ARRIV.NS OF THE FOLLOWING VARIETIES, HENDERSON'S IMPROVED EAR»-Y PURITAN. ROBIN ADAIR. EARLY RECENT. SHARP'S VICTOF?. SUTTON'S ABUNDANCE. FARLY ROSE. 9 AUTY OF HEBRON. OALMENY BEAUTY. GAMEKEEPER. SUTTON'S DISCOVERY. ASHLEAF. These Potatoes are Hand Picked, and special y «wa tor 01 r ± y Mr McGOWAN, WTLLOWI3RIDGE, SOUTH CAMERBUKY THE CLAD EYE-and it is Mother'.-. No vender she is plowed. She is >lighted with the BARGAINS purchased! from Hie BARGAIN SALE will he continued tJfij. week. jnanv lines offering are:— Dress Tweeds at LESS than Coat if lice. Costumes at LESS than half usual price. Blouses ?s lid. Co oured Corded Velveteens, 27in wide, at Is per yard, maxvellous .val ■ne. Striped Flanhelette at 4s 6d per dozen yaidft. tjww r»flnnf!n fl « will ho made in, the Millinery Department. .WE Further reductions will he made in. ABE CLEARING ALL STOCKS. mm 61 QUEEN STREET, MASTERTQN, N*xt Exchange Bnaldwas. Alio, 60 QUAY WELLINQ3DQJ PHON «31.
WORDS OF WISDOM 10 MY PEOPLE— When, a demand arises for an article, and if the supply should not be quite equal to the demand, it creates a scarcity, consequently higher E rices. English ideas and customs ave baen introduced into the Orient, and are spreading rapidly; this, along with the world's increasing; population, has caused an extra demand for all kinds of food, etc., and as the produc-. ing area has not increased correspondingly, it at once reflects on the producing countries, and raises prices. Great Britain is the only free trade country of any importance in the world. In Great Britain, only a few weeks ago, a Commission was appointed to inquire into the reasons ihy the cost of living had increased. *c has been officially stated, while the east of living liad increased 50 per cent, during the last 25 years, wages had only inoeased 15 per cent, for the fiaime pei-iod, so it is obvious taxlU.JS iiutr liiuuu urn nut *v-«-~ io£ Eving, nor increase the workers wages, amd the only remedy for Great Britain is Protection. The Orient has, and is erecting, huge industries equipped with modern machinery, worked, and to be worked witli Asiatic labour. The question suggests itself to my people— how can any English-tweaking country cope with this meuace unless amply protected to save our industries and •wage earners from being brought down to the Asiatic 'level. The Single Tax theory if. absolutely one tax on the land and free trade. It is apparent it would not lesesn the cost of produotioa, but reduce wages to cope with Asinine Labour, agumented with modern .machinery. There is atill hope, as f am credibly informed the tiiiccess' <!' bin? Single Tax policy wild depend upr-vs f.:r» world adopting it. This ought to ,n>;:r? safety for a time. During -my varied expedience T found that (' .•V ■•'•o : pea were h'armfiil to those \r.v~i :;s!i!':::iiU\y ailments, but they have the option of bceoming ,ivell and renuiiiuiiH* here if tliey will follow my advice. I straingly advise ■my people, an 3 ishe imaginary .sufferers, to feast upoa the well known recipes, prosperity, and longevity, etc., viz-> — i/imple protectio-u o» things we can produce, and good w;ages—"CHAMPION MUSCLE-RA.TSISR FLOUR" and "STANDARD" OATMEAL mid ROMPED OATS. I Remain. * ■", ' *'' ' Alwors al yaur rwy>«, OBAMPIGN. p.g._ Follow O-ui-acU's example, and reject Single Tax *nd Free Trade. UP-TO-DATE TAXI-CAR FOR HIRE "AN'iSD KNOWN— That Mr ' J. FERGUSON (late of Wellington) has on hire an up-to-date TAXI-OAR. MB FERGUSON is better known mi Sargood, Son and Ewan's lat*' Qhftffeur. PHONE NO. 423. No. 17, Miriam Street
Yds, Madam, an'd if you come to bur Great MAKE .ROOM SALE jon will 'realise tMat tlio Ban-gains ara groat. Tho savings you can pile up will represent a. tidy isum. THE BARGAINS AWAIT YOU AT Substantial reductions prevail on standard lines as well as on <?.vorj otkw article in l our etstablfelimeiit. Then 'hesitato not, ibnt icoma rigki •away.. THE STORE FOR VALUE. MASTERTON-
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAG19120726.2.15.1
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10678, 26 July 1912, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
649Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10678, 26 July 1912, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Wairarapa Age. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.