Ms 3<5 -0 M . OM/ % t: ft *% to> "* s?i S'Ai E-A Hat ■with 24/6 Race Hats that will be the envy of all at Riccarton. Specially selected by Armstrongs Buyers while in London and Paris. Captivating styles to please the most capricious fancy are now displayed in both our Millinery Showrooms. There's a gay mood of Carnival reflected in these new modes—sponsored by London and Paris. Brims that tilt a new way and garnitures that enhance every lovely line, make these picturesque hats unusually charming. The gayest of colours, the most striking of designs that will give an enlivening touch to your Race Frock or Tailored Mode. Smart Matrons' Black Toques, smartly trim- OA/f% with mounts and finished osprcy mounts tricorn brim. Made of Navy CQ/C Taffeta and finished with vJff U Osprcy to match A Large Selection of Smart Mushroom Shape, in Crinoline. Pedal, Bangkok. Trimmed with soft folds of Georgette, in various colours From Young Ladies' Cloche Hat, in Crinoline and Georgette. Sectioned crown trimmed folds and long ends of Geor- 39/6 Very Smart Picture Hat, in Grey Georgette, with rucked brim. Soft fold on cd.ee. Trimmed with Paon Velvet Ribbon and Streamers A Charming Model in Grey, with Turned-up brim, and embroidered front. Finished with osprey to match Good Selection of Lace and Georgette Models, with drooping brims. Trimmed French flowers and pretty ribbons to tone, assorted shades 55/59/6 srettc in match, liiack In White. Putty, Grey, Caramel, and Charming Picture Hats, in the new C aramel drooping brim, sumptuously trimmed osprcys, as illustrated shade, French yj/g Beautiful Model Hat, in Black Silk Crinoline, lavishly trimmed Osprcy, as illustrated Very Becoming Model in Ci£&r Brown, in Georgette and Lace. Trimmed with 1 AGns. bird of Paradise to tone Armstrongs for Beautiful . Millinery . 29/6 1/ •-K. v \ m 3 V 10
DON'T BE A PRISONER. * Are you one of those who never feel reallv well —always languid and lowspirited ? You feci like a prisoner gazing longingly through the bars of your gloomy cell at your fellows revelling outside in the freedom and sunshine of robust health. The reason you feel like that is because there is always too much bile and paralysing poison? in your blood. If vou' will .iusfc take a few doses of Cockle's Pills to clear these poisons out of your system, yon will feel as bright and strong as other people. Get a box of Cockle's Pills today, take two at bedtime, and in the morning vou will wake up keen ior breakfast' with a clear head, bright eve?, and abundant energy. Cockle's PiUs are world-famed as a tonic restorative. Small pith new size, at Is 6(1 per bos, of all chemists. /
The aiiPged discover;/ of the lost books of Livy must remind us of the treasures of "wisdom anrl learning of which English literature hns been irretrievable* deprived. Of Lord Clint* ham's speeches v.-e have little that can be regarded as genuine, while of Bolingbroke we only know from Dean Swift that he was the most accomplished speaker of his time. Lord Brougham records that it is related of Pitt that when the conversation rolled upon lost works, and some said they would prefer restoring the books of Livy, some of Tacitus and some a Latin tragedy, he at once decided for a speech of Bolingbroke- "What wo know of the oratory of Pitt's father, Lord Chntbam, is much more to be gleaned from contemporary panegyrics and accounts of its effects than from the scanty and, for the most part, doubtful memoirs which have readied u&
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19241101.2.49.3
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Press, Volume LX, Issue 18219, 1 November 1924, Page 9
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593Page 9 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LX, Issue 18219, 1 November 1924, Page 9
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