JAMES WOOD, late WOOD & JUDKINS, Wool-broker, Auctioneer, Financial, Land, Estate, and Commission Agent. AUCTION SALES conducted in any part of the district. Wool, Skins, and Hides in any quantity bought for cash or offered at auction. Regular Auction Sales of Goods and General Produce of all descriptions at Auction Mart, Kimbolton Road. Good Storage at reasonable rates. Agent for Manchester Fire Insurance Company. H. F. WORSFOLD, HAIRDRESSER and TOBACCONIST, Manchester Street, FEILDING. A LARGE ASSORTMENT of Fancy Tobaccos of the choicest brands always in stock. Pipes of every variety, and of the very best quality. My Saloon is fitted up in first-class style, and will compare favorably with any in the colony. A trial respectully solicited. H. F. WORSFOLD. j a M * \aL° : * 1 Ctf 3 S H V M 3 ■^ o w y The following is an extract from the Boston Herald, U.S. A :— - --"S| MILES OF BICYCLE. " FTIHE Heralil Bicycle Parade has JL proved to be not the hit of a day, but the hit of the season, and no better proof of this can be had than the tact that there is not a single devotee of the wheel, man or woman, who is not eager for a repetition of it, and another chance to compete for prizes. " Then, too, the great display which went to make up THE 8} MILES OF BEAUTIFUL, interesting and instructive pageant had an educational effect on many thousands Among people who did not appreciate the force that cycledom had become, the Herald parade is discussed, and the basis of discussion is very largely made up of expressions of wonder at the size of it all. Thousands never imagined the extent or the force or the yalne of cycling, and m quarters where once existed only dis* paragement there is now nothing bat praise. '■ It is not amiss to say that waeeldom is all agog, and wheroyer cyclists get together, whether between the heats of exciting races on the road or m the club rooms, which are so comfortable these cool nights, thu Herald's two big feasts are, if not the sole, the principal topics of discussion. " The contest for bicycle popularity to decide which wheel of them all should bear the stamp 'the most popular bicycle,' the last of the two battles to come to an end, was a battle royal, with a royal victory as a final. Weeks and months did this contest go on, followed and participated in with an interest and a zest that surpassed expectations. To every rider his particular wheel is the only wheel on earth, and in comparison with his wheel all others are as twinkling stars to the sun. " The riders' name is legion, and when the test of popularity was begun the legion got to work. Ballots came in in bundles, in bags, in crates and in all ( ways, until those whose duty it was to receive them were buried under the avalanche. The cyclists rallied loyally about the standards of the wheels which they had chosen. It soon became a record-breaking contest, both in point of interest and in number of ballots. It was not a matter of thousands, but to the leaders it grew into a matter of nun" dreds of thousands, and for the first 10 wheels in the list, those haying a poll of 70,000 or over, more than 2,000,000 bsllots week cast. " The contest went on tor months, and when the end came THE WAttWTCK WAS THE WTNNBBj The victory of the Warwick had nothing uncertain about it ; it was as emphatic as a vote of 671,589 and A LEAS OF ALMOST 200,000 over its nearest competitor. " The winning machine id one that is well and favorably known to nil cyclists, and nothing can better prove this than the big vote and final result of the baN lotting. It is manufactured by the War*, wick Cycle Company of Springfield, of which Mr F. J. W. Feab is Sole Agent for New Zealand." HOW THE VOTES STOOD ON THE 27th AUGUST. NTNETYhEIGHT COMPETITORS. The following are those of the 98 Competitors best known to N.Z. Cyclists :— WARWICK 336,960 Columbia 235,365 Waverley 85,379 Union 81,996 Steams ... ... 40,490 Spalding 10,613 Sterling 9,315 Dayton ... ..« °> a *' Barnes ... ». 4 >307 Cleveland") White £ ...CTuder 2,000 World ) " The WABWICK subsequently won with 671,589 votes, and a lead of almost 300,000 over its nearest competitor." Soik Agent, F. J. W« FEAE, WILLIS STREET The oldest-established practical Cycle Expert in Wellington Feilding Agent— G. W. Fowles A CAED. MR S. S. MOORE, Music Teacher. T ESSONS given oa Piano, Organ, J_J and Violin. Visits Colyton (on Mondays), Awahuri, Campbelltowo (Thursdays aud Fridays)
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Bibliographic details
Feilding Star, Volume XVIII, Issue 102, 27 October 1896, Page 1
Word Count
774Page 1 Advertisements Column 5 Feilding Star, Volume XVIII, Issue 102, 27 October 1896, Page 1
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