THE HUNTLY ABERCHIRDER AND HUNTLY COACHES

... and linen dresses are getting exceedingly popular in London. and there is little doubt that they will be as plentiful as blackberries a little later on. There is every probability that they will soon grow common. and all the good. well-made holland costumes ...

Published: Saturday 17 June 1893
Newspaper: Huntly Express
County: Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2197 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

/ELECTIONS

... the joy makas.— Withs. IF women will paint. it is better to resort to simple methods which will 110 i injure the skin. Blackberry or strawberry juice rubbed sltglitly 'on the cheeks and then washed off with milk goes a beautiful tint which cannot he ...

Published: Friday 25 August 1893
Newspaper: Musselburgh News
County: East Lothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 763 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

IMPRESSION/ OP )ISLAND

... itself in oar ssieds—Who keeps alive this spirit in Ireland! Priests, wawa, constables, and soldiers are pleutifull as the blackberries in Irish lame. All thew ars, or ought to be, guardisos peace sod social order. Their protean mesa to point the other way ...

Published: Saturday 09 September 1893
Newspaper: Strathearn Herald
County: Perthshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1127 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

more does he gain. The evil is plain, and s0 and even on the garden hedge, is the thorn ‘THE

... enough, although the tree itself is poisonous, its berries are not, and are eaten safety both by children and birds. The blackberries, also, hang in branches by the roadside, and all the elder trees swarm with birds in search of their purple-Llack berries ...

Published: Saturday 30 September 1893
Newspaper: North British Daily Mail
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3981 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

TEAS I ARkk a XV- V a 4 0 M t 471111• L: • fittuburg Ran TICUIP3DAY, ()Groan 3, 1893

... hospital, 15. Gifts: Mrs. Osmond, papers ; Mrs. Blackburn - Maze, Graphics' ; Min Anderson, magazines; Mrs. Robinson, blackberries ; Mrs. Liddiard, papers ; Mrs. Paratt, hare ; Mr. Adams, magazines; Mies Reid =matinee ; Lady Graham, G raphice ; Mrs ...

LOCAL INTELLIGENCE

... season, it is interesting to notice that red currants are in blossom iu Newmilos, Ayrshire. The blossom is well formed. Even blackberry bushes are putting forth new leaves . The currant bush referred to stands exposed to south-east winds, and is grown in a ...

Published: Saturday 07 October 1893
Newspaper: Huntly Express
County: Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1124 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LONDON LS TINS

... the fashionable way to get out of petty worries, and drowned themselves. Romances of one sort or another are plentiful blackberries in the district where the girls lived—oos of the most curious districts, by the way, even in our mixed-op metropolis. Just ...

GARDI:NING

... and flowers on the large market gardeners, the markets bring little patronized by buyers or tellers. Toe wild bait o' the blackberry, which grows to freely in the hedges, is sometimes gathered for sale, but it neither keeps nor carrier well, and the poor ...

AND The js THE PARLIAMENTARY SITUATION. wasting time. The prospects of progress that they believed then ro at ..

... give for the first time Mr Waity Brovton, jun., aed aly pas MAIL'S LoNDON OFFICE. of them very deep, into which they hoped blackberries. We rather think that the %, the sentences being given on in hold he has secured upon the sympathies of a here Mr Hamish ...

Published: Monday 18 December 1893
Newspaper: North British Daily Mail
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3453 | Page: 4 | Tags: none