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Advertisement c. 1900. In 1859, Thomas Beecham focused on marketing Beechams by advertising in British newspapers. [3] Two slogans used in Beecham's advertising were "Worth a guinea a box" (the world's first advertising slogan which first appeared in a Beechams advertisement in the St Helens Intelligencer in August 1859), and "Beecham's pills make all the difference". [1]
"Love in the Afternoon" was an advertising campaign used by ABC to market its soap operas in the form of newspaper advertisements and television commercials. Focusing on the highly tormented love lives of its main characters, "Love in the Afternoon" was the chief ad campaign for ABC's afternoon lineup [1] [2] [3] from 1975 until 1985.
W. H. Burford and Sons was a soap and candle-making business founded in Adelaide in 1840 by William Henville Burford (1807–1895), an English butcher who arrived in the new colony in 1838. It was one of the earliest soapmakers in Australia, and up to the 1960s when it closed, the oldest.
The original Bon Ami formula was developed in 1886 by the J. T. Robertson Soap Company as a gentler alternative to quartz-based scouring powders available in stores. [1] [2] In those days, scouring powder was made from tallow and finely ground quartz. When quartz was mined, it was entwined with feldspar, and the two had to be separated by hand. [3]
John H. Woodbury in 1902. The John H. Woodbury company was established in 1870 in Albany, New York, [1] by a dermatologist. [2] The company was still in New York in 1901, making and retailing soap, when the Andrew Jergens Company (now a subsidiary of Kao) purchased the company which owned the soap brand, [3] and moved the headquarters to Cincinnati, Ohio.
BeautyBath — When insurgent forces attacking Malacañang Palace gives her far too much stress, Philippine present Corazon Aquino relaxes and recharges in "[her] own private sanctuary of softness" thanks to this bath soap's "soothing caress." A November 1987 parody of Calgon bath soap and its "Calgon, Take Me Away!" ad campaign. [64]