The nuwcl'ch nt tbe North End, Liverpool, are to bo lighted throughout by electricity by means of lights, each of COOO candle po.ver, suspended from the tops of lattice work i o'Vs 80 feet high. Arrangements have been m;>.d<: fur throwing tho light ou vesaela engaged in oading and unloading.f vjs For remainder of nt>ws sue page 4 Mark yonr Linen, Silk, &c, with American brassneed ormolu letters and stamps. The Bog-oak marking ink requires no heating or preparation. A stamp, with your name, a hottle of ink and pad, 3s Cd ; post free, 3s lOd. Caution.—Beware of load imitations. The ncver-wash-out Bog-oak marking ink, Is 4d post free. The Exhibition prize medal cement mends everything—glass and china, fixes tips on cues, &c, Is per bottle ; post (reo, Is 3d. All orders to be accompanied with Post-office order.—Bailey and Kerr'a American Novelty Company, 65 Princes street, Dunedin, next Queen's Theatre. The trade and stores keepers supplied with Exhibition cement, showy-window-cards, with photo, of Melbourne Exhibition.^ [Advt ] Premature Loss «f tok Hair, which is so common nowadays, may be entirely prevented by the use of Burnett's Cocoaine. It has been used in thousands of cases where the hair was coming out in handfuls, and has never failed to arrest its decay and to promote a healthy and vigorous growth. It is at the same unrivalled as a dressing for the hair. A single application will render it soft and (.'lossy.—[Advt.] Asthma.—Thousands of tho worst cases of Asthma have been relieved by uaing Jonas WhitcomO's Remedy for Asthma. In no case of purely asthmatic character has it failert to give prompt relief.—Bates, sise, & Co., Agents.—[Abvt.J Valuable Discovery for tub Hair.—lf your ha is turning grey or white, or falling oil, use " Tilt Mexican Hair Rcnewer," for it will positively restore in every cane Grey or White Hair to its original colour, without leaving the disagreeable smell of most " Hoitorers." It makes the hair charmingly beautiful, as well as promoting the growth of the hair on bald spots, where the glands are not decayed. Ask your Chemist for "Tim Mkican Hair Kenewer," sold by Chemists and Perfumers everywhere at 3s Gd per bottle. Wholesale Depot removed to 33 Farringdon road, London.—[Advt.] 4ST £1 Fp.m Gifts I—Tla Proprictoro of Wo&m's Aromatic Sceixdam Sciinappr, to induco tho destitetion and prevint th<j improper use of their v,;upi:icn& md labels, awl thus further psotect the public again-1 fraud and deception, have enclosed in the wrappers, o\ under the label on tho quart bottles, since Ist October, 1878 ami continue to enclose in kvkkv d.u'b paokikc rnnouo.-ioirr tub ma. Til REN £1 ORDERS, which are drawn upon the uilrtore:i;M'), and which mil lit ™»hc<l by their A^nta. To secure these Gilts, the public must be carctul to mk for, and accept nothing but the OKNtiiNK Udolil'iio Wolfk'b Soknah'S, with our n&uio upon the top label.—M. Moss & Co., Wynvard lane, Sydney —Al'ChU : DALGKTY Si CO., Ounalin Previous to ISO 7 the sale of Dr Walkkr's California Vixkoar Bitters wns only so much as could be carried about San Francisco in a basket by one person, who left tho medicine on trial. Slice that time this remedy has made its way to every hamlet in the UniU-ii States. The sales are now larger than those of any other medicine in America. For all diseases of the stomach, liver, kidneys, bladder, fildii, or blood, the bitters are a certain remedy.—Agents, P. llav.ma.n ax-dCo., Duncdin.-[AUVT.] StimuljANTs and liißUiHcieot amount of exercise f. equently derange the liver. Eno's Fruit Salt is peculiarly adapted'for any constitutional weakness of the liver. A world of woes is avoided by those who keep and use Eno's Fruit Salt.—"All our customers for Eno's Fruit Salt would not be without it upon any consideration, they having received so much benefit from it.—Wood Biiohif.bs, eheiniste, Jersey, 1878."—Price, 29 Cd and 4s Od. Sold by all chemists. —[Advt.] Enjoy Lifb.—What a truly beautiful world we live In I Nature gives us grandeur of mountains, glens, and oceans, and thousands of means for enjoyment. We can desire no bGttur when in perfect health; but how often do tho majority of people feel like giving it up disheartened, discouraged, and worried out with disease when there Is no occasion for this feeling, as every sufferer can easily obtain satisfactory proof that Grkbn's Auoust Flowkr will make them as free from disease as when born. Dyapepijia and Liver Complaint is the direct cause of 76 per cent, of such maladies a 8 Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick Headache, Costivenesf, Nervous Prostration, Dizziness of the Head, Palpitation of the Heart, and other distressing symptom*. Three doses of Adsust Flower will prove its wonderful effact. Sample bottle, 9d. Try it.—Sole wholeBale agents: Kempthorne, Prosser, and Co.—[Advt.
I Public i-otices. TO THE ELECTORS OF DUisEDIN EAST. /GENTLEMEN,—A dastardly para\JT graph having been inserted in a leading article In the Evening Star of last evening, when the editor knew I had no chance of reply in the ordinary channol, and which paragraph contains a deliberate and wicked misrepresentation, I avail iny?elf of this means to exposo tho slander. The wordi quoted by the htar were written by me, but bad tho editor stated the circumstances it would havo proved that 1 not only advocated the claims of working men in Dunedin, but that I did so in Melbourne, and that my desire for their welfare is no ncwhoru zeal. The words quoted have no connection whatever with the question of Protection and Freetrado. The circumstances were these :— The Berry Government were struggling for the reform of the Upper House, which stood in tbe way of useful eeislation. and Mhich had several times rejected ii Mining on Private Property Bill, which the country urgently demanded. In order to embarrass the Government, and because of the Payment of Members Bill which the Government tacked to the Appropriation Bill, tbe Upper Houso threw the country into confusion by rejecting tho Appropriation Bill, and thus prevented the Government from being üble to pay the salaries of the Civil servants. In this contest with tho Upper House my sympathies were with Mr Berry, though differing from him on other matters. When the Upper House stopped supplies, Mr licrr.v only had a small sum in the Treasury, and aa he knew tho working men and -mall-i-alaricd oltichls could not do wiihout thoir wages, ho continued them in their employment, and in order ts make the supplies last as long as possible, he dispensed with tho services of a number of the most highly-paid otllcials. This course caused a howl of indignation to arise from the sci natters, the members of the Upper Houso, and the merchants who had friends and relatives in the Civil Service. To show sympathy with their aristocratic flocks, the Bishop (Anglican) of Melbourne and tho Collins street Baptist minister, both of whom had only iust arrived in tho Colony, with five other ministers of sciuatt'ng and aristocratic congregations, issued a manifesto in the names of tho ministers of Melbourne, but without their authority, denouncing tho Government Under these circumstances, and knowing that many others were of the same mind as myself, 1 wrote the letter from which the Star has unfairly and wickedly quoted to express my approval of tbe course the Government had adopted ill the emergency which had been brought about by the Upper House, seeing that the Government thus showed consideration for the working men with families, and simply suspended the higher officials, who might have been supposed not to havo been in so dependent a position. The working men of Dunedin will thus see that I have not taken up their cause for tho purposes of this election, but that I have for j ears been a consistent supporter of the working men, and, when opportunity presented itself, havo fearlessly advocated their claims. But what can be said of tbe cause of my opponent, which needs to be supported by such truculent conduct as this of the Star? and what can bo thought of the editor of the Star when ho thus wilfully and moßt wickedly misrepresents by quoting a fow lines from a letter and suppressing the whole of tho circumstances under which that letter was written ? Working men of Dunedin, and fellow-electors who love fairplay, let your decision at tho ballot-boxes to-day sho* most unmistakably that you do not approve of such doings, and that you know who are your true and consistent friende, and that you ore determined to support them. Yours faithfully, M. W. GREF-N.
SWITZERS FREEHOLD SLUICISO COMPANY (LIMITED). TkTOTICE IS lIRKEBY GIVEN that ±S the Directors have made a CALL upon the Shareholders ol SIXPENCE per Share, and that tho said Call is made payable on WEDNESDAY, the 14th day of December, 1881, to the Manner, at the ofliiio of Bastings, Leary, and Co., High street, Duncdin. Dunedin, December 7th, IFSI. K. H. LEARY, 8d . Manager. NOTICE. A' LL ACCOUNTS against the late E. DE LA PERELLE must be renderee 1 to Mr ill. B. Smith,, of . Arrowtown, en or be 1 fore 31st December Instant, otherwise they will nol . bo recognised. D WESLEY TURTON, ) ' Solicitor to tho Estate. ArroTf, December 6th, 1881. • ...,-.
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Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 6189, 9 December 1881, Page 3
Word Count
1,531Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Daily Times, Issue 6189, 9 December 1881, Page 3
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