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The Queen

ti~li Six hundred years after Christ Charlemagne instituted laws to promote gardening, and even decreed by name ..

... unwelcome forerunner in a chill and cheerless November. I have heard that on the first of this month the Devil touches the blackberries with his wand, and thus they are all poisoned, and the children must eat no more till next year; but, notwithstanding, ...

Published: Saturday 25 November 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1063 | Page: 54 | Tags: none

THE QUEEN, THE LADY'S NEWSPAPER

... the University of Nebraska. It is entitled Bush Fruits, and is described as a horticultural monograph of raspberries, blackberries, dewberries, currants, gooseberries, and shrub-like fruits. I have spent the early summer in the woods and magnificent ...

Published: Saturday 21 January 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 811 | Page: 28 | Tags: none

A DICTIONARY OF CULINARY TERIS

... berry. A variety of baies are used in cookery, either fresh or dried. The word bale de ronce generally applies to the blackberry, though the ordinary name is mitre. hire-MARig.—A well-known culinary apparatus which is extremely useful for keeping ...

Published: Saturday 27 May 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1168 | Page: 61 | Tags: none

Ml*4 coLVILLICS BRIDESMAIDS' DRI*;A

... along the Buckinghamshire lanes, the hedges bright with the scarlet hips and the duller red berries of the hawthorn, while blackberries enticed us now and again from our walk to pause and enjoy a few berries, which, if they cost is. a pound, would be considered ...

Published: Saturday 22 April 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1340 | Page: 46 | Tags: none

THE DRAMA

... Miss Consequence, Mrs Bilbrough's Bit o' Blood, Messrs Harding Cox and F. Mansell's Miss ()oldie, and Mr Woodiwiss champion Blackberry were amongst the moat notable of the remainder. Mies Joan Oodfrey's fox terriers Belmont Pearl, What Not, and Mickey Doyne ...

Published: Saturday 02 September 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1537 | Page: 55 | Tags: none

THE QUEEN, THE LADY'S NEWSPAPER

... person has to be reminded continually that literature is a thing to be honoured ; that good writers do not grow on every blackberry bush; and that the literary man, as poet, preacher, novelist, dramatist, essayist, historian, keeps the world alive, prevents ...

Published: Saturday 07 October 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2994 | Page: 29 | Tags: none

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... boy wears a band denoting his particular corps upon hie arm. They take long walks ; they spsnd whole afternoons getting blackberries, or they build a sand fortress or sail boats, doing one of the hundreds of things boys love so well. These little companies ...

Published: Saturday 23 September 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3341 | Page: 35 | Tags: none

ANSWERS

... exposed to the air. I regret to say I can find no recipe for making the satin sweets procurable at Messrs Fuller's.—En. BLACKBERRY JELLY (Hopeful ).—The following I know to be a good recipe, though I have also need the one you suggest. The latter, however ...

Published: Saturday 07 October 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4655 | Page: 59 | Tags: none

THE QUEEN, THE LADY'S NEWSPAPER

... Author of History of the filtrates, and, reaching the sand, and unable to sink through the paws of a penther. But,what blackberries may be British Empire , The British Empire in the Nineteenth the clay, breaks out in land springs. gathered there, large ...

Published: Saturday 14 January 1899
Newspaper: The Queen
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 8465 | Page: 27 | Tags: none