THE RURAL flEWo'YORKER. 
TRY THE FRANK SIDDALL 
(hi Eminent ^)i\riaC/ CUimricemeTit (XmUaotUr^ChTistiaiiL^ 
di\wAlon int^rchanalof tfunujlit amwuj jutrfite,, and,-tfeir lirUliu g iUSS JjMXTb, 
tp*, oi^^tkTllau<>< Merman- urfur oi^oses tti£, intraiukiorL of ncicr improirerjLenis, Ttittrial sflwp&ys 
aiuLwu/e-cfn^togs, 3)iould.k condmnfl as M km mi sni usmrnmhs otMriy 
Husbands ask your Wives, 
Wives coax your Husbands, 
Sisters persuade your Brothers, 
Brothers tell your Sisters, 
to try the Frank Siddalls Soap. 
AND NOW IF NOT SET IN YOUR OLD WAYS 
be sure to try The Frank Siddalls Soap for Toilet—Bath— 
Shaving—try it for Washing Dishes—for House-cleaning—for 
Scrubbing—and be sure to try 
The Frank Siddalls Way of Washing Clothes. 
Every subscriber to this paper Is specially Interested In reading the whole of 
this page, each line is important to every Man Woman and Child or It would not be 
published but would be omitted, and so reduce the cost of the Advertisement 
and Remember there is nothing Stated Here But The Simple Truth 
— FOR MEN TO 
ONLY THINK! ONE SOAP FOR ALL USES' 
The Merchant and his Clerk, the Photographer, the Optician, the Artist, the Jeweler, 
the Printer, the Bather at the Turkish Bath, the Ba’rber, the Hotel, the Stable, 
the Army and the Navy, will all reap great benefit From the The Frank Siddalls Soap. 
--FOR SHAVING- 
Its heavy, lasting lather is so different from that of any Shaving Soap that its superiority 
is almost incredible; the face never burns or smarts, no matter how dull the razor, how tender 
the skin, or how closely shaved, and the Sponge and Soap Cup will always be sweet-smelling. 
-IMPORTANT FOR SHIPBOARD AND ARMY USE- 
It washes freely in hard water, and be sore to remember, where water is scarce, that 
The Frank Siddalls Way of Washing only takes a few buckets of water for a large wash. 
-FOR HORSES, HARNESS, CARRIACES, etc.- 
It is vastly superior to Castile Soap for washing a horse’s mane and tail, while for 
washing Sores, Galls, Scratches, etc., it is indispensable. No Stable is complete 
without it. For Harness it is better than Harness Soap, thoroughly cleansing the 
leather and rendering it soft and pliable, while for washing Cars and Car Windows, 
cleaning the running-gear and bodies of fine carriages, it is withou t a rival; by its use Paint and 
Vamish will last much longer, and the W indows and Lamps will be as clear as crystal 
The Frank Siddalls Soap is elegant for washing Printing Ink from the hands, and from 
Fruiters’ Hollers, Type and Electrotypes, being much better than Benzine, and safer, as 
shocking accidents by lire often occur from Benzine; and Parents whose children use 
Amateur Printing lb-esses should remember this. Type and Boilers washed with The Frank 
Siddalls Soap are in splendid condition for immediate use, and will take the ink readily. 
— SPECIAL FOR PHYSICIANS — 
To the Physician, the Druggist, the Nurse and the Patient its importance is becoming 
more ami more widely known and appreciated, and it is rapidly superseding Imported Castile 
and similar soaps for use in the Sick-room, the Nursery and the Hospital. 
A CERTAIN Cfli F—IN CASE OF ENGKOYVTNG TOE-NAILS—A CERTATS CCRK 
in place of cotton-wool a little of The Frank siddalls Soap should ho kept pressed between 
the uuil anil tender tlesh—one trial will prove its superiority over cutton-wool. 
-AS AN ANTISEPTIC AND DISINFECTANT- 
For washing Old Running Sores, Bed Sores, Cuts, Wounds and Burns ; for washing 
Chafed Places on Infants and Adults; for use by persons sutiering with Tetter, Ringworm, 
Salt Rheum, Itching Piles, Eruptions on the Face, and for children afflicted with Scaly 
Incrustations, it is without any of the injurious effects so often experienced when oilier soap 
is used; while for washing the Invalid it is a most valuable aid to the Physician, by 
the thoroughness with which it removes the exhalations from the skin that would otherwise 
tend to counteract the action of his medicines by closing up the pores, and which cannot be 
accomplished by any other soap. 
Letters from well-known Physicians, describing their experience In their practice with 
The Frank Siddalls Soap, leave no doubt of the truth of these assertions. 
I se it for washing Sores on the Feet, caused by walking or wearing tight shoes. 
Always leaye plenty of the lather on— doni rinse the lather off. 
For washing Graduate Measures and Mortars it is better than anything else. 
for Pamphlet 
V OF 
;• . . u in the bottom o 
>d for ironing, U> ,t n \\ 
on them and are rolled up. 
U k Siddalls Soap d*» K* * , 
•Y on OR BOIL A SIN 
the wash-water gels too dirty, dip 
out of the tea-kettk. ^ 
■k into the suds for a 
, - W-.K THE PURPOSE OF UETiii> 
A \ D 1 t,SVr ^ llc 
Jot orr ?MART KOUSEK “ P 
Wile «“.®]S&GEre DECID 
*>o minutes to 1 hour. 
Genteel, Ladylike 
Snow for the Clean, Neai 
Llntla.r^o^ese^ec.,0^ 
\nmT NOT be used, NOT El TN 
Her Ml ST the wash-w ate i 
WASH-WA I TR^ holds enough lor 
tee warm, a miiaH e 
.... „ n denosit formed on it from 
filer will have r 1 h oU sekeeper , 
, in spite of the most c / tllis Soap 
he delicate 
to heat the wot*;* ”^ oltd it seems. 
time, no "*** _ olher mite Pieces. 
iU Flannel* r w , U er soapy 
always make the U i ^ b a 
n m.I smell nf ^ P overlookc 
'ot re A ■ r '' ['iiii, 'the "doth ts bait so 
ironitty ei 4 s** freelv in hard wat 
L£ta.. 
i water; 
■UKnav,honitiss r n.Xte 
...ccstavclUoSooprol^ 
,„.looU-*ndU-tT 
bbiug the clothes UGll ll- 
M dont use any more Soup 
IT wadi through two su-L. 
bands, add some hot wat 
.It and throw the piece bacl 
»done in lukewann water 
r ’ 1 ti ’ 11TIY on a wa»J 
h piece 1-IGit i ., vn 
DIRTY SUDb ALL C 
Lkewarm or co.d. Yen'll 
in the Blue-water UNI U 
lU.VKAVATb.lLwn^ 
boiling a single ^ 8) 
Colored Flannel- 
s: _anychUdJOori 
■ FIRST— Dip one 
over it so as not to wast 
Then ROl-L l *• 1 
tub under the water, an 
SIDDALLS bOAr 
ES pH|lIdE»-PH1A 
