SPORTS! SPORTS!! SPORTS!!! rpHE Armed Constabulary Athletic Sports will be held at Ormond on Boxing Day. SUBSCRIPTIONS INVITED. LIST OPEN AT THE “STANDARD” OFFICE. NOTICE. AFTER the 31st December, 1873, there will be no traffic through our Paddocks at Opou. HARRIS A FERGUSON. PANUITANGA. A MURI ote 31 o Tihema 1873, ka whaka mutua te liaere ate tangata i roto ia maua Taiapa i Opou. Na HARETE, Raua ko PATIHANA. JUST RECEIVED, EX lIYDASPES, A Splendid Assortment of TRON Bedsteads, Lamps, Chimnies, and Shades, Cane and Woodseat Chairs, Bread Pans, Butter Jars. A large assortment of Glassware, China, and Crockery, Looking Glasses, Carpets, Hearth Rugs, Floor Cloth, Mats, Matting, &c. A epiended assortment of Table Cloths, White Lace Curtains, Curtain Trimming, &c., Flax Mattresses, all sizes, on hand, Palliases, Pillows, and Bolsters, Tables, Ch iffonieres, Washstands, Chests of Drawers, &c., &c., Made to Order on the Premises at the GISBORNE FURNITURE WAREHOUSE LARGE & TOWNLEY, Cabinet Makers. AT AN EARLY DATE, Of which due notice will be given, but which will not be later than the Ist January, 1874. — isro. i OF THE Poverty Bay Herald: A 81-WEEKLY JOURNAL, Similar in size and appearance to the Hawke's Bay Herald at the present date, WILL BE PUBLISHED AT CISBORNB, POVERTY BAY, IN TUB Herald General Printing Establishment, Now in the course of Erection. THE projectors of the above journal feel that, in view of the large increase in wealth and population which have marked the history of the Poverty Bay district during late years, as also of the excellent prospects which exist of its progress in the immediate future being greatly accelerated, as its extraordinary agricultural and mineral resources become more fully developed, they are committing no Act of presumption or of indiscretion, in announcing the intended issue of a second local newspaper, and in soliciting public support to the undertaking. The projectors of the Herald have had considerable journalistic experience, which will be brought to bear on the management of the new newspaper, and they believe it will be further to their advantage that such experience has been mainly acquired in a neighboring district that has always been closely connected with Poverty Bay by the ties of commerce and friendship. Complete arrangements will be made for the supply of commercial and other intelligence up to the latest dates. In its leading columns the Herald, while aiming at assisting in the formation of, and in giving expression to, a sound and healthy public opinion on colonial and general questions, will spire no effort to make as widely known as possible the unequalled advantages which the district offers as a field for colonization, as also to urge effectually on the fair consideration of the Government the just but hitherto unrecognized claims of many of its settlers, together with the claims of the district itself to the use and enjoyment of its own revenues. Carlile Cou Gisborne, November 18,1873.
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Poverty Bay Standard, Volume II, Issue 109, 29 November 1873, Page 2 (Supplement)
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485Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Poverty Bay Standard, Volume II, Issue 109, 29 November 1873, Page 2 (Supplement)
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