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LOCAL NEWS

... Lane of that village, and who had for soine tiiae been in the habit of traversing Tweedmouth and this town picking up bones ‘ and other garbage from the streets, It is not unlikely that the misery of his condition, and the wretcheld and precarious means ...

Published: Saturday 01 August 1840
Newspaper: Berwick Advertiser
County: Northumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 6117 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

FIELD AND GARDEN

... inspection will reveal the eggs packed in two lines, one on each side of the midrib. The best means of destruying them are to pick off the affected leaves and destroy them, and to dress them with hellebore powder, or newly slaked lime when the leaves are ...

THE BOARD OF TRADE RETURNS

... ffupecu of the American trade in this country are mving. As to the increase in miscellaneous es exported, it is difficult to pick out special classes or items, and it Aslpem the increase is !mz spread. Indeed, the diversified character of British exfort ...

NOTES

... prize. sadly that passage when I see hound puppies gambolling clumsily in the market-place of a country town, picking up all the garbage that they please, and every skin disease to which canine upon the point of training for real work Somervile is great ...

Published: Saturday 30 October 1897
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3891 | Page: 23 | Tags: none

EDISON'S PHONOGRAPH

... prize. sadly that passage when I see hound puppies gambolling clumsily in the market-place of a country town, picking up all the garbage that they please, and every skin disease to which canine upon the point of training for real work Somervile is great ...

Published: Saturday 30 October 1897
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 21889 | Page: 29 | Tags: none

ILLUSTRATED~

... golden ;md sea eagles, we have the kite, once so common that it swarmed on the shores of the L ondon Thames, and ate the garbage thrown there; three buz· zards, very rare and not destructive to game ; the hobby, ma.inly an insect-feeder and devourer of ...

Published: Saturday 27 August 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 23357 | Page: 19 | Tags: none

Pauls' Royal nurs¢ri¢s,

... were ];illed one clay, over 400 of them in a ' ingle drive. The weather was not at all favourable, nor were the shooters a picked team, although one of them would, perhaps, be first choice, as we used to say at school, in any teani of sporting But IVIoy ...

Published: Saturday 21 September 1901
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 22275 | Page: 29 | Tags: none

So thick were they these were tossed out from time to time. So thick were they that when I startled

... scavengers, were and cutting expected this more up the already n-pick that showing appreciate way birds doing in sort, which at he was some sort, s toop down the foul water, awful garbage hanging from his talons, so rate, was plain enough, although he ...

Published: Saturday 11 January 1902
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1407 | Page: 43 | Tags: none

AND COUNTRY PURSUITS

... emphasised incidentally \Vhat were the facts? On scores of times during the meeting. \Vhat were the facts? On an ~asy day eight picked riflemen of Great Britain, using the Service riJle of our Army, but-thank heal·en !-not the Service journal Countrv CONTENTS ...

Published: Saturday 25 July 1903
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 19838 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

COUJVTRY LIFE

... rats that infested the ruins-and they were little else-to enter the mouth of this tunnel, probably for the purpose of picking up any garbage that had been floated down. It formed an excellent natural trap. an urchin put his head in at the lower end of the ...

Published: Saturday 14 November 1903
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1450 | Page: 44 | Tags: none

OSBORN & MERCERt

... others are not. Look at Milkers have been employed, and they are the conditions. so difficult to get that the employers cannot pick and choose. They are to a large extent casual labourers and belong to a class with whom cleanliness is not a supreme virtue ...

Published: Saturday 09 June 1906
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 40899 | Page: 89 | Tags: none