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41120 P, 4312 32V WO gee*

... would seem to date back to a hoar antiquity, for amongst the relics of the lake-dwellings we find the strawberry, raspberry, blackberry, elderberry, bilberry, and wbortleberry ; and although all these grow wild in the woods, yet, when they are found stored ...

Published: Wednesday 11 July 1888
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 345 | Page: 53 | Tags: none

Priors]) NY Ram Lcrcx

... CRUZ. BOLD Amaxtcas Fox (who had been left behind): I:-g- .go away, Pretty Foxey ; I only c-c-eante to loo k for 13-)-b-blackberries, jun know. Plionsnmr Nor. Is there a martyr who can pair, In hist'ry's painful annals. With him whose wife still makes ...

and he owns minerals, ooal, and shale. He is a great sportsman, especially in the hunting ground, and is master

... Eastern States and from California, including green and preserved oranges, dried apples, peaches, prunes, plums, peas, blackberries, raisins. Ripe oranges from Florida and California are also on view. Nor has the wine irklustry been forgotten by the ...

Published: Wednesday 04 September 1889
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 701 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

MESSRS. PH. MAYFARTH & CO., FRANKFORT-ON-MAINE, BERLIN, VIENNA, AND LONDON

... only are apples and pears suitable, but also gooseberries, currants—the white and red equally with the black—raspberries, blackberries, bilberries, &c. They can be prepared in the simplest way, both as still and sparkling wines, and they will form an ornament ...

Published: Wednesday 11 September 1889
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1093 | Page: 53 | Tags: none

•V:4Vat,

... emerald, ruby, and sapphire tints, when the nut-clusters hide beneath the golden glory of the rich foliage, and when the blackberries glisten with the morning dew on the purpling hedgerows. Such scenes as these leave &lingering memory of their rare beauty ...

HARVEST FESTIVALS. HARVIST FrerivAr..—On Sunday two sermons were preached in the Eastwood Primitive Methodist ..

... The pulpit also showed to great advantage. being bedecked with oak foliage varied hues, brown fern leaves, and epriggs of blackberries. The decoration of the pulpit was undertaken by Mrs. F. Burman and Miss Burman. The chancel screen, as usual. received ...

TIIE OP STREETS

... /Sunday week a series of services in connection with this movement was commenced. Harvest Thankapivinp are as proverbial blackberries now•a•days. Indeed every church, chapel. mission•ball, and indeed barracks have their harvest services. This thankfulness ...

K IMBERLEY

... given tne that diamonds continue to be found in as large quantities as ever. They appeared to me to be as plentiful as blackberries. At the Bultfontein Mine I descended to the bottom of the open workings in one of the iron buckets used for bringing up ...

Published: Wednesday 13 November 1889
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1515 | Page: 29 | Tags: none

THE COLONIES AND INDIA

... stock consisting of equal moieties of 1,160,00C1. of preferred and deferred. You might as well talk of a mushroom or a blackberry mine in England as of an opal one in Queensland. So writes a mineral expert of twenty-five years' experience in the Colony ...

Published: Wednesday 04 June 1890
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 369 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

• al. T. SPENCE, 39, Bepulotire Dooolater ; Barnsley Agents, CHARLES HAMRI-ON, Aticountant, 3, East Gate; CHAS. ..

... the piece of silver. I hope to find my treasure before I die. Adrian did nut answer. He sat looking atths high-tangled blackberry Itedge,with its luxuriance of leaf and bramble, clusters of blossoms anti fruit, In all its stages between bud and berry ...

LOCAL. AND GENERAL NOTES. Tlie following desolptien will give an idea of what can be done in Bliellield:—Aaiong ..

... full blooms of the plants are alike true to nature. Among the flowers depicted are the aareirau4 with maidenhair fern, the blackberry blossom with spiked tendrils, the fuchsia, snowdrop, clematis, *ild rose, tulip, convolvaluz, corn-flsiwer and heartivome ...

THE COLONIES AND INDIA

... not, however, there is a redeeming feature, for no outlay at all is necessary for a given part of the year, as when the blackberries and hedge. nuts are ripe one can get all one's nourishment direct from nature free in many of our country lanes and woodlands ...

Published: Saturday 04 April 1891
Newspaper: Colonies and India
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 590 | Page: 30 | Tags: none