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Salisbury and Winchester Journal

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Salisbury, Wiltshire, England

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Salisbury and Winchester Journal

BLACKBERRY CULTURE

... BLACKBERRY CULTURE. Many of the American blackberries are excellent fruits. Strong, well-drained clay soils ore best; but the plants thrive almost anywhere. Where possible, cool exposure is desirable. good soils no manure will needed until the plants ...

DISTANCES APART FOR FRUITS

... but it will actually yield both larger and better crops than will more closely planted areas. AMERICAN BLACKBERRIES. The cultivated American blackberries yield large crop# of most useful berries, and are well worth cultivation m every garden that lias room ...

A fruit faimer, in Ohio, is planting a mammoth COnSI 55000 a PP Ie trees assorted ' 4. \ '(S2?

... assorted ' 4. \ '(S2? ear trees ' standard ; 2,000 • eeS, plums acres of quinces, 20 wres of 20 °f raspberries, eight acres of blackberries, 18 acres of grapes.—Bostoa Advertiser. ALY The budgets Education and Foreign Affairs were passed yesterday the Deputies ...

EOMBEY

... The bor, when in a dying condition, said that he, Luffmann, and Ventbam were gathering nuts and blackberries, when the last-named wanted the blackberries deceased had. Ventham, be stated, struck him deliberately in the abdomen. He had a knife in his hand ...

Published: Saturday 09 September 1893
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 257 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

MOHS AND LICHEN ON FRUIT TREES

... by crossing the loganberry and common blackberry, and ia much like the former in growth, habit and of fruit. The be men are homo in bunehra like loganberries, but an jet block when ripe, and have the true blackberry Savour. The plant is very strong grower ...

NATURE'S TEACHING

... fruits 01111110 in abundance—spring rhubarb and gooseberries, then eltewries, red and black currants, plums, apples, and blackberries, each in its tura providing us with a change of diet. Nature is teaching os to make the change--to eat lees meat. sad to ...

TIME for planting

... apples feet. St mdard pears 25 feet. Standard plums 20 feet. Standard cherries 20 to feet. Dwarf apple* and pears 15 feet. Blackberries 4 by t feet. Currants by feel. 4 by feel. Raspberries 3 6 feet. I*runing nd spraying are mn*t easily and effectively done ...

Price only is. 6d. the lixtli edition ot

... Hasbctrics, Cherries, Corvllips, Cyprus Mulberries, Peaches, Scurvy graft, imitated Klilcrbcrrics, Apricots, (•illiflowcr, Blackberries, Quinces, Baum, Mead, Strawberries, Plumbs, Bitch, icc Sic. With fuceimS account of their medicinal virtues; and the m ...

LOCAL INTELLIGENCE

... of Devizes, was drowned, on Thursday last, in a well near Drew's Pond. The little fallow, with some other children, was blackberry gathering, and, attracted by the fruit, attempted to cross a well covered someyears ago, when one of the planks gave way ...

FRUIT BUDS

... previous year or yean’ w od, mostly terminal. Apri~ot (mainly), spurs, previous year or years wood, mostly terminal. _ Blackberry, nearly or quite terminal current season** woxi. Cherry, on spun, previous year or yean wood, mostly terminal. t Currant ...

BONSEY

... C. Richards added that told him when arrested that he bad beet, about the town or five days and bad had no food except blackberries, and so be took the pears.—Superintendent Heated raid Le knew nothing against the prisoner. Be had sent to several addresses ...

Published: Saturday 05 September 1908
Newspaper: Salisbury and Winchester Journal
County: Wiltshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 621 | Page: 2 | Tags: none