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Lisburn Standard

HOUSEHOLD HINTS

... HOUSEHOLD HINTS. SHORTCAKE.—Huckleberries are much liked; in this country blackberries or mulberries could be used in their stead, and nothing could be more delicious than Raspberry or Strawberry Shortcake. The recipe here given is rich enough for ordinary ...

Published: Saturday 15 August 1885
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1197 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

A LADY'S LETTER

... high lights, if she will add a few of the whitest feathers from the traveller's joy, and then some bunches of half-ripe blackberries and a few (but very few) rose hips, she can scarcely fad to be pleased with her handiwork, or to receive many compliments ...

Published: Saturday 28 November 1885
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1866 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE LISBURN STANDARD-SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1886

... under her brows. I wonder who he is ? No good, 11l declare. He has serpent's eyes and cat's footsteps. •411 is (2, 5. A BLACKBERRYING ADVENTURE. lam Emily, my surname need not matter. It was a delightfisl morning in that queen of menthe, September, and ...

Published: Saturday 30 October 1886
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 5828 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

HOUSEHOLD HINTS.

... e niece of soft wasbleether damped with little sweet 011. BLACKBERRY SYRUP.—This excellent remedy for sore throats is easily made and procurable by all. Put some very ripe and dry blackberries into a jar, cover tightly, and stand in a cool oven all night ...

Published: Saturday 11 December 1886
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 911 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

A LADY'S LETTER

... the reddened brown one that shows tender tints of fading, the plant was displayed. On another the yearly story of the blackberry was told in the same realistic fashion, summing up the whole tale in • glance, defiant of chronology. The hate were chiefly ...

Published: Saturday 18 June 1887
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2196 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

TT il NEWS NOTES

... Tina, 1& ad. each. Two gentlemen passing a blackberry bush when the fruit was unripe, one aid it was ridiculous to call them 6/del-berries, when they were red. Don't you lam said his kind, that blackberries are always rod wisen they are green. - - ...

Published: Saturday 03 May 1890
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2152 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

of of

... muff are being shown. One in silk of stone, pinked into fluffiness and beighkeed with gleams of orange, looks both useful Blackberries (remarks Madge of liwth) are in now. They make capital tuts if mixed with apple' or cranberries. A well-boiled padding ...

Published: Saturday 04 October 1890
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 4054 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

BULBS

... to the chief cities. Apples, 2 to 3 dollars the barrel; peaches, 50 to 60 cents a box ; pears, about the same price; and blackberries, which, under careful culture, 1 - ecome the most delicious of all the smaller fruits, sell at 15 to 18 cents the quart ...

Published: Saturday 03 October 1891
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2150 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THk. BLOOMING OF THE ALOE. W. GREEN. [ALL VGETS CHAPTER VL LUMPS, OE HIS WAY TO PARADISE, RUTS SOME FRIENDS

... was in Surrey and this within an hour's walk northward of Canonbury. The ground was undulating, clad with ferns, ragged blackberry bushes and holly trees, and there were troden paths, crossing it here and there, the very paths, so it seemed, that he had ...

Published: Saturday 19 January 1895
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2281 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

receptive subject. What a novel delight was hers at this moment! Titi-d-tete for two hours with an actor's ..

... part of the fixtures of the sacred edifice, like pews and pulpit, seemed to strike as new. Well, they're as plentiful as blackberries wit'l us,' said Dolly disrespectfully. It's the dread of my life that my father will be made one, sooner or later, which ...

Published: Saturday 09 February 1895
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1389 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

LUNATICS AT LARGE

... of the case is as bad as the alarmists would have us believe, and that ill-balanced minds are becoming as plentiful as blackberries, it by no means follows that there is any great cause for fear — for the sort of fear, at least, that the thought of u ...

Published: Saturday 19 October 1895
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 813 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE NAVAL MANCEUVRES

... distance of 1224 miles, in 38 days nine hours. For the last half of the journey his average was 38 miles a day. Gamin° blackberries and mushrooms, by law, are not private property. You may be prosecuted for trespass on land where they grow, but not for ...

Published: Saturday 08 August 1896
Newspaper: Lisburn Standard
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 974 | Page: 2 | Tags: none