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MORE MELBOURNE SUIT TALK, The majority of men desire to get as much for their money as they possibly can—-that is the basis upon which sensible people plan their expenditure—they have to, because it is easier to spend money in this day of “high cost of living”'than to earn it. You have probably decided in your mind that you.ought to get a good suit at a reasonable figure without the “frills” that are supposed to give “class,” and that you are in the throes of 'weeding nut the different “makes” that do not moot the ideal you have created about the “kind” and “price” of a ‘suit you want to buy—then lot us advise you not to be misled into paying a fancy price for something you could have bought equally well, if not better, at the Melbourne at a very much lower price, fb. member this: That when you buy s M.I bourne suit you purchase a ■;uaratitee of workmanship and malarial that mvives comparison. AVh.at•ver wo claim for it, it will do—Wear veil, fit well, and give you all the mit comfort you desire and nlenty of mrvice. Then, most important of all, into the low prices, ranging from 49s )d to Gss. ft will be a strange thi?ig, ndeed, if you do not become a purihaser. *

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19120209.2.4.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 38, 9 February 1912, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
219

Page 2 Advertisements Column 3 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 38, 9 February 1912, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 3 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXII, Issue 38, 9 February 1912, Page 2

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