NEW ZEALAND. LOAN & MERCANTILE AGENCY CO.. LTD.. ■ROADWAY H fTBATFORD, PROPERTIES WE CAN RECOMMEND. I3J ACRES, Freehold — Carrying 3 oowe ; factory returns :A3 per cow Nearly all ploughed, and divided into 13 paddocks, o weeds. roomed house, cowshed, etc. Situated vithih 5 minus/os of Factory and School. Price A3I per acre (really «U»«P). £»«* ' larM. No. W ACRES, Fraihtld— Good level 1 nd, well fenced and divided. 6roomed ed. Situated within 6 minute of School, Factory, Phone and Store. Prlee All its per ««■• with ASM e&sb. No. 2-30 IN ACRES— Good Dairy Farm, level and well sheltered. Two houses and concreted »hed*j carry 100 oowa. School, Factory and ’Phone 8 minute*. Pr!aa **• i«r Very easy terms ts 'ft* liable man. „ , . ’ IM ACRES, Fnaheti—Good Dairying land, practically free of weeds shandy to town an# railway. Nice homestead, good house mv sheds, every convenience. Property well fenced and divided. One mile to Factory, School, Store and ’Phone. Price 231 m ■ora. Good terms ts ■PIWf«CI maw. Balawce for long term at B par sent., or would sewaltfw exchange for pise# of good clean shew* country. N< \ 4rl ™' WE base 199 ACRES Dairy Farm! which is in fplendid order, au > necessary buildings, free of needs, and unmortgaged. The owner’s selling price is A3l I** ■•«. but a* he wishes to retire he will accept a suitable property aa deposit either in Stratford or New Plymouth. *°- *~ loh Al«« a taa ACKE Eclry Farm, whfsh owner will consider exchanging town property between Hawera and New Plymouth. “HOW MoDOUCALL(S) TOPPED THE SCORE.” At the Manawatn Show held recently, McDougalls’ Dip secured 119 out of 157 awards, and 11 out of 13 championships, besides winning the “Short” 100 guinea Challenge Chip and the Southdown Society’s (England) Challenge Cup and at the Canterbury Metropolitan Show users o f “Mc - Dougalls”c aptured 13 out of 16 Championships, and 182 out of 240 awards, besides 19 specials. The merino classes wore not included No 8-944. A. 0. BELL, Land Salesman.
FARMS THAI! AM WORTH SUYIHC, ■I ACRES Freehold. All in gras* aad oropa, 46 Berea stumped, 9P* *• doe&s, all pioaghabie; metal’ed road; 1J milea from Inglaw^od,; | —n- |roco school and creamery. i-roomedd house, cowshed and MtbmMinxo; good orchard. PrlM Alt I** *«r Mf*» »«**■ Balaeee 7 yuri at I par teat. §j' ACRE! Freehold. All i« g;as» and crops; ploughable; 100 Mrea stamped and ploughed; IS paddock*, sheep-proof fencing, ■•tailed road, « mile* from Inglewood, Is rails* fro™. store, post eSoe, cheese and butter factory, I mile Itoxo creamery. 10roomed house, concrete yard*, 80-baii cowshed, stable, and other eetbwldisga. Frtae 119 as r. aara. Si«M cash. Balance aaay team FBR S.EA9E • «M ACRE*—Freehold. Ail in graas and crop* esoapt ahelter bush, 4M sores pioaghabie, 110 aorta ploughed; S mile? from railway, li jniln from creamery. E-room«d house, shod yards, aio. Own* sc jrill lease for Z year* at Jla €d per acre with purchasing clausa at ißlfl l«a. . . MATTHEWS. GAMLIN A CT KUGTIONBEBft, LAsft ft COMMISSION AfllNM, INQEIWMft
SOUND, STRONG, SPIKE AND LINK HARROW CHEAP. (P( OTJNDLx made, Strong enongh fot the rougesfc work, of |-moh square links and best quality heavy points, complete with vriffletree, expander* and drag weight*, all at the famous 'ECMONT" Quality on* Frlee. bottom half can be detached. Mad* in Sizes 8 and 10 fc»t wide, and cas he need »■ » spike and link, or by reversing, a link harrow only. Easily the cheapest and because “Bgmont the best. EGMONT COACH & C * RRIAGE ( JO. WHEELWRIGHTS, COACHBUILDE RS, dTO. AGENTS for Massey-Harris Farm Implement-, Wasa Cream Separators Champion Cooking Ranges, Uaiqu Boiler Frames, etc., Stratford. BOIJ Newspaper Advertising AT one of i-is recent lectures on advertising, given at Liverpool, England, Thomas Bussell, of London, emphasised strongly the value of newspaper advertising. “The time,” he said, “was ripe for a groat extension of advertising, and newspaper advertising must always bo the mainstay of publicity.” He illustrated the fact that scientific adver--8 tising did not add to the cost 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 the manufacturer to keep up the quality. Certain articles of great value 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 the first and most potent advertising force of the present day is the newspaper. Hero is a field so vast and so complex that it needs the most careful study of every varying condition to accurately estimate its possibilities, and * whole army of up* ciahsts au.l experts in all branches of service have come into being.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 292, 8 December 1914, Page 2
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843Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 292, 8 December 1914, Page 2
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