NEW ZEALAND LOAN & MT"CAN TILE AGENCY LTD. •ROADWAY a 3 fTRATFORD, PROPERTIES WE CAN RECOMMEND. 13} ACRES, Freehold—Carrying 8 oowa; factory returns W 9 per cow. Nearly all ploughed, and divided into IS paddocks, o weeds. 6-roomed house, cowshed, etc. Situated vithin G minuses of Factory and School. Prise £3O per tore Really cheap). Easy terms. No - *" 18L Ti ACRES, Freehold—Good level 1 nd, well fenced and divided. 5roomed house, 8-bail shed, orchard, eto. About 28 acres stumped. • Situated within 6 minute of School, Factory, Phone and Store. Price £2l IS* per eere with £2OO cash. No. 2-89. 3«0 ACRES— Good Dairy Farm, level and well sheltered. Two houses and concreted sheds; carry 100 cows. School, Factory and ’Phone 8 minutes. Prloe £SB per acre. Very easy terms to reliable man. fie ACRES, Freehold —Good Dairying land, practically free of weeds, handy to town anf railway. Nice homestead, good house anu sheds, every convenience. property well fenced and divided. One mile to Factory, School, fe™re and ’Phone. Prloe £3S per ■ore. Coed term* to ippro'ed min. Balanoe for long torm at I per oont., or would exchange for piece of good clean sheep country. No * 4 " 170 ‘ WE have 199 ACRES Dairy Farm, which is in splendid order, all necessary buildings, free of waeds, and unmortgaged. The owner’s selling price is £3l P*r aero, bat as ho wishes to retire he wHI accept a suitable property as deposit either in Stratford or New Plymouth. .Mo. 4-101. Also • 206 ACRE Dairy Firm, whfoh owner will consider exchanging town property between Hawera and Now Plymouth. No. 8-244. A. G. BELL, 1 Land Salesman. JMA.* FARMS ARB WORTH BUY s&t-L fM ASRSS—Freehold. 11l in grass and crops, 46 seres stumped, 9 paliiaess, all plonghable; metalldd road; 1} miles from inglew-uodj }nwile from school and creamery. 6-roomedd house, cowshed and outbuildings; good orchard. Prim £l6 ISO par aor*. £2S9 aaeh. Balanoe 7 yean at B per sent.. ACRE*—Freehold. All in grass and crops; all plougliable; 100 acres stomped and ploughed; 12 paddocks, sheep-proof fencing, metalled road, ;fl miles from iivdewood, 1} miles from store, post oßoe, cheese and butter factory, } mile from creamery, 16roomed house, concrete yards, 80-batl cowshed, stable, and other outbuildings. Prise £l6 per aero. £ime sash. Balance easy „,i ■ ■ ,U) on ■ KJ FBR LEASE*H AC REB—Freehold. AH in gross and crop* except shelter bush, 400 acres pioughable, 110 aotva ploughed; 8 miles from railway, 11 mile* from creamery. 8-room ed house, shed, yards, eto. Owner will lease for 1 years at 18s 6d per acre with purchasing clause at £l6 10s. MATTHEWS. GAMLIN A C 10. AUCTIONEERS, LANA k COMMISSION AGENTS, SOUND, STRONG, SPIKE AND LINK HARROW CHEAP. Qosc SB •*,. -5 ROUNDLY made, Strong enough for the rougest work, of |-inoh square links and best quality heavy points, complete with wiffletree, expanders and drag weights, all at Lhe famous “EGMONT” Quality and Prlee. Bottom half can be detached. Made in Sixes 8 and 10 feet wide, and oar be used as a spike and link, or by reversing, a link harrow only. Easily the cheapest and because “Egmont' THE BEST. EGMONT COACH & CARRIAGE (J° WHEELWRIGHTS, COACH BUILDERS, £TC. AGENTS for Massey-Harris Farm Implement*, Wasa Cream Separators, Champion Cooking Ranges. Uniqu Boiler Frames, etc., Stratford. Newspaper Advertising AT one of Lis recent lectures on advertising, given at Liverpool, England, Thomas - Russell, of Lon ion, emphasised strongly the value of newspaper advertising. “The time,” he said, “was ripe for a great extension of advertising, and newspaper advertising must always be tne mainstay of publicity.” He illustrated the fact that scientific advertising did not add to tne cjst of goods, but secured a material reduction of price, indeed, the more an article was advertised the cheaper it became, and the more self-interest compelled Jhe manufacturer to keep up the quality. Certain articles of great yalue to the public could never have been manufactured at all had it not been that advertising' ensured a sale large enough to warrant the putting- down'of the elaborate and very costly plants. Advertising was the cheapest method yet devised by the wit of man for the sale of honest goods. The great commercial discovery of the age was that it did not pay to advertise unless the goods advertised were honest goods, while nothing which was not true was good enough to put into an advertisement. The “Commercial Review” points out that—“ Undoubtedly th* first and most poteut advertising force of the present day is tha newspaper. Here is a field so vast and so complex that it needs tho most careful study of every varying oondition to accurately estimate its possibilities, and a whcle army of specialists and experts in all branches of sen ice have come into being.”
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXX, Issue 60, 6 November 1914, Page 2
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791Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXX, Issue 60, 6 November 1914, Page 2
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