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REARING OF A PUPPY

... abnormally large appetites, and if their natural instinct to forage—as the result of hungeris given freedom, then the picking up of offal and garbage will quickly pave the way for sickness and ill-health. In order, therefore, to avoid troubles of this kind, the ...

Published: Saturday 14 January 1933
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 580 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

HINTS TO ALLOTMENT WORKERS

... and loaves offer shelter for all kinds of that breed rapidly. A good dluting of lime or soot about the ground' when the garbage Las been collected 'Mil uiaiders.' amongut winter stun pays. -,**** s- * MANURE EQUAL TO STABLE. In some places manure difficult ...

Published: Wednesday 10 October 1923
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 571 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

GETTING KID OF RUBBISH

... objectionable to dispose of refuse in running streams in the hope that the rubbish will be carried down the sea. The problem of garbage disposal, therefore, not easily solved except by one method—the use of refuse destructor. hopper is a conveyor, which drags ...

Published: Saturday 26 December 1936
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1797 | Page: 17 | Tags: none

LIFTING POTATOES

... Water and earth-up celery. Prune raspberries. Put in currant cuttings. Take cuttings of half-hardy plants. * * * * * THE GARBAGE MOTH Last week I referred to the destructive habits of the cabbage butterfly. There is another enemy of the cabbage grower ...

Published: Wednesday 30 August 1933
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 866 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

SALSIFY OH VEGETABLE OYSTER

... decided in 1910, clear Con 3ta,ntinoplo of the hordes of scavenger dogs which wore allowed to roam the streets night, pick the garbage. Visitors the I’nrkL«h capital that period will easily recal these ban ...

Published: Wednesday 09 May 1917
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 909 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

iCTOBER 24 1934

... —That isn’t a suitable place. Dean of Guild Cassells —Some members of the Council are of the opinion that it is more of a garbage heap than anything else. If you can suggest any appropriate place, I am sure the members would be pleased to hear and consider ...

Published: Wednesday 24 October 1934
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1063 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

CYCLING ACCIDENT

... small-town reporter, but is now wealthy woman, fittingly describes it as a combination of ditch-digging, child-birth and oakum-picking, with which I am inclined to agree in my busier moments, for with the passage of time and the increasing multiplicity of modern ...

Published: Tuesday 13 June 1939
Newspaper: Stirling Observer
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1225 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Our JOondon JOeffer

... odd that starving Londoners should disdain fattened pigeons on their own doorstep merely for the trouble of bending down to pick them up. Can it be that Berlin and Rome tell crude as well as crafty lies? Too High a Price. Taxpayers, old and new, are going ...

Published: Tuesday 22 April 1941
Newspaper: Stirling Observer
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1175 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

CASUAL COMMENTS

... subject, that the dust from the Sahara is preferable to that more deadly and more subtle substance which emerges from the garbage cans of Falkirk. Now *hat we have ruled out the Arab steed we can proceed to consider the more homely types of cuddy.” The ...

Published: Wednesday 25 January 1933
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1091 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

WAR SU'P'PLEMENT hoi out Wherever German soldiers have been they have made a desert” Mr Balfour FOR WEEK ENDING ..

... clipped from Army horses and mules is worth £100 a ton Garbage is now one the most precious articles in an Army camp It can be translated into high explosives to hurl shells at German soldiers Garbage produces glycerine ammonia and potash three of the most ...

Published: Saturday 21 September 1918
Newspaper: Bridge of Allan Gazette
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2603 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

BUCHLYVIE PLOUGHING SOCIETY

... they successfully reach their prey. They fear man when not fed by him; in towns, like Jamaica, where they are cleaners up of garbage and filth they are quite companionable as 1 can notice from those four beside me. But there are mischief-makers mongst Turkey ...

Published: Thursday 12 January 1939
Newspaper: Stirling Observer
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 1501 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

THE FALiUJVK. HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY MOTORS & MOTORING

... both innutritious arid unsatisfying can only result in the animai making a scavenging trip on its own. The filth and garbage picked up on these expeditions cause the coat to be odiforous and the stomachy to become disordered and the breath offensive ...

Published: Saturday 09 July 1927
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1477 | Page: 8 | Tags: none