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- " *""" " -Notice-/ . * ! TO MERCHANTS, TRACERS, CAPTAINS OF VESSELS, AND OTHERS, VISITING PORT NICHOLSON. / ■♦ DAILY ORDINARY. rpHE Undersigned, having given up all ■*• idea of proceeding to the ' Gold Diggings/ and being anxious to maintain for this settlement a good name fo*r accommodations amongst the neighbouring colonies, has made such arrangements- as will prove conducive to the comfort of all parties visiting or. resident in Wellington. - From and after Monday, May 3, an Ordinary will be kept at the Commercial Rooms, Ship Hotel, Manners-street. The Cloth will be laid at One o'Clock, p.m., and the Table supplied with every variety of Poultry, other Meats, an.d Vegetables. Visitors will be treated with all civility and attention, and care will be taken in arranging the bill of fare to meet the wants of all Customers. Jn thus providing a complete Family Hotel, the Proprietor may be allowe4 to refer with pride to the satisfaction expressed at all hands for his past exertions. For a period of three years an Ordinary was maintained at the Ship Hotel; and the Undersigned merely closed the afiair in order to allow time for th~e completion of such matters as would place the " Ship" first on the list, as a Family Hotel, in New Zealand ; and during the whole of that period the proprietor received from the many hundreds who visited, his Establishment handsome acknowledgements for the manner in which the Ordinary was conducted. The Undersigned can now safely assert, that gentlemen favouring him with visits shall find a Luncheon equal to any thing of the kind in this part of the world. He has laid in an immense stock of Poultry, and has made such arrangements as will place at his command an unlimited supply of the very finest Vegetables. Wines, Spirits, Ale, and Porter, of the best description that money can procure, may always be obtained at the " Ship." The successful and unsuccessful " Digger," anxious or otherwise, will find, if not glittering gold, Golden Sherry and Sparkling Champagne ; and the Merchant, desirous of effecting sales, may anticipate profits in a glass of exhilirating ''Burton." In fact, the wise, gay, or excitable, may all enjoy themselves at a "moderate rate, after One o'Clock, at the Ship Hotel. Families arriving from abroad, or from the country, will find excellent accommodations, — clean well- aired beds, properly ventilated rooms, and all" possible attention. Families will be provided for equally as cheaply as at a private lodging-house, with the advantage of the assistance of two trained servants. Observe! — Ordinary at the Commercial Rooms, Ship Hotel, Manners-street, on and after Monday, May 3, 1852. Good Beds, and the ver/ best Ale, Porter, Wines, and Spirits. You may go to the "Diggings," if you like; there is more satisfaction and pleasure in " digging" into a good Luncheon ! JOHN PIMBLE, Ship Hotel, Manners-street, Te Aro. N.B. — During' Sundays, though the Hotel will be opened between the hours prescribed by law, no luncheon will be provided for parties not resident in the house ; as the Proprietor opens his establishment for the benefit, more particularly of Mercantile Gentlemen who do not require such a place of resort as an Ordinary, on the Sabbath. Wellington, April 23, 1852.

HAY, STRAW, CORN, always on hand at the Livery Stables, Ship Hotel. JOHN PIMBLE, Manners-street, Te Aro. Wellington, April 24, 1852. -

Wool. rpHE Undersigned will advance and ■*■ effect Insurances upon Wool, _as usual, consigned to their correspondents in London. HERVEY, JOHNSTON, & CO. Lombard-street, March 17, 1852.

HORSE INFIRMARY, at M. Quin's, Dixon Street, Te Aro. Wellington, March 17, 1852.

rPHE -Undersigned is a Cash Buyer of *-*- WOOL of the-ensuing clip. W. WARING TAYLOR. Wellington, March 17, 1852.

On Sale,

AT THE OFFICE OF THIS PAPER, pOCKET BIBLES, with Scotch -■-" Version of the Psalms \n Metre, and Church Music. March 17, 1852.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZSCSG18520710.2.2.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian, Volume VIII, Issue 724, 10 July 1852, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
630

Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian, Volume VIII, Issue 724, 10 July 1852, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian, Volume VIII, Issue 724, 10 July 1852, Page 1

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