EVERYTHING EXCEPT MONEY.
The editor of that influential and •widely-circulated newspaper the “Trevortin Times,” of the United States, evidently has not suffered during the past winter. In an editoral in a s&tc-nt issue he says:— “We have taken wood, potatoes, corn, eggs, butter, onions, cabbages, chicken^ - stone, lumber, labor, sand, calico, sauerkraut, second hand-cloth-ing, coon-skins, and bug juice, scrap iron, shoe pegs raw-hides, crinquepins. tan-bark, dogs, sorghum, seed, jarware, and wheat straw on subscription, and now a man wants to know if we could send the patter for six months for a large owl. We have no precedent for refusing, and if we can find a man who is out of an owl and wants ono we’ll do it.”
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19090717.2.39.15
Bibliographic details
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Gisborne Times, Volume XXVII, Issue 2556, 17 July 1909, Page 4 (Supplement)
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119EVERYTHING EXCEPT MONEY. Gisborne Times, Volume XXVII, Issue 2556, 17 July 1909, Page 4 (Supplement)
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