Tfy£AORILAND SEND 21s MONEY ORDER ; • . —To.— ■• - :: : ■■ ■ MUTUAL STORES DRAPERY CO.* DUNEDIN. And Receive the —■ Biggest and Best Parcel ever seen for the money . % —Containing— .1 pair Good Tweed. Trousers. 1 set Denim Coat and Trousers. 1 Strong Tweed Shirt. 1 Flannel "Undershirt. 2 paire Colonial Knitted Sox. ■ 1 Fashionable Tweed Cap or Hal). 1 Put© Silk Tie (wide or narrow). 3 Turkey Red Handkerchiefs. This Offer holds good for 14 days. X SEPT. Ist. . X MUTUAL STORES, LTD., DUNEDIN* T. ROBERTSON, WOOD CARVER. Work or the Trade. 231 St. Asapb Street, CHRISTCHURCH. JACKSON & CO., — For — WALLPAPERS, PAINTS, and CLASS. < . . LOWER CUBA STREET. (Opposite Band Rotunda). , , ■ . —» RUNANGA BUTCHERY. G. C. DALZELL. PRIMEST MEAT KEPT.
Have jZfrX* CUr r Yon Jrj& Influenza, Coughs, & Colds, and all Throat Affections. FLUENZOL is s&ilQ'JjP an improvement upon, the' P re "'^O^J^^^-' scription of an eminent Army Surgeon in India for the cure of Malaria. \vQ\ The orl " TW"^as ter a ■"■/£&■/ remedy forN Influenza by a / clergyman in England, who >>7' f CUrC m °l ° L his parishi- *««4 > ) Lα Gners hGn j # DMIVES AWAY IMFLUEN2SA ®-/*ty ,^*A^V k Fluenzol should be kept in every household. A %. use in emergency. Mr. E. A. Clements, ger United Hardware Co., Cuba St., says: j^^^rjT "lam only too pleased to speak as to the ex- >w"\£ j^r "fWj" cellent qualities of Fluehzol. After a f series of bouts of Influenza, I tound j& it to act with magical effect; and Jp j&' in -fviture I shall never be >P j&. ■Zγ - \— fmioVfl H^ without it in the house ft r x ineU \{« ««« «n case 4fc^^ emergency." JP
GET BOLDLY AND ENERGETICALLY BEHIND THESE CANDIDATES. They are Socialists, Labor Federationists, Anti-Gonscriptionists. M. J. Savage, Auckland Central. F. R. Cooke, Christchurch East. E. J. Howard, Christchurch South. J. W. Munro, Dunedin West. John Robertson, Otaki. P. H. Hickey, OhinemurL r. Gould, Timaru. P. C. Webb, Grey. F. R. Freeir.an, Wellington Central.
I REASONS WHY YOU SHOUIiD USE SHEEP-SHEARINQ MACHINERY. .. t ■ ' j | , rp-ppjr , I._AH expenses incurred ia installation of machines are generally recovered at end of first year, THE when more than 3,000 or 4,000 sheep are shorn. , ■ " ' 2.—lt is possible to shear many more sheep in the same time by machine than by the blade POPTTTjATL Hnivirr' shears awi ruiuma. iflVri ni B 3 ,_lt is a great deal easier to learn to shear with a machine than with hand shears. AND 4._ From I lb. to J lb. more wool is obtained on one average sheep by use of machine shears. , . ■ , VIRTUE s.—The growth of the wool is much more even after machine shearing. STJCGESS^ULi 6.—Machine shears are used by all pleading stations to-day, is no doubt they will be . universally used in the near future. ; -ttMS ? KJP'ftH'EAJJIISI€3I ' OS,C O e _.A retrospect of history proves that machinery has never yet been introduced into an industry i- 3»ri Eiffi.B ,er -Onß.*««slf «UI «Oial»r ' where in the end it has not prevailed. It is only a question of a very short time until hand-shearing becomes a lost art. No men are learning to shear with blades now, all the iUIACHIIME «* B_B C' 'ilk B WkM d*> additions to the ranks of shearers being machine men, and in the very near future it will ■»■#»*#«■■*■■ !§ O i Pi %£& be necessary to fit machines for the above reason alone. ■ ' % • . ' ' IN '' : -\ MACHINE.' DO NOT PUT OFF FITTING YOUR SHED. ATJSTRAI/ASlik Fop full partiCASH EL ST., CHRISTCHiJRQH. •
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MW19110901.2.19.1
Bibliographic details
Maoriland Worker, Volume 2, Issue 26, 1 September 1911, Page 7
Word Count
571Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Maoriland Worker, Volume 2, Issue 26, 1 September 1911, Page 7
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