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NEW ZEALAND LOAN & MERCANTILE AGENCY GO.. LTD. i i BROADWAY, STRATFORD. 780 ACRES L.I.P. at £l4 per annum. Really good, strong clean sheep run cattle country.' About 150 acres felled and grassed, balance good bush. Iron whare. Situated within three miles railway and six miles to township. Motor road within one mile. .Rates £2 5s per annum. Price for goodwill 30s per acre, with £2OO cash, or less to a bona tide buyer, balance at 5 per cent. N 0.6-1037 460 ACRES Leasehold at Is per acre, 420 acres grassed. Nice easy country, divided into 6 sheep proof paddocks. 4-roomed house. Rates £7. 14 miles to township, 3 miles to railway. Price £5 per acre goodwill, easy terms to a good man, or may consider exchanging for Dairying Land. No. 6-1030. <- -wTjjWPjy iwap ■ 190 ACRES Freehold, all in grass, carrying 50 cows and sheep, 6 roomed house. Creamery, School, and ’Phone within few minutes. Aailway 5 miles; good roads. Price £l7 10s per acre, which wo consider really cheap. Easy terms to a good man, or owner will consider taking good quality lightly improved sheep country as payment. No. 9-1106. A, C. BELL, Land Salesman.

FAEMS THAT ARE WORTH 140 ACRES, 60 acres to lease, all in grass, all v ">f , 1 mile from ; creamery; 5-roomed house, small cow-shed, ou . >od road; lease baa about years to run at an annual rental of 12s per acre. PrlM 130 for goodwill. / 14C. INI ACRES, 1097 freehold, 3SI Education Lease j 1400 in grass, 12 paddocks, sheep-proof fences, several acres ploughed; 4-room-ed house, sheep yards, etc.; good undulating sheep country; 11 miles fronMailway, 5 miles from creamery, 2 miles from post office. Lease has 10 years to run. Rent of lease £lB 18s per annum. Price £5 par aero. £2OOO cash. 116. MATTHEWS. G AMLIN & 0° AUCTIONEERS, LAND LNO COMMISSION AGENTS, INGLE W 0 0 0. the emarteet cic IN TOWH-THE "EGMONT.” THERE’S no denying the fact that everyone likes their “turnout” to ha the amartest— henoe we are specially catering to the, particular folk, bat whose parse* (these war -d mes) are not particularly big. Here’* a few reasons why the “Egmont” gig merits this description: Real leather trimmings, solid nickel mounts, “Collinge” steel axles, best hickory shafta, steel or’rubber tyre*, and varnished or painted as desired. Come and sit in one. EGMONT COACH & CARRIAGE C° WHEELWRISHTS, MACHBUILDE RS, ETC. AGINTB for Matsey-Karrii rant Im plemenW, Was* Cream Separators Champion Coo king ftamges. Uniqu Boiler Frames, etc.. Stratford Newspaper Advertising A T one of Lift recent lectures on advertising, given at Liverpool, England, Thomas Russell, of London, emphasised strongly the value of newspaper advertising. “The time,” he amid, “was ripe for a great extension of advertising, and newspaper advertising mnst always,be the mainstay of publicity.” He illustrated the fact that scientific advertising 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. Th* “Oormnerode! Review’’ points ont that—“Ukaonbfcedly the first and moet potent advertising force of the present day »s the newspaper. Here is a field so vast and so complex that It needs the most careful jtudy of every varying eoadition to accurately estimate its possibilitiaa, and a whole army of specialists and experts in all branehe* of service have eome into being ”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19150217.2.9.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 39, 17 February 1915, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
663

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 39, 17 February 1915, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 39, 17 February 1915, Page 2

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