"We regret that our present space must prevent our adverting, except in the most cursory manner, to a scheme which is now afloat, having for its object the erection of a Theatre and Public Assembly Booms in this city by a joint stock company, with limited liability, a desideratum which has been mu£n felt on very many occasions. A meeting will be held at the Bank Hotel on Friday evening, which is likely to be very numerously and influentially attended, when the prospectus of the Company, as well as & plan of the proposed building will be submitted. "We understand that the projectors of this scheme have already received large encouragement, and that there is every " prospect that it will be successfully carried out. The Press, of the 13th instant, contains the folowing: —" Our contemporary, the Lyttelton Times, recently contained an anecdote to the effect that a telegram leaving Wellington on Saturday at 5.25 p.m. reached its office at 11.40 a.m. on Monday. We are enable to cap this s+ory by a still better one. A telegram which left Wellington at 5.27 p.m. on Tuesday has not come to hand yet." "If there is anybody nnder the canister of heaven that I have in utter excrescene," says Mrs Partington, " it is the slander, going about like a boy constructor, circulating his calomel upon honest folks." Holloway's Pills. —Low Temperature. —Hot, cold, or changeable weather is very apt to undermine the health, unless the stomach be kept up to its highest state of digestive efficiency. Holloway's Pills improve the appetite, and so promote digestion —that a large supply of new materials is thrown into the blood after every meal, whereby fresh vigour and activity are bestowed on every organ, and ability to resist disease is conferred upon the system. These Pills thoroughly purify the blood when it has been tainted by fogs, unwholesome vapours, improper food, or other impurities. No medicine equals these Pills for removing bilious complaints, suppressing sickness of the stomach, checking flatulency, and acting as mild, yet effective aperients, which are suitable for either sex and any age. 2736
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Bibliographic details
Nelson Evening Mail, Volume II, Issue 153, 3 July 1867, Page 3
Word Count
350Untitled Nelson Evening Mail, Volume II, Issue 153, 3 July 1867, Page 3
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