As an instance of the power the motor car gives to the plural voter in England, the case of Mr Haywood, of Heme Hill, may be cited. He is a freeholder in six country constituencies, which all polled on the same day, and thanks to his motor, was able to record his vote in every one of them. Ho began (says the Manawatu Evening Standard) at Norwood, in Surrey, whence he drove to Ashford, in Middlesex, and thence to Petersfield, in Hampshire. His fourth vote was cast at Newhaven, in Sussex, a fifth at Heme Bay. in Kent, and the sixth and last at Gravesend, ten minutes before the poll closed. Altogether Mr Haywood covered 340 miles in his vote-distri-buting run. His feat constitutes a record which will be hard to beat, and is 0110 that would have been absolutely i 111 possible if he had been compelled to rely on railways attul horseflesh. There's only ono reason why a /nan goes outside Levin to buy his clothes, and that's because ht doesn't know that he can get the same clothes that the best shops in Wellington handle right at Clark's Store, and at a saving of money and time. When you investigate our claim to match Wellington's best styles and beat their prices, some stoie.in the City loses a customer If you appreciate clothes cut to the latest fashion, you want to see some of the new worsted suits just opened by Clark's. Levin's beat store—Aaw*
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HC19100323.2.29.3
Bibliographic details
Horowhenua Chronicle, 23 March 1910, Page 3
Word Count
247Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Horowhenua Chronicle, 23 March 1910, Page 3
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