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HpilE NEW ZEALAND M JL is PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. By Post or Coach, Cs. Od.; Town delivery, 6s. quarterly. CONTENTS FOB SATURDAY, JULY 14. PACK. Advertisements 1,2, 23, 24 Select Poetrst —To a Flirt «j OSBS AND ENB9 .... . . .. .. ladies' Column Children s Fashions A Mother's Influence—Diptheria—Recipes .. 3 Vhe Novelist—Oakshott Castle, Chapts. XJs.Il., XXIII., XXIV., X.X.V., and XXVI. .. 4 The Sketcher —The Benefit of Emigration—The House of Commons .. -• „••■'„•' The Reviewer—Transactions of the New Zealand Institute—Australians Abroad .. ;* ° Law Intelligence—Supreme Court—Criminal Sittings, Circuit Sittings, and in Banco .. 7 Telegraphic JSbws .. ■■-,." " " o Mr. Anderson and the Independent J Education—Board of Education J Chess .. • • •• „ ; - ... •• . ■" "" lri Captain Russell before his Constituents .. .. i<-> Shipping Intelligence jj Commercial News .. .. - - • • " ii The Wellington Markets .. -•-- " Announcements—Births, Marriages, and Deaths 12 Leading Articles .'alk op the Week *| Welcome to Mr. E. C E. Mills—lnquest on the body of George Cleveland .. .. •• 1* Waste Lands Board—Working Men s Club—Conference on the Liquor Traffic .. . .. • - lo Karori-Makara Highway Board—The Manawatu County Council .. • • •; • ■ "" i' o The Politician—Mr. Stafford at Timaru .. 18 Sporting—Wellington Jockey Club .... 2.0 Aquatics-The Sculling Match for the Championship of the World and £4OO a sideBoating in ICaiapoi .. •• ",,,•■ -° Football -Football Match, Nelson and Wellington College .. .. /•_,■•,»•• " Ol Cricket—The Past Season, by Tom Brown .. 21 Farm and Garden— Celery—Animal Ailments 22 GREAT SALE AT TE ARO HOUSE, Cuba-street, Wellington, AVILL COMMENCE SATURDAY, JULY 14th. JAMES SMITH. TE ARO HOUSE. IHE NEW ZEALAND CLOTHING FACTORY. The desire on the part of the public to encourage New Zealand Industries has been manifested by the great success which has attended the Retail Branches of the New Zealand Clothing Factory. But the proprietors, Messrs. Hallenstein Bros., do not base their success upon public sympathy alone but upon the fact of being able to produce a better and proportionately cheaper article than can be imported. The New Zealand Clothing Factory was established a little over three years ago—the proprietors invested upwards of £70,000 in the undertaking, and at the present time employ between 300 ' and 400 hands, which indirectly, probably, means the maintenance of 1000 people. The enterprise was gone into without protection or Government aid, and in the face of many difficulties and much prejudice, and especially the persistent opposition on the part of the larger houses, glutting the market with imported goods, which the retailers found it more profitable to sell than the colonial article. This decided the proprietors to introduce their goofls direct to the large consuming population of New Zealand ; aud in order to do so effectually, they resolved to sell a ■' single garment at the wholesale price.- In thus opening extensive Retr.il Branches in the principle centres of population, Messrs. Hallenstein Bros, are but following the example of some of the larger manufacturers at home. Having constantly aimed at improving their manufactures, and bringing out styles that will suit the requirements of New Zealand, they are now materially lessening the importation of English clothing, which ever has been, and is now, the gieat aim of the proprietors. They have pleasure in acknowledging the very large support which has been accorded to every Branch as it has been opened— independent of the merits of the goods themselves the public no doubt recognise that an industrylike the New Zealand Clothing Fac- • tory is of immense value to the country—benefitting alike the tradesman, the mechanic, the farmer, and indirectly, every one in the community. BRANCHES HAVE BEEN ESTABLISHED AT DUNEDIN, OAMARU, TIMARU AND CHRISTCHURCH, AND THE WELLINGTON BRANCH IS TO BE OPENED ON SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1877, ON LAMBTON QUAY, OPPOSITE THE ODD FELLOWS' HALL. k CETOPATHY, OR THE ACID CURE. An External, Safe, Simple, and Valuable Mode of Treatment in Fevers, Acute and Chronic Complaints. • Rheumatism, Dropsy. Spinal, Liver, Heart, Lung, and Bowel Complaints, Sore Throats, Neuralgia, Tic. Bronchitis, Sprains, Corns, Fevers of all kinds, »nd Asthma are, where no organ is destroyed, cured by it. Messrs Coutts inform the public that their guaranteed Acid, (Pamphlets, &c)., is sold by MR. JOHN WATT, Bookseller, Wellington, And by Mr. A. Tod, Wine Merchant, Wanganui. CHILDREN TEETHING. Mrs. JOHNSON'S V.V SOOTHING SYRUP is not swallowed as a medicine, but used only on the Gums, CONTAINS NO NARCOTIC, and cannot injure the most delicate Infant, Cools the Gums and gives immediate relief. Prepared only by Barclay and Sons, Farringdon-st.. London. Price 2s 9d per bottle. Sold by all Chemists, Agents—VENN ELL & CO., Auckland,

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZMAIL18770714.2.28.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Mail, Issue 285, 14 July 1877, Page 12

Word Count
722

Page 12 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Mail, Issue 285, 14 July 1877, Page 12

Page 12 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Mail, Issue 285, 14 July 1877, Page 12

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