SOMETHING LIKE A TYPEWRITER.
” Constitutes supreme excellence in typewriters,” reported the Mechanical Expert of the London School Board of the Royal BarLock, and the Board has adopted it for its scholars. The Sunlight Soap Company now uses 58 Bar-Looks as against one in 1896, when it had 14 other machines. Experience teaches. In 1895 five of London's great institutions had only 10 Bar-Locks as against 34 shilt-Key and r.ino ink-pad machines; now they have 146 Bar-looks as against 35 other machines combined. Banks, dock and insurance companies are all discarding the antiquated upside-down rattletraps for the up-to-date Bar-Look. In New Zealand, Government departments use more Bar-Looks fh*n all the other makes oouibit.ed. Why this phenomenal success ? Because there is no “jarabing” of type or heayy carriage to lift every second or tv?o, and because it is the fastest, strongest and most useful machine in the market. See the Bar-Look or send for particulars, E. J. Le Grove, 42 Lambton qua.y t 933
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume LXVII, Issue 3331, 13 January 1898, Page 3
Word Count
162SOMETHING LIKE A TYPEWRITER. New Zealand Times, Volume LXVII, Issue 3331, 13 January 1898, Page 3
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