Election notices. TO THE ELECTORS OF THE BOROUGH OF NAPIER. ENTLEMEN,—I beg to inform you that it is my intention to come forward as a candidate for tho representation of the Borough. I shall take an early opportunity of addressing you in public. I am, Gentlemen, Your Obedient Servant, JOHN SHEEHAN. TO THE ELECTORS OF NAPIER. A FEW weeks ago I was gratified to receive an intimation from a considerable number of Napier settlers that it was their wish I should stand for the representation of this town when an opportunity offered. I had the pleasure to meet and confer with a number of those gentlemen, and finding my opinions generally in accord with theirs I accepted tho invitation given me. The writs for the election of the new Parliament are about to be issued, and I beg to inform you that I am a Candidate for the Napier seat. My political opinions are known to many of 3 r ou, and I hope shortly to address you upon tho questions of public interest with which tho next Parliament will have to deal. J. D. ORMOND. TO THE ELECTORS OF HAWKE'S BAY. rp H E Existing : Parliament will be dissolved within a few days, and you will be called upon to Elect a Representative, when I shall have the honor of being a candidate for your suffrages. W. R. RUSSELL. TO THE ELECTORS OF HAWKE'S BAY COUNTY. GENTLEMEN,— At the request of friends and of my own impulse, I have decided to become a Candidate for your suffrages. For tho information of those not personally acquainted with me, I may state that I am not a large sheepfarmer, neither am I blessed with tho exclusive ownership of a country side. Still, those undoubted failings will not prevent me from voting for really liberal measures, nor will they deter me from attacking the land grabbing rings which have kept Hawke's Bay twenty years behind other parts of New Zealand. My voice shall always be heard against tbe unjust laws which compel masses of men to toil for a bare living whilst thousands of acres of good soil aro lying comparatively unused and fenced in, only w r aiting for tho magic touch of labor to turn them into gold—" to raise the smiling homestead and fields of waving grain." A Land Tax and No Land Monopoly shall be my motto, and my aim to settle Human Beings upon our lands instead of Sheep. A. DESMOND. 25th June, 1884. ELECTION NOTICE. TO THE ELECTORS OF THE ELECTORAL DISTRICT of WAIPAWA. C\ ENTLEMEN,— The time has now arrived for mo to announce that I have much pleasure in acceding to the numerous requests I have received from all classes in all parts of your district to offer myself as a Candidate at the coming Election, and at the proper time I shall explain to you my views on the important questions of the day. I may add that I have, in common with yourselves, an interest in tho general progress of the district, as I hold property in it. I lived for many years in the neighborhood of Waipawa, and represented tho district in tho late Provincial Council, and I am well acquainted with all its requirements, and while my chief concern will be the interests of the colony as a whole, I shall do my utmost for the interests of the district if 1" am elected to represent it. I am, &c., T. TANNER. TO THE ELECTORS OF THE WAIPAWA ELECTORAL DISTRICT. ENTLEMEN,—I bog to again offer myself as a Candidate for your suffrages at the forthcoming Election, and I shall take the earliest opportunity of addressing you at tho various centres of population throughout the district, when I shall fully explain my views on the important political quesions of the day.—l am, Gentlemen, Yours Faithfully, .." ' W. C. SMITH. Medical. TTIOR COUGHS AND COLDS. KAY'S COMPOUND OF LINSEED, Aniseed, Senega, Squill,'Tolu, &c, with Chlorodyno. KAY'S COMPOUND, a demulcent expectorant, for Coughs and Colds. ; KAY'S COMPOUND, for Coughs and Colds, is equally serviceable for Horses and Cattle. KAY'S TIC PILLS, a specific in Neuralgia, face-ache, &c. (1 OAG0AG ULlNE—Cement for Broken ArtiJ cles. Sold everywhere. Solo makers — KAY Bros., Stockport, England. HOAWDEN'S MAIL COACH . _A> leaves Hastings for Maraekakaho on Tuesdays and Fridays at 9 a.m., returning at 2 p.m. Parcels addressed to his caro forwarded.
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Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 4044, 8 July 1884, Page 4
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733Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 4044, 8 July 1884, Page 4
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