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One of the first questions to which members of tbe new Town Council must themselves is that of an Improvement

... through towu, ought objects of beauty and conserv health, are perverted into /fi and made the receptacle of all the 0 p £l \ garbage of a great and grimy town* one admits the existence and the sei'i 1 'fk the evil. There is no room for do rivers speak ...

Published: Friday 03 November 1876
Newspaper: Sheffield Daily Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 838 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE CLEMENCY OF THE CZAR

... sides the room projected low sloping wooden platforms about feet wide, upon which the convicts slept, side side, in closely picked rows, with their heads the walls and their feet extended towards the middle of the cull. They neither pillows nor blankets ...

Published: Saturday 22 June 1889
Newspaper: Leeds Times
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 780 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

SHOCKING NEGLECT OF CHILDREN IN SHEFFIELD

... almost in a instant of drunkenness. The resiit was that the children were most shockingly neglected. They had been seen pick-up the garbage out of tne gutters to satisfy their hunger. The baby was uuriad under very unusual circumstances; he felt it his duty ...

Published: Friday 03 August 1894
Newspaper: Sheffield Evening Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1118 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

TO THE EDITOR OP THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH

... confirms belief as his abode while m New York) is that the hab.t of leaving large barrels of garbage on the pavement is the custom. Reauer p cture to yourself barrel garbage left outside the Queen’s Palace, then you will see now nonsensical is the assertion. ...

Published: Saturday 27 October 1888
Newspaper: Sheffield Weekly Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1357 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

r, SATURDAY, JUNE l4

... see the noble savage with his squaws, all dreamed in rode travesty of the pale faces, wandering aimlessly about, or picking up the garbage in the far food ; to have him come between the wind and one's nobility, would no doubt have been aisquatutante quite ...

Published: Saturday 14 June 1884
Newspaper: Bradford Weekly Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3853 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

A SCENE IN CONGRESS

... R'man candles ab tut election time, but they do not pave their streets, nor remove their heaps of garbage. They have no objections to • poor devil's picking up a diamond pin or so as alderman or councilman ; but when it comes to member of Conerese -0 dear ...

isry There ere the glorious galleries of Florence- lfjor«io» whose very name is the blossoming the world; enoo ..

... won’t hare anything bat host of every' U>e metropolis of the ■fa' western continent^ * r * p i,t * billon where we can bare cm pick of everything, and Jon oan well believe that take the beat every time. You will notice this, be went they Just managed to get ...

Published: Saturday 02 March 1889
Newspaper: Sheffield Weekly Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 792 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

WEST EIDINQ COURT HOUSE,

... Bennett. It seemed the lad was going along the street with some groceries, when he dropped a sixpence. The prisoner saw it, picked it up, and went off with it. —Sent to gaol for a month. WONT) AT. —Boeouqh and County.— BeforeMessw F. H. Taylor, R. Inns ...

Published: Saturday 01 May 1886
Newspaper: Barnsley Chronicle
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1688 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

AMUSING EPISODE AT RAMSEY

... female teacher of Berlin, whilst, on Friday last ascending Mount Generoso in the Lepontine Alps, down a precipice, and was picked dead. Sir Andrew Fairbairn, High Sheriff Yorkshire, was at meeting Conn Nil Desperandnm, A.O.F.,Leeds, presented last hon ...

Published: Tuesday 26 July 1892
Newspaper: Yorkshire Evening Post
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1137 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

DR. GRIFFITHS' REPORT ON TEE PORTER.BROOK

... especially so in warm and dry weather. The brook passes under tbe bridge at the Cemetery gate into a dam, extending to Hardy's pick works, and what should here also be a stream is almost entirely dried up. The existence of this dam in dry weather can be de- ...

Published: Friday 27 October 1876
Newspaper: Sheffield Independent
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1548 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

TOWN HALL, WEDNESDAY

... TOWN HALL, WEDNESDAY. (Before H. Wilkinson, Esq.) Pocket Picking.—Esther Forester, 21, Furnacehill, was charged with this offence by Eliza Thompson. The prosecutrix said she resided at Jordan, in the parish of Kimberworth. On Tuesday she, with some friends ...

Published: Thursday 13 December 1855
Newspaper: Sheffield Daily Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 979 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

These is one point on which are never satisfied—the water supply. The water never seems to suit exactly the tastes

... large-sized eels in the storage basins of water supplies, and that their progeny sbovld come down the pipes means that they are picked out later instead of earlier. Even water so charged with metal insure drinkers sort lead lining has its advantages over a ...

Published: Saturday 26 July 1890
Newspaper: Sheffield Evening Telegraph
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1127 | Page: 2 | Tags: none