BUSINESS NOTiOES.""'..' . GREAT BARGAINS .AT The Economics WINTER SALE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS OPPORTUNITY. TO-DAY, AS TH?} CHANCE WILL NOT OCCUR AGAIN FOR ANOTHER SIX MONTHS. LADIES' UNTRIMMED STRAW and FELT HATS—SaIe price l s upwai'ds. » ' LADIES' REAtTY-TO-WEAR HATS, in a variety of latest styles, to be cleared. —Sale price l s lid upwards. LADIES' TRIMMED MILINERY.^ including all this season's models. —Sale price 14s 6d upwards. LADIES' ALL-WOOL TWEED COATS, new styles, perfectly cut and finfehed. —Sale price 4i- guineas. LADIES' SKIRTS, in Navy, Serge and Gabardine,; all toba clear-ed.-r-Sale nriee 14s lid. ■LADIES' FUR COAT COLLARS, in Hare- and Opossum.—Sale ?price 19e 6d 3 39s 6d. LADIES' OHjSKIN COATS, ampe"vious to any weather.—Sale price 635. . . CHILDREN'S RAINPROOF COATS, good styles.—Safe price 10s 6d, 19s 6d, 35e 6d. USEFUL DRESS TWEEDS, mos\ ly mixed Grey effects, 42in wide.— Sale price 4s TW, 5s lid, 6; lid yard. . ALL-WOOL NAVY SERGES, fast dye, 40in wide: at less than factory eost.-^Sale price 4s lid, 10s 6d yard. eQLORED VENETIAN CLOTHS 3 in Tan, Brown, Prune and OH Rose. —Sale price 2s lid i WOOL ASTRACHAN .COATING for children's coats; S7in wide; in Scarlet, light and dark Brown and Saxe.—Sale price los 6d yard. . LADIES' BLACK CASHMERE, FINISH HOSE.—Sale price 2s 3d .-and 2s lid t>air. LADIES' BLACK CASHMERE-HOSE, wool and cotton, for house use. —Sale price 2 pairs for 2s lid. LADIES' COLORED CASHMERE HOSE, in Honey shade only.— Sale price 3s lid, 4s lid pair.
IF you have any symptoms of eyestrain have your eyes tested and examined at once. We have the nece& sary skill and knowledge required b.y proper training, close study, and ex perience. H. A. BRUNETTE, Jeweller and Optician, HAWERA. Consulting Optician— FRED C. FODEN, D.8.0.A., F. 1.0., Member of British Optical Assn., London, Fellow of Institute of Oph. Opticians, England. ENGAGEMENT RINGS fTWERY woman ' J loves handsome I Jewellery. Every mSlfflS&i^&'frJ , woman likes to feel I tfe-at her Jewellery i>' s'' lis eob'd and pprtflot —just what.is paid tor. ILvwiy v»oELHi likes to save money, too. Then patro nise vs —it means safety, Bati«faKk«--and economy. We have a splendid pt«K>of Diamond Rings, set with stones of our own importation. WEDDING RINGS. _ Wo keep a large etock /&ss&s^± -all of 18ct. No (S^^^% * H. A. BRUNETTk * JEWELLER. Establish*! I^2.
Dairymen!- increase your profits. Get a ''Ceres" latest Swedish, separator. Cleanest skimmer, self-balancing, easy running, 16 to 144 gals. Catalogue free. Prces moderate. Manning Maehnery Co., 5 Bedford Row, Christchurch.— JLdrt.
1 ■■' 4^* ■ : ' i I You can materially increase the milk yield and butter- | I fat test of your herd by methodically drenching 1 f each cow with Sykes's Drench after calving. I •4 ■ ' \ $ I The SyJkes's Method makes the poor cow an average ||| J cow, the average cow a good cow, and the good | II cow an exceptionally good cow. ,' it • 1 ■ ■ ■ M$ I The labour and expense of keeping a Dairy Herd || | of 50 cows is just the same whether you average | I £12 per cow or £15 per cow. I | Every cow has to give a certain amount of butter-fat into the milking I U ® pail before she pays for her keep. It is the amount of butter-fat § I over and above the amount it takes to keep her that you should be | | ~ 1 concerned with. Every pound of butter-fat the Sykes's Method puts j | ! into the,pail is a profitable pound—all profit. Get hold of this. || Think it over. Dcn't doubt —it's true. 11 Most farmers know the importance of using Sykes's Drench after | •' U calving. The man who doesn't know is the man who is paying for j f.j I his indifference, and he is paying very dearly. Some drenches cleanse | I the animal, admittedly, but in doing so they impoverish the blood to j | | such an extent that the milk yield and the milk test are lowered. 1 ? "%' ■ —^n . __ . 4. acts as a Blood Purifier and Tonic and does not impoverish the system by purging. • . Give the cow the right attention by drenching with Sykes's Drench and you will not only ward off possible diseases, but you will put i pounds into your pocket during the ensuing season. You do not j ; know the possibilities of the earning powers of your dairy herd until you i have a milking season after using Sykes's Drench at calving time. 'Mere Assertions Prove Nothing. The following Facts Prove Something—Read on: ; v Mr. W. B. BRISBANE, of Gowrie Park, We^ite, Victoria, one of the best known aftd most successful breeders of Ayrshires in Australia,, member s of the^. ' t . Council of the >Royal Agricultural Society of Victsria, and judge of Ayrshires at | the Sydney Royal Agricultural Show of 1909, writes on October Ist, 1909: — ._./. - - "'Dear Sr, —Your Drench was first brought under my notice at'our Agricultural ■> Shew in Melbeurne, November* 1907. I purchased a quantity of Sykes's ";'■*" Drench and after giving it a fair trial on my herd of Ayrshires, I am thoroughly IJ' | I satisfied that it is invaluable as a cleanser at calving time. I haVe very much I pleasure in recom-mending it to all dairy farmers and breeders o-f stock." s I ■ \ How practical and valuable an authority this is may be*gathered from these |*f H extraordinary^acts:—Five of Mr, Brisbane's cows, accotdirig to the Melbourne fflfc , %. ~<\ "Argus," gave in the Government Test, covering nine months, a butter return of t3P i 'ifhe value of £111 12s. 9d. He claims for. Ida, one of the quintet, that she has '^ :H ; broken the 'Victorian record. Her return showed:— £ Date of calving, March 27th, 1913; date of entry to test, April 3rd, 1913; number A' of days in test, 273; weight of milk last day of test, 231b5.; weight of milk, 1 M -.1/ 10,867|1b5.; average test, SA; butter fat, 5551b5.; standard required, 250f* | 1 | estimated weight of butter, 632|1135.; and to-day Mr: Brisbane is a firmer I % ■ 'if believer than ever in the practical value "of the Sykes's Method. |; II S Sold Everywhere iS-^Sc^edS) f
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Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLI, Issue XLI, 31 July 1920, Page 3
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1,000Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLI, Issue XLI, 31 July 1920, Page 3
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