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THROUGH OUR EXCHANGES

At the Launceston police court on Monday, Ist inst., Charles Black, lescribed as a vaudeville artist, was lentenced to six mouths’ imprisonment for having stolen from the Marine Hotel 17 letters, containing postal lofces valued at £6 14s 6d, the property jf Tattersall’s, Limited, which were addressed to imaginary boarders.

Every puff of a REGENT CIGARETTE brings pleasure unalloyed and die Gift ’rickets in every box bring von nearer a splendid Free Gift. Trite to Regent, Box 331, Wellingon, for Gift Catalogue. ' • • 31

There is a disposition on the part 'f foshionable women 1 to return to tbe simple life in dress. Curiously enough, die idea originated in Paris, states i lady writer. Henceforth, so it is ■aid, there are to be no gorgeous' displays of costly fabrics. An exquisite simplicity is to be the order of the day. It is the final emancipation of women from the tyranny of clothes. At least this is what is claimed.

Want a Grama phone for the weekend whare? Easy. All you fellows smoke REG ENT CIGA RET TES, and save your Gift Tickets. Write for Free 'Gift Catalogue to Regent, Box 131, Wellington. 33

Mrs Clara Willett, a widow in England, whose estate was sworn at £5947, recently loft a curious will. She divided her wordly goods between her daughters, and left her love to “my fellow-townspeople of Brighton, specially to my poorer friends. And I ask the richer ones to remember the following quaint but solemn words: — “That I spent I had, that I gave 1 have, that I left I lost.”

You family of young men—form \ REGENT CIGARETTE brotherhood, save the Gift Tickets and get the “little Mater” a Sewing Machine. Free Gift Catalogue tells how. Write for ,it to Regent, Box 331, Wellington. \ 3o

Certain Anglican clergymen are deacons tliafc it should be made gatory for bridesmaids to wear hats at weddings. But what constitutes a hat, or when is a hat not a hat ? At times (remarks the author of a woman's column) women have worn hats ••o large as to often make it impossible to tell who was under them, and at others a butterfly bow of tulle or a mere whisp of chiffon has done duty for a head covering. Before anything can be done to compel bridesmaids to he hatted some definite definition of a hat must he arrived at.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19140613.2.46

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 44, 13 June 1914, Page 8

Word count
Tapeke kupu
398

THROUGH OUR EXCHANGES Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 44, 13 June 1914, Page 8

THROUGH OUR EXCHANGES Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 44, 13 June 1914, Page 8

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