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See that this trade-mark is on every package of cocoa and chocolate that you buy.

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The immense popularity enjoyed by BAKER'S COCOA and CHOCOLATE preparations, recognized as the standards for purity and excellence, have tempted unscrupulous dealers and manufacturers to attempt to trade upon the name "Baker" and to substitute goods of inferior quality when ours are called for. Consumers should insist upon getting the genuine goods with the trade-mark of the chocolate girl on the package.

A handsomely illustrated booklet of Choice
Recipes will be sent free upon request.

WALTER BAKER & CO. Limited

Established 1780

DORCHESTER, MASS.

Not Bleached

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The marking indicates technical analysis of household apparatus, foods and toilet accessories only

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Contents for

January, 1914 Magazine

Stories and Leading Features in This Number

The New Year Ship

A Poem

The Making of a Militant

Sister to all good women everywhere-that's the view you get of the militant leader in the opening chapter of this intimate autobiography, which will tell for the first time the true story of the fight for suffrage.

Taming the Hawk. A Story

The girl from the West couldn't do it according to modern ways; but a return to first principles brought general satisfaction. The second of a series of Blue Ridge Mountain stories.

Guilty of Motherhood

Should mothers teach? Courts and Boards of Education are at odds over this question, which is one of the most significant of the day. Would you like a mother to teach your children-or wouldn't you?

Saturday's Child. A Serial

The further adventures of the office girl upon whom Society smiled, told by the author of "Mother."

The Butterfly of the Pieris

An essay by the "insect's Homer" which brings men into closer kinship with some of
God's little things.

A Girl's Letter to Her Mother

In which Youth bares its heart. A confession-or an accusation?

What Do Children Read?

An eminent critic pleads for sanity in shaping the dreams of childhood, and offers suggestions which will help mothers to find the books their little ones want.

The Cry of the Pack. A May Iverson Story

Having already proved herself in the newspaper world, this fresh, eager girl from the convent now proves men.

Hashimura Togo Runs a Furnace

And the furnace reciprocates.

Did She Wrong Her Husband?

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Illustrated by James Montgomery Flagg

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An answer to one of the most vital questions to which the changed economic status of woman has given rise.

Growing Old Together

Some new thoughts on old age and how husband and wife may best prepare for it. Sarah and the Bokhara. A Story

Art and love both cry out for satisfaction, and it seems that never the twain shall meet until suddenly the rug, in most unexpected fashion, spans the gap between them, Our Halo

Have you any hair, and would you keep it? Here's instruction how.

Dr. Wiley's Department

Leading Departments

Swindled Getting Slim (with Anne Lewis Pierce): Taking the Paint from Teas;
The First Hatch of the New Brood: Fooling with Flour: Sal Hepatica.
Three Meals a Day

Martha Bensley Bruère

Illustrated by H. J. Soulen

Holworthy Hall
Illustrated by W. B. King

Dr. Woods Hutchinson 102
Illustrated by Rea Irvin

Harvey W. Wiley, M.D. 109

Edited by Bertha E. Shapleigh 133

Simple Economies and Wicked Wastes, Martha McCulloch-Williams: A Suffrage
Luncheon: What to Eat in January.

Other Articles and Departments

Cover Design, Coles Phillips: Editor's Say, 6-8, Advertising Section: A Prayer of the Man in the Street, Bouck White. 1: Mother Goose Drawing, Jessie Willcox Smith, 120; Fashions, 122; Just Plants-or Window Gardens? Grace Tabor. 130; New Things for the Home, 143: Discoveries, 146; Index to Advertisements, 12-14, Advertising Section.

George L. Willson, Secretary

George von Utassy, President George Pancoast, Treasurer; all, 119 West 40th St., New York Subscription, $1.50 a year. Published monthly by American Home Magazine Co. 15 cents a copy COPYRIGHT, 1913 (Trade-mark registered), by Good Housekeeping Magazine. Entered at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., as second-class matter. We cannot begin subscriptions with back numbers. Unless otherwise directed, we begin all subscriptions with the current issue. If you wish to renew your subscription to begin any number of months in advance, state the month. The expiration date of current subscriptions is always shown on the wrapper. Address all communications to Good Housekeeping Magazine, 119 West Fortieth Street, New York

THE SCHWEINLER PRESS

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Of course you should "eat more bread"
and less meat-but be sure your bread
contains all the body-building material
in the whole wheat grain prepared in a
digestible form. The only bread that
fulfils all these requirements is

*Shredded Wheat

Biscuit

or

the natural, elemental food, not "treated
compounded with anything-contains no yeast,
no baking powder, no chemicals of any kind—
just pure, whole wheat steam-cooked, shredded
and baked. Served with hot milk it makes a
nourishing, satisfying dish for a cold day.

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The marking indicates technical analysis of household apparatus, foods and toilet accessories only

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