Shortly after Jean Harper began working as a plant care technician for a Richmond, Ind., rose grower, a supervisor handed her a half-gallon plastic jug of concentrate. She poured the liquid into the tank while the supervisor added water, creating the frothy mixture that would be sprayed on roses in the greenhouses. Out of idle curiosity, she relates in her new memoir Rose City, she read the label on the jug.
The label said Triforine, accompanied by a skull and crossbones and the all-capitalized warning, DANGER! IRREVERSIBLE EYE DAMAGE! WILL CAUSE BLINDNESS! CORROSIVE!
Read On….
SOURCE: WHOLE LIFE TIMES