LAND FOR BEE-FARMING.
"Instructions have been given to tho chief surveyors/' said the Primo Minister, in reply to a question in the House of Representatives yesterday, "that when land is being cut up for settlement they are to confer with an officer of tho Department of Agriculturo, for the purposo of ascertaining whether suitable areas can bo provided for beefarms." London has 200,000 telephones, and tho calls average 1,250,000 por day. According to a Consular report, tho Swiss chocolate and cocoa industry last war showed a. record in sales, the exports rising from <£1,884,400 in 1911 to The United Kingdom took closo upon one-third of this. Tlir New Zealand Express Company's .\r"vll motor .lorry has now covered nearly 25,000 miles in two years' sreVico without any breakdown. It has made frequent long journeys up country, sometimes of between. 200 and 300 miles in the round trip, carrying full loads all the time, and crossing the 'Paekakariki and Rimntaka saddles. Arjylls are adopted by,tho principal municipalities and motor transport companies in New Zealand. For immediate delivery one 1-ton Argyll commeroial vehicle. J. E. Fitzgerald, Lambton Qu*iy, North Island Ctgent;—Advt,
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Dominion, Volume 7, Issue 1890, 27 October 1913, Page 8
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188LAND FOR BEE-FARMING. Dominion, Volume 7, Issue 1890, 27 October 1913, Page 8
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