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BLACKBERRIES

... August there has been sale in stores a good supply of blackberries, on which the glints of light have had a most winsome appearance. There is something very attractive about blackberries; no >aonder town folk arc to give a good price for them. In some districts ...

!Blackberries

... utumn has always been that it brings the blackberry season. There are, I think, few outings comparable to an afternoon picking blackberries. It ts true, of that you get scratches, but who would be a real blackberry picker without the ecars of the trade And ...

Published: Wednesday 05 September 1923
Newspaper: Manchester Evening News
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 359 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES Blackberry pickers who are utubrt journey far into the find haiveat grow smaller and uuia although the esparto tell that tlus a f-mitful blackberry sear. Sim travel facilities have led re curt petition, but the reason is sir modern methods ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1923
Newspaper: Nottingham Journal
County: Nottinghamshire, England
Type: | Words: 65 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE BLACKBERRY

... THE BLACKBERRY Londoners are fond of this bramble. In the autumn evenings you can meet families returning from tne hunt. * They are tired, dusty, bleeding, with purple-stained mouths, and in their baskets a few ounces of bngh‘ red fruit. That is their ...

Published: Tuesday 02 November 1920
Newspaper: Woolwich Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 298 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES. Moat holiscwivea mike blackberry ism eluting thy 5M48.0, hut atteuira anythinir which is a pity. WM* the blackberry is in mans 'the follmring Blackberry Jelly ia quite worth while trying-- BLACKBERRY JELLY. Pick over MOe very ...

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES. There are many allotmepteers paying great attention to blackberries, and their time is no means ill spent. Blackberries are generally considered wild fruit, and some people very little thought their possibilities under cultivation. Those ...

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES. The harvest of the hedges is ready to be gathered in. The blackberries are ripe. For months country folk, strollers in the rlancs. and ramblers of all ages, have looked with searching eyes at the all-too-sloy ripening of the wild growing ...

BLACKBERRY

... BLACKBERRY TARTS WITH CREAM. 6d. each. ...

Published: Wednesday 04 September 1929
Newspaper: Portsmouth Evening News
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 6 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRYING

... BLACKBERRYING. Blackberrying is a pa,tinis which, if taken !piously, is net beneath the notice of grown men. it cannot rank with skis:Ong or fishing, it portal of the joys and excitements of both. can you ask for more than the lanes of Beikshire, *sunny ...

Published: Saturday 03 September 1921
Newspaper: Reading Observer
County: Berkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2086 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRYING

... BLACKBERRYING. The blackberrying around ftpal• ding is now in full swing, stud there is said to be plenty of them. The other day I wise walking beside a hedgerow at Pinchbeck, where several children were gathering blackberries. One was such a little toddler ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1923
Newspaper: Spalding Guardian
County: Lincolnshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 257 | Page: 11 | Tags: none

Blackberries

... Blackberries THE juicy, delectable blackberry is ripe for the plucking. Indeed, little fingers and mouths have Jicen stained with its juice for some weeks past. To-morrow scons be regarded as Blackberry Sunday by the majority town-dwellers , but in truth ...

Published: Saturday 21 September 1929
Newspaper: Daily Herald
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 868 | Page: 6 | Tags: none