v/aikanah stock sale. WEDNESDAY, 8, 1916. Messrs abraham and WILLIAMS, LTD., will sell at 1 p.m.— 8 fat bullocks. 4 fat cows i 6 springing S.H. heifers. 3 springing heifers 6 empty cows 1 2-yr Holstein bull. 1 purebred 2-year Jersey bull. CO fat wetliera 20 3-year steers 1180-3 WAIKANAE STOCK SALE. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 8, 1916. D ALGETY AND COMPANY, LTD. will sell at 1 p.TD— 8 prime fat bullooks. • 2 prime fat cows 2 guaranteed springers o forward cows | 10 yearling steers j 40 fat and forward 4-tooth wethers. 1181-3 CENTURY HALL LEVIN. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9. THE "MYSTERIOUS MINSTRELS." THE "MYSTERIOUS MINSTRELS." THE "MYSTERIOUS MINSTRELS." A Novel Performance. Also send-off to men going into camp. 5 ADMISSION TO ALL PARTS, i C. S. KEEDWELL. Hon. Sec. Levin Patriotic Society. 1185-3 BREAD will be delivered to all parts of the district at 31(1 spot cash, ib y . W. Wooller, To-morrow, 7th November and after. 1187-3 COUNTRY NEWSPAPERS GIVE GOOD RESULTS. At 'a meeting of the American Advertisers' Asosciation, Arthur Brisbane said: —Not the country publisher but the business man is the chief sufferer from the fact that our merchants and manufacturers have not utilised the country newspapers' advertising columns as they should and can he ut:lied). Remember these taots: He who reads the little crossroads newspaper and the larger newspapers of the fairsized towns is a man who buys evjf7thing. He lives in a house and on the land that he owns. He is interested in everything the business men oio doing. Through good advertising you oan sell him anything from the r»int on the roof of his house to the cement on the floor of his cellar. . Everyth : ng between the roof and the cell ir, everything in the barn, and every tool in the field he buys and you mav e«'ll him. He is not like the dweller in the big city flat who gets His water through a pipe, his light through a wire, his heat from the basement, and whose shopping consists in getting a readymade suit of clothes and a ready-made dinner in a box or tin. The man who reads the country newspaper buys everything. He boys pumps, lamps, stoves, automobiles, clothing, dresses, books, paints, farm implements, furniture, carpets, oils. In this room are 250 men and individuals. Some of them represent a dozen manufacturing enterprises and more. There is'nt a man who has anything to sell that he cannot sell to the reader of a country newspaper. And every man here could more piofitably advertise in a country newspaper in proportion to its circulation than in any other publication on earth. I emphasize the value of the coutry newspaper as an advertising medium for it has that value." The Horowhenua Daily Chronicle is | • a country newspaper and has a large circulation, 75 per "cent of it's readers being farmers. Its district is centrally situated (being half way between Welj lington and Palmerston North) in a rich farming community. Send for sample copies and .advertising rates. TO STAND THE SEASON. Between SHANNON andi Otaki. The well-known Clydesdale DraughtHoree. STA NLEY TERMS.—Single Marea £3; two or more mares- reduction made. GROOMAGE FEE 2s 6d. C. BELL, Owner Weraroa. ~ 1071-qr. 111-111 111 alcoholic BEVERAGE Hub % OF m DISTINCT ■ MEDICINAL | BENEFIT
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HC19161107.2.26.4
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Horowhenua Chronicle, 7 November 1916, Page 4
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544Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Horowhenua Chronicle, 7 November 1916, Page 4
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