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Mothers

... Jellies so long as fresh fruit is plentiful. The juice of stewed fresh fruit rhubarb, cherries, gooseberries, raspberries, blackberries, etc.—boiled with just sufficient of Brown &Poison's 'Patent Corn Flour to set a dainty mould, makes delicious jellies ...

A MISTAKEN NOTION

... A MISTAKEN NOTION. It is a mistake to suppose . that the currant grows haphazard, just as blackberries grow in Britain. The Currant vine needs six or seven years careful cultivation before it bears fruit. It does not take kindly to any soil save that ...

GENERAL HIGHLAND NEWS

... Sandaide, has b en highly comaended for two beam irel fans, h painter.' on crape, one with purple clematis, the othee* ith blackberries. mint in fora prize offered by the Fanmakere' Company. Mies Harvey, R semount, Tain, bas c .ntributed some carved sondwork ...

CHAPTHI KaaoPly

... and blue bells, Is their various seasons. Is August all Ow pion is aflame with will rose and woodbine, and Is October the blackberries, needy se large& grapes, hang In dusters on the Web& Ittleseiduded spat is pew two miles front even human hslllatioe , ...

Published: Friday 25 February 1887
Newspaper: Caithness Courier
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 399 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

EDUCATION

... Facts Juices.—Take a quantity of any kind of fresh berry fruit (red currant, black currant, chief]. gooeberry, raapben7, blackberry, cranberry ; also plums and rhubarb). Clean the fruit, and put it into an enamelled goblet or jelly pan. (Rhubarb should ...

GOAT WHEY

... stands in the front rank withporridge! Both are now, alas! sadly neglected, with the result that doctors are as thick as blackberries in the Highlands. There is a story told about a young doctor who settled in the north in the olden days. He complained ...

TSB CIA/TiltinSB 0011RIPIR.IPRIDAll, SEPTEMBER 3, 1884

... the maidepervant said when she knocked the bottom nut of the paiL Tim easiest way to mark table lines—Leave the baby and a blackberry pie alone at the table for three minutes. yer meets er wise man that looks like er fool, but more often yer meets • fool ...

Published: Friday 05 September 1884
Newspaper: Caithness Courier
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 580 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

lIIVIRNXBB, MARCH 23, 1e92

... Friday's row about / About different things, for when people go in for obstruction, occasions for rows become as plentiful as blackberries. Mr Sexton was puling like a gawky chicken sick with the pip, because he had been prevented from making more than one speech ...

Wll4 Pratte

... Wll4 Pratte. We saw on Saturday a float of children gathering blackberries—in Gaelic, matron—aloft ►he Canal basks. It reminded us of pleasures of youth, when isthmian of blackberries and of bassi nets—caotlsn---bo children crowned the year. The cran ...

OF ALL CHEMISTS AND STORES

... fruit up w as it to sink in the munates. Bake in a good oven for Nut A delicious trifle is ome which can be mede of the blackberries and filbert Make a sweet thickened syrup it over the frurt. Add the nuts finely wtp a teacupful of stale ve! some thick ...

GOOSEANDERS

... interest some of your readers to know that in this parish, during sonic months of the year, goosvanders are as plentiful as blackberries, Mr Ewen Cameron, of Loch Laggan Hotel, who is a great ornithologist, having counted last year no fewer than fifteen broods ...

SALO O► STOCK

... younger, and nearly cwt. heavier than the first winner, but not so good on the shoulder. He is got by Dustman 1667, and out of Blackberry. The Queen was fourth with the red ox bred by Mr Walker, Ardbunkart. He was a first winner at Aberdeeu, girths eight feet ...