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FLOUR MILL.

(To ike. Editor of the Patea Mail;) Sir, — On account of the lateness of Hie hour, and the great amount of business your reporter had to attend to at the' meeting on Saturday, I am afraid that justice could hardly be done to the Flow

Mill soli em.©,-rls-.it -p0t...a % disgrace tj the settlers living in tbe-Hawcra District, who are this year rated for over 20,000.(twenty thousand) acres of the finest agricultural land in New Zealand, to be sending about £4jooo. (four thousand pounds) of" their money to Otago and Canterbury this year for flour alone., Now, is not "this a double loss to the district, first —t]ie sending •money out of district, second—the cutting up of our roads by bringing in their flour. What was proposed at the late meeting was to call a public meeting of the Hawcra settlers, to see if they would be willing to cultivate five per cent, of the land held by them. If they would agree to do so, a private person is prepared to start at once and build a Flour Mill for them. Al! the settlers need do is to guarantee that they would cultivate tills small proportion of their land. Wo ought to barm grown this year in Hawera District over 30,000 (thirty thous md) bushels of grain, which at 5s per bushel would give about £7,500. This sum, together with the £4,000 sent to the other island, makes this district £11,500 (eleven thousand five hundred pounds) poorer than it ought to be.—l am, &c, G. INKSTEE. Normanby, October 20, 1877.

wruiana Strangers and country settlers coming to; Carlyle, arc very often at a loss to know Jo. fell is the host and cheapest General } Drapery and Clothing Establishment in the 4 district- E. A. Adams’ Cardigan House, offers special advantages that can be met with nowhere else in the district. He keeps the largest and best assorted stock of every description of drapery goods, imported direct —and from the best colonial houses ; which, being bought on the most advantageous terms, and having thorough knowledge of the business, enables him to offer goods of sterling quality at pi ices that cannot he improved on by any other house in Now i?ealan 1. Every article is marked in plain fignre", from which there is no deviation ; so tha - ’ ' inexperienced people are as well server’ as the best judges, the terms being net cash, without rebate or abatement of any kind. Koto the address—E. A. Adams ; Cardigan .House, nearly opposite Town llal 1, Carlyle.— auvt . Holloway's Pills and Ointment. — During piercing winds and excessive variations of temperature everyone is more or less liable to internal and external disease. Throat, chest, liver, bowels, kidneys, and skin, all suffer in some degree, but maybe relieved by rubbing in this Ointment, aided by proper doses of the Tills, for administering winch full directions accompany each box ; in truth, anyone who thoroughly masters Holloway’s “ instructions,” will in remedying disease, exchange the labor of an hour for the profit of a lifetime. All bronchial, pulmonaiy, and throat disorders require that the Ointment should bo thoroughly well rubbed upon the skin twice a-day with ■considerable briskness, great persistence and regidarity.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PATM18771031.2.11.3

Bibliographic details

Patea Mail, Volume III, Issue 266, 31 October 1877, Page 2

Word Count
533

FLOUR MILL. Patea Mail, Volume III, Issue 266, 31 October 1877, Page 2

FLOUR MILL. Patea Mail, Volume III, Issue 266, 31 October 1877, Page 2

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