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A Perfect sit- Set of Teeth attendance neces«ary. When Frost n £\ A «A ' f & Frost an you. T#%W* *V J I J V% dentists, there is 1119 fl^^f "* M 4W*II aoneedto.taym • • m *+ town overnight. '^.-^T^^^P^^B^H^pß^ ' anaesthetic of the age. Absolutely Y'%'% <■ TX* sa'e ant^ 'ree fron> after-effects. '. s REMODELLING SET. •. # £1/10/PAINLESS EXTRACTIONS • V% FROST ®> FROST 119 WILLIS STREET V "YOUR DENTISTS" OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS 7—8.30

Wallpapers Complete Shipments of New Season's' Goods have just arrived, and the Latest Examples are Now on View in our Showrooms. Pattern Books will be posted Free to any address. Without obligation visit our . Showroom* and seek our , Decorating: Adrice. Select Your Tiled Fireplace to suit your Wallpaper Choice. WE ARE NOW OPEN ON FRIDAY NIGHTS. Smith&Smith LIMITED Wellington and Lower Hutt

What will / wtm H^^^^l WhSHf ITIcoLH. tO V Oil l With a Ne^ Year just commencing NOW is the time to give real live substance to your ambitions—those indefinite longings to occupy a responsible well-paid position. By devoting your leisure hours to congenial study under the skilled guidance of Hemingway's you can Become a Qualified Accountant and Greatly Increase Your Earning Capacity , .Whether you live in the town or in the country, in the North or the Spilth Island, ftemingway's Postal Course in Accountancy is equally accessible to you. Many thousands of prominent Accountants and business executives throughout New Zealand and Australia owe their success to Hemingway's Accountancy tuition. You, too, can ensure speedy qualification by becoming a Hemingway's Student. Send for Big Free Booklet "Accountancy " k Mlth . iHemTngv^aT 7?"! 1 f w CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS \ H&t^ Coupon INow I p.o. box 5i6 - . Auckland I H^Bi and Start the I Please send me, Post Free, and without obligation, a copy of your Free I nr V ' I Book," ACCOUNTANCY." H^^^^DHL jj jj KSBBBfl^^HH^Be^ " '■ Silks, your Rne Things, and your &is gentle Zaundering. YOU would not throw all your clothes into V| "}J ''" "^ one big tub on wash clay. You make a I Is I^^^^ difference between your own personal things , | 11 I and the ordinary household washing. These are <-i&sMx Hm&^ washed separately, but are they washed correctly ? v! Laundry methods which include rubbing and bleaching will shorten the life of your garments. y^fe^*^i You would not dream of using a bleaching liquid &======'aFtS?^i] for your best silks and woollens, and yet it is just »«|^S»~Jw7HLgMi!BI as bad to use a hard soap as a bleacher, be- *——————# cause this destroys the delicate fibrw of the material, weakens it, spoils the colour, and causes it to shrink. Learn this easy way of washing Silks and Woollens correctly. No matter whether you are washing silks, cottons, woollens, babies' clothes,or coloured garments, fine lace or linens, the procedure is the same. First of all you must get a bowl of delicious foamy Lux water ready. Half a bowlful of very hot water needs a tablespoonful of Lux whisked into it so that the Lux is thoroughly dissolved. jF^ =™=\» Then add cold water until the mixture is "~~Yj\ lukewarm. Go on whisking until the suds froth i n\\ : ■ up over the bowl and then into this delicate \ 1' vr^mT") f. creamy mass slip your garments. There is no !■> tffi^ ' necessity to, rub, twist or stretch them. Dip the f^rv ' garments up and down once or twice, squeezing ly \j( ' the water gently through them, while the soapy X\ /^jjl ' foam caresses them, and coaxes out. the soiled Wk\ ik f'^^s^ 1 sPots- Then they must have three rinsings in ifimMffll- -^V^Cf I lukewarm water—that is, in three separate waters. -\ Jil 'Squeeze the water out ever so softly, and the . ' WJSHw&-4m $}fa'f\ work is done. The clothes are ready to be I HSmk" '' Wl■ folded in a clean towel, a,nd should be !■' / 1' pressed with a warm, but-never a J Wgßffl| i// ] hot, iron when nearly dry. Lever Brothers (New Zealand) Limited

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19290112.2.177.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 10, 12 January 1929, Page 26

Word Count
643

Page 26 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 10, 12 January 1929, Page 26

Page 26 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 10, 12 January 1929, Page 26