The Home

... of mustard, alittle viurser, and a tablespoonfrul of salad oil;. mix to paste well, then spread between brown bisouits. Blackberries end apples make the most delicious of jellies. Wash and remove the ends from three pounids of sour apples; cut them in ...

Place aux Dames

... woollen goods, but they also supply wood-carving, baskets, and all kinds of embroidery. Engagements are as plentiful as blackberries this autumn. Lord Strafford, Equerry to the Queen, has chosen Mrs. Colgate, a sprightly American widow, for his bride, ...

Published: Saturday 29 October 1898
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1214 | Page: 21 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

NATURE FOR ITS OWN SAKE.*

... and the soul to feel them. A chlimp of hazel on the upland meadow, around which the daisies grow, and through %which the blackberry twines its white blo-ssoms, may he a wonder-world of bemuty if we study it in its formn and colour, its setting, light, ...

SIR ROBERT PEEL'S PAPERS.*

... heir-apparent to the throne, but the ordinary recurrence of a Royal birthday, or the turn of the vear, shower baronetcies lile blackberries, and peerages like plums into the baskets of eager applicants. PEEL AND THE QUEEN. It is odd to notice the way even Peel ...

A GARDENER'S PARADISE.*

... wi4 blackthorn, which, tho-ugh a plum, is so nearly allied toapear that pears may be grafted on it. And then brakes of blackberries, especially of the parsley- lerired kind, so free of growth and se generous of fruit. . . . +. The grass shoul d be left ...

THE LOVE OF LOVE

... proper bramble, the little flower that has the blackberry for fruit, flattered, for the time, by the name of rose ? If so, I think this Dirge of Tennyson's is the only poem that has celebrated the blackberry-blossom-tender little form of a rose that has ...

NEW WORKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... on horticulture in America atre pu blished simultaneously by Messrs. MNac- millanl and Co. There' are ' Bush vriuits I(blackberries, raspberries, ?? by Fred. W. Card, and Evolution of our Native Fruits,, by L. H. Bailey. Other recent volumes of technical ...

NEW BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... winds blowing tbe winter away and scurrying the dead, untidy leaves into the corners: the hot smell of pines-j2st like blackberries-when the san is nn thfn; the -ihst Fehiruary evening that is fine enough to show how the days3 ar2 leigthening, with its ...

BOOKS OF THE DAY

... Skrine and E. D. Ross. INs. 6d. net. (Methuen and Co.) East Coast Stnery. F-ambles through Towns and Village, Nutting, Blackberrying, and Mush. rooming; Sea Fishing, Wild-fowl Shooting, &c. By W. J. Tate. Zs. 6d. (Jarrold and Sons.) GERMAN SHIPBUILDING ...

OUR SHORT STORIES

... perhaps aict mnuch of a bei distmuatioto., Generais in some parts of Seath pial Amer-.ica be ing almnost as plentiful ats blackberries O11t ina1, igrlaud : ?? G en eral Aetor lo oked everyinci LeI a sl~ier, just the turin, I thought, to wviu thle l baibble ...

CREAM OF CURRENT LITERATURE

... coastgaurd for a period yof 2; years, they vill receive as much as 6s. per day; nd but these appointments are ''arce as blackberries in June. It must be admitted'that ithe pay of these guardians of bur rock-bound 'oasts is not excessive, even when t the ...

HEADINGTON

... ailliam PFenn, Challenge, and is King of Russets3; and from Mr. J. Baker, 20,~ Aston- street, Oxford, a basket of cultivated blackberries aof large size and fully ripe. The s ports,' which attracted much attention, hand affored a large fund of amusement, were ...