HANGATIKI.
Pasturage here is looking fresh, and local cows are milking well. I am pleased to see another separator has'arrived in the district. Several of the settlers have commenced dairying in earnest, and are sending their cream to Ambury and English, fr*#m whom they are receiving satisfactory prices for butterfat. One Waitomo settler brings his cream to the station every morning, a distance of about eight miles. Let us hope that other settlers will follow his example, and support this desirable industry. As it pays one settler it will surely pay all, so there is no speculation in the matter. There is not yet any appearance of the blight, and the settlers are looking forward to good crops. Last Thnrsday, Nov. Bth, while playing at school, a boy named Alexander Scholes fell upon a piece of glass and cut his leg just below the knee somewhat severely. He is now on a fair way to recovery, thongh the leg is very stiff and the lad cannot move about.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KCC19061116.2.16
Bibliographic details
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King Country Chronicle, Volume I, Issue 4, 16 November 1906, Page 3
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168HANGATIKI. King Country Chronicle, Volume I, Issue 4, 16 November 1906, Page 3
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