I wonder if this is like prices for lace books.  They can ask for a certain 
price for a lace book, but it doesn't mean they'll get it.  Here,they could 
suggest these cleaning methods, but it doesn't mean people were stupid enough 
to risk their precious fabrics with these concoctions.

Lyn in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA, where they say we will have spring in 2 
weeks.  I have one blooming daffodil so far.


>Patricia wrote:
>I have been reading the book Jambusters by Julie Summers which is about the
>role the Women's Institute played in the 1940s when everything, including
>food, was in short supply.  On p156 of the paperback edition is the following,
>about clothing:
>
>"The government's hope was that people would reuse and repair old garments
>rather than insisting on buying new outfits.  The WI offered advice on how to
>give old garments a new lease of life including rubbing hot bran into tweed
>skirts and jackets, cleaning white materials with ground rice and using
>powdered magnesia to clean delicate fabrics such as lace, embroideries, white
>kid and suede gloves  Oil of eucalyptus would revive jaded silk and faded
>crepe de chine.....Grandmother's recipes for cleaning clothes were proposed
>but sounded very expensive:  'For cleaning silk.... mix well together three
>ounces of strained honey, two ounces of castile soap and half a pint of
>gin.'"


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