Refine Search

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES. blackberry-Nail-apple tart on the Tea' taurant menus, and no blackberry jam or jelly on the cupboard shelves at home! It is the plums that hare been distinguishing thein.sclves this year in the land of pies and preserves. They are everywhere ...

Published: Saturday 21 September 1907
Newspaper: Bristol Times and Mirror
County: Bristol, England
Type: | Words: 2137 | Page: 22 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRYING

... BLACKBERRYING. The last days of the month are here, and for a week the weather has been mild and bright. Thick dews lie on the grass this morning, as our goodly company resorts to the woods, Phyllis carrying a basket, and Vincent, who has escaped from ...

Published: Thursday 08 October 1903
Newspaper: Bournemouth Graphic
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 557 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

THE BLACKBERRY

... given to the blackberry, owing to its supposed tendency to produce the eruption known as scaldhead iu children. This however is quite an crrdheons ides, for doctors and scientists are agreed that the blackberry is one of the most wholesome fruits, and it ...

Published: Saturday 28 September 1907
Newspaper: Christchurch Times
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 123 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES SOMERSET SENDS THE FIRST ...

Published: Friday 02 September 1904
Newspaper: Western Chronicle
County: Somerset, England
Type: Article | Words: 5 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRYING,

... BLACKBERRYING, The suns up in a bright blue sky, And all the world's aglow. Come fetch your baskets, girls and boys, For a-blackberrying we'll go. I know a spot where the ripe fruit hangs, Luscious and black as aloe, Below the stream, round the hazel-copse ...

Published: Saturday 02 October 1909
Newspaper: Christchurch Times
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 75 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRYING

... BLACKBERRYING. The ene is up in a bright blue sky. And ell tbe world's aglow. Come fetch your baskets, girls sad boys, For a-blackberrying we'll go. I know a spot where the ripe fruit hangs, Luscious and black as sloe, Below the abeam, round the hazel-copse ...

Published: Friday 01 October 1909
Newspaper: Teignmouth Post and Gazette
County: Devon, England
Type: Article | Words: 396 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE BLACKBERRY

... nothing to improve—the blackberry and that staining berry which is called in the several countries where it grows the bilberry, the whort, or the whortleberry, tho hurt, or the hurtleberry. It is worth noting that the blackberry, just coming to its jet-black ...

Published: Saturday 07 September 1901
Newspaper: Gloucestershire Echo
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: | Words: 323 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES. Sir Edwin Arnold. ] When the commencement of September brines days of doom to the partridges, the blackberry, which has alternately green and red, justifies its name by covering the bushes on down and common and hedgerow, with dark and g ...

Published: Thursday 12 September 1901
Newspaper: Cornishman
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 150 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

CONCERNING BLACKBERRIES

... CONCERNING BLACKBERRIES. The Mackberrjr. which the children find sur h great delight gathering, will with us. Unfortunately, the picnics and such-like organisations which attend the gathering of the fruit are generally the most enjoyable part, fi»r even ...

Published: Saturday 12 September 1908
Newspaper: Gloucestershire Chronicle
County: Gloucestershire, England
Type: | Words: 127 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

REIGN OF THE BLACKBERRY

... REIGN OF THE BLACKBERRY. SELLING AT THREE TIMES THE PRICE OF PLUMS. The first blackberries put upon Covent Garden Market recently for the new season realised from 2s 6d to a peck basket of 121b. of fruit. Within ten days 20,000 pecks of English plums ...

Published: Friday 27 September 1907
Newspaper: Western Gazette
County: Somerset, England
Type: Article | Words: 198 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

American Blackberries

... American Blackberries. The varieties of American Blackberries grown in this country, and which seem the best, arc Wilson, Junr., Kittatiny, and Lawton. Even these, however, do not always do well in this country. No doubt the very best of cultivated B ...

Published: Saturday 16 February 1901
Newspaper: Cornish & Devon Post
County: Cornwall, England
Type: Article | Words: 111 | Page: 3 | Tags: none