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VIE AMEMUCAN IILACILIZARY

... people buying blackbertits gathered from the hedgerow which they might. without much diflicultY mow themselves Indeed, the blackberry gives much finer fruit than the ordinary bleckberry. It Is grown precisely like the loganberry. This means that the !dints ...

POULTRY, EGGS, ETC

... yEAB-OLD HENS, and Bun Hooka, laying.—Cainea, Martina Farm, h'CJK, BAluEi. XUllCta, utyaa * am all Poultry Houaea.—Baldock, Blackberry Mead Farm, Llngfleld. E.Q.IBCf PULLETS. 8.1.8.. etc., near laylnglla. each. —Seen Milford Lodge, Camden Park, Tunbridge ...

TO THE EDITOR

... cart it. Lastly, should we not make arran ments to use our acorns and blackberri A very little teaching would enable 1 school children in their holidays to gati acorns and blackberries—they would en it—get some pocket money and a lot food for man and beast ...

Published: Saturday 13 January 1940
Newspaper: Surrey Advertiser
County: Surrey, England
Type: | Words: 797 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

NOTES & COMMENTS

... pigeons, the use of potatoes for the feeding of pigs, the utilisation of bracken as litter and the collection of acorns and blackberries. Lord Onslow points out that if they are to be worth adopting all these suggestions must be carried out on a large scale ...

Published: Saturday 13 January 1940
Newspaper: Surrey Advertiser
County: Surrey, England
Type: | Words: 348 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

CORRESPONDENCE

... G. Whitla 5 0 0 Mrs. A. Tombs 2 2 Miss K. Haynes 10 6 Mrs. C. M. Chapman 1 0 0 Mr. W. Chapman 10 0 Mr. P, G. Grundy 4 0 Blackberries 12 0 Mr. Septimus Clarke 110 Buckingham Senior School (80y5) 110 Mr. F, Tofield 110 Mr. W. J. Abel 0 Proceeds of Dance ...

THE COLLAR

... painted the picture herself, although only four and a bit. But first they imagined the story . • • • Once upon a time in 'Blackberry Hollow,' in the House of the Toadstool, Fairy Blue Bell lived. She was a very kind Fairy, and worked hard to make scent ...

Published: Saturday 20 January 1940
Newspaper: Hampshire Advertiser
County: Hampshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 436 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

Blow Lamp in the Thatch

... filling his cap with the eggs from a rook's nest, only to fall out of the treefortunately, though uncomfortably, into a blackberry bush—assures me that nesting high is an unfailing habit among these birds. Anyway, the birds use the same nests year after ...

Published: Wednesday 24 January 1940
Newspaper: Worthing Gazette
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 780 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THROUGH THE E—\?E gl‘ “THE ARTIST.”

... [n all their day-dreams in the City they had never hoped to be led on a walking excursion and be allowed the happiness of blackberry picking, with its reward for enterprise and daring, and the utter contempt for brambles and thorns. Those fortunate stalwart ...

Published: Thursday 25 January 1940
Newspaper: Banbury Guardian
County: Oxfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1183 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

not be complained of as being too blow with the very restricted lighting of the cars and no lights at

... parties, and records briefly the arrival in France. The news is given that One afternoon the whole of one battery went blackberry picking, and the hospitality of the inhabitants Is stated to be remarkable. The record pro- ceeds: We have been honoured ...

Published: Saturday 27 January 1940
Newspaper: Crawley and District Observer
County: Sussex, England
Type: Article | Words: 369 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THUIR I'SKI‘TL WAR-TIME WORK

... I'SKI‘TL WAR-TIME WORK \\ inslow (iirl Guides are busying themselves this winter with many activities. 1 hirly-one pounds blackberries were gathered in the autumn and, together with apples, were made into jelly for the Bucks County and Radcliffe Hospitals ...