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Scotland

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Hawick, Roxburghshire, Scotland

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Plant Blackberries

... Plant Blackberries Cultivated blackberries are infinitely superior to the hedgerow kinds. They ought to be planted in every garden because they fill sunny and partially shaded fences and walls with very acceptable food. The variety 1 specially recommend ...

Published: Friday 22 November 1940
Newspaper: Hawick News and Border Chronicle
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 352 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

ATHLETES

... poor one. BLACKBERRYING. Blackberrying is popular as the occasion for an autumn outing, although it invariably means getting painfully scratched and torn, and stung by insects. There is, however, as old belief that after Michaelmas Day blackberries are ...

Published: Thursday 02 October 1930
Newspaper: Hawick Express
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 415 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

RECIPEg FOR AUTUMN DAYS

... Serves 4-6. A good family pudding, also put forward by the Stork Service, Blackberry Charlotte Slices stale National Wlioaliiioal bread A little racked margarine. Blackberries This close link between the suliscribing areas and sliips of the King's Navy ...

Published: Friday 10 October 1941
Newspaper: Hawick News and Border Chronicle
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 496 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

MB

... Salmon (fresh or Carrots canned) Tomatoes Liver Wholemeal Bread THE BLACKBERRY CROP H Blackberries are WVBn ripening fast all over the country. Don't and health-giving organise blackberry-picking parties—but take care to close all gates and avoid trampling ...

Published: Friday 13 September 1940
Newspaper: Hawick News and Border Chronicle
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 268 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Hedgerow Harvest

... holiday will use two legs instead of four wheels, and an economy tip to ramblers is—take basket! Hedgerows are laden with blackberries. Boughs trees are heavy with crab-apples. There are elderberries and rowanberries in profusion. They all help the stock ...

Published: Friday 09 August 1940
Newspaper: Hawick News and Border Chronicle
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 331 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

SEEDLESS FIGS FRI IT SALAD

... SEEDLESS FIGS FRI IT SALAD PEARS M „ „ BLACKBERRIES M „ „ PEACHES (HALVES) „ PEACHES (SLICES) APRICOTS M „ „ GRAPEFRUIT M „ „ ...

Published: Friday 12 September 1930
Newspaper: Hawick News and Border Chronicle
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 26 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

TABLE 1

... TABLE 1. -Fruits rich in pectin end acid (set well) : Sour apples, sour red blackberries, gooseberries. crab apples, red currants, sour loganberries, and damsons. ...

You cannot bargain with a rattltanakc.”

... resulting juice should then added to the blackberries, sugar, and marrow, and the whole cooked as before. a jam having a stronger flavour of blackberry desired, take 8 lb. of marrow and increase the weight blackberries used to lb. About Syrup. The question ...

Published: Friday 06 September 1918
Newspaper: Hawick News and Border Chronicle
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1904 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

War Time Jobs for Women

... of course, be preserved, and, when not otherwise engaged, youthful folk may well be set to pick blackberries. Blackberry Jam To every pound of blackberries allow 1 lb. of auger and the juice of half a lemon. Place the berries in a pan with the lemon juice ...

Published: Wednesday 20 September 1939
Newspaper: Hawick Express
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 439 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

WOOD & MILLIGAN,

... HAM 1/« per ib. CHOICE ORADE FRUITS Small Tina. FRUIT SALAD PEARS PEACHES (Halves) PEACHES (Sliced) APRICOTS LOGANBERRIES BLACKBERRIES SEEDLESS FIGS . STRAWBERRIES RASPBERRIES per tin M .. ~ ...

FOOD TOPICS. Items about Production and Rationing. [By Smallholder It to hoped that a good deal of the labour ..

... both National Kitchens and Pithead Canteens will long outlast the war. Blackberries and Jam. The unfavorable weather of tho last few weeks has played havoc with the later blackberry crop, preventing the fruit, which was abundant, from ripening. This is ...

Published: Friday 11 October 1918
Newspaper: Hawick News and Border Chronicle
County: Roxburghshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 536 | Page: 6 | Tags: none