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TINUI SCHOOL.

| Tho following Committee was ' elected:—Messrs Mackay (chairman), I McHutchon, Groves, Nicholls, Perry, Mangnusson, and Knight. i GREYTOWN SCHOOL. The following committee were elected :—Trotter, Nation, Cotter, Udy, ' Gray, Wood, aud Muir. There was a largo attendance, and the cumulative system was taken full advantageof. • FEATHERSTON SCHOOL. The following Committee was elected : H. Bunny ... 126 A, Matthews , ... \§ A.'McDougall ... ... ... 42 J. G. Cox.,. ... ... •„, 36.'."■ Captain Donald ...... ... ... 33' C. Brunskill ... ,„ ...28 John Robertson .... 16 A northern exchange stales that considerable amusement was created at the lato races at Bulls by a greyhound, . who seemed intent on swelling,the scanty "fields," On three occasions he ' joined the pair of horses which were running, and in the match between ■ Creeping .Jenny and Spec he joined in • the race when about half a mile had been travelled, over-hauled the horses, and cut out the running to the finish, passing the post firot. "I'll back the dog j" " two to one on the dog;" " the dog wins it," we among the shouts that arose amid much merriment. The ' mile spin of the dog's was certainly no mean performance. The case of a town declaring by formal voto of its Municipal Council, that from a certain date.it would become moral, can only be found in theTJnited States. .Dodge City, in the State of Kansas, has hitherto had a ' '-i very evil reputation. But when tlw Alchißon and Santa M Railway Company made it a condition of construct. ing a branch line to Dodge ■■ City that, some guarantee of-public, order, and respect for property and life' should 1 be given,' the Town ! Council met ane} passed a solemn resolution that froia September 6 the city would become moral, and all houses that could not... show they were : ocoupied for respectable ' pursuitsßhouldbe.closed. y ' : "■'

THE BAD AND WORTHLES are never imitated or cminterfeitt This is especially true of a fami medicine, and it is positive proof tin the remedy imitated is "of {he highei value, As soon as it had been teste and proved by the -whole world tin Hop Bitters was llio purest, best an most valuable family medicine on eartl many imitations sprung up and bega to steal tho notices in which tho pre: and the peoplo of the country had e; pressed the merits of E 11, nnd.i overy way trying to induce sufferin • invalids to use their stuff instead, c: pecting to wake money on the credi and good name of H. B. Many othei started nostrums put up in. similti style to H. 8,, with variously devise names in which the word " Hop" c " Hops" were used in a way to indue peoplo to believe they were tho same t Hop Bitters. All such pretende remedies or cures, no matter what thoi style or name is, and especially thos with the word "Hop" or "Hops" i their name or in any way connecte with them or their name, are imitation or counterfeits. Beware of thou Touch none of them. Use nothing k genuino American Hop Bitters, wit a bunch or cluster of Green Hops o tho whito label, and Dr Soulc's nam blown in tho glass. Trust nothing else Druggists and Chemists are warnei agairist dealing in imitations or conntei feits. A survey of tho coal lands of th Canadian North-West lias just bcei made under the directions of the Do minion Geological Survey. Approxi mate estimates of the quantity of coa underlying a square mile of land ii the Bow and Belly rivers district givi in one case 4,900,000 tons, in two casei 5,000,000, and in another 9,000,001 tons; Tho coal is in general exposei on the surface, and these is conse quently little labor necessary to tin the working of the mines. Though n< Government surveys havo been madi in the surrounding districts, coal-bear ing rocks are known to extond to tin north and west of tho parts from whicl coal is now being taken.. The Superintendent of the C'olonisa tion Companies of North-Westen Canada has just returned from ar of the lands belonging to these conv panies, and reports that eleven of these companies are doing good work. One hundred settlers had been placed on each reserve, and it was calculated thai there would bo, before winter set in, as mnny as 10,000 persons on the whole of the lands, The money spent by each company ranged from 50 to 200,000 dols. Stores have been opened at which settlers may obtain goods at cost price; sawmills and blacksmiths' shops have been erected, and the crops of tho past season having turned out remarkably well, tho settlers arc reported to be generally satisfied with their prospects. The New York Times' special says the anti-Irish feeling has been increased by' the recent dynamite outrages. It is difficult for Irish laborers in Glasgow and London to obtain, work, simply because they are Irishmen. In tho United States there are now 43,000,000 sheep. "Whileit.took 30 years to double the number of sheep the return of wool has been more than quadrupled, being now 235,000,0001bs .in weight. The merino is now being crossed with cotswold sheep, a'kind of breeding which has in view mutton not wool. The Taieri papers says that, in at least some portions of the Taieri, the small birds have paused considerable loss'to the fanners, they having been compelled in some instances to sow their turnip crops twice. It points out that in order to subdue the nuisance to any appreciable extent the farmers must unite in one common plan of action, Dr O'Farrell, of Windsor, New South Wales, has been committed for trial.on n charge of manslaughter in causing the death of a woman named Fitzgerald, whom he attended in childbirth, The evidence at the inquest conflicting, Some of tho witnesses affirmed the doctor was drunk at the time he was attending the deceased. "Vanity Fair "of tho 17th November thus alludes to the "Great Thunderer" of the Press:-"The proprietors of tho Times must havo had some gruesome countenances several days this week, when they saw what a falling off thero has been of those advertisements which make the Times a paying paper. Thus on Tuesday last there were only thirty-six columns of advertisements, while on.- tho corres- . ponding day of 1881, and 1882 there were, forty-eight and) fifty-ono columns respectively. This is terrible," ' ■'How do you do, Mr Lincoln ?" said ■ someone to the President, " Well," said .. .he in, & characteristic way,' 1 ' that reminds me o/s story. As tho laborer said lo tho bricklayers, after •falling through the roof and iafters of au unfinished' house, 'I have E[ono through a great deal sinco I saw you last,'" Malamal Fevers-Malarial fevers, constipation, torpidity of tho liver and kidneys, • general'debility, nervousness and neuralgic ailments yield 'readily to this great disease conquoror, Hop Bitters, It repairs the ravages of disease by converting tho food into rich blood, and it. gives new life and vigor to tho aged and infirm. See, Holloicai/s Pills,— All our Faculties.— Almost all disorders of tho human body are i>.Btinctly to -bo traced to some impurity of ncbo blood. Tho purification of that fluid is first step towards health. Holloway's Pills recommend, themselves to the attention of all such sufferers, They search out and 'remove all impurities from tho vital fluid; In indigestion, confirmed dyspepsia, and chronic constipation the most beneficial effeots have been, and always must be, obtained from the wholesome power exerted ■ by those purifiyrig Pills over tho digestion. Persons whose lives have been restored to . ease, strength, and perfeot health by Holloway's Pills, after fruitless trial of the whole pharmacopeia of physic, attest this fact. This is beyond dispute, •

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18840129.2.12

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 6, Issue 1595, 29 January 1884, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,270

TINUI SCHOOL. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 6, Issue 1595, 29 January 1884, Page 2

TINUI SCHOOL. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 6, Issue 1595, 29 January 1884, Page 2

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