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… were an oil refinery, great expansion of the pulp and paper industry, plans for substantial increases in the New … merchant bars, self-adhesive tapes and labels, wallpaper, instant coffee, and gin. Some industries expanded …
… his neighbour, W. G. Butcher, also published an important paper – Breaking-in of Light Pumice Lands – in the September …
… (1839–93). Prime Minister, newspaper editor and proprietor. A new biography of Ballance, … Taupo Quay. In 1867 he gave up shopkeeping in favour of newspaper publishing. On 4 June 1867 Ballance and his partner, … out the first number of the Herald , a penny evening paper which appeared three times a week. Later, Ballance …
… fact does not appear to have been noted in a scientific paper until Archey drew attention to it in 1933. It is quite … the ridgepole. Two of the illustrations in Best's paper show lizards on ridgepole supports. This may be … to have been the thwart on which the Tohunga sat. Best's paper also has an illustration of a lizard carved on a bone …
… asks Swinburne. How not indeed? They even named a weekly paper after her, and a pub or two. And would-be bards, …
… Otago Institute, of which he was a life member, he read a paper on the Conservation and Extension of the Amenities of …
… knowledge, to the Outlook , the Presbyterian denominational paper. He wrote extensively for church publications, mostly …
… College, Edinburgh, he served his apprenticeship in the papermaking business at the Kinleith mill on the Water of … in British, North American, and Scandinavian pulp and paper mills. He also arranged for a trial shipment of logs …
… stand today the gaunt lingering remains of Jamestown, a paper village, that nearly 100 years ago was to have been …
… achieved by the verse. One of the casualties of wartime paper shortages was the occasional publication of fiction or poetry by local newspapers. Few journals today will accept literary material. …