(Advertisement.) NEW ZEALAND INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION, CHKISTCHURCH. Those that wish to l>e represented at the ilnteruational Exhibition to bo held in Christchurch in March next should inform ua of their intentions. We have been connected with all the International Exhibitions held in the Colonies. At the late Adelaide Exhibition we represented sixty ■exhibitors, for whom we secured 10 gold medals, 49 first and one second awards, three of which were for New Zealand firms —D. Strang and J. F. Martin. Invercargill ; and 1.. Sevan, Wellington. Our plan is to represent the exhibitors, transact their business, fix the exhibit in its space, attend to the ‘judging of exhibits, and anything necessary while the exhibition remains open and at the close re-pack and send them goods hack, orse'l them, or duplicate thereof, if required. It is very inconvenient for exhibitors to attend the -exhibition to fix their exhibits, and causes them not only a great loss of time but loss of money, which they must necessarily expend on them Then, again, the exhibitors have a benefit: they have no trouble -in getting space. They inform usfimw much is required, and we secure it for them, as -we have a large amount vranted to us, we fix the exhibit on a better space than if they applied themselves. ‘Our terms are moderate, We specially 'Caution the public against giving, their exhibits to so-called exhibition agents, Wholhave been the rounds of all the exhibitions, and run the exhibitors into debt and other difficulties.- A T.tiEUT S. MANDERS and Co . British and Colonial Manufacturers 1 Agents. Head office, 91, Little Collins-stre.et E., Melbourne; C 7, King William.street, Adelaide ; Tow-a Hall, Perth,’W. A. ; branch in Christchurch after March 1, 1882; London, St. Paul's Buildings—Copies of circulars may be obtained at the office of this paper. Sentence of three months hard labor was recently pronounced, at Woiship street Police Court, on Charles Frost, a youth of nineteen, for stealing an umbrella and obtaining hoard and lodging under false pretences He prayed nightly, and very loudly, for i is landlord and landlady ; but when the day for paying his lodging came he disappeared, taking an umbrella with him Frost admitted being a hypocritical scoundrel, and smiled when sentence was given.
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Bibliographic details
Dunstan Times, Issue 1048, 19 May 1882, Page 4
Word Count
371Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Dunstan Times, Issue 1048, 19 May 1882, Page 4
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