Rouses and Land for Sale. AT VALUATION. 109 ACRES, L.T.T.—Few. ' miles from X-j—j railway station—Well fenced and subdivided: flat to undulating; all pwughable; good loam—soil;--70- acres grass after plough, balance ready for seed; "permanent creeks. .Well-finished House, 4 rooms and outbuildings. Cream cart calls. School, P.O. and store U miles. Price. £20- 10s per -acre. NOTE.We have been instructed to sell this property affile actual price it has been 'valued at for mortgage purposes. NO OTHER PROPERTY IS OX THE MARKET UNDER THIS -CONDITION. OUTH A UCKLAND. "J 7 A ACRES, L.T.T.—Only one mile from XI \J railway station—Well fenced and watered soil loam and volcanic: all ploughable; 10 acres "Bush, balance in grass or under, plough. House and outbuildings. Price. £25 per acre. Very easv terms arranged. NOTE.— Owner must sell, and the right man can make £10 PER ACRE PROFIT ON THIS PLACE. HARRISON & CO., - SOLE AGENTS, 7, SWANSON STREET. F. L. WARD t Manager Farm Department. I'' ' 1 Tailoring. TAILOR-FITTING SUITS AT WHOLESALE PRICES. The average man wishes to save money on his clothes: - He recognises that £5 5s is a long price for one suit, and he is anxious to get it for less. " But he doeß not want 1 to lose the difference in quality—to appear in a suit which looks inferior. Many tailoring firms recognised that there was good business to be done. i. tit they did not grasp the ideas underlying the Jit'tle paragraph which heads this article. They took, expensive premises, made a splash, and inevitably had to' reduce quality or raise prices. They reduced quality, their customers vanished., and the problem was still unsolved. Some few years ago a few practical men of different vision set out to' take the average n>an put of his dilemma. Tnev studied the problem, they made arrangements with Home and colonial mills - for . regular supplies of the latest materials, and opened in Chrlstchurcn, Wellington, and Auckland. Quietly the business grew by the.. recommendation of pleased clients until it put the crown on its achievements by securing the first prize and gold medal at Auckland Exhibition." ~ The Crown" Clothing" Comp&By is the firm which has solved the problem of how to dress as well at less cost. Tucked away between two other big ware--1 houses in Elliott Street, jusr. behind Strand Arcade, you will see the well-dressed show "windows of the firm. Step inside and the first surprise is yours. a long, lofty showroom with the air ol a West End London tailoring establishment, fitted with. fixtures . containing beautiful suitings of Eng- ;■ land worsteds, and the best from Home and colonial mills in ' every '' seasonable weight and stylish pattern- On fflodefs are samples of-suits, marked with the net cash pricesExamine one of these suits and it will be 1 .seen that the linings • are good, ' and the finish throughout is thorough in every par- ' ticular. Gather a handful of the "front of '. the coat, release it. and the good nuahty hair cloth support springs back into place, showing that the suit will keep its shape to the end. At the further end of the great showroom are the customers' fitting rooms. Each .has a sliding door," which when shut displays ; the sign " Engaged" Inside each are two full-rtensth mirrors- Before a customer is allowed to take away a suit, it must-meet • his approval. The mirrors show him the front and' back, view—no" one needs to ' tell him whether the suit fits or -not. Ho knows for himself." ' From the 40 sizes in stock any man -lay be perfectly fitted-at once. Should there be any slight difference it will he "promptly altered on the premises without any additional charge, and' the suit is exactly the same as it it had been specially made and . tried on. Where customers desire a suit specially made the extra chargeis slight, "because the basic principle remains the same. .... . . That is a plain statement of why the ; Crown Clothing Company can provide suits equal 'to "tailor-made in every respect but at wholesale price. They buy -in immense quantities tor the trade of the three- largesfrcities in New 'Zealand. , They do not lavish money on main street premises, and every , -man employed is a worker.' They "trade for . cash only, sell dfiecT'*fd the public, and . mafee no bad. debts. This is war time, tnd ' a man must save where he can do so with- : out losing quality, .Ones, men see that at last thev . can =' secure at wholesale price a suit which »the ..'most -experienced observer "could not tell -from tailor-made, there is no need to do. ;njuclr urging,-. It t took time-to r prove that it could be done, but now it is J an, admitted faet»-' Young- office men 'who J "must dress well on a small salary furnish 1 a large portion of tho trade, but scores of r "business men- in a large way-come regularly to The Crown" for their suits. Ask them now to pay £5 5s for a business suit, an**" th«y would think it a joke. The address—^ we "wilt "TeTGBt" it "again*—so that""."can't mistake. it-nCrswn.. Clothing Company. Elliott • Street, just through the ' Strand" Arcade, ' Auckland., ' "„■.. ■, - ' .■:■■=?. Merchandise. • New Yea Presents 2 5 The custom of New Year Gift--1 giving is becoming more popular every year. i The Present you overlooked or £ were to buay to choose for Xmas, we have in our Reserve ' Stock now set out. Toilet Goods, Leather-ware, I Sporting Requisitesa delight--3 ful selection. 3 J. WISEMAN & SONS, LTD. m Leather Craftsmen and Sports Goods Specialists, 175 Queen Si. "■ » "~"" "— Musical. ', PIANOS "&. S,! p °f, TPIANOS~™£M^7 PIANOS %MM. j_|/\NvJC> SB. HIGH ST. PIANIOQ NO DEPOSIT. rinnvQ as, HIGH st. r IMINvJO 23, HIQ-I ST. . PIANOS Ng°s.g,^oTi PIANOS 8, - a §.^ll^r. pi AM 00 NO DEPOSIT. rInINUO 23. HIGH ST. PIANOS 9 - /- A WEEK riniXvO 28. high st. PIANOS *5s, p -f5ffST: PIANOS 28. HIGH ST, }
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LII, Issue 15807, 2 January 1915, Page 9
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980Page 9 Advertisements Column 6 New Zealand Herald, Volume LII, Issue 15807, 2 January 1915, Page 9
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