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MOTUEKA ELECTORAL BOUNDARIES.

! ,In answer to - enquiries- we 1 publislr below the boundaries of the Mbtueka Electorate, as defined by. the Commissioners and afterwards ratified : This dlstrict is b< mnded town rds the -north-west and north by tlie sea from the Ngakawhau River to fchfr Cape Far ewell Lighthouse ; thence towards the east generally by Goldeh Bay and Tasman Bay 7 to the City of Nelson Electoral District, at Rabbit Island ; thence towards the south generally and towards the north east bv the said e’ty of Nelson Electoral District to the summit of ; the watershed between the Wairau an** Pelorus ’ Valleys; thence towards the South east generally by the boundary line between the ‘Land Districts of Nelson and Marlborough to Tophouse ; thence by the summit of St. Arnaud Range and the summit of the Spenser Mountains to Faerie Queen ; tfience 'towards the «outh west generally by the summit of the leading range to the Cann Range, and thence by the summit of Cann Range to the saddle between the Rivers Warwick and W'arbeck thence by the summit of the leading ridge to the Mantell Range, and thence by the summit of the Mantell Range and by the leading spu.i to the Buller River at a point abonst 30 chains to the wesrward of the confluence of Doughboy Creek with the Buller River ; thence again towards the south by the right bank of the Buller River to the western boundaryline of Inanganua County ; thence towards the we.-t by the seid western boundary of the Inangahua C am tv to Bald Hill, Block X., Lvell Range ; thence again towards the south west, by'the summit of Use watershed leading up to the head waters of Lvell Creek and Slaty Creek and by the summit of the leading spur to the source of the snid Slaty Creek thence by a line due west to the uearest source of the Ngakawhnit River ; and thence by the .-aid Ngakawhau Rivet to the sea.

At a Friendly Societies’ Conference in New Plymouth, the following resolution Was carried :—“That this meeting recommends' that each lodge take into consideration the wisdom of joining a Friendly Societies’ Council, with the view of arranging for hospital and dispensary treatment -and matters generally affecting Society members.” Bishop Julius, speaking at the first meeting of the temperance association, at Christchurch, 1 said that he wanted to Vote for State control, blit -was not allowed to do that, so would vote no license’. ' He would rather die than vote continuance. Though his’-party held different views in regard to prohibition, it was at one in voting no license at the coming election. Two ingenious cyclists have collabot - ated to turn the handle-bar into a gas generator for an acetylene lamp. The handle-bar is divided, into a water chamber and a carbide chamber, the two being connected by a pipe, and the flow'of water being "controlled,by a valve from the outside. In the centre is a gas chamber, having an outlet to feed the lamp. Mr George Adams, of Tatter-sails, fame contends that the Tasmanian farmer will benefit greatly by his continuing t> reside and , carry on his. money-making business at Hobart. As previously reported, he intends to start a brewery, and for it buy up the farmers’ barley. Explaining to the Hobart Mercury, he said : “I have given my word t > buy as much barley as the farmers like to grow, not to mention hops, and even should the brewery I intend to open not turn out profitable, I shall still want the barley for malt for export.” Se 1 i!ia S<nga 1, who ;issisted at the murder of her husband Dandenong, near Melbourne, is .-ist-ei of the girl Thekla Duberke, who became so notorious in connection with the great “boot b- x tragedy” of three or four years ag I —the case in which the body of a young girl killed by an operation at the hands of an old woman, was committed in a boot-box to the Yarra by Duberke and the girl’s lover. Duberke has since marine*:, and is now in Queensland.

The effect of the judgment recently delivered by Mr Justice Denniston in the gorse case of Bremner v Dunn, is (says the Press) that if any owner of any land permits any gorse or other noxious plant to grow on the road fronting his land, he must clear it off at his own expense on receiving notice from the local authority, whether such growth has spread from his own land or not. Bright red spectacles, accompanied by internal doses of calomel, form a new German specific against sea-sick-ness. It is deducted from Epstein’s investigations on the influence of colour on the blood vessels in the brain. Seasickness is due to lack of blood in the brain, while red sends blood to the brain with a rush. By looking atone point for some time through the red glasses the patient is rapidly cured.— London Sun. As a result of the drought in Australia, several cargoes of Australian wheat afloat for the United Kingdom will be returned in the vessels now carrying them. Certainly the best medicine known is Sander and Sons’ Eucalypti Extract. Test it’s eminently powerful effects in coughs colds, influenza—the relief is instantaneous in serious cases and accidents, be they wounds, burns, scalds, bruises, sprains, is the safest remedy—no swelling, no inflammation. Like surprising effects produced in croup, diphtheria, bronchitis, inflammation of the lungs, swelling, etc., diarrhoea, dysentery, diseases of the kidneys, and urinray organs. In use at hospitals and medical clinics all over the globe ; patronised by his Majesty the King of Italy, and crowned with medals and diplomas at International Exhibitions. Insist on getting Sander and Sons’ Eucalypti Extract, or else you will be supplied with worthless oils.

The recei*b;i(*i*r inSonth Africa has y given many instances of the saying'.'; that the world is but a small place after all, but possibly note more Curious than the experience of a trooper from Hyde, a. not too prosperous township in Central Otago. Entering a store in Pietermaritzburg, Natal, to make a purchase, the owner of the store inquired if the trooper was a New Zealander, and, receiving a reply in- the affirmative, the stor ekeepey queried, “Do you know a place there called Hyde ? As the trooper had scarcely ever been away from Hyde, iis birthplace, until he enlisted for service in South Africa, firs' surprise at such’ st qfrejstion Jb such a place was. very great. Further conversation revealed the fact that the storekeeper was a Cousin to Mr J. J. Ramsay, who had emigrated to South Africa somayears ago. Mr Ramsay having spent mapy years in -Hyde, and being in communication with his cousin, the name was 'well known to him. But that fie should have come across a native of that little place in the course of a casual conversation in South Africa is decidedly singular. Needless the trooper was hospitably entertained and invited to call again. The Sydney Bulletin asserts that Premier Seddon has several big business undertakings on hand in London. The chief is a big West Coast coal mining venture.

Sir William Lyne is opposed to the building of an Australian navy. In referring to the matter Ve said he believed in the Commonwealth having a powerful land force for defending our shores in case of attack, but he did not think we could have a navy for many years to cor *». We could not bear the necessary expense. What he wanted to see was the foundation of the navy. If an arrangement could be made by which our naval men could get good training by borrowing or hiring, or in .-ome way obtaining the use of a proper warship with the latest armaments, we would do well, but as to building a navy of our own, he did not believe in it.

“Any being whose heart no longer beats and who has apparently ceased to exist, may, in many cases, be brought to life again,” says Dr La horde,

the inventor of the tongue traction treatment (says the Temple Magazine). Dr. Labor;] e has found that in the case of persons who ha ve lost consciousness through narcotic poisoning, thronh collapse after anaesthetics, through electric shock, through drowning, thropgh asphyxiation, through * syncope, ox through committing suicide by hanging themselves, it is sometimes possible to, revive them, even when they appeared to be dead and after all other methods of restoration had failed to have any effect, if the tongue be drawn rhythmically backwards and forwards for a certain length of time, either by hand or by an electric motor. Already close upon 6000 fruit trees have been imported by one Tasmanian nurseryman this season, and there are others who have also executed large order's. These trees have been dis-' tributed all over the island. The demand seems to be more for apples and pears, and those apples which have reached the London market in the best condition are being planted out in larger numbers. At the next meeting of the Wanganui Chamber of Commerce Mr 1. Higgie will move that the- Chamberjoin with the Farmers’ Union and ascertain if it were possible to erect at Castlecliff receiving stores where quarterly sales of farmers’ produce could be held. Worms undermine Childrens Constitutions. Use WADES WORM FIGS i is boxes* *** Subscription to MOTtJEKA STAR Three Shillings and Sixpence a Quarter which may begin any timr

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MOST19020829.2.7

Bibliographic details

Motueka Star, Volume III, Issue 109, 29 August 1902, Page 4

Word Count
1,572

MOTUEKA ELECTORAL BOUNDARIES. Motueka Star, Volume III, Issue 109, 29 August 1902, Page 4

MOTUEKA ELECTORAL BOUNDARIES. Motueka Star, Volume III, Issue 109, 29 August 1902, Page 4

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