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Countries

England

Regions

North West, England

Counties

Cheshire, England

Place

Congleton, Cheshire, England

Access Type

94

Type

91
3

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LADIES' COLUMN

... and white, ready for cutting. Moonstones and creeidoliten, opals and garnets, onyx and sun. stones, all as plentiful as blackberries, and stored as infonnally as if they were but jsckstones. Once more we are approaching that midwinter season that tries ...

Fauna AS YOOD Arm MIEDKTWL

... pleasant and safe than blue pill. The juice should be used alone, rejecting the skins. The small. seeded fruits, such as blackberries, figs, raspberries, currants, and strawberries, may be classed anions the best foods and medicines. The sugar in them is ...

. LADIES' COLUMN

... trees are only chewing the faintest tinge of autumnal colour, yet the fields are lore and the wheatchearc garnered. The blackberries lag behind, and are as yet hard and green ; and wild berries, such as the mountaimash, and gadder • roses are but half ...

WISE AND OTHERWISE

... tea. One of them proposed to take a short cut through a wood with which they were well acquainted, having often gathered blackberries in it on a summer after. noon. The other agreed, and so they arrived at the edge of the wood and prepared to enter it. ...

AN AMERICAN VENDETTA

... the Factory Act. A melancholy drowning came wise reported on Friday from Galway. Two little girls neared Stewart were blackberrying on a cliff, when one fell over into the river 24ft below. Her sister tried to save her, and also fell over, striking • ...

HINTS FOR THE HOME

... closely toothier, so as to allow no juice to escape. Make • mermaid* b stewing either apples, rampberriee, mulberries, blackberries, or any otber tied of fresh fru4 that may be convenient, with some sugar. Whim the fruit has stewed long ecnugb to be reduced ...

THE EPIDEMIC OF CRIME

... sent back, to meet Sir George Hamerton, as he came by the afternoou train. It enough to conceal hermit. A thick growth of blackberry bushes and holly, forming a fitting underwood for some magnificent oaks and beeches which grew in the hollows of the perk ...

LOOTING AND BURNING A SHIP

... murder, but he asserted that the name of Dwyer witness said he was first asked to give evidence for was as plentiful as blackberries in autumn. the Times, a few days after Mr. Lewis sent him IMPUDENCE TO THE COURT. a Pubpena. He had been receiving £4 weekly ...

WISE AND OTHERWISE

... your bill - berry befoe it i s due-berry. Your father, the elder-berry, would not have been auch• but you need not look black-berry, foe I don't care a straw-berry, and I t pay you till C:lridn)c., Biery. .1. member of Parliament. well known for hie rt ...

WISE AND OTHERWISE

... was full of brambles and brushwood, with birds' nests out of number in the spring, easy to be reached, and the finest of blackberries in the autumn to be had for the finding. Willie and Isis brother were often So lie found there, especially in the nesting ...