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... side. The effect was admirable. Cherries are also to be met in combination with grapes, on hats.of coarse white straw. Blackberries are the only other fruit patronised by the authorities as adaptable to modes millinerial. Answers to Correspondents. THE ...

Published: Saturday 04 June 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2753 | Page: 43 | Tags: none

132 Effects and causes are proverbially difficult to link together; the man who lays an agricultural drain-pipe ..

... And never does there seem to have been such good promise for nutting, and for blackberrying. are already well formed of good size, though not yet coloured, and the blackberry bloom is smothering we may perhaps put down, with gratitude, to the credit of ...

Published: Saturday 06 August 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2904 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

356 L eyswood Stud, which was one of the earliest of those founded in the South of E ngland, were

... years. The fi sh should be tench, which are fair eating, or, if the owner is enterprising, American lake trout. American blackberries are much finer than those of our lanes, and the American black bear's liking for them gives a pleasant excitement to the ...

Published: Saturday 24 September 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2949 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

LAVENHAM CHURCH

... you to hear that we have in our part of the country this year a very unusual nulllber of berries of all kinds, from the blackberry to the hip and haw and the holly. Now this is always regarded by the country people about us, and I believe with some truth ...

Published: Saturday 15 October 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3956 | Page: 34 | Tags: none

I LLU STRATED

... you to hear that we have in our part of the country this year a very unusual nulllber of berries of all kinds, from the blackberry to the hip and haw and the holly. Now this is always regarded by the country people about us, and I believe with some truth ...

Published: Saturday 15 October 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 57168 | Page: 49 | Tags: none

If one is permitted to take a little Pagan satisfaction in

... number of acorns on the trees. ever since r 893 have we had such a crop. It is a wonderful year for the berries al l round- blackberries (though these have not ripened properly), hips and haws, ro eberries, and so on--but the multitude of the acorns is even ...

Published: Saturday 05 November 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3750 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

COUNTRY LIFE iLLUSTRATED

... ellesbourne F ame. The Bulldogs were not co n s pic~ously good, though Mr. S. Woodiwiss's brace of champions, Baron Sedgmere and Blackberry, and also Mr. Alfred J. Sewell's Queer Street, are quite first-rate .specimens of their breed, the first-named beiPg the ...

Published: Saturday 18 February 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1846 | Page: 37 | Tags: none

batsmen are never beaten, becau~e their nearly as likely to make runs as their first. They might almost

... Mercedes, a big, varmint mare, F reckles, a Another wiry chestnut mare, a useful sort, and promising, uut want in~ time; and Blackberry, a six year old brown mare, bought in Ireland, is a rare sort, hard, compact, short-legged, and clever. Mercedes, a big ...

Published: Saturday 01 April 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 8077 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

R. B. 2otlge. IN SEARCH OF A WIFE

... and months in the year. One illustration shows A LATE EST, and its eggs of the midsummer sitting, placed in a tangle of blackberry briars in a hedge-side. The contrast of the soft nest, on whi eh the fragile eggs lie, with the sharp and ruthless thorns ...

Published: Saturday 01 July 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 7724 | Page: 35 | Tags: none

IN AUSTRALIA

... many first-class gardeners, and shall be happy to recommend one to any who may require the services of a reliable man. BLACKBERRIES HE marvellous rapidity with which many English and other plants become acclimatised in Australia not infrequently aids ...

Published: Saturday 01 July 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3755 | Page: 36 | Tags: none

Madame Bernhardt as

... abundant. As much as 4oolb. of blackberries have been gathered in a single day by a family consisting of husband, wife, and four children. Allowing for evaporation of water in the fruit, it is estimated that one ton of blackberries will make, with the necessary ...

Published: Saturday 01 July 1899
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 5567 | Page: 38 | Tags: none