Final Rugby Meeting
There being no quorum at thefl torua Rugby Sub-Union meetingH ed for last evening, it was agree® those present that the final of the season should be called^B Monday, November 6. -H Lucky Escape |H A fortunate escape from seiio^B jury was the lot of a passenger^B motor-car which was involved i^H lision with another car at Te last week-end. The passengerj^B thrown through the windscreefl^j^H car, but beyond cuts and braao^H received no serious injuries. Examination Suceesses From the results So far the following pupils and ex-pup^H the Rotorua High School kave'^B successful in the lannual terms inations of the Auckland Univ^B College: C. W. Davis, applied matics, 1; pure mathematics 1, ^H istry 1; T. A. Carnachan, Fre^9 A. W. Holland, pure matliemai^B ehemistry 1; F. T. Raethel, ehei^H 1; M. C. Burgess, Latin 1, 'Eagl®| S. J. Forster, English 1; J. S. andex*, jurisprudence, Roman property. South Island Wool Preferred In an interview in Wellington^® A. Kummerle, of the Emil spinning mills of Brandenburg,^® Berlin, a firm which manufa^B knitting* yarns and employs 1900 people, stated that over bales of wool a year were usei^B a big percentage of this came^B New Zealand, mostly from the^^H Island. The North Island woo^H not found to be as good. it is the climate or the breed^B don't know," he said. "If get it, we prefer the South wool." Cutlery in Pig Buckets The disappearance of a nuni^B articles from the Napier Hospit^B prompted the house committee^^B Hawke's Bay Hospital Board t^B form the matron that the incre^B the number of missing ariiu^H viewed with alarm, the Daily^B graph reports. It was said last meeting of the Hospital that rnany articles were thrown^B in the pig huckets. No fewe^B twenty articles of cutlery, retui9® the pigman, were produced. tron has been infprmed that supervision is necessary. Maori Fishing Nets "The size of the flax fislh1^^® of the Maoris is likely to people who loolced upon thei^™ care-free and easy-going race^H. Dr. J. S. Yeates, speaking to meeting of the Palmerston Citizens' Lunch Club on New flax. He said that in 1880 had been recorded as having^B three-quarters of a mile l°n9H that it had required two going canoes to carry it. Thes^™ of the net and of the rop^^B have been really first-class, tinued. In that respect it esting to see that the ropes 1'^^H made from the leaves of thc^^H tree. The cabbage tree first cousin to flax. Both to the lily family, and both tinctly New Zealand plantss^^H
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 671, 25 October 1933, Page 4
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423Final Rugby Meeting Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 671, 25 October 1933, Page 4
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