SHIP CHANDLERY A J) GENERAL STORE, THE POST, NELSON. !"-. /-B/FBiLN'ZBN 1 ' V:. Is now offering his well-assorted- Stock >of ; Sliipcliaiidlery. Grocenes, ! Drapery, Earthenware, ; Bruskware, &c, &c, at the lowest remunerative prices. ; GHOCSRIES. |A well-aaEocted stock of the very best brands ; and at .the lowest prices. iPaoDUGE Taken in Exchange ok i fob Cash. - jSbips Provisioned and Bonded Stores supplied i at the shortest notice. ; '.'i BRAPEE^. JUST RECEIVED— IPek Salisbury, Edinburgh Oa&tle, and '• Ben Venue, ma Auckland, I A Splendid Assortment of j WINTER CLOTHING • ; ■ : ..Comprising— ! Black Cloth Suits, iCoats, Trowsers, and ! Vests . ■ 1 Best West of England Tweed Suits j ' Tweed Trowsers ; ■ Coatijmd Vesta — Single and Doable | Breasted " | Best : Pilott. Cloth and Beaver.:. Overcoats, ! -. and Monkey Jackets . . I Blue Cloth !Suita— Coat, Trowsera, and 1 Vest ■■■-<■'• < White and Colored Moleskin Trowsers ! Paget Coatß and Double-breasted Veata J j 3 bales Blankets — white, blue and grey, i from 9 to' l2 quarters - : / S bales Mexican Calicoes -, Flannels—a well-assorted stock i Seige, blue and white, single and double ! width— -best quality '• Winceys , ; . . ; , i French Merinqes . ; Also, J About 50 dozen Men's and Boy's Hats— | v latest fashions ■ ", JUST OPENED — : An Assortment of Colonial-made Clothing i Suits — coat trowsers, and vest | 1 case Trowsera— specially adapted for the < working man ; I case Trowsersand VeslLs, frpm 12/6 Shirts, Collars, Ties, Scarfs, &c. ' Blue Serge Coats, Trowsers, and Vests Leather and Elastic Belts Men's Hosiery, Haberdashery, &c, &c. : Oilskins, Souwesters, Horse. Cloths, and ; hick Cloths made to order and iu i siock Tents and Canvasa Civera.oN Hina, made to Order, and in.stuck Slnicing and other Hoses made to Order Heaviest and btst Canvaaa lor Diggers Hoses Picks Long and Short-handled Shovels Locks, Catches, and Bolts BOOTS AND SHOES. ENGLISH AND : COLONIAL, i Ladies' and Childrens' Boots an J Shoea Watertight, Bluchers, Elaatic Sides, Bal- ; moials, Wellingtons, Gum Boots (lonr and short), and Ke&l Sea Boots SHIP CHANDLERY. European Rope, from t to 7 inch Coir and Bolt Rope>- do do Flax and Manilla Rope, all sizes Blocks— Common and Patent, Single and Double, from 2 to 14 inch Canvas (No. 1 to 7), Linen and Cotton Ducka Muntz Metal (genuine), Composition Nails, Sheathing Felt Copper Nails and Tacks, Marling Spikes. Mallets, Caulking Iron, &c. ■ Anchors, Chains, and Shackles—all sizes Galvanised Ships' spikes, Bolts, and Copper Rods — all sizes Varnish, Stockholm Tar, Coal Tar, Spirits o£ Tar, Pitch,_O>akuoa; Besin, &e. White Lead, Red Lead^ Black. Green, and other Colors— Paint;, ; Whitewash; and Tar Brushes Paint Scrubbers, Drawn Baas Brooms, Coir Scrnbbers, &c— all sizes Oils— Boiled, Raw, Castor, Colza, Kerosene. and Fish Oils Sails made to order, of the Best Material and on the Shortest Notice Oars and Roltocks j Patent Lever Clocks, suitable for ships : Compasses, Marine, Field, and Opera Glasses . Aneroids, Barometers, Charts, Log Books Sextants, Parallels, Rulers, &c, &c, &c. International Code of Signals and Book complete with Quarterly Supplements supplied, £S 6s Ensigns,' Union Jacks, Fxjmption and B'ue Peters in stock : House and other Flags made to order Bunsing— Red White, Blue, Yellow, and I Green j Ships Fitted Out with Evbst Eei ' '■ quisiTE at Lowest Pricks. On Sale by the undersigned — S. E. Jeans & Co.'s Impboved Patent Reflector GAS COOKING STOVES. The3e Stoves will Roast, Bake, Boil, Toast, and Broil, as shown, equal to the open fire, or kitchen range, and are most convenient and economical, both in first coat and use, and, having no gas inside the oven, meet with general approbation. These 8 toves have been put t > every possible test, and have given th9 greatest satisfaction. The oven above the roaster is constructed in auch a manner that every particle ol heat is used. The oren is made with a case or jacket, and the heat from the flame over the roaster passes round the oven with. a regular diffused heat, and the waste heat, after passing round the oven is brought in contact with the top hot plate, or under the saucepans on top so that all the heat from the gas is wed. The ridges on the hot plate are radiating from each burner on the lop, which cau«ea the Quins to apreid over the. whole of tin bottoms of saucepins o r kettles and the burners are so construe el th«t no lat < r water can drop into thttn — so obj ctionabltin most tas stoves. All burners in ibis Stove are aimojpturis. B. Fbajszen*, THE POLT, S^ELjON. 11
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Bibliographic details
Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 69, 21 March 1877, Page 4
Word Count
734Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 69, 21 March 1877, Page 4
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