I have found that after a heavy day's work the box was apt to get heavy and feel as if it were a grandfather's clock hanging on your back. Then the ratting spade was engaged instead of being free to mump a rat on the head in a hurry, or point out a likely... Studies in the Art of Rat-catching - Page 24by Henry C. Barkley - 1896 - 185 pagesFull view - About this book
| Mark Hovell - Rats - 1924 - 520 pages
...they are good men, too), think you should put it into a box about 18 in. long, 10 in. high, and 10 in. wide — the box to be divided into two compartments,...which to close it. Don't tie the bag with a piece of string — it is sure to get lost — and don't have a stiff buckle on your strap that takes ten minutes... | |
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