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used the TAYLOR SERVICE YET? There are 125,000 people in Christchurch. Many of tHese Have ' not yet experienced the manifold advantages and pronounced economies that go with the regular utilisation of Taylor s Dry ' Gleaning and Pressing Service. M)k\ "You should send that frock to Taylor's!" "It's time that suit went to Trior's!" "f IF YOU ARE ONE . . . . M '... of those who have not yet sent either a suit or a U- ' frock to Taylor's for cleaning and pressing, to say «trL av' nothing of the expert dyeing of garments, then we sZ!dyou°rsJt7o suggest ihost respectfully that you are foregoing a Taylor's?" .. service that can be of great use to you, both in main- ; taining the standard of appearances which is to-day D necessary and in effecting really important economies in the cost of dressing each year. V Fabrics to-day are different from what they were some years J ago. In fact it is no exaggeration to say that the great majority of materials now used cannot be washed successfully. On J the other hand they lend themselves to successful Dry T Cleaning and Pressing by experts who know the composition * of the materials they are handling. It is both unsatisfactory and uneconomical to wear garments at all that have become so soiled that they must be thrown away. Far better is it to send them to Taylor's for expert cleaning and pressing, thus 3 enabling your clbthing to be smart ALL the time, so that you rcan enjoy pleasurable confidence of clothing cleanliness (all perspiration emanations—B.O.—are completely <f/A Taylor Dry Cleaning). It is great to know that you are \ U dressed above reproach. q '/ \ \ The cost of using the Taylor Service regularly is very small, /A V but the savings you make represent a large sum, many, many \©- • times greater than the few shillings involved in having a "A visit to garment properly cleaned and pressed by Taylor's. Taylor's would make all the difference to that suit!" 5 . TO-DAY IS MONDAY f"^ The 'phone No. is * 31-820 k "* TAYLOR'S WILL CALL FOR «f °"£>«? YOUR CLOTHING ?-V^ "You really should send that frock to Taylor's!" "It's time Taylor's saw that suit!" "Good dressing is not expensive when you send your suits to Toylor's regularly" "You're, always sure of being satisfied when your frock goes to Taylor's." I Depot, 678 a Colombo Street (Opp. Reece's). IVlake sure it is Taylors

NfcppltS] Of course all the credit should go to Mother. She keeps me comfortablesees that my nappies don't chafe me. How? Oh simply. She washes my nappies, in fact all my clothes, in LUX. LUX keeps f them soft, fluffy and unshrunken and contains no soda to make them hard and irritating. ' WON'T \/ IRRITATE i Ji. BABY'S / RENDER i A Levtr Product — Made The Press" Classified Advertisements are read at the breakfast table, and are sure to deliver results during the day—l2 words Is, 3 insertions 2s 6d. 'Phone 33-358 —*

Handicap Singles Third Round—Mrs F. Christopher (Dunedin) 3, beat Mrs M. Richards (Timaru) 41, 26-14. Handicap Doubles Semi-final—Mesdames Corbet (Invercargill) and W. McLennan (Timaru) 2. beat R. W. McCreath (Gore) and Mrs J. Wilson (Invercargill) U, 26-14. Championship Doubles Final—Mesdames G. McLeod and A. Pettigrew (Gore) beat Mrs W. Corfoert and J. Nichol (Dunedin) 26-5.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19370215.2.112.3

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22017, 15 February 1937, Page 14

Word Count
544

Page 14 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22017, 15 February 1937, Page 14

Page 14 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22017, 15 February 1937, Page 14