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STRATFORD BOROUGH COUNCIL IN THE MATTER OF “THE MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS ACT, 1903” AND THE AMENDMENTS THEREOF. AND OF “THE LOCAL BODIES’ LOANS ACT, 1913.” PROPOSED STRATFORD BOROUGH ELECTRIC LIGHTING LOAN OF £16,000. THE STRATFORD BOROUGH COUNCIL hereby gives public notice that it proposes to borrow by way of Special Loan, under the provisions of “The Local Bodies Loans Act, 1913,” the sum of Sixteen Thousand Pounds (£16,000). The particular purposes for which the loan is required, and the sum proposed to be borrowed for each such purpose are as follows:—(a). For the purpose of lighting the. streets and public places of the Borough of Stratford, and supplying electricity to the inhabitants thereof, to acquire by purchase the whole of the business and undertaking of the Stratford Electrical Supply Company Limited, and the entire goodwill thereof, irtul all the freehold and leasehold hands, corporeal and incorporeal rights, easements and appurtenances, buildings, engines, machinery, poles, lines, plant, stock-in-trade, materials and'other property of the said Company (excepting moneys, securities and book debts).

£1.5,600. (1)). To purchase or otherwise acquire all such other freehold or leasehold lands, rights,' easements, property, machinery, plant, and materials, and to erect all such further buildings and other erections as the Council may consider necessary for the purpose of lighting the streets and public places of the Borough with electricity and supplying electricity to the inhabitants thereof £4OO Total ... ... £16,000 The Council proposes to pledge as security for the said Loan of £16,000 apd,thp interest and sinking fund thereon, an annually recurring Special ilates nf one penny and, one farthing rfl-J-d) in the £ o.U the unimpr.oyed valued of all rateable property within the said Borough of Stratford during the currency of sncß Loan,.,such Special Rate to he payable half yearly on the First day of April and the First day of October in each and every year during the currency pi snbh Loan, being a period of Thirtysix years,, or until the said Loan is fully paid off. It is proposed that such Loan shall be for a period of Thirty-six years from the, Ist day .oS,,Ocjtoh§£,,. .l-9J6*. five pounds five shillings,;, pet centum per annum interestj, pytji tjtp,, addition of a Sinking Fund of One pound (£1) per centum per annum, and the whole of the Loan is to he repayable on the Ist day of October. 19.52, by means of the Sinking Fund and otherwise. I It is proposed out of the ■ Loan the cost of raising the Loan, and all preliminary expenses in connection with the scheme for Avhich the Loan is proposed to be raised; hut it is not proposed to pay out of the Loan the first year’s interest and sinking fund of the Loan during the construction of the said works. Dated at Stratford this 26th day of July, 1916. PHILIP SKOGLUND. Town Clerk. NOTICE OF POLL. NOTICE is hereby given that a poll of the ratepayers of the Borough of Stratford will he taken on the proposals do sen bed in the above notice at the Borough Council Chambers, Broadway, in the Borough of Stratford, on Friday, the Twenty-fifth day of August, 1916, between the hours of Nine o’clock in the forenoon and Seven o’clock in the afternoon. JOS W. BOON, Mayor.

I Are you “Liverish?” I I To feel “liverish” is to feel wretched, I I but to be really bilious is indeed agony. • Liverishness often becomes biliousness if \ you leave your liver to work out its own 1 salvation. A few doses of a time-proved ( stomach and liver corrective and tonic | * such as Mother Seigel’s Syrup is generally I j all that is needed to ensure the regular I | and even flow of bile so necessary to the j perfect digestion of food and the regular I daily action of the bowels. It is a simple j matter to take thirty drops of Mother i SeigeTs Syrup in a little water whenever I you feel the tendency to liverishness or ; liave partaken heartily of food that is | liable to disagree with you; yet thousands of people avoid the consequences of biliousi ness and indigestion in just this simple I way. They keep a bottle of Mother SeigeTs Syrup handy for use when n'eeded, and many of them have stated that they i would not willingly he without it in the | house if the cost were six times as «reat as it is. “Two years back,” writes Miss Maggie McGrath, 3, Kermdde Street, North Adelaide, South Australia, “I was practically little better than a physical wreck and absolutely broken down in health as well as spirits. I was suffering from quite a complication of ailments and bad symptoms, embracing biliousness, headaches, indigestion, and heart palpitation, aud the pain and distress I endured are quit© beyond my powers of description. I believe that an ill-conditioned liver was the foundation of all my troubles and sufferings. “I heard such good reports of Mother SeigeTs Syrup that I decided to. try it. I purchased a supply, aud felt an improvement iu my condition after using the first bottle. As 1 continued the course my I troubles grew less and less, until at'length I the headaches, indigestion, and. bilious I symptoms had all disappeared, and I found myself as vigorous and well as ever 1 had ) been in my life. There are many medicines, but few real remedies, and of these latter Mother SeigeTs Syrup is the very, best 1 know,”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19160809.2.6.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 9, 9 August 1916, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
906

Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 9, 9 August 1916, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 9, 9 August 1916, Page 2

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