YOU SHOULD BEAR IN MIND
That by using the commcrcia eucalyptus oil which is now bought up at 6d per lbs weight and bottled, and on account of the large profit pushed, you are exposing yourself to all the dangers to which the use of turpentine will expose you, irritation of the kidneys, intestinal tract and uncous membranes. By insisting on the GENUINE SANDER EUCA LYPTI EXTRACT you not only avoid these pitfalls, but you have a stimulating, safe and effective medicament, the result of a special and careful manufacture. A trial will at once convince. Quality in small dose distinguishes it from the bulky and dangerous products. Remember SANDER’S EXTRACT embodies the result o f 50 years experience and of special study, and it does what is promised, it heals and cures without injuring the constitution, as the oils on the market frequently do. Therefore protect yourself by rejecting other brands. SANDER’S EXIRACI possesses curative powers peculiarly its own and it can be used with perfect safety internally and externally.
Port. Chalmers folk* will kooti Ijo able to enjoy a plungo anil swim in tho municipal bath*. They measure 160 ft. by 110 ft. At every 14ft a large pile has been, driven. The spaces between arc lillci! by battens at ilistances of about a foot. At low water at the deepest part tho water (ouches the 6ft. 6in. mark, shelving back to inches.
Aviators will soon be competing for some tempting prizes. The Daily Mail is again offering £IO,OOO for a flight from Paris to London, and £BOOO s offered for what is known as tho Southern Prance circuit. Another big event will be a. race from Paris to Brussels and London and back to Paris, for which the prize will bo £BOOO. Then there is the British international meet, in connection with which the prize money will amount to £40,000.
“We can still show yon some wrinkles." said Mr J. Hodge, M.P. for Gorton. Lancashire. at an Auckland meeting, when rallying the <-olonial labour people upon the good opinion, of themselves. You in Auckland for instance. Your now installation of tramways would never have been permitted in any place in tho Uhl Land to have lieen handed over to a company to make money out of.” He also thinks the Labour party here rather supine
According P» the view In,id by the Taranaki News, “the land” should he preached from the. pulpit-, .shouted from the housetops, and discussed on (lie Bench. in the homo, and in the streets. In (he opinion of our contemporary the land question is more important, than the gold industry, and is of infinitely greater significance than the coronal ion of a King, the death of an anarchist, or the result of a prize light. “But there is no great voice to sing the song of the land.”
It will be of interest to a good many persons in this part of the Dominion to learn that tho Bronnau gyroscopic railroad is to bo given an experimental trial in Alaska. Tlie route will lx, about 100 miles long, and to construct such a line with double track and railbod would cost about £4OOO per mile, while the amount required for the monorail will bo about £6OO per mile. The road will bo ready for operation by the latter method in Josh than half the time required for the construction of the other.
At Home the agitation for woman suffrage does not .show much indication of abating. A Now Zealander when a) Home witnessed a snllragelte procession from (wo to three miles king, interspersed in its length there being no fewer than sixteen bands. The visitor’s various travels through Britain persuaded him that female sulirago, pure and simple, would be a bad thing at Home, because there would, he felt sure, be a tendency downwants. In Dundee be saw- from one of the many mills there no fewer than 20.000 females emerge, and he believed that if given votes they would return one of themselves to Parliament.
Some dilliculty has arisen in regard to the wages required for County Council work in one riding of tho Eltham County. The engineer stated that a County contractor at Omoiinii has to pay men 10s. 11s and up to 12s a day, and the question was what was the Council going to pay. The regular rate of wages paid by the Council is 9s, riding foremen getting 9s 6d. ami the engineer thought it would be somewhat of an anomaly if he were to olfer 10s a day to induce men to go to Umoana while tho foreman received 6d a day less. Tho engineer was instructed to do the best he could and uso his own discretion.
A coiTe.spumlciil of the Si ratforif paper, writing alien! a forthcoming municipal contest, advises aspirants for municipal honours to procure a. gig and drive at a fair iml dow n a. street indicated and “if there’s any of tho gig left, and tho occupants have not been taken to tho hospital” to continue their pilgrimage, when they should be in a position to tell the ratepayers how many cubic yards of loose stones there are on tho borough streets. Thev are further recommended to take, a trip to Wellington suburbs and notice what sort of streets private speculators have to make micro they arc taken over by the local authorities.
A proclamation by the King, determining the new designs for gold and bronze coins, has just been published (writes a London correspondent). Tho cfligy of the reigning monarch will appear on the obverse impression, and except that the inscription is to read: Georgius V. Dei. Gra, etc., there will be no change on the reverse. That of the gold coins i.s lo com ain “tho image of St. George armed with a .sword, sitting on horseback, attacking the dragon with a sword, and a broken spear upon the ground, and the date of the year," with a graining upon the edge. As at present, the bronze coins will have their value—penny, halfpenny, fa rilling—plainly stated.
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXIII, Issue 947, 28 January 1911, Page 4
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1,016YOU SHOULD BEAR IN MIND Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXIII, Issue 947, 28 January 1911, Page 4
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