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Bystander, The

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The Bystander

HEDGEROW PHEASANTS

... in the more important work to come. Many a cock pheasant, rising like a rocket from a thick double hedge row, a clump of blackberry vines, or a belt of young firs, has left a rattling good crpme-shnt wnnderinp' he watched a couple of tail feathers fluttering ...

Published: Wednesday 01 October 1930
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 893 | Page: 54 | Tags: Photographs 

October Shooting Notes

... pheasant rearing to cut down rations just as the shed corn on the stubbles is getting scarce. Nor (with the exception of blackberries, of which there is a bumper crop) are the wild fruits of the hedgerows and woods by any means abundant in many parts of ...

Published: Wednesday 28 September 1932
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1413 | Page: 38 | Tags: Photographs 

International Affairs and Others

... know the place and day, and each spent the morning skulk;ng round the bushes of Walton Heath pretending to be an unripe blackberry, or I a hiker waiting to meet a friend. I did see the I Prince hit any number of I really first-class shots in practice ...

Published: Wednesday 12 July 1933
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1059 | Page: 41 | Tags: Photographs 

Marshall & Snelgrove

... slimming lities over a marocain slip. The neck is cut to medium V at back. Obtainable in Brown, Beige, fi I Black, Blue, Blackberry, atid Coffee, in (J I hip sizes 38, 40, 42 ami 43. Sent on approval. The Shining Hour A becoming dinner gown of romain ...

Published: Tuesday 02 October 1934
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 167 | Page: 49 | Tags: Photographs 

GOING OUT to GOINGS-ON: The Bystander in Society

... meeting. Lady Dalrym- ple Champneys was wearing a real Cossack cap belonging to her husband, and Peggy Gordon-Moore was in a blackberry-coloured dress, with a moleskin cape and 1830 velvet hat to match Lady Dalrymple- Champneys and Miss Peggy Gordon-Moore ...

Published: Tuesday 06 November 1934
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2133 | Page: 23 | Tags: Photographs 

Advertisements

... feather flowers, finished with veil, 42/-. This hat can be supplied in all sizes, also in Grey, Brown, Wallflower, Filbert, Blackberry, Navy, Black or Hunters' Green. Ladies' own Velour and Felt Hats remodelled to our Catalogue shapes, alterations must be ...

Published: Wednesday 09 October 1935
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 731 | Page: 2 | Tags: Photographs 

London Nights: Dinner, Dance and Cabaret: A Going-Out Dinner, Dance and Cabaret: A Going-Out

... are ex cellent so is the lamb cutlet and new peas and potatoes that follow, and the fruit-and-sweet trolley has stewed blackberries on it. Even in April they are irresistible. So almost was the moselle section of the wine list, but we put away temptation ...

Published: Wednesday 29 April 1936
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1797 | Page: 74 | Tags: Photographs 

Gardener's Chronicle: January Flowers

... are several and two barberries (berberis dictyophylla and B. sieboldii). These rubus are not scramblers like our common blackberry, but gentlemen of con fined habit, throwing up annually stiff, arching stems with grey-green leaves. These stems remain ...

Published: Wednesday 11 January 1939
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1220 | Page: 25 | Tags: Photographs 

Gardener's Chronicle: In Search of Sun; From Arcachon

... catch the resin as it oozes down the slash. The undergrowth was of arbutus unedo, tree heaths and dwarf cistus and such blackberries As for gardens, most of the villas are too young to have more than a few young shrubs, geranium and zinnias, but in some ...

Published: Wednesday 06 September 1939
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1017 | Page: 34 | Tags: Photographs 

Women's Golf: Going West

... still a hard-handed, soft-voiced son of Devon with a dog to retrieve your ball out of them, while you pick the luscious blackberries that festoon the rushes. Back in Bideford they are making gas masks with a rapidity which speaks well for amateur effort ...

Published: Wednesday 01 November 1939
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1049 | Page: 26 | Tags: Photographs