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SNAPSHOTS FROM THE SNOW AND THE SUNSHINE

... with her son and daughter place deservedly popular in the best sense of have been crowded with well-known people, erbial blackberries. Some interesting play has :tion Captain Bower is credited with having nearly a quarter of a million sterling. MISS ELIZABETH ...

Published: Wednesday 08 February 1911
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 322 | Page: 27 | Tags: Photographs 

BOTTLES and POTS

... POTS Preserving the fruits of early autumn means increasing the charms of winter menus By CATHERINE IVES APPLES, apricots, blackberries and damsons; Morella cherries, mulberries, nectarines and plums. Really, in September, the cook who is far-sighted as well ...

Published: Sunday 01 September 1929
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 759 | Page: 91 | Tags: Photographs 

AT THE CLONMEL HORSE AND HOUND SHOW

... advancing to the fray with Mr. and Airs. Villiers-Stuart, of Dromana. As was only to be expected, M.F.H.s were as thick as blackberries soon will be. Mr. Russell is joint-Master of the Waterford, and Miss Anne Hickman, daughter of a former M.F.H., the late ...

Published: Wednesday 02 August 1939
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 291 | Page: 26 | Tags: Photographs 

Bottling Fruits at Home

... plums, juicy green gages, soft melting pears, delicate apricots, tasty gooseberries and delightful mixtures of apple and blackberries-- all preserved so as to be as near as possible equal to the fresh fruits in colour, flavour and appearance Bottling offers ...

Published: Tuesday 01 September 1931
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1768 | Page: 87 | Tags: Photographs 

Harvest-Tide in West Sussex

... seeds for hay, and the best of this year's corn John Rushbridge (potatoes, vegetables and hops), Ann Smith (the wild fruits blackberries and mushrooms fruit and flowers) and Peter Shaxon (the corn wheat, oats, rye and barley). AT THE WEST DOOR Representative ...

THE PERENNIAL JOYS OF NORTH BERWICK

... looks slim and elegant driving. Behind her are the HON. MIRIAM PEASE and the HON. MRS. RICHARD NORTON. i \m 8. Attractive in blackberry red knitted cardi gan and cap teas MISS JAN RICARDO, whose brother, Francis, recently won the Belgian championship. 9. Trousers ...

Published: Wednesday 26 September 1934
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 370 | Page: 15 | Tags: Photographs 

WINES

... next. These bottles contained mead concocted from honey and a very early English drink potent, too!), parsley, rhubarb, blackberry, elderberry wines, as well as wheat wine, sloe gin, raspberry vinegar and plum port. Exhibits came from Norfolk, Lancashire ...

VOGUES AND VANITIES: The Important Trifle

... every thing, if it 's 'or.lv '.a beaded blackberry or an odd scrap of. coloured wool. Take millinery. Quite the best hats of the moment have a vegetarian or fruitarian tendency, and really a war time ration of blackberry -and-apple tart has better decorative ...

Published: Wednesday 10 October 1917
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1144 | Page: 22 | Tags: Photographs 

The ORCHARD of the EMPIRE

... Ewings won a number of piizes at la& season's fruit show at Vernon. IN AN OKANAGAN ORCHARD L li LOGAN BERRIES CULTIVATED BLACKBERRIES PRIZE APPLES MORELLO CHERRIES CHINESE GATHERING FRUIT ■■■■IIMIIim. I III I| II WWII IIMI-- STRAWBERRIES PACKED FOR MARKET ...

Published: Saturday 03 June 1911
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 297 | Page: 13 | Tags: Photographs 

Next Week's Work in the Garden: Vegetables

... use should now be thinned out to 4 in. This is another plant which is greatly benefited by a top dressing of soot. Fruits Blackberries and mulberries are probably ready for picking in a good many gardens they make excellent jelly sugar rations permitting ...

The Editor's Box

... freshly gathered bramble berries which grow wild in the High land glens, and far surpass in flavour the cultivated bramble or blackberry Robertson's Ginger Marmalade is delightful for breakfast, dessert, or tea, and Silver Shred Marmalade and Golden Shred ...

Published: Wednesday 04 February 1914
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 511 | Page: 68 | Tags: Photographs 

The Editor's Box

... freshly gathered bramble berries which grow wild in the High land glens, and far surpass in flavour the cultivated bramble or blackberry Robertson's Ginger Marmalade is delightful for breakfast, dessert, or tea, and Silver Shred Marmalade and Golden Shred ...

Published: Wednesday 04 February 1914
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 512 | Page: 68 | Tags: Photographs