The Df*a f Hear.T-No 494 of The Illustrated World of 626, Chiswick High Road, London, W., England, contains a description of a Reraarkab'e Cura for Deafness and Head Noises which may bs arried out at the patient’s home, an! which is said to be a certain cure. Tba number will be sent free to any deaf person sending their address Editor*
CHARLOTTE’S VALUELESS CHEQUES. A young woman named Charlotte Tyrer, who posed as an heiress, was sent to gaol for three months at Brighton, Victoria, for attempting to pass a valueless cheque. Her mother, who was 72 years of age, was sentenced to six hours for complicity, The woman pretended that they expected £IO,OOO from the Government it connection With ail invention, and bad stopped at various places Under different names. salutations! a Australia. When he heard that the Australian Commonwealth was going to admit Maoris without any test, the Hon, M-ihuta Wherdwhero cabled to the Australian Premier “ The hearts of the Maoris are gladdened tci know that you do not intend to prevent them visiting Australia. In the early years they formed part ot the parent colony, and were of one another. It was the pakeha who made the separation, but our feelings have always been fraternal. When the people of Australia dame here we were powerful and numerous, and treated them as our brethren, but when exception was recently taken to a few of our people who went to see you, we became ponri and sad at heart. Tour message to the Premier has removed the cloud. Very few of us will cross Te Moana, but many of your people will come to see us, and they will be welcome enough. The Maoris thank you,” “ PRECEDENCE.’’ The dispute over a matter oi pre. cederice at White House is rather amusing. The Speaker of the House of Representatives refused to give way to the Justice of the Supreme Court, and in consequence did not attend President RoosEvelßs dinner. The Speaker’s action recalls the story of .he chief of the Macdonalds who went once from his native Scotland on a visit to Ireland. At a banquet which he attended, Macdbriald took his seat near the door. When Ids hdst saw this, and, learned who he was, he sent a messenger' inviting him to the head of the table. The chief, pulling out his dirk,'stuck in the table in front of him, arid sent bstck the message that where the Macdonald Sits is, always the head of the table. The Speaker ot the House of Representatives is mora modest than the Macdonald, but he has raised a question which, if he remains firm, may cause some unpleasantness. Popular opinion would probably run largely in the Speaker’s favour, and the House of Representatives would, no doubt, support him to a man. But it is with the President, of course, that the decision rests, and he may have some difficulty in bringing the “ sticklers " into a harmonious frame «f mind (says an English paper.) BANK OF NEW ZEALAND. In a political address at Napier on Wednesday evening, Mr A,_ L. D. Fraser, M.H.R., in supporting the action of the Government in assisting the Bank of New Zealand at the financial crisis in its affairs in 1894, quoted a number of figures to show how widespread the calamity would have been had the bank closed its doors. He said that something like 70,000 persons would have been directly or indirectly interested, and that the following public and seminublic bodies had at the time their funds invested with the bank:—Education Boards, 3 ; Hospital and Charitable Aid Boards, 43; Harbour Boards, 24; Benevolent Trust Boards, 7; Town Boards and Borough Councils, 123; Road Boards, 212; Friendly Societies, 216; Savings Banks, 3; County Councils, 72; School Committees, 633 ; sundry local authorities, 127 ; or a total of 1466 local and public authorities, apart from the depositors and other customers of the bank.
AN HONORABLE DISTINCTION The Western Medical Review, n medical pub icatiou of the highest standiag, lavs in a recent issue :—“Thousands of physicians m this and other countries have a'tested tha* SANDER AND SOWS EUCALYPTI EXTRACT is not only absolutely reliable, but it has a pronounced and ind'sputab’e superiority over all other preparations of eucalyptus.” Your heal h is too precious to be ampered with, therefore reject al products foisted upon you by unscrupulous mercenaries and insist upon gettino: SANDER AND SONS’ PURE VOLATILE EUCALYPTI EXTRACT, the only pre naratiou recommended by your physician nod the medical press Used as mouth wash reiiular'y in the morning (3 to o drops to a glass of water) it prevents decay of f eth, and is a sure protection against all infectious fevers, such as typhoid, malaria, etc. Catarruh of nose and throat is quickly cured by garg'ing wi h same. In-tantaneous re ief produced in colds, influenza, diptheria, bronchitis, inflammation of the lungs and consumption, by putting eight drops of SANDER AND SONS’ PURE VOLATILE EUCALYPTI EXTRACT info a cupfu* of boiling water and inhaling the arising steam, Diarrhoea, dysentry, rheumatism, diseases of the Kidneys and uri. ary organs, quickly cured oy taking 5 to 15 drops internally 3 t ’ 5 times daily. Wounds, ulcers, sprains a d skin diseases it heals without dammation when painted on.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19050328.2.6
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVII, Issue 3502, 28 March 1905, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
879Untitled Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVII, Issue 3502, 28 March 1905, Page 2
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Manawatu Herald. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.