110 THE GARDEN MAGAZINE Octozer, 1908 
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COPYRIGHT 1908 BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO, CINCINNATI 
How can you expect your piano to look as well as it should if you never wash it? 
Wash it? Yes, wash it. 
Dusting is not sufficient, —The woodwork needs to be gone over thoroughly, at least 
once a month; and the keys should receive attention every week—oftener, if you live in a city. 
TO CLEAN THE WOODWORK: Dissolve a quarter of a cake of Ivory Soap, shaved fine, 
in a pint of boiling water. When lukewarm, apply with a soft cloth. Rinse with cold water, 
which should be applied with another soft cloth. Rub dry with a chamois. 
TO CLEAN THE KEYS: Dip a clean cloth of some soft material into a bowl of tepid 
water. Wring it almost dry. Rub the cloth on a cake of Ivory Soap. Wipe dirt off the keys. 
Polish with a chamois or a clean, soft cloth. 
For every purpose that involves the use of a better-than-ordinary soap, Ivory Soap is 
unequalled. It contains no “free” alkali, no harmful ingredient of any kind. It is pure 
soap; and nothing else. 
Ivory Soap . 2 « « 994360 Per Cent. Pure. 
