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The Latest Mi - y. I: Patent, ampagne » •'.< 'vr '• am raj 1! 5« SffMWfc am. H m m i 8 -v In Black M a. -or '■■ A;: *s* m yww 523 A;-. Sizes , 2 to 8. £2 8 Children's Shoes Fancy Styles Fancy coloured sides and front. In Black Patent, as illustrated. Sizes 4 to 6 , Price, 6/11 Sizes 7to 9 .. Price, 8/11 Size 10 .. Price, 10/6 Sizes 11 to 1 .. Price, 12/6 Postage, 6d per pair. In Maids' or Ladies , I sizes 2 to 7. Price, 14/11. w Postage, Bd. Grey vamp trimming WONDERFUL VALUE. As Illustrated—Ladies' Black Patent, Cham» pagne trimming; sizes 3 to 7—• PRICE, 16/11 Postage, 8d; Also, same style, with cut-out front, Grey Lizard inset; sizes 3 to 7 ;! PRICE, 16/11 Postage, 8d„ English Brogue Shoes for Men. also Black PRia^Nv Postage, 1/Sizes and half sizes, 6 to 10. with collar; felt and leather y soles. Great Value. * PRICE, 3/6 j Postage, 4<J. v FLEETFOOT TENNIS SHOES. White Lace—Children's: 4to 9, Price 3/6; Size 10, Price, 4/6; Sizes II to 1, ! * Price, 4/11. Ladies', sizes 3to 7—Price, 5/3. Men's, sizes 6toll Price. 6/11. Ladies' Fleet/oot 1-Bar White Shoes, with heels—Sizes 3 to 7, Price, 7/11. Children's, sizes 11 to 2, 6/11. Postage Extra. PLEASE ADD EXCHANGE TO COUNTRY CHEQUES. ' 121-123, KARANGAHAPE ROAD, AUCKLAND ; (OPP. BON MARCHE). ESTB. 1880.

ViY\ me care of Woollens ■E3B How woollens should b* Washed. Whisk two tablespoonfuls of Lux into a thick lather in half a bowlful of very hot water. Add cold water until suds arc lukewarm, then put in garment. Dip it up and down, pressing suds repeatedly through soiled spots. Do Not Rub. If suds die down in wnshing, more dissolved Lux should be added to restore suds. Rinse thoroughly in three lukewarm watera. Do Not Wring. For coloured woollens make suda and rinsing waters almost cool. Wash very quickly to keep colours from running. Woollens should sever be dried in the sun. FEW women like to trust their blankets, their delicately coloured woollens and under-garments —still less their children's woollies—to a laundry. Yet winter time necessitates the wearing of many woollen garments which become only too quickly soiled, whicn must be cleaned often, but which, if proper care is not taken, soon lose the softness and elasticity which renders wool the most cosy and warmthgiving of materials. Woollen garments require individual attention for reasons of hygiene and because wool is more sensitive than other fabrics. It is composed of tiny over-lapping scales which when displaced become rough and scratchy, rendering the material irritating to the touch and unhealthy to wear, because the porous quality which is one of its advantages is thus destroyed. Rubbing with hard soaps damages the fragile tissues and makes wool harsh and matted. Ordinary soaps and soap flakes also contain alkali, which not only discolours wool but causes it to shrink. Blankets washed with hard soap have been known to shrink aa much as eighteen inches! The housewife who uses Lux avoids these evils. Lux is finer than soap, its flakes melt more easily and contain no alkali to endanger the softness or wear the fragile tissues of wool. To launder in the Lux way is to keep your woollens a good colour, in good shape and with their fragile fibre unimpaired* W Q Lever Brothers (New Zealand) Ltd.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19281027.2.165.44.2

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 20088, 27 October 1928, Page 10 (Supplement)

Word Count
556

Page 10 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 20088, 27 October 1928, Page 10 (Supplement)

Page 10 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 20088, 27 October 1928, Page 10 (Supplement)