AUTUMN an EASTER Opening Displays at M & C's i m, TO-DAY and FOLLOWING DAYS... WMW Just what are the fashion changes this season— for morning, for afternoon, for L evening? Do suits and coats unfold new ii style notes? Does millinery reveal many 1| new notions, or footwear introduce new nl designs? Are the materials very new and ■J different? H But why not see for yourself - J# - why not Iff spend an interesting hour or so among the H new fashions. A unique opportunity is H afforded in the Autumn and Easter opening ■ displays this week—an opportunity oj; provVI ing how very smartly yet economically one H • may dress this season . . . at M. &: C's. H Afternoon Mannequin Parades ■I in the Tudor Room. If you have not already done so, make table reservations in the Tudor Room so that you may view to advantage many typical examples of the reasonably priced fashions # that will be revealed by Manne- ** quins each afternoon at 3 p.m. The extreme smartness of reasonably-priced Knitwear Suits for the new season is typified in the style illus- , trated—Waistcoat collar, cuff and pocket finish of •trips form* an effective contrast. O.S. size, in black/ white, navy/white. W. size, green/white. S.W. size, Spanish tile/black. £5/19/6 MILNE & CHOYCE WQueen Street, Auckland. jThere Is No Substitute For The Trained Beauty Expert rou hear a lot about the effect good health has on good looks. i True enough. You must be well in order to look well. But the physician does not concern himself with .beauty care. He can't. That's not Ills Job. That's the job of a trained, professional beauty expert. .Women who want to keep looking their best should consult a beauty expert regularly. That is the advice not only of beauty specialists themselves, but of all those who study the matter of beauty , culture. [Writers for . magazines and newspapers on the special subject of beauty problems and beauty care, advise regular, professional assistance in this important matter' of keeping well-groomed. * ————— Many thousands of years agp dusky tnaidens massaged the gentle oils of the olive and palm trees into the fine-textured skin of Cleopatra, [which kept „ her skin soft and smooth. These oils were then the best known method of safeguarding and heightening the natural beauty of the complexion. And even to-day '—according to the most famous beautyexperts of , Europe and 'America—there is no better way to ensure a beautiful skin than by the use of these same oils that, were, in vogue In. Cleopatra's time/ iWhen selecting a soap the price is not a very certain index of its quality. .In business to-day there are manv factors which contribute to the fluctuation of prices in a staple article of this kind. Often synthetic perfumes, colourings, fancy oers increase the cost tho tag to ensure the buyer [of any finer oils wi" caustic alkali 'agreeable for should be 'Amon beat m 77;V.>-T m Q ........... ~-. sSS-'S/t: HUM ■■HI HHH j//'"-' 9.', ' it's W mm X w-'/' 1 m m M m ii mM
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21132, 15 March 1932, Page 15
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567Page 15 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21132, 15 March 1932, Page 15
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