Prospects for the approaching fishing season are good. A number of observers have testified to the plentitude of trout, which have not been disturbed on the spooring beds, to anything like the extent of previous years. Doubtless the activities of the ranger have mitigated against poaching. Two observers standing on the Grey River bridge at Blackball, report having seen some hundreds of trout, varying in size from one and a-half pounds downwards, cruising round, sometimes in schools. The Orangapuki and Crooked Rivers, leading to Lake Brunner, held, during the spooring season, a great number of fish, varying in weight up to lOlbs. No ova have been distributed this year, the cost being diverted to intensive ranging. It was felt by the Society that ova this year was not necessary, as streams and lakes had been plentifully stocked last year.
Woods’ Great Peppermint Cure For Influenza Colds
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Greymouth Evening Star, 12 August 1932, Page 7
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146Page 7 Advertisements Column 2 Greymouth Evening Star, 12 August 1932, Page 7
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