THROUGH OUR EXCHANGES
The Government has awarded £SOO compensation and £2O as expenses to the widow ol the late Constable Dennis Mahoney, who was amongst the victims of the Upper Hutt disaster. The constable, it. will lie remembered, diud while in the execution of his duty. Want a Gramophone for the weekend whare? Easy. All you fellows smoke REGENT CIGARETTES, and save your Gift Tickets. Write for Free Gift Catalogue to Regent, Box 331 j Wellington. 3:1 The Napier Thirty Thousand Club proposes to issue a guide, having for its object the advancement and advertising of Hawke’s Bay from Wairoa to Woodville. The club is spending £3OO on the guide. A Maori named Rnpana Pnhara, a veteran of the Maori war, and said to be 100 years of age, died at Raid Raid on Thursday afternoon, says the Hawke’s Bay Tribune. Every puff of a REGENT CIGARETTE brings pleasure unalloyed and the Gift Tickets in every box bring you nearer a splendid Free Gift. Write to Regent, Box -331, 'Wellington, for Gift Catalogue. 34 The Eltham Co-operative Dairy Com* pany’s make of cheese for the past season was 1800 tons. Of this 25,318 crates were shipped to London, the remainder being kept for local consumption. You family of voting men—form a REGENT CIGARETTE brotherhood, save the Gift Tickets and get the “little Mater” a Sewing Machine. Free Gift Catalogue tells how. Write for it to Regent, Box 331, Wellington. 35 The three best-paid men in the entertainment field* to-day are said to be moving-picture “producers.” A salary of £SOO a week falls to the most famous member of this transcendant trio. Other Cigarettes end in smoke, hut REGENTS end in downright enjoyment, while the Gift Tickets enable you to get a Gramaphone, a Sewing Machine—Sixty other presents to choose from. A card to Regent, Box 331,• Wellington, will bring a Free Gift Catalogue. 36 Some time ago a couple in a London suburb received In post two stall tickets for a popular play. “You will never guess who sends you these,” ran an anonymous note accompanying them, “but go and have a good time.” They obeyed, enjoyed themselves immensely, and (the Daily Chronicle says) returned home to find their house ransacked.
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Bibliographic details
Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 40, 9 June 1914, Page 3
Word Count
371THROUGH OUR EXCHANGES Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 40, 9 June 1914, Page 3
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