Refine Search

Newspaper

Lincoln Leader and County Advertiser

Countries

Access Type

58

Type

53
4
1

Public Tags

No tags available
More details

Lincoln Leader and County Advertiser

SOW VEGETABLES —_— 05 HOW TO INCREASE THE FOOD SUPPLY. In response to numerons inquiries, the Royal ..

... Kales, Cabbage, Cauliflower, late Celery, and Leeks. 3. To hottle all Fruit of Plum, Damson, and Bush Fruit, including Blackberries. Bottle Rhubarh; store Apnles in a cool place, not too dry but not damp,_ else they will shrivel. Do these things now to ...

MINCED STEAK AND MUSHEROO M 8

... it to the cooked fruit. Stir an for two or three minutes, then swe and keep stirring until the sugar When the flavour of blackberries | Yiked, simmer the grated rind of | with the fruit, and add the juice ot the same time as che sugar. 1 wet mould FREE ...

h Following

... black —Wash the rice, boil for ten minutes, and tie up in small cloths to four Jeave room for the rice to continue Wash the blackberries, picking out or cores. and stew with the sugar water till quite soft. Rub through to remove most of the pips. Dfm umplings ...

JANE EYRE

... unskilled labour; good wages. Men over military age.— Apply, H. Hunt, Dominie Cross, Retford. W.\\;*N:F'm BUY, any quantity of BLACKBERRIES; I,'ood price given, -JJAI,,,-l\'Ar.n_._ Fruit Merchant, Grantham; rd Market, Monday W.\.\l‘H), LADY JUNIOR CLERK, Shorthand ...

THEFT AT MARKET DEEPING

... prosecuted.—~Eisie Mcßev, of Nottingham, said she Was on a visit to Long Bennington, and on the day o question was gathermg blackberries in a feld, when &e prisoner assaulted her.—Evidence was given by Mms. Rebecca Robason, of Church-lane, long Bennington; ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... NOTES OF THE WEEK. — ¢ — POLIT!(‘AL spéeches just now are plentiful as blackberries in autumn, ‘At the Belfast meetings of the Ulster Unionist Council, Mr. Walter Long varied the phrase, withou; altering the meaning, of Mr. Bonar Law at Bristol. Mr. Long ...

NICE DISHES

... with black pepper and salt, and serve at once, very Lot. Dausos Cuzzsz. —Put the dameons in a jar in the same way as for blackberry jelly. Set thie ond by Dolling W the it o S T t - . dinm“othm'h:hthy.ncfil To -d.“ dof pd'b hl:l po-l;dd P a alr. .J boil ...

“CARROT SNATCHERS,” OR SOUL SNATCHERS?

... recorded that he, and one of his preachers, on an occasion in Cornwall, wera not offered indoor hospitality, and dined off blackberries. The present writer remembers a “local” walking 5 miles to a village in the Lincoln cireuit to preach in the afternoon ...

CUT THIS oUT MISCELLANEOUS RECIPES

... pound of vegetables, can be ad to anv kind of fresh or dried fruit in jam-making. It can be used in equal quantities with blackberries instead of apple. One-third dried apricot and two-thirds marrow pulp is also very satisfactory. MEeTHOD.—PeeI and seed ...

NICE DISHES

... elices of thin bread-and-butter, and then fill it with hot stewed fruit, currants—red or black — raspberries, plums, or blackberries. Cover with a piece of bread-and-butter. Put a eaucer on the top with a weight on it to press the fruit down. When cold ...

NICE DISHES

... with slices of lemon and a few rashers of bacon. AMERICAN Bracknerry TArr. — Line a soupplate with pastry, fill it with blackberries, mft sugar over, and cover with I:u' wetting the edges to make them adhere. ke and leave till cold. Cut a round of pastry ...

THE GERMAN BAKER,

... to freedom. German waiters, head waiters, and evem German proprietors of hotels and boarding houses, are as plentiful as blackberries, In these and in innumerable cases of a like order of enemy invasion the average citizen who takes no heed, and is satisfied ...