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10-ABREAST HORSEMEN

... not commonly joked about nowadays in this country. But coarseness is a matter of convention. In France they don't pick blackberries, because they consider them poisonous. highly artific - ialised and looked like a bit of Chauve-Souris that had lost its ...

Published: Sunday 02 May 1926
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1525 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

HOW, WHEN AND WHERE TO INVEST

... around 625. SOUND PREFERENCE Really sound 6 per cent. preference shares standing under par are not exactly as plentiful as blackberries in September, but here and there they are to be found. As an instance, the 6 per cent. preference shares (20sA of the African ...

Published: Sunday 21 August 1927
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1399 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

/-X4, .5;5: 4Z WF .5,e7

... that the fattest, blackest and juiciest blackberry is always, the most difficult to get at? Probably because all the others have been picked. But somehow I don't think that is the only reason. When a blackberry finds itself growing into a special beauty ...

Published: Sunday 02 September 1928
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 229 | Page: 27 | Tags: none

Free Feast

... out into the country this week-end will be carrying baskets with them, for it is now blackberry time, and the recent spell of hot weather has assured the blackberry bushes being well loaded with ripe fruit. The bramble is one of the most common shrubs ...

Published: Sunday 02 September 1928
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 157 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRY ING JOYS Sunday Pictorial Office. MY DEAR BOYS AND GIRLS,— Have you been blackberrying yet? The ..

... BLACKBERRY ING JOYS Sunday Pictorial Office. MY DEAR BOYS AND GIRLS,— Have you been blackberrying yet? The blackberries are all out on the heaths and commons near where I live—but somehi)w I don't fancy they will remain on the bushes for long! Almost ...

Published: Sunday 02 September 1928
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 248 | Page: 27 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRY FANS

... BLACKBERRY FANS EATING about the bush. * * After the Vacation School and collected * * * Definition Seaside resort : A place where , the natives live on your holiday until next summer.. * Hay Ho! Laughing Harvesters, says a headline Ha Ha Harvesters ...

Published: Sunday 09 September 1928
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 413 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

Para-Typhoid Lull.—There were no fresh cases of para-typhoid in London yesterday. The total number under ..

... without a stop, failed at Crewe yesterday afternoon, necessitating a change of engines. - Hanged in Wood.—While picking blackberries in a wood at Kingsbury, N.W., yesterday, boys found the body of a man named Perry, of Inman-road, Harlesden, N.W., hanging ...

Published: Sunday 16 September 1928
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 128 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

By ROBERT MAGILL

... By ROBERT MAGILL LIBUS FRUTICOS, the common blackberry,.lll) is so called because it is generally green, yellow, pink, violet, and anything but black, and it is nothing like a berry, being a number of succulent drupels like little blisters, crow ded round ...

Published: Sunday 07 October 1928
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 801 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

VEGETABLE DISHES

... supply of bottled tart fruits. You want not only the usual yellow plums. but red and Victoria plums. greengages. cherries, blackberries and rhubarb For a good tart is one of the best sweets you can serve on a cold day. Vary tarts with steamed puddings, and ...

Published: Sunday 11 November 1928
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 362 | Page: 18 | Tags: none

Safety First The drought has so affected water supplies that in some rural districts it has been decided to leave

... usually produces a greater number of convictions. Some-err time ! * * Scarce In some parts of the country, I read, the blackberry bushes have practically no fruit on them. Lackberry bushes, in fact. At the Festive Board (Dainty confections are gradually ...

Published: Sunday 15 September 1929
Newspaper: Sunday Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 369 | Page: 10 | Tags: none