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Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News

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London, London, England

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Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News

MISS M. LANGER of Bidborough, Kent, and Her Printstile Herd of Jerseys

... bulls are the three- year-old Bramley Mona's Dreamer, a rising three-year-old Raylands Dairy man's Postboy and Printstile Blackberry's Postboy, rising three, by a Raylands Bull and out of a Scarletts cow. Miss Langer is also rearing a good looking young ...

A FOAL FOR THE OLD MARE

... haven't been too bad this year, and she's had an open shed where she can get away from them. She '11 have to come in by blackberry time, however. That 's when she '11 begin to go back. Why is it, by the way, that an animal you 're fond of is always the ...

HERE TO-DAY AND HERE TO-MORROW

... Approach Many still tend to regard the country side as a huge, though ever-diminishing, playground space out of doors yielding blackberries or primroses according to the season, with the occasional farmhouse where eggs can be bought cheaply. With the increasing ...

MRS. IRENE RICHARDSON: and her Corsbridge Herd of Pedigree Large Whites

... Glen boars have been used to build up the Corsbridge herd and an outstanding foundation female was a sow from the Tringham Blackberry line. To-day Mrs. Richardson has 28 breeding sows, all home-bred except for one Dart mouth sow from Mr. Jack Bartlett's ...

Enemies and ownership

... it poisons the hedge in some way and in a few years will kill it on either side and leave a weak place. The other is the blackberry bramble which will eventually smother and kill a hedge in a short time, growing ever wider and higher and sending out runners ...

HAYTERS (SALES) LTD

... weed, and diverts plant energy to new and useful growth. The Hayter Rotamower reclaims overgrown areas, clears heather, blackberry bushes, gorse, rushes, brambles, etc., without choking or damage. Try it on stubble cutting. You will hear the name Hayter ...

Farming in Tasmania

... keeping a house cow on or falling back on dried or tinned milk. The scourges of the Tasmanian farmer are the rabbit and the blackberry. The latter was imported by a misguided migrant and thrives to such an extent in this congenial climate that it can be a ...