Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| BRI eT o ot tadie These manufacturers know how their BN THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1922. = products should be washed— that is why they are urging women to use Lux for all fine laundering Belding Bros. & Co.— Silks Wm. Skinner & Sons—Silks and Satins Van Raalte Company —Silk Underwear Emery & Beers Co. Inc.— Onyx Hosiery McCallum Hosiery Co.—Silk Stockings H. R. Mallinson & Co.— Sport Silks O one is in a better position to know how to wash silk, woolen, or fine cotton, than the manufacturers or these products. It is a matter of business to these manufacturers that the lovely fabrics and garments they make should ruinasilkblouse. A baby’s woolen shirt or band will shrink or yellow almost beyond When this happens, the manufac- turers of the fabric or garment are held responsible by their customers. For this reason, such prominent man- Louis Roessel & Co. Inc.— Silks The William Carter Co.— Knit Underwear S. B. & B. W. Fleisher Inc—Yamns Simon Ascher & Co. Inc.— Knitted outer-wear Dr. Jaeger’s Sanitary Woolen System Co.— Sport Woolens Blankets North Star Woolen Mill Co.— Herbert B. Lederer Co.—Edelweiss Organdies and Dotted Sevisses essential for them to work out the safest way to wash their products. v Thorough washing tests have been made by the domestic science department of a famous university. Samples of silks, woolens, linens and fine cottons were laundered the S 5 | X 23 5 e RPN Puritan Mills—Draperies Pacific Mills— Printed Cottons Betty Wales Dressmakers—Dresses average number of times. Careful records material which had never been washed. As a result, the manufacturers whose goods customers. They know that Lux could not stand up under these severe tests unless it They say without reservation that Lux is safe—that if water alone won’t harm a fabric or color, Lux can’t.