NEW ZEALAND! LOAN & MERCANTILE AGENCY CO. LTD. BROADWAY, STRATFORD. 140 ACRES FREEHOLD, good dairying land, no weeds. Well divided and fenced, over half stumped. Good 6 roomed house, large milking and other sheds, carry 70 cows and young stock. Factory returns for the last 10 years may be seen, which exceed all expectations. Price £37 10s oer acre, with £7OO cash, or less to a reliable man, balance for long toms at 5 per cent. > - W w No. .?*? 62 190 ACRES FREEHOLD, level and rolling land, very suitable for milking say 30 cows and running a few hundred breeding ewes, or young cattle. All grassed and well subdivided. 5 roomed house and milking shed with milking machines installed. Handy to school, factory and township. Price £l6 per acre for quick sale, with a couple of hundred cash, balance for long term at 5 per cent. , ' A very nice little farm of 96 ACRES FREEHOLD, level and well watered no weeds. All the land has been under the plough. Well fenced and divided. Well • situated, being handy to town, and all conveniences. Well huilt 5 roomed house and 16 hail cowshed. Bedrock price £6O per acre, with £4OO cash, balance for long term at 5 per cent. No. 8-938. 96 ACRES FREEHOLD, well fenced and divided. Carrying 40 cows. 7roomed house and 20 bail concrete shed. Close to either cheese or butter factory; school, etc. Price £35 per acre, with £4OO cash, balance for 7 years at 5 per cent. • 160 ACRES FREEHOLD, good, level, and nicely undulating country, free from weeds. About half the property has been ploughed. Wintering 70 cows. Almost new 6 roomed house, hot and cold water. New cowshed, concreted, also concrete yard and race. Price £4O per acre, including up-to-date milking plant In thorough order. Very easy terms to a bona fide man. Balance for 8 years at 5 per cent. No. 7-540, 200 ACRES, good country, free from weeds, about half of which has been ploughed, 7 roomed house and concrete cowshed with milking plant installed. Close to school and factory. Price £3O per acre, with easy terms, as the owner’s sons have enlisted. * • No. 7-536 06 ACRES FREEHOLD, well divided and fenced. Carrying 40 cows, etc., 7 roomed house, 20 bail concrete shed. Close to school and factory (cheese or butter). Price £35 per acre, with £3OO cash, balance for 7 years at 5 per cent. No, 7-536 Anyone wishing to exchange their property kindly send us full particulars of their land, mentioning their requirements, as we have clients wishing to exchange. We make a point of working exchanges on fair and selling values, and through our wide knowledge of this province are in a position to give reliable information when requested. i v W. A. HEWITT, Manager. A. C. BELL, Land Bateeman. WHEN YOU BUY A nrr* See that you get the best gig on the market. You are invited to criticise every detail in the construction of the “Egmont” Gig. You notice _ its handsome appearance on the road, and you test its comfort and perfect balance. THE EGMONT QIC THE EGMONT GIG '/N O Is built to conform to the highest ideals of the Coachhuilding art. Test it how you may, you will find the “EGMONT” to-day is the same reliable “EGMONT” which lias achieved an undeniable superiority and popularity. EGMONT e CARRIAGE CO. MCE STREET, JUST SOUTH-OF BRIDGE, STRATFORD.
FARMS. that are worth buying. 140 ACRES, W tone to Imm, All in grass, all ploughablaj 1 mil* from orMmerj; 0 roomed honM, small cowshed, on food road; Imm has aVont 14 years to ran at an annnal rental of ISs per acre. Price «3I far •Ndvlll. JOOO ACRES, 1067 freehold, 800 Education Lease, 1400 in grass, 18 pa'ddocka, sheep-prool fences, several acres ploughed; 4-roomed house, sheep yards, etc, - ; good undulating sheep country; 11 miles front railway, B miles from creamery, 2 miles from post office. Lease la's 10 yMTB to ran. Bent of lease 018 13s per annum. Pfloa il Hr tore. iMMMIh. MATTHEWS G AMLIN & CO. AUCTIONEERS, LANS AND COMMISSION AGENTS, INGLEWOOD. Newspaper Advertising A T one of his recent lectures on advertising’, given at Liverpool, England, Thomas Russell, of London, emphasised strongly the value of newspaper advertising. “The time,” he said, “was ripe for a great extension of advertising, and newspaper advertising must 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. The “Commercial Review” points out thatthe first and most potent advertising force of the present day is the newspaper. Here is a field so vast and so complex that it needs the moat careful study of every varying condition to accurately estimate its possibilities, and a whole army of specialists and experts in ail branches of service have come into being.?
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXVII, Issue 89, 16 August 1915, Page 2
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928Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXVII, Issue 89, 16 August 1915, Page 2
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