Refine Search

Please forward overseas

... went and slept in his dressing room. Early this morning, Faith rang me up. Darling, she said, you know that fashionable blackberry shade Well, I 'm wearing it next my skin. So am I Walking up the cliff path a few days ago I saw Bertram, our Evacuee, ...

Published: Wednesday 22 November 1939
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 694 | Page: 8 | Tags: Illustrations 

QUICK SLIMMING DIET

... between meals. 5. Baked bread. 6. No melon ever. But long solus meals of any other single kind of fruit, peaches and cream, blackberries and cream. Figs. 7. No vinegar, ever. 8. A liquid night meal instead of dinner, on iT pints of some single pressed vegetable ...

Published: Tuesday 01 September 1936
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 716 | Page: 40 | Tags: Illustrations 

FROM Cocktails to port

... least, I have greatly improved my knowledge of the growth and structure of heather, the common fern, the nettle and the blackberry bush. SPHERE is an excellent golf story in Mr. Arthur Lambton's memoirs The Galanty Show (Hurst and Blackett). Sir Morgan ...

A PORTFOLIO of FASHION: Autumn Fashions: A Forecast for

... forms and the tunic will appear again. Amongst the new colours a lovely ink- blue and the dull purplish colour of wild blackberries will be popular. There will also be a good deal of green and brown, black, of course, and some dull shades of burgundy ...

Published: Wednesday 13 September 1933
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 968 | Page: 37 | Tags: Illustrations 

Bond Street and Thereabouts...: A Weekly Commentary on Fashion

... of un breakable composition by a secret method just what we all want to relieve the mournful black or nearly as mournful blackberry blue which are the season's colours. Also belts of unbelievable chic unbelievable in London and at such prices, I mean the ...

Published: Wednesday 29 November 1933
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 820 | Page: 38 | Tags: Illustrations 

EVE at GOLF: There and Here

... means so fine and free a stylist as at Stoke, and after twelve good holes she fell away sadly, did a little bird-nesting and blackberry- ing amongst the bushes, with the result that instead of sweeping the board, as she looked like doing, she left that pleasing ...

Published: Wednesday 01 October 1930
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1058 | Page: 50 | Tags: Illustrations 

PARIS: CONFLICTING INFLUENCES

... gleam ing through. Satin, faille, taffeta, moire, Ottoman silk, flat crepes, and much brocade and metal lam6 are also used. Blackberry, deep green, capucine, ice-blue, plum, violet, and black are lead ing colours. 1 ...

Published: Wednesday 06 September 1933
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1049 | Page: 45 | Tags: Illustrations 

THE LOVE OF FOOD

... stones and cockles in the mud good basis for a soup. We ride inland, where the pine forest grows thicker there we find fine blackberries, with which we make pies and jam. Failing that, there are bits of dead wood and pine-cones we bring back a basketful for ...

Published: Wednesday 18 October 1939
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 988 | Page: 34 | Tags: Illustrations 

And There's Home-made Jam For TEA

... thirty minutes. When tested on a plate it should run unevenly. Skim, pour into jars, seal and cover when cold. Cherry and blackberry jam can be made in the same way. Loganberry Jam (Certo Method). 2 lb. berries. 2 lb. sugar. Half a bottle Certo. Crush the ...

Published: Monday 01 July 1935
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1085 | Page: 74 | Tags: Illustrations 

THE FIVE CUBS

... wood scent that made you pause and take a long breath of it. Inside the wood there was densecover with a good bottom of blackberry, and then in the middle of the wood there were broad open glades studded with gorse, now one mass of bloom, and the warm ...

Week after Week

... told to. And now the leader cries, Look out for the brambles, whereupon, having gingerly held aside a particularly whippy blackberry branch, he lets it swing back with all the impetus of which it is capable into the face of the man behind him, who does ...

Published: Saturday 29 August 1931
Newspaper: The Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1760 | Page: 10 | Tags: Illustrations 

Standing By...: One Thing and Another

... Hugh Walpole, and it would ire an agreeable innovation to mount him on a horse closely resembling Wordsworth's own horse Blackberry, who was so often mistaken for the poet himself, and is said to have written many of the Sonnets. We 'd also like a little ...

Published: Wednesday 05 October 1938
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1802 | Page: 15 | Tags: Illustrations