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NO MORE WASHDAY DRUDGERY

It will surprise most people to learn that discriminating women in New Zealand spent hundreds of thousands of pounds last year in purchasing Beatty Washing Machines, but to those wise housekeepers — happy home-builders is a better way to describe them — it was just plain common sense to lot the machine which has reached a stage of perfection do -that back-breaking, thanldess job — the weekly family wash. The efficiency, economy and simplicity of the Beatty Washer is simply amazing. A child can work it and do a bigger wash in an hour or two thfin a strong woman could do in a whoie day with the old-fashioned methods. Every possible objection has been ovorcome. You can do a big wash with a Beatty in your drawing-room and wring out . every ounce of water without spilling a drop.

There is an excellent service organisation behind the Beatty Brothers' products. ' Distributors of some machines are here to-day and gone to-morrow, but, as soon as a district becomes washing-machine-minded, a Beatty factory branch is established and staffed by good, reliable, local people who have undcrgone a thorough trainiug. Mr E. Eoberts will be in charge of the Beatty Fac'tory branch which opeas to-day in Heretaunga street, Hastings, and lie wishes everyone to lcnow that they are selling a washing service, not merely a washing machirie. To celebrato the opeuing of this Beatty Factory branch in Hastings, Mr Eoberts has decided to give a splendid five-foot step ladder or a reallv good folding elot'hes rack to every body who arranges an appoinlmcnt before Saturday next the 12tli • instaut for a home demoustration a*t any eonvenieot time. Each of tliese handsome P'V* sents would cost mere tinui a pound m any sliop. No obligatiou wlnttever is iticumni by perniitting Beatty Brothers to demonstrate a washing maehine or oue oi: their home ironing rnnehincs becau-'e you are only accepLiug an inviiutijn gladly extended by tha largest tnakeis in the Empire who realise that it takcs time and education to change old ideas and. habits. — P.B.A

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBHETR19370607.2.103

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 120, 7 June 1937, Page 8

Word Count
342

NO MORE WASHDAY DRUDGERY Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 120, 7 June 1937, Page 8

NO MORE WASHDAY DRUDGERY Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 120, 7 June 1937, Page 8

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