PUBLIC NOTICES f, , . ^ A filRLS YOUNG AND OLDER j ■ i ' r . • Suppori the Sndustry , . ' Your 0wr District BY CALLING TO HEAR * OF THE OPPORTDNfflES ■ I OFFERIHG BY A. LEVY, LTD., . - ; CLOTHING MANUFACTURERS OXFORD ST. — LEVIN ' ■ ■ , 1
Have Your Radio Serviced With up-to-date Testing Equipment - By - W. H. GR1FFITHS, Radio Serviceman (By Exam.) Agent for Mullard Radios and Solarc Batteries Telephone 21 — Liverpool S.t. — Levin, (Near Railway Station) W. F. CAPIE, GRADUATE OF BLIND INSTITUTE AUCKLAND. TUNER AND REPAIRER OF PIANOFORTES Will be pleased to fulfil orders left with the Arcadia Bakery. TELEPHONE 94A. While Poultry Food is Short HENS MUST Be Kept Healthy j.- ■ Fhe present .shortage of poultry foods .has come at a time when, with the moulting icaaon apploaching, it is of the greatest importance that hens should rcceive special care in diet to ensure the rebullding of their highest standard of health for the -season ahead. If shortage occurs in dict, thc health ! of thc birds must be safeguarded by adequate j vitamin and mineral content in the food. ! The easiest artd best way to ensure this in correct proportions is by giving Laymor Poultry Tonic regularly in the daily mash. This valuable Tonic Prcscription is Gbtaipable from ProdM^e Dcalers LH
AUCTION SALES LEVIN SALE TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1946. At 11.30 a.m. 170 fat wethers 40 fat b.f. 2-ths. 100 fat ewes \ i 200 fat lambs 100 forward wethers 30 forward b.f. 2-ths. 200 good shorn Romney lambs (1 earmark) 200 w.f. wether lambs 90 b.f. lambs 65 5-year ewes r.w.s.d. 9 fat bullocks 18 fat P.A. cows 30 P.A. vealers 10 runners 30 P.A. cows r.w.b. 7 Jersey heifers close to profit 60 porkers and baconers 40 store pigs On Account Takapuna Stud: 5 P.B. Tam worth serviceable boars On Account of W. M. Simcox, Otaki: 4 high grade 3-yr-old springing heifers
stclen m0ney FOUND AFTER long SEARCH Received Sunday, 7.5 p.m. WASH1NGTON, April. The Postal Department announcey the discovery of 153,150 dollars, whio/ ; "was part of a sum stolen hy a former • employee in 1944. Three inspectors, who were working \ on the case for two years, found the money in two tin cans and two ;glass ; jars, sealed with paraffin and enclosed * in two lengths of stove piping, buried nine feet deep in a yard. The department said that a former postal clerk, Joseph Marshall, confessed to the crime shortly hefore his death on August 10, 1944, hut beyond saying that the money was. buried in jars, did not disclose the hiding place. The department said that the total sum stolen, 180,000 dollars, was the higgest theft in j the history of the Post Office. M,arshall stole the money when a Federal Reserve j Bank shipment came into his hands.
Immediate relief — Coughs, Colds— Woods' Great Peppermint Cure. W. E. • Woods, Ltd., Lambton Quay, VVgtn.
PRINTED and Published for KERS- i LAKE, BILLENS & HUMPHREY, ! LTD., at the Registered Printing Office of the Company, Oxford | Street, Levin. MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1946.
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Bibliographic details
Chronicle (Levin), 8 April 1946, Page 8
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495Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Chronicle (Levin), 8 April 1946, Page 8
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