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© ®OQEBBKa© ®BEBSiraB»S3S«IgIgBEBgIBBKKSBaaBBBi IBIBQ 3g|QCT''nK{S3C^se^^BQ(S&3a3BktS%BE!^ ® & Common Talk ’Bout Town are Inglis’ Values ! ffi That “ Tired” Feeling. When you go shopping you can’t help drawing comparisons about the treatment you receive from the salespeople at the different establishments you visit. Some are only too pleased to show you everything their stock offers, and to offer helpful suggestions that you appreciate greatly. Others again are simply the reverse. They antagonise you by their indifference, they create a feeling of repulsion not only against tnemselves but against the store, and everybody concerned with it—in a word, salespeople of that type have “ the tired feeling.” Everything is too much bother, and constantly many sales are lost through gross carelessness. To shop at Inglis’ where .our assistants are taught to give Service to our customers, makes shopping quite a treat. You’ll find no “tired feeling” type of sales person at our store; everybody is out to please you and do all they can to suit you satisfactorily. 01——^5) rTTw fi Ttii Post JK Us /• / Your Orders f/. w L You Live Out m of -z: Town. 205 p (S)===PE) For the new season Inglis’ prices are the talk of the town, and rightly so, for no other store is offering such stylish merchandise at such unusually low prices. Our Dress, Millinery, Hosiery, and Mantle Sections, too, all join in offering attractive price concessions that make shopping a pleasure at Inglis’, to say nothing of being profitable. Smart Costume introducing the Very Newest Themes of Fashion, New English Suitings, £lO ioi Wo are at present showing these smart Costumes in one of our windows, and you shouldn’t miss seeing them, for they are very stylish indeed. ' All of these fashions decree for the present season fine representation, and tho materials are beautifully woven in Grey and Rosewood shades. The now floral buttonhole is a small feature, but it adds greatly to the whole ensemble. They’re good value at £lO 10/-. Meet Miss Sullivan Our NeW Dressmaker. Miss Sullivan is here, and we cordially invite yon to call and have a friendly chat with her. She will be very pleased to talk about the new fashions, and no doubt will bo able to give you many helpful suggestions concerning your wardrobe. As stated in last night’s advertisement, Miss Sullivan comes to us with an enviable reputation as a dressmaker, and wo are sure that your requirements can he safely left to her expert care. Say you plan a visit to-morrow. Check Skirts and Plain Coats, £lO These Costumes are just out of their tissue paper wrappings, and we assure you that you cannot heat them for style and general smartness. Skirts are check, and coats arc quite plain, Grey in shade. Made perfectly to fit easily and comfortably (you have only to try one to realise how true this is). Floral buttonholes aro a distinctive feature, and add life and color to tho outfit All sizes are hero at present, but every day our stock depletes, so we advise early buying. They sell at £lO each. New Jumper Suits. Wo intended in this advertisement to tell you about some very smart Jumper Suits that have just arrived from Home. But space to-night is limited, so wo will have to let you know all about them to-morrow. Don’t miss the advertisement, will you ? The values will bo worth reading about, for they aro very special. Choose carefully your Vocation, grip it hard, & climh from the jool of your class to the top. OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE 1 kff n H m 11 iNGlihl QUALITY*^ VALUE OF GEORGE 6T. V OUNCOIN > 'Phone 2,007 P.O. Box 241 © ®

VETERAN OF THE GRAND OLD ARMY. “ I am a veteran of the Edgeworth army, still in active service,” writes Mr J. J. Roberts, of Palmerston North. “ I make this claim challenging allcomers to have smoked Edgeworth and nothing else but Edgeworth (when it was possible to get it) for a longer period than any other person in New Zealand. I have smoked Edgeworth for 21 years, and will soon start on the twenty-second. I’ll admit to having tried other brands, including sotermed high-class, high-priced blends and mixtures, enough to appreciate and satisfy myself of the superiority of Edgeworth. In all these years I have never had one can, of , Edgeworth that varied in flavor or otherwise.”—[Advt.]

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19270329.2.31.3

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 19519, 29 March 1927, Page 3

Word Count
723

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Star, Issue 19519, 29 March 1927, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Star, Issue 19519, 29 March 1927, Page 3

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