Old Sofala. OLD SOFALA!" How the name con-. 0. jures up memories of the roaring days — of teeming pubs, rowdy gambling dens, slant-eyed Chows by the hundreds, and jettison from all the nationalities — flotsam' from every corner of the ...
... Sofala, and the requirements for cormnonago and commoners on tho boundaries of the.placcsnamcd. Tho matter was regarded as J* [most important one. Surveyor Thnrburn gave evidence showing that tho common at Sofala contained 19,640 acres ...
... Sofala and the Turon area is still full of wonderful characters, many of them alive and well in the bar of Mrs Eileen Farrell's famous Sofala Royal Hotel. Built in 1862. only 11 years after the start of the gold rush and once housing a ...
... SOFALA ESTATE s unquestionably one of the best subdivisions ever flcTcd to the Public. One of the But Subdivisions s a big thing to say, but the vendor Is confident thai Sofala is exactly what ho says It to— "Something Good" nd docs not ...
... Sofala, with the information that theianlr, that morning, had been robbed of £1692. Sergeant Casey, of the Sofala police (who had come to Bathurst to attena the Quarter Sessions), and sergeant Garvey, of the Bathnnt police, were at once ...
... Sofala, with the information that tho bank, that morning:, had boon robbed of £1682. Sergeant Casoy, of tho Sofala police (who had come to Bathurat to attend tho Quarter Sessions), and sergeant Garvoy, of thoBathurst police, were at ...
... Sofala (pronounccc show-fa-la). She is quite pret ly. She will generally be wear ing her own African dress. Her accent is somewhat French. Mrs. Sofala has been in this country for the past six years as a student. But, what is more ...
... Sofala Public School was closed because the Department of Education said the school's enrolment had dropped to nine, and 12 was the minimum required to keep a one-teacher school open. Sofala P and C was told by the department that a ...
... Sofala, you should know, is not in that class — it is different. This village with the mellifluous name is tucked into the dimpling crease between two lines of hills. From whichever direction it is approached it remains modestly hidden ...