nmzszi a»Krefrftj&a ■“"g rarmers ft Li] L-U' For This is a day of short cuts and elimination of unnecessary waste in time and expense. The Farmer, the True Wealth-Producer of the country, has been hampered in the development of the land’s resources Ly being forced to carry the Retailer on his back whenever he turned to buy. Thinking Farmers have seen TUsE WRONG Or THE MIDOLEMAN’S SYSTEM and have tried to get away from it by forming Co operatives. But the farmer’s money is needed for the development of his land, and being an expert in his own business (farming! he can make his money yield more interest by judicious investment in his land than in mercantile business. LAIDLA W LEEDS sized up the situation like this: — The Farmer knows most about farming, therefore he should remain a Farmer. The Merchant, from his experience, knows most about eliminating expense in merchandise, then he should be a Merchant. But where is the sense in bringing in the Middleman—the Retailer—between the Farmer and the -Importer? Why' shouldn’t the Wholesale Merchant co-operate with the Farmer in cutting out the retailer and bringing the farmer into direct touch with Die world’s markets? Every other Wholesale Merchant was afraid that to do this would mean would rise up against him. because tire retailer But LAIDLAW LEEDS, had the COURAGE of their convictions, and with this, plus faith in the farmer's sound common sense, have cut adrift, from the old method of selling to the retailer, and have gone direct to the farmer by their Big 230-page Wholesale Catalogue, which is mailed free to all farmers and out-of-town residents. Tiny have gone one further than this, and have eliminated' the traveller, with, his heavy travelling expanses and commissions, by selling from Catalogue oniy. They have done away with bad debts by selling for cash with order only. They import in enormous quantities, and sell direct to the consumer, at, in many eases, less than other wholesale merchants charge the storekeeper. Our Big 280-page No. 3 New Illustrated Catalogue is ready. If you have a copy, use it. if you haven’t, send for one. It’s Free. Mrs. Kennedy, of Otorohanga, says : —“ G Have saved 51 - In every pound 8 spent wsfrih you, and yoiar goods are off tS-ae silgffnesS: ejuaSsty.” w m ' imrmcrjTPi % Wholesale Merchants and Importers SUPPLIERS OF EVERYTHING IN THE WIDE WORLD Tori: Street Warehouses - Auckland
LAND, INSURANCE, & GENERAL COMMISSION AGENT, WAIKATO. 2000 ACRES Real Firstclass Land, all m English grasses ; well fenced and sub-divided; present stock, 4000 sheep, 250 cattle; good homestead of nine rooms, two cottages of four and five rooms ; full range of outbuildings. Freehold. Price, £7 5s per acre. Easy terms arranged. Stock at valuation. jjqo A.CRES, O.R.P. at 10s; jqo Acres grass; 800 acres ploughable. Goodwill, £ISOO. Terms, £SOO cash, balance 5 per cent. aoq ACRES, 0.R.P,, at 295. '* 200 acres grass; good house, 4 rooms. Railway station 9 miles. Goodwill £4 10s per acre. Terms £250 cash : balance arranged. Iqq ACRES, O.R.P. ; bush ” T -' country; half grass. Price, £3 3s per acre. Easy terms. oy q ACRES,carry ing 80 cows, •J / J house of six rooms and cottage. Price, £l3 per acre. Terms. 200 ACRES, Good Dairy Farm; handy' to all conveniences ; good house. Price £l6 per acre. Terms. I ctQ ACRES, Good General O Farm, near Te Awanuitu; new house of 7 rooms; £ls per acre. Terms. JQQ ACRES, Real Tip-top ‘ Farm ; mostly in grass ; full range of buildings. Price only £8 per acre. 100 ACRES, Good Dairy Farm; handy to townships, school, and creamery. Price, £ls per acre. j oq ACRES, freehold, nearly J all in grass, 6 paddocks, will carry 35 dairy cows this season. Price £l2 10s per acre. £2OO cash, balance 5 years at 5 per cent. TOWN ALLOTMENTS-Splen-did Building Sites, Quarter Acre Lots ; £SO freehold. Secure one immediately. Good investment. N.B. —Let me know your requirements. Two hundred Farms to select from. G. H. / REAL ESTATE AGENT, T E AWAMUTU,
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAIPO19111110.2.2.2
Bibliographic details
Waipa Post, Volume II, Issue 60, 10 November 1911, Page 1
Word Count
667Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 Waipa Post, Volume II, Issue 60, 10 November 1911, Page 1
Using This Item
NZME is the copyright owner for the Waipa Post. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of NZME. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.