Odds and Ends.
Rough weather. Court sits to-morrow. Mining still booming. Band of Hope next Monday. A church at Wyadham, New South Wale 3, was partly-blown over, and several houses were partly unroofed in a gale recently. . @ '. One thousand one • and twentytwo persons left the colony for Western Australian last month. Alluvial gold of no great richness has b§en struck in the sewerage works, Albert Road, South Melbourne. Recently, Miss Boyd, a Christchurch lady, crossed the Rimutaka, on a bicycle. Miss Mitchell, of Gore, another lady cyclist, made the journey some months ago. The stinkwort, a weed wlpich has proved a great pest in South Australia, has made its appearance in the Albury district, and an agitation to eradicate it has been started. A labourer named James S. Smith jumped off the wharf at Wellington on Tuesday, and gallantly rescued a girl named Bardsley who had, while in a lit, fallen into the water.
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Te Aroha News, Volume XII, Issue 1773, 25 September 1895, Page 2
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154Odds and Ends. Te Aroha News, Volume XII, Issue 1773, 25 September 1895, Page 2
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