PROSPECTUS. NEW LAND ASSOCIATION. 4 LTIIOUGII ‘‘ The Auckland Land Asso- | ciation” has not yel been a year establish-! Ed, its advantages have been so fully apprcci-1 ated by its members and by the classes for , whose benefit it was more especially inten- i ded, that several of its members have consi- I dered it desirable that a new Association, of the same nature, but of enlarged objects, should be set on foot as speedily as possible. They are of opinion that there arc many among the labouring and trading classes of the community, and agriculturists now leasing land, who would, if their means would allow of it, become the purchasers, and bona fide and beneficial occupiers of laud lately brought into market at the reduced price, under the new Land Regulations. Rut whilst thelabonringclassesarestruggling to accumulate means, by slow degrees, from their earnings, and traders and men of small capital find it necessary to have their limited capita! employed in (heir several businesses, men of wealth in the colony, and others who are arriving from the adjoining colonies, arc buying up, and will continue to buy up, the land all around ns (mostly for the purposes of speculation) until not an acre is left to those who have held ou by the colony, and struggled with all its vicissitudes. His Excellency the Governor, in reply to a letter which the Committee of the Auckland Land Association addressed to him, in May last, slated that “ he considered it his duly to issue the proclamation of the ith March last, containing the New Regulations | for the sale of land, partly with a view to ' enabling the frugal and industrious easily to acquire small freehold properties, cilherdi- j reclly or indirectly, through Associations ' such as the Auckland Land Association,” j and that “in order to render them entirely ! effectual and successful, no effort would he wanting, on his part, to procure as extensive tracts of land as possible in the vicinity of Auckland, so that an ample choice may be afforded to intending purchasers; and tba the Land Regulations will be so administered as to afford every proper facility to those whose limited means only permit them to purchase small farms.” Encouraged by this, it has been thought that bis Excellency would carry out this kindly interest in the welfare of the less wealthy portion of the community, by layingaside a block or blocks of land in such district or districts as the members of the Association, now projected to be formed, might suggest, and of such size as it might appear they would require—to be divided in such portions as might be agreed upon, and to be paid Coral such periods as each member of the Association should become entitled to its advantages, according to some such plan as that of the now existing Association. Parlies inclined to join in the preliminary slops of such an Association, are invited to send in their names to Mr. T. Boylan, Queen street; Mr. John Williamson, Shortland street; or Mr. A. W. Hansard, Princes’ street. Auckland, July 20, 180.0. PROSPECTUS OF THE ONEIIUNGA LAND SOCIETY. Shares .... <£2o Monthly Payments . os. r jTHE Pensioners and the residents of Onc--1 buuga have recently bad two facts forced upon their notice, which have caused to them no little alarm. One is, the present difficulty of obtaining firewood at a moderate price, and the probability of (bis difficulty gradually increasing by the best land getting into private bands —the oilier is, that the agricultural land in their neighbourhood is being rapidly bought up by strangers with whom they have not the pecuniary means to compete. A Society therefore lias been formed with the view of removing both these difficulties, by which it is proposed to pm chase a portion of bush land upon the Manakau, to be worked by the Society for the purpose of supplying firewood to the members exclusively and by a monthly subscription, to provide each member with sufficient funds to enable him to purchase a piece of land for agricultural purposes.
So soon as a moderate number of Shares are subscribed for, a meeting of the subscribers will be held for (he purpose of making the proper rules and regulations for the management of the society of which due notice will be given. Applications for shares to be made to Mr. Lusk. HOLLOWAY’S PILLS. SOLD BY MU. WELLESLEY HUGHES, SIIORTLAND-STUEET, AUCKLAND. A Lady cured of Asthma after Twenty Years Suffering, by the use of Holloway's Pills. r IP II E Wholesale Agent for the sale ol ® Holloway’s Bills in New South Wales, alludes, in a letter to Professor Holloway, to several extraordinary cures of Asthma, effected in that Colony, by the use of these invaluable Pills; and to one case in particular—that of a lady residing near a hill named the Bazorback, who, after having for twenty years been abided with great difficulty of breathing, and unable, in consequence, to bear the slightest exertion, at last used this remedy, and is now, to use her own expression, able to run to the lop of that high hill. Extraordinary cure of Rheumatic Fever by Holloway's Pills , in Van Diemen's Land. Margaret M‘Connigan, nineteen years of age, residing at New Town, had been suffering from a violent rheumatic fever for upwards of two months, which had entirely deprived her of the use of her limbs. During this period she was under the care of three of the most eminent medical men in Hobart Town, and by them her case was considered hopeless. A friend prevailed upon her parents to try Holloway’s celebrated Pills, which they consented to do, and in an incredibly short space of time a perfect cure was effected. The particulars of this case arc copied from the ‘Hobart Town Courier/
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New Zealander, Volume 9, Issue 769, 27 August 1853, Page 4
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966Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 New Zealander, Volume 9, Issue 769, 27 August 1853, Page 4
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