XVI. 



REVIEW OF REVIEWS. 



September 1, 1913. 



A cooler, quicker ironing — easier and 

 better, too — for only 3 pence with a 



GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY 



Tlii-eepence worth of electricity 

 for an avcra<z;e ironing — that's 

 all it takes. Only 3d. for all 

 the coolness, the time-saving, 

 the delightful convenience that 

 you gain by using tliis famous 

 iron. 



Part of this 3d. you save in 

 coal or gas. For the rest of it 

 you get tliat steady, tireless heat 

 wliich saves time and steps, that 

 evenness of heat which means 

 fewer scorches and less rubbing 

 — hence less wear and tear on 

 fine clothes. 



More than half a 



million women are now 



proving the comfort, 



the ease, 



ness, the 



the G.-E. 

 Most of 



the quick- 

 economy of 



Iron. 



these 



tages and economies are due to 

 the special G.-E. "heating 

 metal." Calorite. The way 

 Calorite is built into the iron 

 prevents waste of electricity — 

 concentrotes the heat in the fmt- 

 toin of the iron — and liolds it 

 there for ironing long after the 

 current is turned oflF. And 

 Calorite is so nearly indestruct- 

 ible that G.-E. Flatirons last a 

 lifetime. 



The (i.-E. Guarantee 

 is on the big red and white tag 

 on each iron. Look for this 

 tag. Insist on the G.-E. Iron. 



Send to-day for our liandsome 

 book, ■■ Electric Heating and 

 Cooking '" — 64 pages of interest- 

 ing information about eh'ctricity 

 in the bou.st^hold — with many 

 beautiful illustrations in colour. 



AUSTRALIAN GENERAL 

 ELECTRIC COMPANY 



Corner of QUEEN and LITTLE COLLINS 

 STREETS. MELBOURNE, and 



217 clarence; STREET. SYDNEY. 



T/ic Guarantee of Excellence 

 on Goods Electrical 



Tbauk you for meiiliouiiig the R«view of K«view8 wuen wriLing to advertisers. 



