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auctions. THE CITY MARKET. THE CITY MARKET, 550 COLOMBO X STREET. PUBLIC AUCTION, THIS DAY, AT 11 A.M. HORSES—Account Mr Moore: 5Horse Hcam, a to 10 years. Account Prebbleton client: Gel., all work; account Client: .'J Farm Horses. All Ihe above with trials. Account Trustee of the late Harry Box: 2 Ponies and Cob, 1 Harness Marc, good, quiet sort: also 7 Vehicles, Gigs, Sp. Drays, Harness. Tools, etc. COWS —Account Dr. Haskins: 10 Pure Jersey Cows and Heifers, yearlings, 18 months, and springers: also Jersey Bull, !) months; HoMein Ileifcr, 3yrs, calved yesterday, extra good; Shorthorn Heifer in calf. The above are in good condition and the progeny of registered sires and dams. Account two owners: Jersey Cross Cow, Jersey Heifer, both springing. 12.15 P.M.—MOTORS, BICYCLES, and TOOLS. 1 P.M.—FURNITURE and EFFECTS. Carpet, 15ft, !) x 15ft, Axniinsier; 6 other good C. Squares, Linos., Wardrobes, Duchesses, Ex. and other Tables, Stretchers, Beds, Bed Mattresses, Mirrors, Chesterfields and Suites. D.P>. Suites, do. Bedroom. Chairs of many kinds, Carpet Floor Coverings. ;j rerfection Cookers, Crockery, and hundreds of lines, clean and in good order. Private sales made any time. 2 P.M.—POULTRY. POULTRY. Every Friday good entries are offered of all classes of Poultry in small or large lots. Crates sent to any address or called for. 100 lots and over offered at each sale. 11. C. SMITH, Prop. 'Phone 34-000. 2045 AUCTION SALE OF COTTAGE— This Day, at 1.30 p.m.. at the City Market, account Mr D. Milne, Property situated 13 Dudley street, off Clarence road, close lo tram; 4 rooms and conveniences, 20 perches of land. A splendid, tidy home. Rates £4 15s 7d. For practically unreserved cash sale. H. C. SMITH, Auctioneer, 'phone 34-68<>. 2044 EDUCATIONAL. T> ANGI-RURU, Hewitt's road, Merivale. School will reopen at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, September 12th. Miss Gibson will be at home on Monday. 420 DO YOU MEASURE UP TO TO-DAY'S STANDARDS? EVERY man and woman now in business must justify employment by Specialised Knowledge. It is not sufficient to be able to do your present job just as you have in the past. Promotion and salary increases are not merely a matter of routine. To earn more you must definitely be worth more. HEMINGWAY'S HOME-STUDY ACCOUNTANCY COURSE will show ycu the way to a more successful, more assured, and more lucrative business career. Remember, in the business world today, youth is no bar to promotion. Efficiency is all that counts. Specialised Accountancy study under Hemingway's will enable you to achieve success while still a young man. Write to-day for Free Book, "Accountancy." HEMINGWAY'S CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS, PO. Box SIG. Auckland. H 4141 Dancing deportment (under Royal and Vice-Regal Patronage) MISS LOWE resumes Classes from June sth. Fox Trot, Waltz, One Step, or Polka taught in three private lessons. At home Friday Afternoons. MISS LOWE, El WORCESTER ST. W. L 4481 BUSINESS NOTICES. gE R T INDER, IRON AND WIREWORKER, Has Resumed Business, Corner Lichfield and Madras £treCtS - T*ran Tel. 41-263. I4jS7 ADVERTISING AS i ADVERTISING AS ADVERTISING AS INVESTMENT. INVESTMENT. INVESTMENT. AT a time like the present, when most business executives are exploring every avenue for the stimulation of sales and the reduction of overhead, the question of advertising receives more than usual attention. This is, perhaps, only natural, and rightly so, for 1 there is no avenue through which money can be wasted more easily ; ! similarly, there is no more profitable field for investment, particularly in a time of business stress, ' than that offered by advertising. Any keen business executive looking back through the files of New Zealand's leading newspapers cannot help being struck by the fact that most of the wellestablished, progressive firms of to-day arc those who have been consistent advertisers. It is sigu nificant, also, that the progress of t most firms can be traced by their advertising. Some firms, for in- , stance, which held a big share of their particular business field 20 or 30 years ago, have written the story of their decline in the advertising pages of the daily newspapers. Others, again, show their rise and ever-continuing expansion. It is an interesting study, for in no sphere do methods change quicker than in that of advertising, and no field offers greater opportunity for the building up of goodwill. Furthermore, it is a field no commercial institution can afford to neglect. ' The people of Canterbury are, r and have always been, used to 1 their morning newsoapcr, and, as in CANTERBURY, as in " ENGLAND. AUSTRALIA, and NEW ZEALAND, the MORNING NEWSPAPER leads in Circula- ■ tion and Coverage, and is recog--5 niscd as the ideal medium, both for National and Retail Advertising. THE MORNING NEWSPAPER is read by the menfolk before leaving for business, and is read and REFERRED TO BY THE WOMENFOLK SEVERAL TIMES DURING THE D. '. THE CHIEF BUYER IN EVERY HOME > is the Housewife, and before leaving home to do the family shopping the advertising pages arc eagerly read, in order to ascertain where to go and the best that is offering, so as to make the purchases with the minimum amount ' of effort and time. A POWERFUL SALES PRODUCER. Covering the province of Canterbury, " THE PRESS " reaches every section of the community, particularly those people with the maximum of purchasing power—a matter of the utmost importance to advertisers, especially JUST NOW. "THE PRESS" is a home newspaper, being delivered right into tlic homes, and it enables advertisers to reach all members of the family six days a week. , "THE PRESS," CANTERBURY'S - LEADING DAILY, ' is owned and controlled in Christj church in the-interests of Canterbury people. It has the largest circulation—C,E R TIFI ED B Y 1 AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATE ' covering City, Suburbs, and Country Districts, of any newspaper in Canterbury, and is a 1 SELLING MEDIUM OF UNEQUALLED POWER. t 1 • -

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19330908.2.154.4

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXIX, Issue 20955, 8 September 1933, Page 18

Word Count
963

Page 18 Advertisements Column 4 Press, Volume LXIX, Issue 20955, 8 September 1933, Page 18

Page 18 Advertisements Column 4 Press, Volume LXIX, Issue 20955, 8 September 1933, Page 18