FOR LADIES ONLY.
It will be worth while for every careful housekeeper to read the following lines. Few ladies know how to properly starch and iron collars, cuffs, white shirts, etc. When next you order from your grocer just try one box of ROBIN THE NEW STABCH. It will only cost you- sixpence and you will probably say that you never laid out sixpence in a more satisfactory manner. Remember—BOßlN THE NEW STARCH contains everything necessary for producing a fine gloss, and NOTHING should be added. ROBIN THE NEW STARCH docs not stick to the iron, but itistheieasiest starch in the world to use. ROBIN THE NEW STARCH is only sold in sixpenny boxes. Full directions on each box. Sold by all first-class grocers. Remember a sixpenny box will prove to you that there is no starch anything like as good.—Advt
SANDER & SONS' EUCALYPTI EX TRA.CT-—Under the distinguished patronage of His Majesty the King of Italy, as per communication ma'le by the Minister for/Foreign Affairs, through the Consul-General or Italy at Melbourne, March 14, 1878. Awarded diploma at the Amsterdam Exhibition, 1883Acknowledged by Mdical Clinics and Universities all over the Globe.
There are imitations of Eucalypti Extract in the market, products of simple distillation, forming crude, resinous oils. In order that these crude oils may not be taken for our purolatile Eucalypti Extract, which is recognise by the Medical Division of the Prussian Goernment to be of perfectly pure origin, as per nformation forwarded to us through the Consul at Melbourne, March 2, 1878, we vtate:—
It is proved by tests made by the Medical Clinics of the Universities of Bonn and Griefswald (Prussia), and reported toby Dr Schultz Professor of Pharmacology at Bonn, and Professor Dr Mossier, Director of the Medical Clincs at Griefswald, that only products that are saturated with oxygen and freed of acids resinous and other substances adherent to primary distillation, will develop the sanative qualities proper to the plant. All crude oils or so-called Eucalypti Extracts, are to be classed according to the named authorit* ss, among the turpentines, which are abandoned long since as an internal medicament. Tl ese crude oil, or so-called Eucalypti Extracts, are discernible:
1. By their deficiency in pungent odo (which our product, the only genuine Euaa lypti Extract, develops most freely throrgu ts surplus oxygen.) 2. By their alcoholic, thin, and mobile appearance, being reduced to specifio density through the presence of acids. . 3. By their taste, the result of contract ing tendency of resins and tanats. If these crude oils, or so-called Eucalypti Extracts, are applied by mistake in cases of croup, bronchitis, dipthcria, internal inflammation, dysentry, etc., the consequences are most appalling. For safety's sake ask always or Sander and Sons' Eucalypti Extract.— Sandhurst, Victoria, Australia.—SANDEß & SONS.
A number of business men in Hawkes Bay are considering the question of establishing a woollen factory either at Napier or Hastings. Th'/; twenty-nine sawmills now at work in the bush districts of Hawkes Bay are ally employed. The timber industry is brisk and promises to remain so. At last week's meeting of the Invercargill Borough Council a petition signed by 105 shopkeepers asked the Council to notify the Minister of Labour that they desired to havo all shops in tho borough closed on Saturday evenings at 9 o'clock during the winter months—from tho Ist April to 30th September in each year. The necessary number of residents of Patca lias decided to have a telephone exchange connection that embraces the whole of Taranaki. Efforts will be made also to get connection with Wanganui. From a country newspaper—" Wanted, a steady, respectable young man to look after a garden and milk a cow who has a good voice and is accustomed to sing in the choir."
.Efforts are being made to have the New Plymouth Central School declared a District High School under the new regulations issued by the Education De 4 partment,
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Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 22 May 1901, Page 4
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652FOR LADIES ONLY. Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 22 May 1901, Page 4
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