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CORRESPONDENCE.

To Tnie Editor of the "Evening Mail.'

Sir,—Will you kindly allow "another sufferer from dogs," to state his troubles from them. I am in the habit of burying bones round the roots of my fruit trees, and next morning I often find every bone turned up on the surface by dogs. After their first feast they take the best that are left and make a hole in the ground just dug and planted, burying the bones there, destroying my fresh sown seeds and plants, and they make gaps in my fence large enough to admit a boy in search of a stray apple. I should be sorry to put up " poison " upon a notice, aud with my fellow sufferer I will say let the tax be 405.—1 am, &c, Old Biggs.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18770511.2.8

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 110, 11 May 1877, Page 2

Word Count
132

CORRESPONDENCE. Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 110, 11 May 1877, Page 2

CORRESPONDENCE. Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 110, 11 May 1877, Page 2

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