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POISON GAS

3 P.M. EDITION

HARD TO LOSE IT.

CITY OF COLON’S EXPERIENCE. (Australian Press Association—By Electric Telegraph—Copyright). (Tunes Cables.) Received April 12, 12.15 p.m. ~y LONDON, April 11. The Times’s Berlin correspondent states; - , “However proud many Germans have been of their poison gas inventions, the City Fathers of Colon have learned to hate the very words poison gas. “They found themselves in possession of a large quantity after the war in a munition factory near the city, and they have found it very difficult to lose, they first tried burning it, but the fumes killed the rural vegtation, and the farmers protested. They next buried a yard deep under the factory. The latter, was subsequently dismantled, and the fumes caused grave uneasiness. They then buried it in a deep sandy soil in expectation of it gradually sinkink into oblivion. Intsead it polluted the wiiter supply. c ' “Questions were asked in the Prussian Diet, and it was decided to enclose the gas in containers and sink it to the seabed. The railway authorities pointed out that the transport of the gas was dangerous, and fishermen feared that the fish would be poisoned. “Burning of the gas was again attempted, but later abandoned. It was decided to re-inter it where there was no water. A pit 20 feet deep was dug and a bed of reinforced concrete made. A coffin was constructed and in it containers filled with the gas were placed, and the lid affixed. The whole was covered with thick clay. . “But, unfortunately, many containers were overlooked, so the authorities are now debating whether to reopen the coffin or prepare another grave.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19290412.2.102

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIX, Issue 113, 12 April 1929, Page 8

Word Count
273

POISON GAS Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIX, Issue 113, 12 April 1929, Page 8

POISON GAS Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIX, Issue 113, 12 April 1929, Page 8

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