Manawatu Herald. SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1903.
A boy has died at Brisbane from an attack'of plague.
The offertories to-morrow at All Saints’ are given to the vicar. Three pictures in Windsor Castle have been deliberately slashed across. Servants are suspected of doing the damage. The Sydney City Council has floated locally a loan of fifty thousand pounds at 4 per cent. The loan was covered three fold.
Mr Arthur Jonson has made a start with Mr Stewart’s cottage on the Lady's Mile and the allotment has been fenced in.
The timber is lying on the ground torthe two cottages Mr Alf Fraser is about to have erected near Dr. Bennett’s.’residence.
Colonel Watt elsewhere requests the inhabitants to take notice of the danger flags which will be placed where the volunteers may be firing. The building between Mr Barber’s shop and. the printing office, lying at the back of the section is being made into a dwelling house by Mr Speirs. This week Mr John Davies disposed of the greater portion of his property in Foxton, at it may be presumed a satisfactory price (which however, has not transpired), as he stated he hadcleared £3,500 on his speculation. Messrs Loveday and Perreau have secured a site for a flaxmill near the mouth of the Tokomaru, and the Makerua Estate will deliver the green flax at the mill at somewhere near £ir odd per ton of dressed fibre. The estate is laying new tramlines into the flax.
The tender of L. Williamson, Levin, has been accepted for the erection of an industrial school at Levin at a com of £5016. Among the rejected tenders were T Griggs, Palmerston, £6587, and J. Hopwood and Co., Palmerston, £7666. At Rangiora the other da) 7 , ‘the Christian names to two parties to an application order were Adam and Eve, Adam was ordered to pay 73 a week until Cain had attained the age of 14, and £i 3s for the expenses Eve had been put to. The N.Z. Fancier’s Chronicle has an article on “ poultry and fr.uit ” in which the following extraordinary statements are made: —“lt is a mistake to think that the fowls will eat the fruit. I know that fowls will not eat apples and plums even when they have fallen to the ground. If any fowls should do so the appetite soon cloys.” Our experience runs in the directly contrary way. The Manchester Conservatives’ Association, at its annual meeting, added to a vote of confidence in the present Government a rider expressing regret at the attitude of the Prime Minister on the Church Discipline Bill. Mr Balfour replied to the effect that he had not- differed in his aim, but had differed in the question of the means of attaining the end. He feared that the abolition of the Bishops’ veto would effect a division in the Church, and would not stop Romanisation practices.
Miss H. Lorraiue-Tansley requests us to state that she is not taking any any part in this evening’s performance in connection with Val Vousden, but is engaged tor Tuesday evening’s concert. On Tuesday night the concert in aid of All Saints’ Church will take place. The programme, published elsewhere, is one of the best, including as it does such well-known performers as Miss H. Lorraine-Tansley, and Mr Permain, of Palmerston North. Our best local talent are also assisting. The concert will commence punctually at 8 o’clock. SANDER and SONS EUCALPYTI EXTRACT. According to reports of a great number of physicians of the tightest professional standing, there are offered Euealpyti Ex tracts which possess no curative qualities. In protection of the world wide fame of Sanders and Sons preparation we publish a few abstracts from these reportS) which bear fully out that no rcliauce can be placed in other products-—Dr. W. B. Rush, Oakland Fia.. writes It is sometimtM difficult to obtain the genuine article (Sander and Sons). I employed difftr. ut oilier preparations; they had no therapeutic value and no effects. In one case the effects were similar to the oßdamphora, the objectionable action of which is we'd known'.’* Or H. B. Drake, Portland, Oregon, says—" Since I became acquainted w th this preparation (Sander and Sons) I me no other form of eucalyptus as I think it is by far the best.” Dr L. P. Pre-ton’s Lynchburg, Va., writes--" I neveF'Usod any preparation other than Bahdeir arid Son’s, as 1 found the others to be almost useless." Dr J. T. Corrneil, Kansas City, K-ins.-, - ays —“ Care has to be exercised not to •be supplied with spurious preparation-, as done by my supply druggis:.” Dr il. H. Hart, New York) Bays--" It goes wl.ho.t saying that Sander and Sons’ Eucslyp'i Extract is the best in the market.” Dr James Reekie, Fairviaw, N. Mr—” So wide is with me the range of (applications of Sander and Sous Eucalypti Extract that I ! carry it with me wherever I go. I find it most useful in diarrhoea, all throat troubled >roneli ;,,,, ( 'de."
Catakeu is Always the Result of .a neglected cold. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy will not Cute catarrhs bat will cure the cold and so prevent that disagreeab'e malady. This remedy not only relieves the local irritation of the throat and lungs, but removes the causes of the diseased condition. It leaves the system in a natural and heahhy condition. It always cures aud cures quickly. W. Hamer, chemist, Foxton, sells it. The Elusive Pioshin is the soiirce of much ; port and the cause of many injuries. Foot ball players should use ChanC br-rlain’a Pain Balm, an antiseptic liniment, especially valuab’e for sprains and bruises. One application gives re ief. Try it. W. Hamer, chemist, Foxton, sells it. Is asthma curable ? Mrs E. Pierce, an old resident of Cambridge, Waikato, N.Z., writes to P. Bock & Co., chemists, Auckland Dear Sirs,—For many years I was a sufferer from aathnia. I am now completely cured through using your excellent medicine, Bock’s Balsam. I know of quite a number of people that were cured by it both of asthma and bronchitis. I have also ued it for' severe colds on the chest with really wonderful results. For Bronchial Cough, take Woods’ Great Peppermit Cure, Is 6d and 2s 6d everywhere.
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Manawatu Herald, 11 April 1903, Page 2
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1,036Manawatu Herald. SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1903. Manawatu Herald, 11 April 1903, Page 2
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