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FCN 
THE GARDEN MAGAZINE SrPTEMBER, 1908 
AN IVORY SOAP FABLE 
(With apologies to Aesop and Geo. Ade) 
yi iiNCE upon a Time, there lived a Man who 
Determined to be Economical. He Resolved to 
Frequently walk to and from the Office to save 
Car Fare. 
At the End of a month, he had Saved nearly, 
but not quite, enough Money to have his Shoes 
half-soled. They needed it. 
Shortly afterward, his Wife became Economical, also. 
She made up her Mind to Save Money on Soap. She 
Decided to Wash her Dishes with ordinary laundry soap 
rather than with Ivory Soap, as had been her Custom for Years. 
At the End of Six Months, she had Saved nearly, but 
not quite, enough Money to Have her Hands “treated”. 
They needed it. They were very Red, very Coarse 
SS SCLYDE JAMES NEWMAN 
and very Rough. The Combination of Hot Water and 
ordinary laundry soap had been too much for Them. 
When she got back from the Beauty Shop, she did a 
little figuring. She found that in the Course of twenty- M Wy ( 
: ny] 
six weeks, she had saved 43 cents. She did not Know oe fh «| 
; " | 
aN h wa i 
where the Money was, but she Knew she had saved it. 
She also Knew that she had lost her Temper fifty- 
two times because her Husband had Said Things about 
the china; and eighty-three other times because her Hands 
were “all shrivelled up.” Mz el 
So she stopped Trying to Economize on Soap. 
Moral: The Best—which is Ivory Soap—is none too 
good for the Woman who does her own work. The second 
best is not half good enough. 
Ivory Soap 
99444 Per Cent. Pure. 
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