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138 THE GARDEN MAGAZINE Aprin, 1908. 
COPYRIGHT 1808 BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATI 
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“Every wash-day morning”, writes a New York woman, “I give the laundress 
my own dresses and skirts, the children’s dresses and such other articles as need to 
be washed with special care. 
“I say to her ‘Mary, wash these with Ivory SeaD: Use ordinary laundry soap 
for the rest of the washing.’ 
“T do not think it makes very much difference what kind of soap one uses for 
washing dish-cloths; but for one’s dresses, for table linen, woolens and ‘nice’ things 
of all kinds, Ivory Soap is the only soap a careful housekeeper should use.” 
There is no ‘‘free’? (uncombined) alkali in Ivory Soap. That is why it will not injure the 
finest fabric or the most delicate skin. That is why it can be used for hundreds of purposes for 
which ordinary soaps are unsafe and unsatisfactory. 
Ivory Soap . 4. . 994% Per Cent. Pure. 
