s.- ' v i! cV 7 $ ■ 0000 Every bubble a little vacuum cleaner. £I,OOO Guarantee of Purity on Every Bar. THERE are certain things which time cannot change, and one of them is the way in which dirt is taken out of clothes. Washing is what is known as a physical, not a chemical process, which means that dirt is pushed out or drawn out, but not dissolved or changed by chemicals. Pure soap and water worked up into a lather make an ideal machine for drawing dirt out. Every bubble acts as a little vacuum cleaner, sucking away until even the dirt that has got right inside the cloth is pulled out and washed off by the water. The purer the soap the better the lather, the stronger the bubbles—the poorer the soap the less the lather, the weaker the bubbles, and, the greater the danger of chemical action starting to rot the fibres. There is no better way of washing clothes than the Sunlight way, because Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure. If you want to use a copper, Sunlight is still safer in the boil and the best that art and science can produce. SUNLIGHT SOAP Uever Brothers (New Zealand) Limited-Petone
During 1922, there were 97,986 accidents m the factories md workshops of Great Britain, and of these 813 were fatal. The figures show an increase of 5421 over those of tho previous year. A man's greatest height is reached between the ages of 28 and 30. Different statistics give slightly different figures, but the following seem to be about the nverageEnglishmen and Scotsmen, 67. j. inohes; Irishmen, 67 inches.
The St. John, New Brunswick, dry dock is now an accomplished work ana was officially opened, on October 29th. It is the largest dry dock in North i America and capable of accommodating this largest ship in the British Navy*
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New Zealand Times, Volume L, Issue 11705, 18 December 1923, Page 11
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311Page 11 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Times, Volume L, Issue 11705, 18 December 1923, Page 11
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