Rensselaer Republican, Volume 18, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 February 1886 — The Usual Result. [ARTICLE]

The Usual Result.

It is not to bo denied that a good r.se’ving machine is one of the most important appurtenances of the modern household. We thought we had a good machine • until one day the a<rent of the n*w .HOME presented himself at our door and •proceeded to deliver an oration upon its cbai aetemteo merits. “But,’’we answered, “oar machine ? suits us well and we do not care for smother.” The.ag.nt. however, begged the priv lilege of leaving one of his machines • with us, “forthe ladies to try.” The request was not unreasonable, so >we granted it—but more to oblige the agent than anything else;for we really • did not want the machine, and had not the remotest idea of buying it. The machine dueC in the house, it -was natural that the ladies should look it over; they did so. and as a conse-c-pienee fell in love with it. They say that witnout the slightest wish to decry •or disparge any other machine, this, all things considered, is, in their opinion, the most desirable one to be bad. This nurivalied machine is manufactured by the NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO., Orange, Mass., and 30 Union Square, New York.