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G Hi W JS K A L. The ‘Southland News’says;—lt is stated that for the present season's oato from Is 4d to Is 5J is being: offered and growers are asking Is 6i. Owing to the wet weather experienced while the crops were in atook, chaff should be in plentiful supply this year, and be o' tiinabla at reasonable values, Messes Morrow, Bassett, and Co., have just landed another shipment of the famous LKny Carf. * Intending purchasers shoal I send in their orders at once to avoid disappointment. Price ill 10s. A Bill has been read a second time in the House of Commons, by 266 to 133, providing that a fund of half a million shall be levied and publicans compensated for the noa-renewal of licenses where no misconduct has been proved, OKO the Great Cough Tremendous success has the larged. sale of any cough Medicine in Dansdin f w largest King Edward has taken the Duke of Connaught to task for his connection with Wh tiker Wright-3 London and* Globe Financial Corporate jo swindle* The King is said to have lec-ured his brother severely for his connection with Wright, and to have declared that henceforth members of the Royal Family must avoid money>*gett'ing chemes of a dubious character. For comfort and easy riding invest ia a “Daisy” Road Cart. Price £ll 10s, Morrow, Bassett, and Co. A nelson publican’s license was endorced and he was fined £1 fur supplying a man with liquor on a Sunday. Defendant admitted the charge and said he thought the man lived three miles away \ but measure* ment proved the distance to be two miles and a-quarter.

MOKO the Great (Jough Core, A Dunedin lady cured of chronic bronchitis after years of suffering, Is 6d everywhere. Albert Adams, a wealthy lottery organiser, nicknamed “ The Policy of New York,” has been sentenced in New York to one year's imprisonment for keeping a betting establishment. ■'l i eSSf! <be * Southern Standard’ says:— • Many district farmers inform us that the results ot their oat threshing are disappointing. Well>grown fi. Ids of oat*, apparently quite as heavy as last year’s, failed to yield anything like a similar quantity. The yield, in many cases, is fully 15 and 20 bushels pee acre less," A Lamb Shoulder is usually caused by rheumatism of the muscles, and may be cur d by the use of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. This liniment ia unequal'e 1 as a soothing lotion. One application gives relief* Try it. D. A. Jolly ano sons sell it. “So much to do, ao I ttle done,” is "e complair t of the New Zealand Court of Artdtiat’On, »lso of those who want to get their cases dealt with by it. An idea of the position can be gathered hom the fact that in Wellington alone, there are five "disputes,” all dat-ag rotn last year, fifteen applications for •Mforcement of awards, ten claims under the Worker’s Compensation Act, and ive miscellaneous applications waiting 0 be heard. After the Comt finishes 1 a Auckland business, however, it ia dkely to sit in the southern industrial centres. The Opinion of Every Englishman ia >hab liberty of speech and action is the birth right of every free man. “ Britons never shall be slaves ;> is one of the most iopular of all national songs, and, as a natter of fact, it is impossible lor slavery to exist under the protecting shadow of the B itish flig. In the same manner, men can mt remain bound by the tyrannic shackles "f disease, if they will pl*ce themselves under the healing influence of Holloway’s Pills and Ointment. Their success in all pirta of the world is now a familiar story, aud it is only necessary to say here, there is uo known disorder that cannot be speedily cured or relieved by them. The prehistoric man in the British v luseum—known affectionately by his admirers as the ‘ kipper ’ —has, even on the wet’est and most dismal of days, his circle of silent gazers. Qe has a chas-tening effect on the awt hilarious country cousin, who usually staret at him in silence for a uiomett or so. hudders, and pasties on to the more familiar mummies—quite homelike and modern peisons in comparison with this uncanny survivor of a race extinct agei. before tne Pharoahs ruled Egypt. He has crouched in his sandstone tomb, surrounded by his vases and flint knives, for 10,000 years or so, and his hro*n curia still cluster thickly, bis uuken eyes eta re, and in his half-open nouth white teeth gleam. Even the *>evmedalied warrior who guards the mummies finds the ‘ kipper * trying* "Thousands come to look at’im,” he remarked ; <l but I can’t abear ’;m—•nough ta spoil your dinner, he is.” Yet be must have been a fine-looking fellow, slim and tall, with slender hands tnd feet, and fair skinned. Have the scientists discovered any divergence of type 1 A piece it Flannel dampened with Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and bound to ths affected parts, is better than any plaster for Ume back or pains in the side or chest. Chamberlain’s Pain Balm is a liniment that has no superior. One application give* relief. Try it. D. A. Joli Y AND Sons sell it.

Signor Marconi baa made a free gift of an apparatus to the Italian Govern' mett. The receipts from the messages from 12 stations go to the Government, and those from the ships to the Mar*coni Company. The State imposes a fixed tax on each message beyond the ordinary cost„ When Yon Cannot Sleep for coughing, it is hardly necessary that anyoce should tell you that you need a few doses of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy to allay the irritation, of the throat, and make sleep possible a ways cures and cures quickly. D Jolly and Sons sell it. nberaUon^l m The National Zeitung declares that the suitix raises the whole question of Germany's atiitude towards the new system of a preferential treaty between Great Britain and her colonies. The writer hopes that Australia t wiU no| folte* GmWa le,|

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CROMARG19030505.2.36.6

Bibliographic details

Cromwell Argus, Volume XXXV, Issue 1833, 5 May 1903, Page 6

Word Count
1,009

Page 6 Advertisements Column 6 Cromwell Argus, Volume XXXV, Issue 1833, 5 May 1903, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 6 Cromwell Argus, Volume XXXV, Issue 1833, 5 May 1903, Page 6