MODERN OVERSEAS TRAVEL
FIRST CLASS WARDROBE TRUNKS MADE IN AUCKLAND
Our grandfathers and grandmothers, when they ventured on a long ancl often precarious sea voyage, packed their personal belongings in an oak sea chest and wedged themselves into .ramped and primitive quarters. In those days ocean travel was merely a mean sof transport to a desired destination. Nowadays ocean travel is both a necessity and a pleasure. The luxury of a modern liner equals that of the best hotels, and demands an extensive and well-chosen wardrobe. This created a new problem for riie makers of travelling cases, since •the old style of steamer trunk was obviously unsuitable, necessitating as it dkl the continual disarrangement of garments. Thus was evolved the Wardrobe Trunk, that masterpiece of the travel manufacturers’ art. Its general principles are now familiar to every overseas traveller. The suit and frock hangers on one side, anti the tier of compartments on the other, where all small and delicate articles can lie neatly and safely kept in their appointed places, ready for use at a moment’s notice. The use of Wardrobe Trunks among naloon passenger soverseas has now become almost universal, as no other form of package will give the service that modern conditions demand. Messrs. Palmer Collins and Whitaker Limited, of 239-241. Ponsonby Road,, Auckland, are specialists in this trade, and the sole manufacturers ot Wardrobe Trunks in the Dominion. They make a fine range of handsome Wardrobe Trunks, containing all the latest ideas for safety and convenience, ranging in price from £9 10s upward. These trunks are practically indestructible. and provide an absolutely <afe means of conveyance of valuable and delicate clothing, as they cannot possible become unfastened in transit. Today improved means of transport make tho handling of Wardrobe Trunks a simple and expeditious matter* and their almost universal adoption has definitely proved thensuperiority over all other forms, foi lons-distance travelling.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 810, 2 November 1929, Page 7
Word Count
315MODERN OVERSEAS TRAVEL Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 810, 2 November 1929, Page 7
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