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THE EVENING STAR AND ALDERMAN EDWARD

... the British Consul at Haukow that the exported pigs, so far from being of the wild variety living oin whutever garbage they are able to pick up, are of the black and white breed raised between Tungting Lake and Lokow, where only the finest class of pigs ...

Published: Wednesday 25 May 1910
Newspaper: Evening Star
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 408 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

TJU: COMMON lIOFSL-ILV

... death in one's soup or ton utter crawling over tillh and garbage about the place. The foot the bonseflv was like a sucker and acted in a similar wav to the rubber sucker which schcol- Imvs used pick up things It could therefore understood that flies walking ...

Published: Saturday 20 February 1926
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 401 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE FATAL BUN

... in hospital. The police discovered that gliss Rosenberg was an eccentric. She lived on what she could find in dustbins and garbage carts, but in various banks £9,000 stood to her credit. She lived in a cellar, for which she paid a few shillings a week. ...

Published: Saturday 12 August 1933
Newspaper: Haverhill Echo
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 391 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Gast Anglian Daily Times

... bad. Those who are prurient and wunclean in their literary tastes, as in their moral conduct, will always find the literary garbage which delights their perverted appetite. Moreover, 1o censor a book nowadays is to give an extra fillip to its sale and to ...

Published: Friday 12 September 1913
Newspaper: East Anglian Daily Times
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1087 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BOTAL VISIT TO IBELAND IN DUBLIN SLUMS

... aristocracy of the land, to fo down into those meen etreets, rank with edoroes filth, where ragged childrea played amidst mud and garbage, and to the bedsides of the dying, where wasted forme and pallid great reliever. waited patiently for the approach of the ...

Published: Saturday 25 July 1903
Newspaper: East Anglian Daily Times
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1722 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

NEWMARKET (SUFFOLK) PETTY

... negotiate jilst befole the accident. Defendant, oath, said that was riding towards Newriialket, using dip beam head-lamp. He picked up tlu* rear reflector a cyclist and also raw a cyclist cpmipg towards him on his proper side, lie drove qiit to the crown ...

Published: Saturday 11 September 1937
Newspaper: Bury Free Press
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1659 | Page: 13 | Tags: none

' him 11, 11110 r To Boor W The chatriet

... Whether the obeervations be made in England. Prance. or Germany, the results are quite unatected. From lkiyd's figure* we can pick out 102 men and 113 women between 641 n. and high, average; dime on 65in. for each group. But the brains of the men average ...

Published: Saturday 02 June 1900
Newspaper: Newmarket Journal
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 1943 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

IN DUBLIN SLUMS

... whero she was picked up e ing, continuing their busy round, their Majesties drove together in full state to the t of the Royal Irish Constabulary, in the Phenix Park. In front of the long white barracks, 360 men were drawn up, every man picked, and a giant ...

Published: Saturday 25 July 1903
Newspaper: Evening Star
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2650 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

The Secret of the Black Bog By MADGE BARLOW

... hinted that • stroll through the sesioservm lora* would be Mims. as he stretched o• tiptoe —by costumed—to pick • consent& tor her, she picked his root-tail pocket. Bravo! cried the incorniptible Chews. I tier. We skipped up to the attie and abstracted ...

Published: Saturday 26 August 1916
Newspaper: Newmarket Journal
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2767 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

;IT I Author ol A Rose of Erin, .Tbc Cairn of the Badger, /Lc. to to *****iiiii*it-ii XXX:: :I CHAPTER XIX

... hinted that a stroll through the conservatories would be bliss, and, as he stretched on tiptoe- -by command—to pick a camellia for her, she picked his coat-tail pocket. Bravo! cried the incorruptible Chevalier. W. skipped up to the attic and abstracted ...

LONDON LETTER

... speaker who has a to get out of. Mr. Balfour had declared be; case to make out,-may often lay an undue/it was not moral to pick out any particular| ga emphasis on the worse eide. To remedy an|trade or class and tax it. Mr. McKenna admitted evil, it is ...

Published: Thursday 04 November 1909
Newspaper: East Anglian Daily Times
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Article | Words: 2826 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE FRAMLINGHAM WEEKLY NEWS-SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1900

... M. Loubet, the German Emperor, or any representative, crowned or not, of a foreign nation. But the fact remains that this garbage has been publicly sold about the streets of Paris, a time when the city full of English visitors, who form their impressions ...

Published: Saturday 10 November 1900
Newspaper: Framlingham Weekly News
County: Suffolk, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3287 | Page: 2 | Tags: none