M. TEASDALE PRACTICAL PLUMBER, TINSMITH AND GAS FITTER. WMoughby. «tre«rt, ,?totland, aext Tetley, »-,r, her. BA'IHS, TAMES, LAMPS, CHIMNEYS, »t<j., made to order Special attention given. to all kind* of Repairs. | CARD. H. L. WRIGHT, bt>tU*U>a UKNTIST. EaUbluhed on Thames 14 ntn ALL WOKK GUARANTEED. PAINLESS KXTRAQTIOV AddnM-. . IM, POLLEN ST. Important to Mints j Managers. — • ■■»»■■ Rules for the Woriring of Mines. i i THE GENERAL RULES For the working of Mine* under the , Mining Act of 1898, flection 206, with tin ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS , for tha safety of life and property in connection with, mining operation!, recently publiahed. in the Government Quette, can be obtained PRINTED ON CALICO, PRICK s 2t 6d Each. M the Thames Star Office. Mine Managen an reminded that tL« Mining Act require* that a copy of tb» regvlatiena (hall be potted in a concp'cu. ova pla-e in each mine, and without an opportunity being afforded miners by having tho provisions of the Act within cbeir reach, a>ine nan»«n and owne*i " '% eusa «4 rHTUhf. .. ■ ■ . ■ . . ■ i ■. . • Little's Phenyle DI3IVFEO?' ' Phenyle.! 1 Sold Everywhere Little's 'Pheayle' REASONS FOR ADVERTISING IK THE THAMES STAR. Adrertiiing is tib* chief Buxiliuj of trade.—Tooke. AdTertising is not the road to suo* rms, but auoceea itself.—Riohardson. Advertise your business; I owe all my success to it.—P. T. Barnum. The most truthful part at a newspaper is its advertisements. —Jefferson. The man who pays more for shop rent than advertising does not know his business. —Horace Greeley, How can one man know what you want unless you ask for it, or what you have to sell unless you advertise it?—Murat Halstead. The advertisements which appear in a public journal take rank among the morfc significant indications of th« state of society of that time and place. —Dickens. If you advertise, it giye» your place a reputation around; folks will crowd to your warehouse and keep lireJy. If you don't want to do anything, keep m still as you cam.—C. F. Lrowne. There i* an absolute necessity for idvertising; there is a great eagerness to compete for attention, and no ore gets it unless it is by giving a« t were, so many strokes of the hammer, one after Ahe other, to compea neople to notice what >s croinc on— W. E. Gladstone.
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Bibliographic details
Thames Star, Volume XXXXI, Issue 10441, 16 October 1903, Page 4
Word Count
378Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Thames Star, Volume XXXXI, Issue 10441, 16 October 1903, Page 4
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