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What is THE Verdict ? llow many times have you thought the Wallapers in your home spoil the appearance of your-furniture. For if you think of that, so must your friends. Don't give them the opportunity to criticise. Let lIAltFOIiI> and SONS {five you the benefit of their experience of interior decoration. jj’ j HARFORD £ SONS, LID. Fhone 115. Manchester Street 9W jjJitte Moral f 'ffi mm* -.t-iV -V ;-\— ADVERTISE IN THIS NEWSPAPER

for Dependability use a WILLARD Outstanding improvements in design, advanced engineering practice, better materials, finer workmanship, more exacting tests —all these have contributed to the highly efficient Willard ThreadRubber Insulated Battery of to-day. It starts your motor quickly—and gives you more miles and more months of satisfactory, dependable service. "WW 0 «u| BATTERIES Willard QUICK STARTS . . . AND MANY OF THEM W. E. JOHNSON, lAXCHESTER STREET, FEII.DIXG

Autopay will be* having- his filial prallop at Trentham to-day, and will be leaving- for Australia next Friday. . Autopay is very well and should come to hand quickly in Sydney. The three year old Aga Khan, who has been under C. Jackson’s care at llawera for some weeks, has made considerable improvement in appearance, and is bg-inning- to shape well in his track efforts. Formerly trained by M. Carroll at To Rapa, Aga Khan was much boomed round the Waikato district, but has not raced much. He won a maiden race at To Kuiti in April, beating: a moderate field, but is a likely improver, and should be useful around Taranaki tracks. W. Refime, the well known crosscountry rider, returned to Hamilton last week after attending the Victoria Grand National meeting- at Flemington, where In* rode Make Up and Landmark in the hurdles and steeples respectively. They failed to run prominently, he stated, havingtrained off since they left New Zealand just after the Great Northern meeting-. They were further handicapped by the brief interval between the time of their arrival and the races. if they were in form Rennie considered that- they would have good y prospects of winning- races on the other ride Coney and Captain’s Gift

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/FS19320730.2.8.1

Bibliographic details

Feilding Star, Volume 9, Issue 3784, 30 July 1932, Page 3

Word Count
346

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Feilding Star, Volume 9, Issue 3784, 30 July 1932, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Feilding Star, Volume 9, Issue 3784, 30 July 1932, Page 3