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ORGAN LZAIiONS

... It had 48 pages in it. and also II stories. The stories were. A Visit to the Sun: The Winter \rtist: Mother Knows Best; Blackberry Time; The Souirrers Lament: Chit- Chat; A Blnsh Red Nose: The Tlnies under the Ground; A T/esson from Robin; The Fairy Glen; ...

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... onwards come the bush fruits, which must picked, packed, and marketed—gooseberries, currants, strawberries, raspberries, and blackberries; and the free fruits, such plums, damsons, pears, and apples, each in their season. Summer pruning is necessary part of ...

FOR THE FRUIT GROWER

... trees with a good compost and lightly hoe in. Fish guano an excellent fertilizer tor top dressing the soil round cultivated blackberries and loganberries. Lime spraying may be freely undertaken. Sec that all branches arc well coated as well the trunks of trees ...

IMPROVED COMBINATION TABLE MANGLE

... Market Hill. Huntingdon, St. Ives and St. Neots. Hunts. By Appointment to H.M. King George V. FOR SALE. HUME-MADE JAMS.—Blackberry and Crab Apple 7d. per lb., in screw capped jars; ordinary 21b. jars, lid.— Below. Mulberry jelly, 1/3 for Crab Apple Jelly ...

Published: Friday 11 April 1930
Newspaper: Biggleswade Chronicle
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 448 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

mm empire TALKIES

... lovely colours. 2/3 per tin. Prom paint suppliers. Shade card free from Colthurat Harding, Ltd., Bristol. HOME-MADE JAMS.—-Blackberry and Crab Apple 7d. per lb., in screw cupped jars; ordinary 21b. jars, lid.— Below. Mulberry jelly, 1/3 fur 2ibs. ; Crab ...

Published: Friday 18 April 1930
Newspaper: Biggleswade Chronicle
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 214 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

VEGETABLE GARDEN JOTTINGS

... Thin out loganberry canes. Complete the grafting of young fruit slocks. See that all branches are well tied cn cultivated blackberries. Fruit plantations may now protected the lighting of smudge fires the windward side. Finish top dressing established strawberry ...

By OLIVER BELL

... fried with bacon over the fire, make the most appetising breakfast the world. There a sense of satisfaction. too. In eating blackberry pic made from fruit which have picked ourselves gratis from the hedges, and the nutting season invariably sees crowds of ...

Published: Friday 29 August 1930
Newspaper: Biggleswade Chronicle
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 792 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

PHEASANT

... timid a creature. It eats ali sorts of seeds of weeds and their tender shoots. Every kind fruit Is relished by it such as blackberries, elderberries, hips and haws. It gets plump on the stubbles, and in the roots where It devours many insect pests. Indeed ...

Published: Friday 26 September 1930
Newspaper: Biggleswade Chronicle
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 709 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

WITH THE FLOWERS

... Securely stake and tie maiden apple trees. Remove runners from potted-up strawberries. Cut out old canes on cultivated blackberries. Pears will finish ripening in a few days if laid out in warm, dry room. Scrape off all moss on fruit trees and cleanse ...

FOR THE FRUIT GROWER

... grown apple crop is generally very light; only in a few districts arc there fairly favourable prospects. Loganberries and blackberries may still be increased by pegging down some of the long growths and covering with soil firmly. Now that the flush of soft ...

FOR THE FRUIT GROWER

... or Westmorland prune damson); cherries (Napoleon, bigarreau, and inorello); gooseberries; strawberries; loganberries; blackberries (cultivated varieties): raspberries; red currants (either alone or with black currants; apples (gallon cans, solid pack) ...