NEW ZEALAND y & 'LOAN & MERCANTILE v AGENCY CO. LTD. BROnOVf AYj STRATFORD. A nice little Dairy farm of 71 acres, freehold, all in grass and been ploughed with the exception of about 10 acres; divided into 12 paddocks; no weeds; 5 roomed house, stable, trapshed, hay and cowshed; 3 miles from railway, handy to school and factory. £32 per acre; very easy terms to a good man. Stock (20 rows, etc.) may be had at valuation. No. 8-934 Nice piece sheep and cattle country. 600 Acres (O.R.P. and L.1.P.), about 250 acres grassed, balance good hush; I paddocks; 4 roomed house iu fair order; 2=} miles from township, school, etc; good road; 5V miles to railway. Price for Goodwill £5 per acre. This is a splendid opportunity for a man of limited capital, as owner has other property, and will sell this on almost any terms to a boua hde purchaser. No. 6-1028. We have a full stock of Cram and Clover Seeds of all varieties.— Buda Kale, B.L.E. Rape, Silver Beet, Algerian, and Carton Oats, Winter Tares, Russian Barley, Bran, Pollard, Prime Canterbury Sheaf Chaff, etc. MANURES.—For all Crops—Lawes Superphosphate, Boncmeal. MACHINERY.— Fanners’ Favopite Drills (just arrived), Disc Spike and Link and Chain Harrows, Ploughs, Gates, Fencing "Wires, Wire Netting, Staples, Sheep Dip, Calf-foods, Cow and Horse’ Covers. Call or Write for Quotations. A. C. BELL, Land Salesman. FARMS' ■ THAT ARE WO!*TH BU?K. HI ACRES, SO aerea to laaa®. nil in grata, all v ''t / 1 mil* from •rearnerj; B.roomed homo, email cow-shed, ow >od road; leaae Imm about 8i jean to ran at an annual rental of 13a par aora. Fries AM far goodwill. WMSI ACRES, I<9T freehold, 3M Education Lean; 1400 in graaa, II paddocks, iheep-proof fences, several acres ploughed; 4-room-ad home, aheep yards, etc.; good undulating sheep country; 11 milaa from railway, 5 miles from creamery, 3 miles from post p(Boe. Lease has 10 years to run. Bent of lease £lB 18s per annum. Frlee £1 per sere. £2o®o cash. 116. MATTHEWS. GAMLIN & 0° \ AVBTIBNEERB, LANS A*B SUBMISSION ABENTS, f iNicmti.
fHI tMARTUT GIG IN TOWN —THIE “EGMONT.” mH ni>a go dWTina the loot tha t everyone likes their “turnout” to X ho the H&orlest h»ee we ere specially catering to the particular folk bat whose pvtM (these war f i mes) are not particularly big. Here J a reaaone why the “Igmout” gig merits this description: Real leather trimming! solid nickel mounts, “Collinge” steel axles, best hickory •helte, steel or’ mbber tyres, and var nished or painted as desired. Gome ood ail in eae. EGMONT COACH ' A C‘ ERIAGB C* WHEiLWHICHir*! •BABHBUIi.BE RB, ETB. HIQg for M»»«ey»Harrii Vina I* ilemsustw, Wart Oroam Separators dumpien Oeeking lai|M> iDait* Boiler Vramae, etc., Stratford. Newspaper Advertising A T on© of Ids recent lectures on advertising, i-Tk giyen at Liverpool, England, Thomas Bnssell, of London, emphasised strongly the vilne of newspaper advertising. -‘iTHe time,” he said, “was ripe for a great extension of advertising, and newspaper advertising must always be the mainstay of publicity.” He illustrated the fhot that scientific adver tising did not add to the cost of goods, but the more an article waiction of price Indeed, it became, and the mor advertised the cheaper led the* manufacturer f« »eH-intereet compelCertain article of grea" keep «P «» quah y. could ncyer . manufactured at all bad jt not been that *J™r ensured a sale large enough *. «»», th * tt down ot the elaborate and very ,j y plantß iidvor . tising was the cheapest yet devised by the wit of man for the ea j[ e 0 | 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 net true was good enough to put into an advertiser! *nt. fha “Commercial Aortas ** foluts out that—“CaHoubtedly the list and moot potent advertising force of the present day is the newspaper. Here is a field so vast and so eomplex that it needs th« most careful study of every varying condition to accurately estimate its possibilities, and a who'e army of specialists an.i experts i* all brandies of ser iee hare come into being.’ 1
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 92, 21 April 1915, Page 2
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699Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXV, Issue 92, 21 April 1915, Page 2
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