EXHIBITION IN CITY. HAYWAEDS GARDEN SUBURB. Have you noticed the people stop and gaze in the windows at the corner of Panama and Featherston j streets —opposite the G.P.0. 1 j ' Their attention is attracted by an exhibition of photographs, flowers, and shrubs, also plans, which are being shown to illustrate the charms of Haywards—the coming garden suburb in the Hutt Valley, only 15 miles by rail from Wellington—and demonstrating the intention of the owners in dealing with the approaching auction sale of the Manor Park Estate in the Hutt Valley.* The whole estate, comprising over 600 acres, is intact —not a section has been sold yet. The beautiful panorama of the wil-low-fringed river, the rich flat fields, the slopes and upland plateaux^ is one of the finest rural scenes in New Zealand. :. •' It is an ideal situation for a pretty garden village, where city workers (may..dwell amid beauty and comfort, "away from the noise and smoke of the (own. The Haywards estate is to be offered for saJo in the first neck in Iwcmn'ucr. Watch for i'urttiw jiarliculaxs.—Asivi" -
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Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 124, 21 November 1925, Page 10
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179Page 10 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 124, 21 November 1925, Page 10
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