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HOWE’S POTATO MANUAL. 
Dr. W. H. Morse of the Electro-Medical 
Institute, Y. Y., replied to enquiry made by 
Yew England Farmer. Boston, whether it was 
possible to make an Electric Soap, — “ In Dob- 
“ bins’ Electric Soap, Electricity certainly plays 
“a part. It is a remarkably pure article, of 
“ excellent quality. It contains no soda or 
“ potash, apparently ; refusing to turn red with 
“phenolphtalein. Thus the neutralizing prop- 
erty of electricity is apparent; and the pres- 
ence of alkalies not being manifest, the soap 
“has the effect of not drying skin, hair, and 
“nails, as alkaline soaps do.’’ 
performs wonders now-a-days, and adds to 
our comfort, convenience and welfare in very 
TRICITY many ways, but in nothing is it more won- 
derful than Dobbins’ Electric Soap is, in its speedy attack upon 
dill, wherever found, and its absolute powerlessness to injure 
fabric or skin. Ask your grocer for it. Take no substitute. 
I. L. Cragin & Co., 
Philadelphia, Pa. 
