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MHp____——_— _■__—"*-** .1.1 Auctions. " " MATSON & CO. CANTi_mB]LJRY WOOL SALES. SEASON 1887-188., POSITIVE SAFETY. PUNCTUAL SETTLEMENTS. PROMPT ATTENTION. PRACTICAL KNOWLEDGE. PERFECT ARRANGEMENTS. jj A T SO N - te - i_/.Q. S Canterbury wool stores, "THE WOOL __OUSE,, -WlOoh, for ove_Twenty Years, has perslsfently *■ f _dvocate_the DISPOSAL OF THE NEW fZEALANDiCLD? BY. AUCTION *< *•' IN ; Y THE "^ALaiARB_iT, fl ,i -OUwßnabling the Grower to find a "CASH " Within the Colony for Us years labor, c_re, a_4 1 * v f •P WOOL-GROWISIS, l-ERCHANTS, "* ' AND THE TRADE. Gentlemen.-At the approach of uofMrwool teas-n we take this opportunity ot l agflun ad Sressine you. and, upon this occasion, ~o conJrlSe yoi upon the undoubted success of __BtW's y sales P in our local. ™ r ¥ e^ thank those who aided wd-sWmbrmnnß tahout such an unqualified success the sales of 188S-ISB7. It must indeed be a Seerful consolation to every farmer to k-now that at last New Zealand is fast becoming one of'themost important, and shortly will be one of the - "CHIEF EMPORIUMS" ♦«•* *■_« nale of wools in the A_stralasi-S_Tlins ™«J__'_n-ad Wthe necessity of the producer ES to the last) becoming a shipper, carter. S? merchantf and fulfaflng his destiny, by enabling him to "HANDLE THE CASH ON THE SPOT, and thus know his success or failure for his year'slahor. Onr advocacy is, and has always been the accumulating of ,?. LARGE CATALOGUES OE W00L,",. ffaerebv enticing buyers from all parts of the •world, or otherwise,, for we Btfll hold to the belief, "THAT WHERE THE CARCASE IS, SO SURELY THE EAGLE WILL SHORTLY QUAMBY., We hßve no intention to weary onr friends with a long description of '*heta*alto«i at our disposal for their especial benefit, suffice it to Bay that the same accommodation and spc-~___lti-s pertaining to our W 00l hnsinesa of last - _S_ion; which our friends were good enough to appreciate by entries in catalogues of greater dimensions than 'upon any preceding occasion, are at your disposal this season. Without •vanity, we re-echo the oft-repeated sentiment of the trade. "No question about it, these aro far and away the most suitable and best lighted Woolßoomsin Canterbury." Well, gentlemen, as with the Wool Rooms, so -with tap system adopted to the get up of tho Sales. ~We make a role to spare no trouble in seeing that each nag or bale has its fair position, and that every opportunity for inspection and valuation is afforded. As resident Brokers and Salesmen of lone standing, in fact one of the first firms whe established Wool Sales in Canterbury, we claim t as our duty to our clients and the trade gene-•-ally to most earnestly counsel them upon no consideration to repeat the persistent errors of the past in foolishly packina 'under ono cover" several kinds of< wool. Such as bale : number so-and-so contains UO-and-80, or, as in many instances, no advice as to peculiarity of contents, and when BUhsetfnently examined by buyer the lot is rejected, ___.er the "safety valve " of clause re lalse packing. "Wool bales, and bags are cheap , enonahi surely! Then why nor. expend an extra penny and sare pounds ? These remarks reftsrSequally- to daggings and coarso brecchtngfi. No article of produce is so sensit've to th-v'' market touch "a3 wool. The wool:. ayer isthe tndst artistic and wary of purchasers; he is" a. once the mo3t confidential or suspicious creature in trade, and rightly so to. Noted ''brands will always command the resp-ct of the woel-buycr, but in case of stray, ill-gotuplines; •wherein at times' arc to be found all sorts and conditions of fleeces, now and then daggings, a __B.p%_ln or two. &c, these sutler mercilessly in the hands of the trade. Whereas, had the ooi_-_»_2ent been carefully "gone over" in 'owner's shed," an_ placed in separate parcels, eac_ ; l——i ot -wool by itself, never mind how Bmall tSTj-lkj the seller would be. a very largo Tgafiier." J3_t no other calling 1 : is;'Megligcnce or :'_SeJe__a_ss* s_ "severelypuhishea" asm the ** J __i--'qf wool; perhaps tlie mtliction is not at. the tlmftßerceptible, but tho ltnwaryproducersoon flndi ma pocket lighter than that of his more discreet neighbour. Query—Why throw,away money when it can be so easily saved ? With regard to charges, these are reduced to the lowest, and are upon the same scale as other houses. No charge is made for cartage from rail to onr well hghtcd stores. This is a "gteat boon, -which we,, with pleasure, give to our clients. Viewing the outlook of the Wool Market we can, with every confidence, advise our friends and tlie public generally to try the .Local Market .this season before rashly Bonding forward by sea. Habit is, like opium eating, very hard to overcome, but in wool producing the •producer should have " two shots for his money.* There is no necessity- to place in Btore the whole clip. Send sample bales of each class, which system was introduced by a most •valued client some fow years since, and emulated by many both of the Plains and Peninsula, and has invariably resulted in equal Batisfaction. , Large Catalogues, produced from the various Brokers doing business in Canterbury, ia the only bait to attract our worthy French and Foreign Buyer, who frequent Menzies' Hotel, and nave their cards placed upon the seats in the various Melbourne Wool Rooms. Why not try I Is New Zealand to remain in the background for evert In troubling you •with these remarks' we do so in the interests of many wool growers, who, '.from hahjL-in the good prices ox the past, have and the taste of adversity of late should act as an incentive-to use every caro and caution in the "get up" of the clips, to secure all the advantages of the rise. Collar every _b_f_r'' is an old but very true saying. Values in wool are made or nian-d by care or carelessness. .'Wie ask the pardon of some growers for thus, as it were, again "rubbing it in,' but having - th-N-Xperienco of lengthened years as salesmen. Bad-bur position allowing us to view both sides of tho-qucstion, we take the liberty in growers' .Interests, as well as in the general interests of the trade, to press upon the owners of wool, especially the two to twenty bale lots, thenecesstty to insist upon careful sorting. "Nothing Ss more attractive to the eye of an expert than at nice, oven, well-classed line of wool, bo it either merino, ha—bred, or cr_s3bred*nObt_in __e__t__ction and you secure the price. In cond— _on. -wo may state that, failing a sale in the local market equal to vendor's limits, we • _?_* *l P*>s" on unsurpassed to place your clips -/inthe London market upon terms which certainly will bear favorable comparison with any others in the trade, not even exceptSnit the *_p__*_test Wool Houses in the world. - , Ooragents and brokers in London thoroue-hlv-understand the ramifications of the woottrade and ahouldanttdpattons here be not realised' g«|pan rest quite contentedrlbafcs if ya_T_l__t _h IP . your wool will have __re _52 e n_ whothoroa S" ly kaowr tho-varying tone i ' »«»*=*. tho advance *«-_^-p__ with your zd* oui? l SALE OF THE SEASON, "-- - TAK-tS P-ACE OX "NOVEMBER ia We axe. Gentlemen. MATSON and CO., Wool Brokers, Canterbury. Wool Stores, Christch urch. Agento a__ Receiver-— KATSON and Co.. A__burton and _eeston, WM. BUSS. Rangiora. A ccasiCTmentn per rail, ad-.-ea3r_ "Matsow Co, Cb-tstohnrcb,' come direc. to our rm

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP18871107.2.61.1

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume XLIV, Issue 6902, 7 November 1887, Page 8

Word Count
1,217

Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 Press, Volume XLIV, Issue 6902, 7 November 1887, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 Press, Volume XLIV, Issue 6902, 7 November 1887, Page 8