It is the unusual home in which washing is done more than once or twice a week. The balance of the time the machine must stand idle. And this is true of practically every other type of labor saving device. It represents the most difficult of conditions a factory product has to face.
In dealing with this most important subject, the Good Housekeeping Institute is offering valuable facts that have been established through fifteen years of experience in testing household equipment, and it is further utilizing the viewpoint of thousands of consumers and dealers who have come for a conference either in person or by letter.
POINTS OFTEN OVERLOOKED BY MANUFACTURERS
It is not too much to say that in general the manufacturer wants to produce the article that the consumer wants to buy. In many cases the reason he does not accomplish it is due to the fact that he does not divide his expenditures wisely. He neglects to pay the price for the highest grade skill in designing and he markets his product too quickly.
The importance of developing a specific design cannot be overestimated. No machine on the market, of any type, is one hundred per cent perfect and none on the market should, therefore, be taken as a standard to be met by the new manufacturer.