kind of fresh berry fruit (red currant, black currant, cherry, goose (jerry, raspberry, blackberry, cranberry, Ac.; also, plums and rhubarb). Chau the fruit, and put it into an enamelled goblet or jelly pan. (Rhubarb should ...

Published: Wednesday 01 July 1891
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 713 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

GARDEN WORK

... Plums, Cherries, and Apricots may now be shortened back to four buds. Pears and Apples maybe left till next month. Blackberries. The Blackberries, represented by the cultivated forms, as the Cut-leaved Bramble and the American kinds, are useful additions and ...

Published: Wednesday 19 July 1899
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1558 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

AUSTRALIAN GARDEN FLOWERS

... pastoral purpoes. The sweetbriar, also a garden favourite in some countries, ha; thriven almost beyond control; and the common blackberry has become nuisance in some places, and most difficult eradicate. Numbers and numbers of species of beautiful trees, shrubs ...

Published: Wednesday 24 June 1896
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 715 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

HOW TO MAKK AND rKt.SKKVf. Till M

... prepare Fruit a quantity of avy kind of fresh berry fruit (red currant, black cur- rant, cherry, gooseberry, raspberry, blackberry, Clean the cranberry, &c.; also plums and rhubarb). frait, and pat it intoan enamelled goblet or jelly pan. (Rhubarb should ...

Published: Wednesday 20 May 1891
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 718 | Page: 6 | Tags: none