in which an advertisement is to be published. One that is pub-
lished in the locality in which the property is situated, where
there are residents who probably have some knowledge of its
whereabouts and its advantages, need not specify so much as to
the situation and qualities of the land, and the extent of the
improvements, as a notification addressed to metropolitan readers,
hundreds of miles away from the property, ought to do. In some
eases, indeed, a mere outline might be sufficient in a locality
where the property is well known. But to what extent can
dwellers in Melbourne who may not be able to travel hundreds
of miles to inspect a property, be expected to take an interest in
the mere fact that a block of 640 acres, "about seven miles from
Curyo Railway Station, well watered and fenced, with useful
buildings," is to be sold by order of the mortgagee? That is the
whole of the information vouchsafed. It might be enough for a
farmer in the Curyo district. But the resident of Melbourne
would not find in it the things he required to know before he
risked his money. The local man, if he ever saw it, might say :
"TI know that block. It ought to be a bargain at three pounds
an acre anyhow. A good deal of it is under crop and most of it
fit for the plough. It is on the best side of the railway where
the red loam is, and not far from the irrigation channel." But
the Melbourne man would probably say : " They do not tell one
whether the place is on the right or the wrong side of the line,
what sort of soil it has, how much is under crop, and how much
fit for the plough, nor how it stands for irrigation water if I want
it; I suppose the silence is because it is not satisfactory in these
respects, so I will not waste valuable time going to the sale."
The respondents were aware of qualities which recommended the
property, because they had received before making the loan a
report from their own valuer in which it was stated among other
things that the soil was "red to brown sandy loam of good quality
for cereals and for grazing"; that it was all cleared and nearly
all then ready for cultivation, about 250 acres being then culti-
vated; that there was a Trust Water Channel about a mile away,
which would be very advantageous when the farm came to be
connected with the channel; and that the then value as a free-
hold was £1,280, which meant that as a leasehold it was worth
VOL. XII, 47