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PBOBPBOTTJS. PROSPECTUS OF THE EOTAL COMZE ALAND POTTERY PANY (LIMITED). Registered under the Joint Stock Companies Act, 1860, Capital £30,000 In 12,000 Shares of L2 10s each, of which 800 shares are already paid up, representing portions of the present capital of the Company. Five shillings per share to be paid on application, and 5s ou allotment. A call of 5s per share to bo made three months after allotment, and no further call to exceed 5s per share, payable at intervals of not less than three months between each call. Provisional Directors ; W. A. MURRAY, M.H.R., Glenere HENRY CLARKE, M.P.C., Tokomairiro JAMES GOOD ALL, Mayer of Milton ANDREW M'LAREN, Stock-dealer GEORGE COOMBE, Settler JAMES ELDER BROWN, Settler JOSEPH MACKAY, Publisher R. W. CAPSTICK, Auctioneer J. M. WATSON, Centractor W. L. PHILP, of Philp, Henderson, and Co. JOHN A DuTHIE, of Capstick, Duthie, and Co. GEORGE WILSON, Timber Merchant JAMES FINCH, Farmer J. L. SOUTTER, Merchant JOHN M'FARLANE, Farmer, Wangaloa THOMAS MURRAY, Farmer, Glenore With power to add to their number. Bankers * NATIONAL RANK OF NBW*ZBALAND. Solicitor : DONALD REID, ESQ. Manager • MR JOHN CHETHAM. Agent tor Dunedin : M. W. HAWKINS. The name of the Company is the New Zealand Royal Pottery Company. The Registered Office of the Company is to be established in the township of Milton t in the Province of Otago. The objects for which the Company is established are for the purposes of manufacturing and selling all kinds of Stone, China, Printed, Painted, and Enamel Earthenware; also, every description of Salt Glaze Stone Pipes, Chimney Tops, Sewer Pans, Fire Bricks, Tesselated Pavements, and Telegraph Insulators, and to do all things the Company, from time to time, consider to be incidental or conducive to the attainment of its objects, or otherwise for its benefit. The Liabilities of the Shareholders are Limited. The Nominal Capital of the Company is L 30.000, divided into 12,000 Shares at L2 10s each. THE success which baa attended the establishment of the Mosgiel Woollen Factory under the provisions of the Joint Stock Companies Act, and the greater facilities and extent to which such undertakings can be conducted by a Company as compared with a private individual, has led to the project of the formation of a Company, with a view to the purchase of the Tokomairiro Pottery Works, now owned by Mr W. M. White, and conducting the manufacture of Pottery and Earthenware upon a scale somewhat commensurate with the large market presented in New Zealand and the other Australian Colonies, this being the only Pottery Work established in the Southern Hemisphere. _Th® present works were commenced by Mr V ■ M. White about a year ago, since which fame he has disposed of over L 3.000 worth of Salt Glaze Pipes alone, the market for which is steadily on the increase, and beyond the present producing powers of the establishment. During this period Mr White ho s also devoted a considerable portion of his time and attention to the preparation of the necessary buildings and plant for the manufacture of all classes of Staffordshire Pottery Ware upon the most approved principles and latest improvements in machinery used in Staffoidshire, and recognised as the best and most economical m the world. The property is situated in the centre ef Milton.

Mr W. M. White has now ready for market large supplies of saleable articles for general and domestic purposes. The present time is, therefore, considered by the projectors of this Company the most favorable opportunity for entering upon the possession of the works, and pushing the manufacture and sale of Potteryware in this and the adjoining Colonies. An estimate of the nature and extent of the available market may be arrived at from the fact that the value of such imports into New Zealand alone for the year ending December last amounted to L 70,000, of which Otago alone imported L 22,000 worth of potteryware. The promoters have every confidence that they will be enabled to supply the whole Colonial market with any article in potteryware, at a figure sufficiently low to compete successfully with the Home article, while securing a large margin of .profit to the Company, who have secured the services, as manager, of Mr Chetham, for thirty years proprietor of one of the largest English Potteries, and practically aoI quainted with the various processes adopted in every branch of the trade. The services of the present staff—of over thirty thoroughly experimiced hands—brought from the Staffordshire I Potteries direct, and now engaged upon the works, have also been obtained. The projectors have agreed with Mr W. M. Winte to take over the Freehold Property, consisting of Three Acres of Land surrounding the present centrally situated Works (secured with a view to their future development), and the large and substantial buildings, with plant and a Ta l uat ion estimated at, or about, D 7,000, including the General Government bonus of L3OO. The amount of goodwill, estimated at L 2,000, Mr White has resolved to nvest in the Company in paid-up shares to that amount, so confident is he in the bona Jtdes of the undertaking in the hands of a public Comtttl projectors have also secured from Mr White his right obtained from the General Government to remove clay from the lands adjoining the line of railway between Tokomairiro and the Clutha, which clay is allowed, by competent judges, to be equal to any found in England for manufacturing purposes. The Government are now forming a siding to these clay pits, which are inexhaustible. The projected branch line to the Tokomairiro coal fields has also been surveyed to pass in front of the premises, so that the works will be in railwav communication with the raw material, withunCheap , Coal with a port of shipment; as also with the metropolis and 1 Sl krge !i toW,^ ip f of the Province likely to rovni good markets for supphes, I The projectors appeal for support with every confidence to the residents of Tokomairiro and the settlers of the County of Bruce generallv industry has already tended greatly to develop the resources of the district in opening up clay and coal mines, employing a large amount of outside labor in proS Dg wVi° a 5 lng timber ’ coal > and day sup. phes, while the recent unexampled prosperity of the township of Milton has been gSX $ vanced by the presence In its midst of the We number ©f employes—men, women, and ehilthe J w °rks, and which would be greatly increased by a larger propriety possessed ©f increased elpitel the works to every advantage. ” The promoters also confidently bring the eaterpme -under the notice of the general public of Otago, as it is a well-known fact that nothing so tends to advance the prosperity of a country as the estabhshment of local industries within its borders, thus preventing the export of capital from the Colony for supplies of every- • '^■P ar * fr° m these considerations, the enterprise of itself promises to be an amply remunerative and successful one. The L^w 40 *' 8 ’ having S iven the matter in all its aspects every consideration, have great pleaend believ. it will prove ffieveS way worth, confidence and eo-operativesupnnrt tW n f r nc !. and e °-°Perative suppo: Foms of apphcation may be obtained froxr W. StaSS&SSr fcltra: - » *

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18750422.2.10.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 3794, 22 April 1875, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,219

Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Star, Issue 3794, 22 April 1875, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Star, Issue 3794, 22 April 1875, Page 2

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