n ft X m T 'i These two made a test. £I,OOO Guarantee of Purity on Every Bar. THESE two girls made a test which anyone can male#. They agreed to wash certain garments with two, different soaps to find if there was any real difference'between pure soap and soap of another kind. Sunlight was chosen as the pure soap. The test ran over a period of twelve weeks, and both hand-washing and boiling were used. At the end they found that the garments washed with Sunlight were just as strong as ever. There were no worn places, and there was no tendency for strands to pull out. Comparison with the other was very much in favour of Sunlight. Soap purity is not just a phrase, it means greater ease in washing, whiter clothes, and less wear and tear. The Sunlight way of washing, by gently soaping and rolling the clothes is still the least fatiguing, but if you want to boil clothes. Sunlight is safe, sure, and quick. SUNLIGHT SOAP Lever Brothers (New Zealand) Limited-Petone
That he had defrauded the Labour Department of the sum of 4a 2d was admitted by a blaoksmith named Walter David Fisher at the Magistrate’s Court yesterday when, before Mr E. Page, 8.M., he confessed to having, under the name of William Joseph Daniel Barnes, obtained a railway warrant to the above value for a trip to Waikanae. Sub-Inspector Cummings explained that the aocused had represented to the Labour Department that he was a returned soldier, and that he had work to go to at Waikanae. On a further charge of using obsoene language when berate arrested, aooused was sentenced to a further 14 days iu gaol, whilst his father, David Fisher, for endeavouring to prevent Constable Kano’s arrest of his son, was fined £5,. in default 21 days’- imprisonment*
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19231124.2.118.2
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume L, Issue 11685, 24 November 1923, Page 10
Word Count
306Page 10 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Times, Volume L, Issue 11685, 24 November 1923, Page 10
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