If I crack open my vintage box of Cold Power detergent

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It was the Kenmore that washed everything so well, not the detergent lol. Didn't realize there was such a low-end Kenmore with one auxiliary knob and timer dial that had such a nice control panel.   
 
Launderess-- If you get the chance, check your box of Cold Power for a definition of the term 'germproofs.' I would think they mean 'kills germs,' but the term implies fabrics resists germs after washing.

I'm more amenable to cold water washing than many, but I draw the line at diapers unless a maximum dose of Clorox is involved. And probably not even then.

My mom bought a box of Cold Power because of a generous coupon which was doubled at the grocery store. I recall it had a wonderful, distinctive scent.

She used the entire box washing in hot and warm water, of course. I don't recall her washing anything in cold.
 
No mention of anything about germs

Have debated selling on the darn box of Cold Power and need to get back to a few interested parties. Just cannot make-up one's mind about the stuff. Mother Dear used it for a while (it was the 1970's, energy crisis and all), but cannot recall how well it performed. Also am not sure about sudsing either.

Sill think that lady in commercial has the most charming Southern accent. You just don't hear it anymore do you? Her manner is also very refined for a housewife that has to cope with "red Georgia clay soil". *LOL* I mean don't think Miss. Hilly knew where the washing machine was in her house.
 
There was a truck delivering free samples of Cold Power after leaving junior high one day and they dropped a carton of about a dozen boxes on the sidewalk. Naturally I took them home and gave them to my mother. Under no uncertain circumstances was she washing in cold water. It worked fine in hot and she went back to Tide after that free stash ran out.
 
charming Southern accent. You just don't hear it anymore

I do when I go to Alabama and get to listen to the refined older ladies at a firend of mine's church.  I keep wondering when Scarlett O'Hara is going to walk into the room.  :-)
 
 
It can of course be used in warm or hot water.  We used it for a while back in the day.  HIGH sudsing!  Nice scent (maybe to cover up the smutz of cold-water washing, LOL?).
 
No mention of anything about germs...

 

Wonder if they had to stop using the term?  One would need to know whether your box of Cold Power or the commercial in your original post came first.  

 

"Thanks for checking, Launderess," he said in his best Georgia gentleman accent.
 
I have no idea if those ingredients really germproofed! Was it reformulated because of FTC complaints, or was it too costly?

The boxes I have used are pretty good albeit not the best (that would be Tide). It is fairly high sudsing, but like most C-P detergents a little less so than Procter & Gamble stuff. At one point the powder was blue, and (later?) white. None of them had any scent remaining so I can't comment on that.
 
While I am a staunch anti-Cold activist (
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), I have to make an admission:

 

My diapers/nappies (whatever you call them) were soaked and washed in cold water. Living on a farm with water heated instantly with gas bottles teaches conservatism - namely not using all the gas for laundering, otherwise, someone might have an uncomfortable experience in the shower if the gas and pilot goes out(!)

 

We used Napisand, a "sanitising" product for nappies with Oxy bleaches, and probably Cold Power. I was, of course, too young to remember. 

 

All washed in a suds-saving Top-Loader. We still have those diapers/nappies and they're clean, if a bit worn (but not tatty). 

 

However, I converted to Warm and Hot washes. My clothes are cleaner for it, and I've become a better person LOL

If needed, I add a Pre-Wash and even a soak on the Miele if the soils are sensitive to heat. 
 
"Thanks for checking, Launderess," he said in his best Georgia gentleman accent."

A real Georgia gentleman would say, "Thank yew ma'am for checking." He might even throw in, "I'm much obliged."

"Thanks" is not a polite option since it cannot be followed by "ma'am" or "sir."

I can see where those bromine compounds would be right lethal to germs. Bromine is just above iodine in the Periodic Table in the column of halides or salt producers and just below chlorine; talk about a lethal neighborhood.
 
Cold Power, "coin vend laundry size"  were mailed to  rural households in the summer of 1967.  My mom and I spent the summer in rural Missouri when my Grandfather was ill.  I remember her using it at the Laundromat  as others have posted it was used in hot/warm water.  To be honest I doubt if the old Easy coin ops even had a cold water selection.  Great old commercial and some nice memories too.  Thank You, Launderess! 

 
 
Wow, I used to use vintage Phisohex and/or Phisoderm a couple of times a day. We also had Lifebouy soap in the bath. Yikes!

It does not inspire confidence to read that frequently used products were withdrawn from the market. Well, at least cyclamates were safe.

😫

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I'm a victim from 1971

of the staph outbreak in hospitals!

 

"At least two companies manufactured over-the-counter preparations incorporating hexachlorophene. One product was Baby Magic Bath by The Mennen Company. Mennen recalled the product in 1971, and it was removed from retail distribution. Immediately after the withdrawal, there was an outbreak of Staphylococcus infections in hospitals across the USA"

 

 

I was born in 1971 and my mother has always said I had staph on my cheeks while in the hospital.  I've had tiny scars my entire life...not like acne scars, just more like larger pores.  She said she'd wash my cheeks with PhisoHex as my doc told her...it went away but left some mementos behind.

 

I found carbolic soap on ebay while looking for Life Buoy (without carbolic).
 
Lifebuoy Carbolic Soap

Have a large stash of vintage Lifebuoy soap (surprise, surprise) and cannot say am exactly thrilled. Was like bathing with Lysol which isn't surprising as the active ingredient in both are cresols.

Gave a few bars away and IIRC have used perhaps two, the remaining sit stashed away. Found the stuff far to drying and irritating for use as a daily toilet soap. Could literally feel one's skin drying out in the shower. Would take the application of large amounts of body lotion to calm things down. Have to say the scent otherwise is rather a spicy medicinal scent. Familiar to anyone involved in nursing or medicine going back if not from just having been brought up with the stuff.
 
OMG...OMG....OMG....I know this woman....She was married my mother's cousin. Jeff whom she talks about the "Georgia red clay" and his pants...we were friends. I had remembered that she filmed a commercial but I had remembered it being Tide. I clicked on this and there was Julie...(Julia sounds much more refined)...she actually was a nice lady and Jeff and his sister Lisa were as wild as hell. All three gingers....going to forward this to my mom.
 
Miss Julie’s accent is truly fascinating to me.  I have actually never heard anyone speak in quite that way.  I’m not from Atlanta or Decatur, and neither is anyone else who lives here, so I have no idea what the real accent once sounded like.  Maybe this is it.
 
I just love how Miss. Julie

Makes that soft but sweeping pointing gesture towards her son Jeff who "gets into our Georgia red clay....). *LOL* Just so genteel like she was saying "Jemima set that tea tray down over there..". We all know it isn't polite to point but one must indicate where something is to go somehow...
 
I just talked to a lady at ABC Financial in Arkansas today that sounded a lot like this lady in the commercial. I hear lots of people that have such an accent when I visit in Mississippi.

Why doesn't anyone in Atlanta have such an accent? Is the place totally filled with Yankees now?
 
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