TRY THE FRANK SIDDALLS SOAP 
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EVERY WORD IN THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS THE TRUTH r Acel „ writer of English 
h h mh m an i literature was paid an enormous 
^Tm wml II ^^9 ET A B Jn& Small lp rice for preparing this article 
ll| B f% F* Aft || i Bp*i g Wi Children or Grown Persons - 
Clams are not a proper model for human beings to copy after for they open their shells to 
take in their accustomed food, but they shut up very tight when anything new comes along 
FOR THEY ARE CLAMS 
.dBa££ 
A Clam is not a good thing for a Housekeeper to copy after: 
wishing to improve themselves 
in composition or letter writing 
should carefully read the entire 
page and note the ingenuity by 
which so much information has 
been given in so small a space. 
A Clam is not a good thing for a Farmer to copy after:—is not a good thing for a Crocer to copy after:— 
A WIDE-AWAKE HOUSEKEEPER will try new ways that are endorsed by leading newspapers 
A WIDE-AWAKE FARMER will try a Butter Worker and a Hay Fork 
A WIDE-AWAKE GROCER will buy the kind of goods his customers call for 
A WIDE-AWAKE MAN always wants to try the Soap he sees highly recommended for Toilet, Bath and Shaving. 
Of course a woman is NOT expeoted to try every new thing that is offered her; but when the most reliable papers in the United States emphatically 
endorse in the strongest manner every claim made for The Frank Siddalls Soap, there is certainly no excuse for not giving it one square, honest 
trial strictly as directed. Intelligent women are adopting The Frank Siddalls Way of Washing Clothes, and those who have done so are already 
beginning to look down with pity on persons who are set in their old ways :— SO DONT BE A CLAM 
How a Lady can get the Soap to Try 
At Places where it is Not Sold at the Stores: 
Send the retail price 10 cents in money or postage stamps. 
Say she saw the advertisement in the Ladies* Floral Cabinet 
Only send for one cake and make these 2 promises: 
Promise No. 1 —That the Soap shall be used the first 
wash-day after receiving it , and that every 
bit of thefamily wash shall be done with it. 
Promise No. 2 —That the person sending will personally see 
that the printed directions for using the 
Soap shall be exactly followed. 
By return mall a regular lO-cent cake of Soap 
will be sent, postage prepaid; 
It will be packed in a neat iron box to make it carry safely, 
and 15 cents in Postage Stamps will be put on: — 
All this Is done for IO cents 
because it is believed to be a cheaper way to introduce it 
than to send salesmen to sell it to the stores 
( If your letter gets no attention, it will bo ; 
because youhnve NOT inado tbo promises. | 
rvakerwiinr* Wfint Tree or Wore* tn tne mn> or n a rnc«r, | 
IT tlio abOTO TWO promises nro nini/o, 11 
but trill NOT be gent if the prom ines are NOT made. I 
It,Wu!> Bar'll 0S 
^Eillftrt frutSl&lbSiutfl 1 
Dont ask your wife to try it for washing unless you 
celebrated soaps of Europe and America. 
If not set in joor ways try The Frank Siddalls Way of Washing Clothes. 
How to tell a Person of Refinement 
A Person of Refinement will be glad to adopt a New, 
Easy, Clean Way of Washing Clothes, in place of the old, hard 
sloppy way. 
How to tell a Person of Intelligence 
A Person of Intelligence will have no difficulty in under¬ 
standing and following the very easy and sensible directions. 
How to tell a Person of Honor 
A Person of Honor will scorn to do so mean a thing as to 
buy the Soap and not follow the directions so strongly urged. 
How to tell Sensible Persons 
Sensible Persons will not get mad when new and improved 
ways are brought to their notice, but will feel thankful that their 
attention has been directed to better methods. 
And now dont get the old wash-boiler mended, 
but next wash-day give one honest trial to 
The Frank Siddalls Way of Washing Clothes. 
On]v One Oake rr^ paf hft nnnt for, 
to lli'MTHmMliitn you, _ 
or you 01 m order Ulreel'Woin tlio V tic tor y. " 
You must NOT send for more than one cakei 
| If a friend wants to try it, she must send in a separate lett 
Will cure Itching Piles so quickly as to 
seem almost miraculous, giving relief 
as soon as applied. 
WILL CTTItB TNG It OWING 
TOTS N.LU,S 
by merely pressing a little of 
The Lranlc Siddalls Soap 
between the nail and tender Jlesh 
* 
It is guaranteed that 
The Frank Siddalls Soap 
is now sold by Wholesale Grocers 
in every city in the United States. 
If the store you deal with 
does not keep it, try elsewhere. 
Your neighbors will be very much / 
1 pleased if you invite some of them ini 
and let them see The Frank Siddalls | 
Way of Washing Clothes — I 
le* them see the whole operation:— J 
Be sure to let them see the Clothes! 
ABOUT PRESFNTS AND AGENCIES. 1 Although it seems strange to 
Occasionally letters are received from persons wanting { use for Toilet, Shaving, &c. the 
agencies to sell The Frank Siddalls Soap; also letters from ( same Soan that is 
1 ladies who, although not wives of grocers, would like to get / ?° ap tUat ,s recommended 
the valuable present we advertise:—Please hear in mind that \ tor kl tchen use, still, sensible 
1 none of these letters are answered until AFTER the Soap has j people know that the world moves, 
, been tided on the whole of the regular family wash and sti'ictly ( and will be glad to try 
yaccordin,, to every little direction. _ J Tlio I^rauk Siddalls Soap. 
put in to soak. 
It will be quite a curiosity for them tof 
see a wash done without scalding or) 
boiling a single piece no matter how \ 
'dirty or soiled, and without even using I 
a wash kettle to heat the water in. I 
^Make the blue water VERY 1 
SPECIAL PREMIUM TO THE WIVES OF GROCERS 
A most Magnificent Premium can be had by the Wife of every Grocer In tho United States. 
The Premium Is a very handsome Velvet Plush Case, containing 6 
beautiful Heavy Plated Silver Knives and 6 Forks, manufactured 
specially for this purpose, and guaranteed to be the finest quality made. 
The Premium is given to the Wife of a Grocer treo if her husband dues not sell The Frank Siddalls Soap 
It will be sent after she has made a Thorough Trial of I he Soap, and enough Soap to 
make the trial will be sent Free of Charge. 
The Wife of a Grocer who desires to get this Valuable Premium MUST FIRST 
try a cake of The Frank Siddalls Soap on the whole of the regular family wash 
strictly by the very easy directions, and then send word by mail to the office in 
Philadelphia, together with business oard or printed advertisement of some kind to 
show that her nusband is a grooer, or send a bill for groceries bought of some 
wholesale grooer. 
The Premium is NOT sent until AFTER a thorough trial of 
The Frank Siddalls Soap has been made, and no letters from any one 
asking for information about the Premium will be answered 
until AFTER the Soap has been used. 
Children ask your Parents, 
Sisters persuade your Brothers, 
Brothers tell your Sisters, 
to try The Frank Siddalls Soap. 
It is made of the finest, purest 
materials that have ever been pu t 
into even the most expensive 
makes of high-priced toilet soaps, 
and the process of making it is as 
GLEAN as the cooking of a dinner. 
Persons who allow articles 
said to be as good as 
The Frank Siddalls Soap 
to bo forced on them 
must expect to be deceived 
8 RB THAT YOU GET WHAT YOU ASK FOR 
And Now for the Clean, Neat, Easy, Genteel, Ladylike FRANK SIDDALLS WAY OF WASHING CLOTHES 
There is nothing intricate about these directions:—any child 10 or 12 years of age—who has common sense—will have no trouble in following them : 
A Wash-boiler MUST NOT be used, NOT EVEN 
TO HEAT THE WASH-WATER, and as the wash-water 
must only be lukewarm, a small kettle holds enough for 
a large wash. 
A Wash-boiler will have a deposit formed on it from 
the atmosphere, in spite of the most careful housekeeper , 
which injures the delicate ingredients that are in this Soap 
Bo sure to heat tli© water in the Tea-Kettle 
the first time, no mailer hotr odd it teems. 
Wash the White Flannels with the other White Pieces. 
Be sure to always make the last water soapy; 
the clothes will NOT smell of the Soap, but will be as 
sweet as if never worn, and stains that have been overlooked 
in washing will bleach out while drying, and the clothes 
will iron easier. 
Altrays dissolve a small piece of Soap in the starch; 
it makes the ironing easier and the clothes handsomer 
The Frank Siddalls Soap washes freely in hard water 
without Soda, Lye, or any washing compound. 
Dont me Borax, Ammonia, or any other soap on any of the wash. 
FIRST—Dip one of the garments in a tub of lukewarm water; draw it out on a wash-board, and rub the Soap LIGHTI.Y 
over it so as not to waste it, being particular not to miss soaping any of the soiled places. 
Then ROLL IT IN A TIGHT ROLL, just as a piece is rolled when it is sprinkled for ironing, lay it in the bottom of the 
tub under the water, and go on the same way until all the pieces have the Soap rubbed on them anil are rolled up. 
Then go away for 20 minutes to one hour—by the clock—and let The Frank Siddalls Soap do its work. 
NEXT—After soaking the FULL time, commence rubbing the clothes LIGHTLY on* a wash-board and the dirt win, 
drop out; turn the garments inside out to get at the seams, but dont use any more Soap; DONT SCALD OR BOIL A SINGLE 
PIECE, OR THEY WILL TURN YELLOW ; and DONT wash through two suds. If the wash-water gets too dirty, dip some 
out and add a little clean water; if it gets too cold for the hands, add some hot water out of the tea-kettle. 
If a Streak is hard to wash, rub some more Soap on it and throw the piece buck Into the Buds for a few minutes. 
NEXT COMES THE RINSING— which is to be done in lukewarm water, and is for the purpose of getting the 
dirty suds out, and is to be done as follows; Wash each piece LIGHTLY on a wash-board through the rinse-water (without 
using any more Soap,) AND SEE THAT ALL THE DIRTY SUDS ARE GOT OUT. Any smart housekeeper will 
KNOW JUST HOW TO DO THIS. 
NEXT, the Blue-water, which can be either lukewarm or cold: Use little or no Blueing, for this Soap takes the 
place of Blueing. STIR A PIECE OF THE SOAP in the Blue-water UNTIL THE WATER GETS DECIDEDLY 
SOAPY. Put the clothes THROUGH THIS SOAPY BLUE-WATER, wring them, and hang up to dry WITHOUT ANY 
MORE RINSING and WITHOUT SCALDING or BOILING A SINGLE PIECE. 
Afterwards soap the Colored Pieces and Colored Flannels, let them stand 20 minutes to 1 hour, 
and wash the same way as the white pieces, being sure to make the last rinse-water soapy. 
THE MOST DELICATE COLORS WILL NOT FADE WHEN WASHED THIS WAY, BUT WILL BE THE BRIGHTER. 
Offices of The Frank Siddalls Soap, 1019 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. Pa. 
