From the Evening News,
October 26, 1973
BOLTON Wanderers' supporters can take a bow. For despite recent setbacks, the support they are giving Jimmy Armfield's young side has soared. The upsurge in attendances is right against the national trend. Bolton's league gates at the moment are averaging 13,859 - almost 6,000 up on last season, when they were laying out their stall for a successful assault on the Third Division promotion race.
From the Evening News,
October 27, 1948
THE little 'Nursery Rhyme' corner, with its thatched well and accompanying gnome, on Worsley station, which has brightened the journey of many Boltonians travelling from Great Moor-st. to Manchester (Exchange), has probably helped to win for Stationmaster R. Mansell and his staff, a special prize of £10 in the British Railways 'Best Kept Station Competition, 1948' (Manchester and surrounding area. Stationmaster H.V. Molesworth and his staff at Radcliffe (Black-lane) station have also won a special prize of £10 and staff at Turton and Edgworth station have won a prize of £5.
From the Evening News,
October 27, 1873
A REPORT of the damage done by the great storm of August 24, 1873, has been prepared at the Signal Office in Washington. The losses caused by this terrible storm are summed up thus: One thousand and thirty two vessels, of which 435 were small fishing schooners, are known to have been destroyed in the neighbourhood of the Gulf of St Lawrence and the Atlantic shores of Nova Scotia. In addition, over ninety vessels were destroyed by the same storm before reaching Nova Scotia. Two hundred and twenty-three lives are definitely reported as lost, and the most moderate estimate of the numerous cases in which the whole crews are stated to have been lost, swells this number to nearly 500. The fishing industries of the United States and Canada have been seriously crippled.
Converted for the new archive on 14 July 2000. Some images and formatting may have been lost in the conversion.
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