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BUS!NESS NOTICES. WHAT SHALL I WEAR AT EASTER ? Hi : This is the question uppermost in ths womanly mind, because Easter is the ] turning point between Summer and Winter— the Season of Warmth and the Season of Wind. A happy solution of the problem is found in ■ T SSSffc? It vM iSm fMid I feijd m SSsS i2ZS MOREY’S " I. AUTUMNAL DISPLAYWhere Damo Fashion’s Richest Gifts tr. MlSiSncry, Costumes, Shirts, Dress Materials; Silks, Ladies’ and Children’s Goats, Laces, Furs, and other Livery far her followers, may now be seen in extensive variety. i ■ Come! A visit to this exhibit will help you make up your mind not only recarding Easter *attlre, but as regards the Clothes for your Winter Outfit as ■ic» we!!. All these Goods’for Women’s Adornment during Autumn and Winter were brought by the ■ S.S. Turakina, and coming as they do from the world’s great fashion centres, a visit will provide the equivalent of a tour through the Salons of Paris or the big Stores ' of London. lO< MOREY & SON STRATFORD- AN D NEW-PLYMOUTH.-

TONEING’S LINSEED EMULSION ij":.;., ; , ;!■ : ■ ■■ xxxxxxxxxxxxxx THE ONLY CERTASN CURE .FOR COUCHS AND COLDS. ■aj k: ’ xxxkxxxxxxsxxx ALL CHEMISTS AND STOREKEEPERS. Is 6d, 2s Gd, 4s 6d.

ND HERE,”!'-said Mrs. Gamp, “am 5 a going twenty miles in distant, on as w enter so me a chance as ever anyone as missed ever ran, I do j believe. Says Airs. Harris, with a woman’s and a moth er's art' a beatin in her human brehst, says she to me, “You’re not a goin, Sairey, Lord forgive you I “-.Why am I not a going, Mrs ris?” I replies. “That Mrs 1 says, “ has never done me wrong v along wi’ six, an’ now her constitooahun cries out for “ Stand-Out” Tea, which she, bein; a blessed angel as never wos, knows to be jest the best thing for her when she Is so dis* poged, which havin the priwileges of a invaliege in this wally of the shadder,” 1 says, “I’ll get it for you if they beats me biack and bine and I has to walk the whole distance on my bended kneeges,” I says. “‘Stand-Ont’ Tea shCr wants,’,’ I says, “ and ‘ StandOut? Tea she shall have, the 1 , poor lamb, as sure as my name’s Sairey Gamp, and there’s no deniglng of it, and twenty miles wentersome 1 goes to get it this blessed day,” I says; && m W 3 32* ,^5 ON ‘Pltipfi r-l'rJ. m m 'the guinea prize. See Saturday’s Essue for “StandOut” Weekly Competition.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19120403.2.10.1

Bibliographic details

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 82, 3 April 1912, Page 3

Word Count
422

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 82, 3 April 1912, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 82, 3 April 1912, Page 3

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