THE VISITING DOG
... but Bag, which consists a zip fa tener to dog from a chill deal of muddy an aspirin treatment; pick up heartily of worm Remedy on holiday Benbow's groups picked symptoms H ...
... but Bag, which consists a zip fa tener to dog from a chill deal of muddy an aspirin treatment; pick up heartily of worm Remedy on holiday Benbow's groups picked symptoms H ...
... garden of t his house for three years before I knew him, and cont inued to do so until 1933. H e became exceedingly tame, picking up scraps of food at the feet of the lady of the house, Mrs. G. Vidal, or of her sister, though he never took anything from ...
... refuse are much better than formerly, there is still very much roolll for improve- How frequently do we see garbage ment. How frequently do we see garbage st ill thrown about or tossed into uncovered receptacles to which rats have ready access. Again, efforts ...
... 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 ...
... 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 ...
... latter complaint are easily recognisable. Early evidences may be detected by a morbidity of appetite-a desire for picking up all sorts of garbage and unwholesome tbings, such as cinders, earth, stones and filth. The gums may become inflamed, the breath has ...
... the unbelievable garbage they offer to the birds beggar the imagination. One Summer evening not long ago, one of the boys concerned was seen to b waving about in the air the highly putrescent carcass of a muchdecayed fowl he had picked up somewhere. On ...
... feathers and all. The food of the lesser black backs in the Westmorland colony consists chiefly of garbage and the shelllisl-i lmown as the tellen. Among the garbage may be mentioned slaughter-house refuse, hens' heads and feet, dead kittens, puffins and rats ...
... sometimes they are impudence. But sometimes they are useful, because, being omniverous, they feed on all sorts of carrion and garbage a nd remove from our homes all kinds of rubbish. Moreover, a lthough they often take the cultivator's harvested grain when ...
... country. The turkey buzzard, a scavenging American vulture, is seen everywhere, and performs a useful service by devouring garbage and putrefying animal matter. It is a repulsive bird when observed at close quarters, but is magnificent in flight, and known ...
... latter complaint are easily recognisable. Early evidences may be detected by a morbidity of appetite-a desire for picking up all sorts of garbage and unwholesome tbings, such as cinders, earth, stones and filth. The gums may become inflamed, the breath has ...
... NEOLITHIC GUTTY. A day or two ago I was given a rare anrl valuable present, to wit, one gntty ball. This particular gutty was picked up in the wildest part of Dartmoor. What it was doing there, goodness knows ; possibly Neolitliic man p~:actised LIFE. his ...