Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 181, Hammond, Lake County, 19 January 1917 — Page 30
J'AGE TEX
THE ORAK-1,15 January 22 and 23, 1917
I A HearttoHeart Talk with Home Folks ' J iTrr.iiTihiiBwti.ii7j rrBirrhttiiiiWTOia lI,J.Lr::a2XaiMgULgJ r.BSX'AffTBIUafflagSaaa my3iLM.-v3:Kwai glr"Jsa?Mi--iLatlaF; I Dear Lady of the House: .
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nd doubtless you arc also an efficient nousekeopcr and all that that womanlv
Tine implies, lou detest dirt and untidiness and have yery little patience with any woman who can tolerate either.
'our table, when prepared, for your occasional week-end visitors, leaves nothing
to be desired in appearance or equipment, and your cooking, baking, broiling of the appetizing menu provided, is frequently the subject of laudatory comment among your many friends." Not a visitor finds it possible to write her name upon the case of the piano, and your floors and rugs and curtains defy inspection. ut how about your beds? "We venture to say that upon this one point moro excellent housewives have met and are today meetine their Watcrloos than up
on any other dozen phases of efficient modem housekeeping. Every, bed in your home may be luxuriously "built up," covered with a beautiful, spotless "spread," and further adorned with an artistic and costly "sham," but what of the sleeping qualities of the bed itself? It is on this very noint that we, your friends of the Enterprise Bed Co., are desirous of a few minutes talk with you. T emember, please to start with, that the week-end visitor at your home spends five times as many hours in your bed as she does 'at your table, and, believe us, it is bed comfort and res'tfullncss that adds very largely to the pleasure of her visit. Simply recall some of your own visits and see if our statement is not fullv endorsed. - t TT s it not a fact that too many housewives are apt to be satisfied with the general fine appearance and ignore the real resfullncss of the bed? A $10 spread, a big 45.1b. mattress or a $40 brass bedstead are, of themselves alone, utterly inadequate to bring sweet sleep or quiet rest during the long night hours. It's what's under the mattress that counts THE SPRING. And we believe you will pardon us if, right here, we have a few things to say concerning mattresses. ermit us, then, to urge you NEVER to buy one of those - atrociously heavy mattresses. A good spring doesn't require it, and all the mattress weight of earth can't render a faulty, ill-made spring perfect. You well known what a fearful 'drag upon the average housewife is the handling of the 40 or 45 lb. "ordinary" mattress. They are made by the pound to be sold by the pound. See why you are urged to purchase a "a good, heavy mattress"?
ere's where the HYGEIA SPRING proves a god-send to every housekeeper, as
a "1.) or 30 pound good felt mattress will be tound abundant weight for this spring, and you will then be provided with a supremely delightful, restful bed, without the necessity of lugging your life out every time you make it up. The writer and his wife, whose combined weight is something over 300 pounds, have for years used a Ilygeia on an old-fashioned wood bedstead, with but a 25 pound felt mattress above, and nothing, I am sure, could make a more delightfully restful, billowy bed.
ihe HYGEIA will neither tip, roll nor sag it is just as you or your visitors
would have a bed, and if you really care to increase the bed comfort of your home you can make no wiser move than to order one without delay, it is made to fit any size bedstead, wood, or metal, and so splendidly is it . constructed that you'll never have to buy another spring the longest day you live, for that's the length of time Ave furnish EREE any needed repairs. In other words, we guarantee every Hygeia Spring Bed for life.-
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THE MYQEIA, THE WORL D'S BEST BED
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