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A MOST REMARKABLE SALE The Mightiest of all. 750 Satisfied Purchasers Over £l,OOO worth of Boots and Shoes sold I MTFh Men and Women, and as many children, to WAN 8 ItU purchase the balance of the mighty tempting sacrificed bargains in Boots and Shoes. Last few days to secure your Footwear for Xmas. GIRLS’WHITE CANVAS SHOES, sizes 7 to 9, , Sale Price 4/6 * Sizes 10 to 2, Sale Price 5/6 f GIRLS’ PATENT BAR SHOES, sizes 8 to 9, Sale Price 9/6 J Sizes 10 to 1, Sale Price 13/6 - i BOYS’ & GIRLS’ TAN & BLACK SANDALS, sizes 5 to 6, Sale Price 5/6 r Sizes 7to 9, Sale Price 5/11 £ Sizes 10 to 1, Sale Price 7/9 5 BOYS’ SCHOOL BOOTS, heel and toe plates, sizes 9to 13, Sale Price 14/6 $ Sizes Ito 2, Sale Price 16/6 g (J Sizes 3to 5, Sale Price 17/6 J | LADIES’ PATENT LEATHER SHOES, Louis and Cuban Heels— z g I Usually 30/-, > „ Sa . le l r ‘ le '!?<® 5 t LADIES’ PATENT COURT SHOES, Usually 35/-, Sale Price 15/6 X # LADIES’ PATENT COURT SHOES. Usually 30/-, Sale Price 12/6 * ? LADIES’ Glace COURT SHOES with leather heels, Usually 27/6 Sale Price 5/11 X | LADIES’PATENT LACE SHOES, with Louis & Cuban Heels, - f < Usually 29/6— r Sale Price 13/6 J I LADIES’ 1-STRAP WARD SHOES, Usually 14/6— , Sale Price 10/6 * I LADIES’ WHITE CANVAS STRAP SHOES, Usually 8/11, Sale Price 3/11 5 t MEN’S BEST QUALITY BOX-HIDE BOOTS, Usually 35/-, Sale Price 25/- > I MEN’S WILLOW CALF TAN BOOTS, Usually 39/6— Sale Price 27/6 * t MEN’S WORKING BOOTS (Suckling Bros.) Plain or nailed— ♦ | Usually 29/6- c , Price 23/6 ? | MEN’S SHAPED RUBBERS, Usually 2/- cnl^r fel /3 , S f I ADIES’ ROUND RUBBERS, To Clear at 6d a pr. Good SOLE LEATHER, 3/6 lb J £ MOHAIR BOOT LACES, 4 pairs for 1/-. WE PAY POSTAGE > C. SMITH, Ltd. GreymouHi Drapers and Boot Importers ■I ' ' ==Why the Newspaper?== NEWS AND ADVERTISING SHARE INTEREST One Enriches the Other and Together they Rule the Onward March of Progress Mr. Norman S. Rose, Advertising Manager of the famous international! daily newspaper, “The Monitor,” of Boston, says: “WHY THE NEWSPAPER? Well, for one reason because newspaper* publish news, and an advertisement is news. If it isn’t, it should be. The beat advertisement is the best news. “The reader of a newspaper, reads it because he wants t 6 know what is going OU in the busy world. He is after information. Up and down ths columns lie goes, finding on one page something startling, on uiiulner sonie- [ thing interesting, on another something educational. “While be is in this attitude of mind,, the newspaper advertiser is privileged to address him. His eye travels from a news item to an advertisement, his thought travels with his eye. If the advertisement offers him an attractive piece of news; if the headlines of its opening phrases impress upon him that here is something he may well know about, then he is quite likely 10 read the advertisement and to digest the information it offers to him, ' This is true the World over. New Zealand experience shows that Sound Advertising in the Newspapers is MOST “PULLING,” MOST PROMPT, MOST PROFITABLE 1^— 41 -p * Double the circulation

Children with worms restored to good health by Wade’s Worm Figs, safe, pleasant and reliable, —26,

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19271125.2.80.4

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 25 November 1927, Page 12

Word Count
555

Page 12 Advertisements Column 4 Greymouth Evening Star, 25 November 1927, Page 12

Page 12 Advertisements Column 4 Greymouth Evening Star, 25 November 1927, Page 12

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