Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

TAILORING. AFTER ALL—EVERY MAN WANTS TO EARN MORE. ! Not that he may hoard it up like some old miser — nor paint the town red with It — but solely that It may be spent to advantage in" other directions. • . One way of earning more is to spend less. Without sacrificing quality, to get the same article at a reduced price is the .aim of the richest merchants in the world. They call it hunting for better value. It is what has made them rich. To earn more, spend less — that is one way. And when I claim that I can save you at least £2 on yonr suit if yon will pay cash, and still give you the same quality of fabrics and tailoring, the opportunity is open, to. you to earn more by ■ spending less. .. r ,,. The tailor-made suits that I am making for Winter are surprisingly big value. .;<• The materials are exciting the keenest admiration from men who know what good materials mean — they admit that even another £2 will not buy similar quality elsewhere." . .;.: "*- I personally selected each, feeling that your interests could best be served by my doing so. - ■' i They come from the finest mills of the woctd <— English; Spotttieh, Irfsli, and Colonial. ■ . - ' Owing to the big business that I do, the mills have readily sought mc, knowing that •the CASH wasxeady for them-the moment the' delivery .was made. '" . :. With the result. that, you cannot select an old-fashioned or inferior material .from my stock at any time; ' r. ' "'. r" fc ''," I want your order also because I know I have the staff to. do it justice. Many ' tailors • will ' show you ■• materials that are ; good for newness of design and excellence of weaving, , but when the suit comes tome — 'p-l .. .. ..-.-.-,...: It isn't for that you spend money. It isn't to have a good material spoilt and to hang like a sack that you have paid 4or 5 guineas. . ' • I want to make your, next. suit, because I am of the opinion that ■ you ■will be satisfied with the . result of my tailoring.' Whatever price you pay. I guarantee a perfect fit, however much, your figure varies from the ordinary. , ... I have been making suits for a few years now for thousands of men who come back to mc regularly , every season. x " ■ ■* That is the strong" argument I offer you. --.-.., It sounds like, "Don't ask mc how I suit — ask the man who .pays"—and it is exactly what I mean. If I don't suit you, I don't ask you to pay mc. . . ' Satisfaction is a sine <ma' non of every order given at any of my shops. Haw satisfactory my suits are can be learnt from my booklet, "What . men say about my suits after they have worn them." I send it free of charge to any man who is sufficiently interested to call or write for it. '.-... ■':■•■ . . . ■ If you'll tell mc at the same time what yon are paying for you? suits to order, I will select patterns that the credit-and-cash tailor supplies at that price, and promise to make you as smart a' suit as ever he made at that price for you, at exactly two pounds less. .-'■ ;.'• [ If I couldn't do It,? do you think that Imy business would have assumed the proI portions it has? " • Satisfaction to the customer is the means by which my unique business has been I built up. and satisfaction to the customer ;is the means by which I intend it to grow. Satisfaction to EVERY customer — and YOU I ask to become one of thousands I will make suits for this Winter. : : Can we see you . about your new suit to-day? , ; 55/-, 63/-, **™ 75/- :; rOB TAILOS-MABE SUITS TO ORDER. ■ ■ ■ ■ .;.," j ■ .. ..- ... y THE MODESH; , TMLOK, 46, QXrEEN STKEET, ATTCICLAHXJ,

I?___l— NOTICES. ' ■esy\____^__Z_^7t^\ rneTHQia ' WfiTSRI ftp .___* Jffl __£___ ' C 'D -AS NOT TO HURT A BABT (yQiurc OR INJURE %.._ '",. ' --"■-" " THE MOST DEUpATE FABrite I ' ' ".

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19100322.2.121.2

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 69, 22 March 1910, Page 7

Word Count
654

Page 7 Advertisements Column 2 Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 69, 22 March 1910, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 2 Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 69, 22 March 1910, Page 7