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East End News and London Shipping Chronicle

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East End News and London Shipping Chronicle

STRAY NOTES

... to be gradually freeing itself. THE blackberry crop in Kent this season. is An exceptionally large one, and the fruit. os iug to the hot sun and high temperature, is of tine quality. In a few instances blackberries are preserved in bottles or made into ...

POPLAR DISTRICT BOARD OF WORES

... they would probably be unable to make any good use of it.—Globe. Hen-pecked husbands, though not quite so plentiful as blackberries in September, are to be found in all classes of society, and even among the masses who, in the opinion of some eminent ...

high On the low mounds where warriors lie:

... honeysuckle—that scents the oltowsy air. The sweet briar, too, in blossoms pink, adds also to the charm. The bushes of the blackberry are whitened o'er with profuse promise of luscious fruit, and under foot the heather tipped with early pink bides all beneath ...

THE EAST END NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1892

... Saturday we went out and had a fine time of it. It was simply immense, and the May and blackberries we brought home were a treat to see. Rather'. May and blackberries on one day's ros would be a trest. such a one has eat fallen to the lot of many riders ...

1110 W TO 111111 FRUIT 7LLTOURINII

... guard the health and to the pleasure of tie se for whom tiny provide. Among the juicy fruits are strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, cherries, and currants; among the non juicy fruits are apples, pears, peaches, quinces, apricots, and plums. Mush the ...

FRCIT JELLIES

... more difficult to keep. but it HI quit* worth the trouble. When red currants aro no longer available, blasts currants. blackberries, quinces, plums, aprione. kc.. can all be used with equal mucous. APPti Jeu.r.—Take about 30 large apples, and rub them ...

Furnit ,ra l'o!paired and Itopolkhod

... favourite walks, and the blackberry bushes, the fruit of which he repeatedly acknowledges himself uncommonly fond, grow in all their luxuriance but a few paces from his grave. Many a walk did he take over yonder hill in quest of blackberries, and he thus ends ...

XVIL-THE GRAVE OF 'OLD -IfUllPli REY.'

... to Hastings he selected a spot where he wished to be laid. Ile had often eat on the slopes of the East Hill, amidst the blackberry bushes, farce, and heath, looking on the outstretched expanse of sea, the ruins of the ancient castle on the West Cliff ...

UNDERTAKERS

... horses), light lunch was partaken of, and Kentish hops in a liquid form generally discussed. We then passed through more blackberry and sloe-laden lanes, leaving Goof Farm on our right, and on to the town of Dartford to the Bull's Head Hotel, kept by one ...

TO PIOUS 01,00148 AND TOMATOrs

... cover it in the usual way. blackberry syrup: Make a syrup by Ilb. of sugar to each pint of water used, l4 2 boil it until it is rich and thick. Remove scum as it tires to the surface. Add to the syrup as many pints of blackberry juice as Mem are pounds of ...

MAMTIIR OF THE WORTHIE SOCIETY OR

... paste, which then put into a esrthenware bowl with the remains of pulps. On top of the place three quarta of picked ripe blackberries, and pour on enough boiling (actually bubbling) water to entirely cover them. Smash the fruit up with a wooden spoon, stir ...

PORMICIeII B• MSG POW DIM Beet Sikh! Powder RORWICIea BAKING POWDIUL. the world. 110111WIelle• BAKIXO ftWDBIL ..

... le to a large eztent—the former I are, as a friend of mine recently observed after a visit paid to the town thick as 1 blackberries in autumn, while as to the latter, the fact that amongst the *even old men provided for in Laxton's ahnshouse.t one named ...