CITY AND COUNTRY REAL ESTATE ACTIVITIES
HOUSES AND PROPERTIES FOR SALE 4870 ACRES FREEHOLD, One hour by car from Dunedin, One mile from rail, Post Office, school, and store. Well subdivided; large portion ploughable; plenty of water; all warm ewe country; 6-roomcd House, garage, stable, barn, implement shed, wool shed, sheep yards, etc. PRICE, 25s AN ACRE. DONALD REID & CO., LTD., DUNEDIN. FOR EXCHANGE. TPXCHANGE farmlet , JL SUBURBAN HOUSE. FOR As Advertiser has Fannlel; 4J ACRES FREEHOLD, with House and- buildings, couple miles from tram, value about £OOO, and as he requires a Suburban House, he would MAKE AN EXCHANGE FOR SAME. Will give a good deal for Comfortable, Plain House. 122, TIMES. gECT I 0 N FOR GAR. Owner of Good Suburban Section, value £IOO, no mortgage, would take English Light Car or heavier American Sedan about same value.. Private Owners only. 123, TIMES. HOUSES AND PROPERTIES WANTED WANTED to BUY (Purakanul or Warrington), 3-4-roomed HOUSE for summer week-ends.—Patersons, Rattray street. V 3au CASH BUYER waiting PURCHASE old HOUSE with freehold section; on rise or north end.-—Clarke, Venn. 3au WANTED TO RENT GOOD TENANT, waiting for self-contained FLAT or small HOUSE, within 15 minutes’ walk Octagon,—Clarke, Venn.
The wearing: of shamrock in London on St. Patrick’s T)ay seems to be declining every year, although there are more Irish dinners there than ever (says the Manchester Guardian). Mr Dulanty, the Free State High Commissioner, however, is said to have dined at at least four of them on St. Patrick’s Night, as befitted the most popular Irishman in town. One explanation why there are fewer shamrocks to be seen in the streets is offered by a correspondent who went into a famous Irish tavern in Fleet street and asked whv there were no bowls of shamrock on the bar. The barman replied that the distillers were not sending shamrock now; That was bad enough, said the correspondent, hut to make it worse the man, with a good Irish accent, was wearing a red rose in his coat. To wear a red rase in one’s tavern on March 17 is surely one of the most daring deeds ever done on St. Patrick’s Day.
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 22022, 3 August 1933, Page 12
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361Page 12 Advertisements Column 2 Otago Daily Times, Issue 22022, 3 August 1933, Page 12
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