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The Extravagance of Cheapness in a Sewing Machine I Every woman knows the foolish extravagance of buying anything for her house iust because it is 1 cheap,’ Every woman also knows that what seems ‘ dear ’ at first is often ‘cheapest in the end.’ Yet the woman who will urge her husband to buy a thoroughly good overcoat because he gets several seasons’ wear out of it, often buys some unknown Sewing Machine for herself because of its ‘ bargain ’ price. ■Now the Singer Sewing Machine costs very little more than thrown-together, catch-penny machines. Yet one Singer will out-last several of the ordinary kind. T" The Singer has earned the reputation of running as smoothly at the end of its twentieth or thirtieth year as the day it was bought. Considering this, the Singer is in the end the cheapest machine to own. V Singer’s Sewing Machine Go. George St. Dunedin

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19140702.2.66.5

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, 2 July 1914, Page 44

Word Count
149

Page 44 Advertisement 5 New Zealand Tablet, 2 July 1914, Page 44

Page 44 Advertisement 5 New Zealand Tablet, 2 July 1914, Page 44

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