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SECOND EDITION.

We remind our readora of Messrs Lowes and lorns' Sale to-morrow at tiro o'clock. New and second hand ohaita, furniture of ever; description,' Austrian chairs, tapeitry carpets, hearth rugs, bacon, hooka, aundrios eto. etc,, will be submitted. It will interest tho friends of Mr J. Payton to hear that moro encouraging news has been received regarding hii health, in letters which arrived froaL England to-day, dated 26th May. N/r Payton spoke of Sailing for the Colony in Junc, and in any case not later than July. . A protest is being'made against the provision of a second publio fountain in Masterton ao close to the one already provided adjacent to the firohell in Queen street, and on the. 23rd Jnne, Mr G. S. \V. Dalrymple, the givsr of the latter, wrote tolnßpectorThomsonpointin» out that all requirements were, he considered, now met, and that there was no need to break up the police garden to pn t & further fonntain and trough within a chain of that already existing. Mr Dulrymple, in concluding his letter, asked that the Defence Department wMi« draw the grant of a Bite, as he infers that subscribers will be glad tosavelheir money now that he has erected the necessary fountain at his own expense and piven it to the town. Yesterday, having received no reply to his letter, Mr Dalrymple sent tbe following tele-

gram to the Minister of Defence, Wellington Please instruct Inspector Thomson to atop pump well being put in Police gardens. There is one within a chain. He will tell you it is not wanted, so will Hogg, our member." Messrs Lowes and lorns add to Air Stock Sale fur Wednesday, July 13th,100 forward wethers.

At tho Anti-Gambling Conference at Auckland recently one speaker assorted "there wore sixtv men in Auckland

getting a living by betting. Of those thirty-two wcro members of Tatturaall'a, and twetity-elght wore blacklegs who failed to pay their losses." A farmer leudont of Timaru (sayathe Herald) writes from Freemantle, Wea-

torn Australia Wages are very low and eatables are dear. A laborer guts 6s a day, carpenters 8s to 10f, masons, bricklayers and plasterers lis, station hands the same as in New Zealand. £2 a week in New Zealand is better than £3 here. If you hear anyone talking of ooming to Western Australia tell thorn the oountry is over-rushed. Anyonewho does come should have money enough to build a house, or else be prepared to live in a tent. Rent Is ruination,

The Wellington correspondent of the T.yltolton Times says The Govern-

ment has in contemplation important changes in the law regarding oharitablo nit 1 . It fully recognises the necessity of dealing with this subject on a more com. prehensivn basis than the present ISfii but it will not be able to bring down res proposals this session. . A contributor to a London oonteropon rary says Very little notice Beems to have been attracted to the extaordinary development In tho Colonial dairy-pro-duce trade which has taken place in the season now closing, possibly becauso few people have thought it worth while to make a speciality of Australian and New Zealand gutter, which haasimply merged into the general supply, and been sold and consumed as French, Danish or Dorset, or whatever the fancy of tho retailor suggested. Under any name, however, the fact remains that nearly 4000 tons of Antipodean butter will have passed into consumption here by the time the season closes, which is about ten times as much as wo received three years ago, while the Improvement in the average quality marka an advance of equal importance. Mr Reynolds, of Auckland, was good enough to send mo some samples of his New Zealand butter and honey the other day, of both of which 1 had nothin? but what is complimentary to say, Mr Roynolds, who is a colonist of twenty live years standing, is tho owner of the first, if no' f/io first, of New'fta* land butter factories, which was bufinn 188 G. Nowadays his holding haa in* creased to ten factories, Bis buttor took tho gold medal at tho Melbourno Gen* tennial Exhibition in 1888, and the pro-

duction is now largo enough to enable him to do a pretty considerable iinglish export trade entirely in his own produce, Ho has diaorootly decided not to leave it to bo handled on this Bide by agents with possibly other interests to nerve,, but has come over and opened In London a house of his own at 30, Borough, whonco New Zealand butter, apples and honey are beginning to find their way all over .the kingdom.

How ia it 1 ABk anyone in the crowd.' Aak your next door neighbour. Ask tho nan who collects ticket** on the railway, Ask the peoplo who dwell in Ekctahuna, MauricoVille, Tenui, Carterton, Greytown, or anywheto else, Communicato with tho people living in any port of the country. Ask them all Why they shop at L. J. HOOPER Jt COMPANY'S, and they will tell you "bccausoit suits them.' And why docs it suit them? Bccauso they got more and better in eichango for their money at the Bon March!; than anywhere else, and bccauso the conveniences of the place are such as no other establishment can afford. Tlicso arc the bare outlines of the reasoning that brings the peoplo in shoals to this wonMul place of business. Visit tho various moots in which tho lordly crcaturo man Mlb all he wants, and woman—lovely womanloves to linger and look at tho fashion section, Hero aro the Boulevards of Paris and tho shops of Regent and Oxford streets, London, rolled into one. Hero under your cyo aro tho fashions arranged, classified, and ready for immedlato use and wear, Turn into tho grocery aud provision sections, These are of interest to ovory man jack in tho community, To describe tho advantages of buying from Hoopor would fill a book, Whether you want blankets or bonnets, tea or sugar, whether you're a chilly mortal or a hot member, a protectionist; a freetrader, a socialist, a cilithumplan, a positivist, a nono such, ora rabbit catcher, you will find no better outlet for the money you havn to spend than at Hooper and Company's Bon Maroho, Master* ton,—Advt

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18920708.2.14

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XIII, Issue 4158, 8 July 1892, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,040

SECOND EDITION. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XIII, Issue 4158, 8 July 1892, Page 2

SECOND EDITION. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XIII, Issue 4158, 8 July 1892, Page 2

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