Hotels. Thomas a. shirley begs to notify to his patrons and tlie public that, his lease of the Eeatlierston Hotel having expired, he has Removed to those Premises known as the Eoyal, and would take tills opportunity of returning his best thanks for the very liberal patronage he has received during the last three years. T. A. S., in soliciting a continuance of post favors, has much pleasure in announcing that he has made arrangements for the erection of one of the largest and most commodious hotels in the Province. Featherston, June 9, 1874. ATKINSON’S HOTEL Market Square, Wanganui JAMES J. ANDERSON. rnoPEiEiOK. The above Hotel having changed hands, the present Proprietor begs to draw the attention of the public to its improved SUPERIOR ACCOMMODATION FOE FAMILIES and TRAVELLERS. The study of the Proprietor will always he to ensure the comfort of his patrons, and to procure none but the very best brands of WINES, SPIRITS & MALT LIQUORS, and trusts, by a strict attention to business, to receive the same liberal amount of support accorded to the late proprietress, Mrs Atkinson., The house-keeping duties of the Hotel will he under the able management of Mrs James Siewakt. [CAED.J JUNCTION HOTEL Sandon, Manawatu. W. BROWN Proprietor. IJI AU P 0 HOTEL. TO TOURISTS AND OTHERS. R. C. HASTIE, The Proprietor of the above now well-known. Hotel, begs to intimate to Tourists and others, that he now contemplates FURTHER ADDITIONS, with a view r of meeting the increased wants of the public. Private rooms for families will shortly be added, and every effort made to make those who patronise Iris Hotel comfortable in every respect. The steamer Victoria will shortly make weekly trips between Tapuaeharuru and Tokano, which will afford Tourists an opportunity of visiting that wonderful country. The yacht Lady of the Lake is now fitted up, for the use of visitors. fjnOKANO HOTEL. The undersigned begs to inform the public that his large NEW HOTEL, which will afford every accommodation to visitors and the public, will shortly be OPENED, and trusts that his efforts to meet a long felt w r ant by Tourists to this country will he appreciated. , JAMES HASTIE. Coaches--0088 & CO.’S TELEGRAPH LINE OF ROYAL MAIL COACHES WAIRABAPA DAILY. Leave—1. The Hutt 7. Featherston 2. Taita 8. Tauherinikau 8. Silver Stream 9. Greytown 4. Upper Hutt 10. Carterton 5. Muugaroa 11. Masterton 6. Pakaratahi Return Coaches leave Dixon's Accommodation House, Masterton, for Wellington, every morning (except Sunday) at 6.30 a.ra., arriving at the Hutt in time for Tram to Wellington. Pares to and from Masterton ... £1 0 0 Do do Greytown ... 015 0 Do do Featherston ... 0 12 6 All passengers to pay their train charges. Mr. Hastwell provides a ’Bus, leaving Mclntosh’s New Zealander Hotel every morning at ten minutes to seven o’clock, and meeting the down coach train. The bus leave Mclntosh’s New Zealander Hotel every morning at 6.50 a.m. W. R. HASTWELL, Proprietor. CIOBB & CO.’S TELEGRAPH LINE ) OP ROYAL MAIL COACHES £4 0 Prom Wellington to Hawera Do do to Patea Do do to Waltotara Do do to Wanganui Do do to Tutaenui Do do Rangitikei (Bull’s) ... Do do Rangitikei (Scott’s) Do do Manawatu Do do Otaki Do do Waikanae ... ... Do do Paikakariki... Coaches start from the Booldng Office, Mclntosh’s New Zealander Hotel, ever Monday and Thursday morning, at 6 o’clock a.m., and from Atkinson’s Hotel, Wanganui, on Monday and Thursday mornings, at 7 o'clock. A. YOUNG, Proprietor. Booking Office: New Zealander Hotel. 0 0 15 T> COOKERY wishes to inform the public ® that his Coach will attend daily to convey passengers from Lower Hutt to Taita, from every train on arrival, returning from Taita to catch every train. All passengers for Upper Hutt requested to come by 2.30 train. Books, Stationery. &c----y MORTON, BOOKSELLER and ZV» STATIONER, Greytown, has on md, and to arrive, a large assortment of OOKS and STATIONERY, which he sells ; Wellington prices. R. M. will OPEN a BRANCH STORE in [asterton as soon as his new premises are impleted. The trade supplied. Greytown, Ist May, XS74. EW BOOKS, JUST RECEIVED and ON SALE BY THE UNDERSIGNED ,e's History of English Literature, 2 vols. r’s Primitive Culture, 2 vols., new edition Naturalist on the River Amazon, by H. W. Bates, 3rd edition, with maps and illustrations iVcelcs in the Saddle, a Painter's Journal in Iceland, by E. S. Walton trange Company, being the experiences of a Roving Correspondent; by James Greenwood, “the Amateur Casual" [istory of Booksellers, the old and the new; by Hcnrv Cunven, with portraits and illustrations Friendship of Books, and other Lectures, by the Rev. F. D. Maurice Coining Race, by the late Lord Lytton lell's Diary during the Last Great War Statesman’s Year Book for 1871, by Fred. Martin uess, by a Merchant ■itical Examination of the Gospel History [•atnre and Dogma, by Mathew Arnold valuta. Prince, King, and Slave, a Story from Yntral Africa; by H. N. Stanley •er’s Dictionary Phrase and Fable, now and roused edition , Christian Year, quarto, presentation edition ion’s Christmas Stories, in 1 vol., viz.—“ Blade o’ Irass,” “Golden Grain," and “Bread and Cheese md Kisses " , „ ;ht’s History of Caricature and Grotesque in Literature and Art ■ ■ , story of Clubs and Ciub Life, by John Timbs dors of the Yellowstone Regions in the Rocky mountains, by James Richardson ra and Lapland. Travels in the African Desert md the Polar World ; translated from the French iv Mrs. Cashel Hoey „ japan, the Land of the Rising Sun, its annals luring the past twenty years, recording the remarkable progress oi the Japanese in M estern livilization: by Samuel Mossman, with maps ill’s Law Book, a practical compendium of the reneral principles of English Jurisprudence w’s History of the English Constitution ail's Traverse Tables, new edition ailing Mv Way, twenty-seven years of Autobio■ranhy; by Robert Dale Owen Story of Goethe's Life, by G. H. Lewes Pursuivant of Arms, or Heraldry, founded on acts, by J. K. Blanche , „ . Artist of Collingwood. by Baron na Camag i Patinos to Paradise, or Light on the Past, the q-osont, and the Future; by Dr. dimming of the Rev. William Anderson, L.L.D., Glasgow ■national Scientific Scries, vols. 1 to S re Series, vols. 1,2, and 3 . CO Primers, edited by Professors Huxicy, Eoscoe ,nd Balfour Stewart, vols. 2 to 5 LYON & BLAIE, (Successors to William Lyon.)
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4156, 16 July 1874, Page 4
Word Count
1,055Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4156, 16 July 1874, Page 4
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