Histoeical ! Vide " Jurors Reports and Awards, New Zealand Exhibition." Jurors : J. A. Ewen, J. 14 utter worth, T. C. Skinner. "So far as the Colony is concerned, the dying of materials is almost entirely confined to the re-dying of Articles of Dress and Upholstery, a most useful art-, for there aro many kinds of material that lose their colour before the texture is half worn. G. Hibsch, of Dunedin (Dttnedin Dye Wobks, George street, opposite Royal George Hotel) exhibits a case of specimens of Dyed Wools, Silks, and Feathers, mid dyed Sheepskins. The colors on the whole are very fair, and reflect considerable credit on the Exhibitor, to whom the Jurors recommended anHonorary Certificate should be awarded." Honorary Certificte, 629: Gustay Hirsch, Dunedin, ior specimens of Dyiag in Silk Feathers, &c. England.
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New Zealand Tablet, Volume IV, Issue 174, 28 July 1876, Page 13
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132Untitled New Zealand Tablet, Volume IV, Issue 174, 28 July 1876, Page 13
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