152 ACRES. Good 1 dairying and grazing land, Omata district, about 20 acres in bush, practically all ptougliable, well fenced, metalled'road within' % mile of property; council has promised- to complete remainder this winter; 3 miles from school and creamery, will carry 40 to 50 cows, 3-roomed whare. Price £lO per acre, a dirt cheap property at the price.
WAIKATO HAMILTON WAIKATO TAEANAKI FARMERS' COME UP TO THE WAIKATO. Numbers of your friends are there, and doing very, very well indeed, and they are astonished at the results they are getting, file land is surprisingly cheap and of very excellent quality. The climate is mild and J .he whole district is progressing in a moat remarkable fashion. HAMILTON, the capital town of the Waikato, is the talk of New Zealand the way it is growing and developing. The many numerous magnificent buildings now being erected are evidence of all this, and still the town is only m its infancy. When the electric power enmes, and further industries are established, its progress will be still more rapid. ryr, ' WHY ?* 0T BUY A PROPERTY RIGHT ON THE OUTSKIRTS .OF THE PRESENT BOROUGH? IV the most pessimistic valuer it must be in the City limits in the near future, and WHICH IS ACTUALLY NOW SUBURBAN, and yet is a slashing farm, a better sole of grass and quality of land than the fafnous Waimate Plains- and better than the Hauraki Plains, f.s it will npt poach, and lias anexcellent water supply. Two very important things—JUST REALISE THE POSITION—IJ miles out of Hamilton town, and ACTUALLY ADJOINING THE STATE MODEL FARM. In fact, it is sheltered by the State Farm Plantation*" Details are—--100 ACRES Free,lo,d > absolutely flit, semi swamp cabbage tree land. Magnificently sheltered all round. A most glorious sole of grass, thick, luscious, and like velvet to tread 011, sheep-proof fences, wire and live hedges. ' Two houses. One fit for the owner and the other for shf.re-milkcrs or labor, to live in; cowshed, machines, engine shed, concrete yard and' all conveniences. Other outbuildings. CARRYING 45 SHORTHORN MILKING COW'S o 0 jipij) ™>y STOCK, 30 SHEEP AND 4 HORSES, and the FEED IS RUNNING TO WASTE. This is a fact absolutely! You can only describe it as a "sweet little property and an ideal stud farm." A Jersey herd on this place would show itself to the best possible advantage. The State Farm is next door, where thousands of visitors visit every year! What an advertisement for' a stud farm. PRICE "£l5O per acre; '£sooo cash down, balance at Si per cent for G years. NOTE.—Two Taranaki farmers of well-known rnuutc visiting Hamilton last week who had bought in the Hauraki Plains saw this'farm'" too late, They gaicHT only IMvcra farmers could see this place they would o-ive £250 an acre for it without "batting an eyelash," and, )>=• glad to g;t if APPLY direct to F. W.F. FAGAN (Salesman for\ r _ \ T.< MANDENO JACKSON , \ ESTATE AGENTS, HAMILTON. .JKAD OFFICE, AUCKLAND.)
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Taranaki Daily News, 21 April 1920, Page 8
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495Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Taranaki Daily News, 21 April 1920, Page 8
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