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The “Fresh Packed” Milk ROGERS Evaporated Mik Condensed Milk Save 2350 Rogers labels and mail to our office. We will send you a six- dollar auto vacuum . Ice Cream Freezer “Free,” with a recipe book telling how to make pure, rich. ice cream - at home with Rogers’ Fresh Packed Milk. Rogers “Fresh Packed” Milk is packed only as we get erders. Thatis why it is different from other milk. Save your labels and get this freezer to make your own ice cream. . That you may the more quickly obtain ane of the freesers, we will give you one on the return of 150 labels, together with $1.15 in cash, or for 100 labels and $1.65 in cash. MAIL LABELS TO ROGERS MILK CORPORATION 25 WEST 43D St. For Sale at All Stores New Yok City RIDGEWOOD ORCHARD Apple Marmalade- i ‘% kitchen is cookless, serve Ridgewood I Apple Marmalade. Make “pie-ettes”|v 1 of bread and Valley apples. i " Ridgewood Apple Marmalade made right in the Ridgewood Orchards ginia apples. quired to make a jar. 12 Warder Bldg. ers, in their Orchard at Winchester. Priced at 25¢ the jar. /000 » /4/ y % o ”” ) au ) ///I Aurback, A., 31 Pierce St. Ballinger, E,, Wisconsin Ave., Md. Bersock Market, 5215 Blair Road Fonoroff, 16 Good Hope Road Preedman, S., 4400 Ga. Ave. Freeman Bros,, 2202 14th St. N'W. Goldin Market, 301 13th St. 8. E. Hals, J., 7th and C Sta. N.E. Hais, S., 1300 4% St. SW. ‘Waminsky, A., 5th and G Sts. N'W. Hornstein, M., 3335 15th St. N.W. McDevitt Market, 1020 Girard St N.W. listed below: AN Mooreland Bros., 1113 15th St. N.W. Mostow, A., Tenleytown Rubin Bros., 4716 14th St. N.W. Sacks, H, 900 3d 8t. S W. Sherr, A, 233 12th 8t SRE. Stelsburg & Murinson, 620 N St. N.' Vigerhouse, M., N. Wiggiten, M. F., Brentwood, Md. . NOTHING TO DO BUT.FRY! All ready, potatoes and all. The convenient meal for three. Costs little too, 20c acan. Appetizing Meal Try Gorton’s Ready-to-Fry Cod Fish Cakes ICH, tender, sun-cured, deep sea Cod and fat Maine potatoes, all prepared. Just fry and serve these goldem, crisp, toothsome cakes! There’s a dish to please any palate. | Ready in no time. No picking—or peeling. All the bother banished. Just open the enamel lined can, pat into. fat cakes and pop into the frying pan. Serve ’em hot. All the family like them. And they are so eco- nomical. Cost far less than a meal of meat or eggs., A can feeds three husky appetites—and costs 1 but 20c. Order some from your grocer today. - Gorfon'sisy 'From the Gorton- Pew Fisherics, Packers of Gorton’s Cod Fish $ Gloucester, Mass. * ~No Bones On Thursday and Sunday, when the o near Winchester. It has the flavor, the bouquet, the tartness of delicious Vir- Fifteen apples are re- RICHARD SPENCER PALMER, Inc. Distributer Washington, D. C. Made by the Ridgewood Fruit Grow- For sale by dealers| good housekeeping. Miller, A., Good Hope Road, Anacostia “Itrue little story. Phs\:y Branch Market, 1020 Girard Capitel apd L Sts, | 8he was of the square neck for afternoon and evening and the bertha of precious lace that went with it. Already one Ssees many women brave enough to defy the accepted fashion for the Italian neckline and cut their frooks in a wide opening in front, some of them adopting the delta decolletage which is beloved by actresses and which is indorsed by artists as one of the loveliest ways in which to show the neck. About the edges of these newly re- = é:. LANVIN OF PARIS = TRIMS A WHITE TAFFETA FROCK FOR THE SOUTH TH LITTLE CAPE OF ITB TULLE RUN WITH BANDS £§HTE ‘ROSES AND SILVER RIB! ived necklines there must be a line f white. Qnly to the canoe opening is fashion peremptory about leaving oft a collar. Whether or not women iS {have seriously objected to this ver- dict, they have adhered to it. They have gone collarless for several years. Now when they are told they may Are You Always a “Good House- We ‘home-keeping women all like to be known as “good hougekeepers.” Yet there are rare moments™hen we should put something else before our ‘What is this something else? It is the voice of |the heart. For when our house- keeping duties clash with our an- swering some generous impulse of the heart it is time to make those duties a secondary consideration. I think I can best illustrate what I mean by telling you the following A few days ago a neighbor’s child ran in to see me. bringing with her an old-time doll that _belonged to her grandmother. “What a wonderful dolly!” I ex- claimed, “Did your grandma get it for Christmas or on her birthday?" Seigel, J. 34 8t snd Md. Ave. N.B | fof, Christma irthaay *" “No,”, said the child, given to her on any special occasion. Her father bought it for her when five years old; she had seen shop window and she kept alking past it and looking at it. She did want it so very badly! Final- ly she went into the shop and asked the storekeeper if 5 cents, which she had, would buy it. He told her that she would have to have five dol- lars to buy it. So she went home dis- appointed. But what do you think? Her daddy went downtown and bought that dollyfor her as a sur- prise! Wasn't that fine?” This little story touched me deep- ly. For it is the story of a man who dared to defy convention and &answer in a 1lhe dictates of his heart. gone day when that doll was bought few parents bought their children PERSONAL By William Enlarged Tonsils. In the Journal of Experimental Medicine last June Drs. Murphy, ‘Witherby, Craig, Hussey and Strum report the results of X-ray treatment of the enlarged and diseased tonsils of forty-six individuals. Some of the patients had also adenoid en)arge- ment. In all but four cases.the X- ray treatments were followed by marked shrinking of the tonsils and adenoid masses, and with this grad- ual shrinking, which' extended over a period of many weeks, the ton- sillar openings or crypts were drained of their accumulations of detritus or septic or foul material. As the shrinking process started by the X- ray exposures progressed the previ- ously enlarged tonsils assumed a nor- mal appearance. More important than that, however, was the effect of the treatment on the bactetia harbored in the crypts or openings of the tonsils and ade- noilds. It was found by Drs. Murphy, Witherby, Cralg, Hussey et al. that strains or clans of hemolytic germs— that means germs which haye m wicked capacity of destroying bl cells and undermining the. host health—such as are commonly pre: ent in the crypts of infected tonsils and commonly responsible for such systemic effects as duodenal ulcer, appendicitis, gallstones and so-called “rheumatis:,” these strains of strep- tococei and staphylococei (delightful medical jaw-breakers, meaning, re- spectively, chains of cocci or indi- vidual spheroid germs and bunches of such germs resembling bunches of grapes) disappeared from the ton- sils usually within four weeks of X- ray treatment. Some_other investigators have re- ported less favorable results from X- ray treatment of the tonsils in lleu of_surgical removal. D X-ray treatment 1s much more ex- pensive than surgical removal; takes many weeks of treatment com- pared with three or four days of care necessary when tonsils are re- moved; the ultimate effect is‘less o tain with X-ray treatment, and even it the most favorable results are gained the patient stil has his ton- sils, which are still as susceptible to infection as ever. I don’t know whether I should choose X-ray treat- mént or surgical excision if my own tonsils were concerned, but I think I should, give the X-ray a whirl if a chil@’s tonsils were concerned, al though children who contract dis- eased tonsils it . our poorly ventilated, overcrowded, unsanitated schools derive nothing but’ benefit, and very great benefit, from the sur- gical removal of the tousila, . For merely large tonsils, X-ray is 1 as for adenoids. For infected de: or diseased tonsils, the alternative is St passtiled Ao e et o S o BY ANNE, RITTENHOUSE. There is much talk of the revival Color in Interior Becorations. In my last article I made a plea for & further knowledge of color among Eome makers, and I promised to give some simple rules to follow in selecting color scheme: ‘We know that there are only three primary colors—red, blue and yellow— that all colors are derived from these three and that black is the resuit of ar lace or fine embroidery, they e not sure how to use it. Must it be precius lace, they ask? Will finely embroidered tea-tinted . batiste do? Can they clean thie old point lace bertha that belonged to their ances- tors and place it about the opening? To all of these questions one can answer, ‘yes." There is a fashion for the kind of yellowed batiste that was once the height of good taste and it'is embroidered in the ‘same delicate floral manner that our ancestors eon- sidered correct. Whatever precious lace you have:can be used, for fash- ion sponsors it. Women of position and great wealth are wearing it about the "edge of sapphire blue velvet gowns, also of white satin. ! But’ the idest thing has been thrown into the fashion market by Jeanne Lanvin of Paris, who starts so many fashions for Americans. This is the ghort cape of white tulle run with bands of pink roses. It is placed by her on & white tal trock | | for the south, a frock that has a slim, tight_bodice, the kind that Janice Meredith wore, and a full skirt, for we will all wear gathered skirts if Lanvin has her way. This- cape is not like the gathered ones of silver lace, that Poiret, the French designer, sent to this country. It is like an old-fashioned shawl bor- dered with roses Quite a touch of coquetry, there, White tulle and roses, reminiscent of the civil war. But full skirts and wide-brimmed hats suggest coquetry. The cape is a fitting adjunct. The nl?etch shows it. It is the kind ol thing a young girl would look her best in. It s intended for the afternoon, but it could be worn, minus the hat, in_the evening, for, no matter how. hard the designers try to persuade us that the formal even- ing gown is the correct thing after the lamps are lit. we still cling to the kind of costume that the war HOME ATTRACTIVE | BY DOROTHY ETHEL WALSH. jof green, which is made by mixing blue and yellow. Blue finds itself irn- complete without some ogrange (red and yellow), and yellow ‘needs pur- ple (red and blue). Today the artist has shown us a light yellow wall with a wistaria and ?luo striped couch placed in front of t. taria | In the S]nops ‘ A gold mesh bag with a powder puff concealed beneath a little jew- eled 1id in the bag’s top. A pretty penny, of course, this costs, but it is a distracting little gewgaw that any woman would envy. The window draperies are wis- color. Red silk handbags. This is a season when a good deal of headway has already been made with red hats. Red silk handbags are another ac- cessory of dress that carry the color well and give a note of contrast that i‘l cl;nrmin(, especially with a white | rock. English toilet water bottle, wrap- ped about in a wicker holder, just like those quaint bottles of Chianti that we used to have. A jade pendant, held in a gold rim, the jade pierced in a beautiful fret- work and marked with the light and d?rk streaking characteristic of this stone. Enameled cow , tiny, and in pink or blue, white or yellow. These are placed on the tea table, for call bells to summon maid or man. Hyacinths fn baskets. This is a season when hyacinth biue is a par- ticularly smart color, and the paint- All kinds of fruit, some of %In in rlu a Sampo. metimes t 50 natural it might which wide and | be deceptive in a fruit dish mingied ske! shallow, as well as deep, are hung | with real fruit, and some of it quite upon the wall. frankly artificial. Tastes, 4 IISAII An All T X .4 Fresh, Pure and S0 Delicious — quy'ersally Sold — EFFICIENT HOUSEKEEPIN In the by-|s HEALTH SERVICE rovoked, something that could be &nrn from 4 o'clock until midnight. The cape is merely an enlarged bertha, and the one fashion permits the other. If the exaggerated edition of the bertha can be worn, surely no fault will be found with the minor edition. It is a graceful addition to the slim, tight bodice which the great in fashion persist In advising. What- ever else it proves, this tulle cape shows the love of the fashionable world for roses and silver ribbon. The fashion for the latter has become a mania. Scarcely a smart frock is tree from the touch. The designers are kind to gold, and they offer it as a substitute, but, as far as the sea son has gone, the public prefers sil- ver, especially in ribbon, whether it be on frogks or hats. ed blue baskets filled with growing hyacinths of, that lovely lavender shade called hyacinth blue are one of the prettiest offerings of the florists. Black net and lace boudoir caps embroidered with gold threads. White kid gloves, with blug velvet lining for the cuff: mixing together equal parts of each. Each of the primaries has a com- plement—that is, all three must be used to make what is RKnown as a complete color combination. Thus red seems to call for small touches! e A Comedy of Errors--- in Mattress Buying Scrap baskets four feet high, woven toys save on Christmas or a birth- day; indeed, it was considered almost, improvident so to induilge & child. Yet here was one parent who didn't care what the world thought—who rose above convention to give his lit- tle girl a thing that she “wanted so very badly.” There is a message in such a little tale for you and me, Housekeeper reuders. We are too prone to put con- vention and the viewpoint of others before our human impulses. 1 have seen housekeepers who thought it r stern duty to sweep a room| | n an elderly dear one wished ardently for yarn which she had not the strength to go out and buy for herself, but which would Kkeep her happy and her-fingers busy for hours. Of course, our rooms should be swept; but they may be swept tomor- row as well as today, and we should feel justified in ch; ing our work- then to do a ch as this. I have seen mothers who have met their children’s hopefully chor- used “Let's go on a picnic, mother!” - by a regretful look at the summer sunshine and & reminder that ‘“Mother must do her baking.” Of course, we should do our baking, but perhaps the children would rather go without cake for once . than miss brightening those only too short childhood days with a joyous picnic. Yes, reader friends, the schoolboy's slangy " is a phrase ! which average housekeeper should heed more frequently than.she docs, because she has allowed her work to rule her. (This article was ewritten at the request of a reader who. wrote me ving, ‘“Please write some more of ice scoldy articles; they do me Act I. Y DEAR,” observed Mr. Parsons, as he dangled his toes over the edge of the bed and rubbed the middle of his back, “you can’t tell a mattress by the ticking.” long-fibre filler is still buoyant and supremely comfortable. You'll be glad you bought it. It’s what is inside a mattress that counts!’ “ ‘Bulderdash,’ said I. ‘Send me home that ordinary mattress, as you call it. It’s cheaper and I like the rose design ticking anyway.’ " “My dear Matilda Parsons,” said Mr. Par- sons, fumbling in his trousers pocket, “you are a strong-minded woman and uniformly right— indeed, always right —but as the immeortal Shakespeare puts it: “The proof of the pud- ding is the eating? Consequently, I hereby donate to the cause the wherewithal for one new comfortable mattress—Conscience Brand mattress, I might add.™ Curtain, “Pursue your subject, dear Frederick,” said Mrs. Parsons, “you are gradually working around, I suppose, to this mattress!” “Quite right, beloved. Eight months ago when I placed it on our bed, I myself admired the flossy rose design of the ticking. But to- day, hless my soul, it is more like a board than a bed. - And just feel these lumps in the sur- face!” You spend one-third of your life in bed. The more comfortably you sleep, the steadier your nerves, the better your digestion and the clearer your head. Those are medical facts. Supreme comfort comes only with long-fibre filler.. You camnmot judge a mattress by the ticking any more than a cake by the icing. You must rely upon the integrity of the maker to put proper materials inside. Con- science Brand mattresses are made in a great fresh-air, sunlight, sanitary factory from carefully chosen, high quality materials which give supreme comfort and long wear. Conscience Brand mattresses are sold in your favorite furniture or department store. Ask your dealer to show you a Paris or an Elite cotton-felt mattress (described be- low) or the Enduro hair mattress. .After you have noted the stout workmanship, test for yourself the elastic long-fibre within the laced end. A Conscience Brand mattress is » sure buy at a reasonable price. “But,” said Mrs. Parsons, “it was a real bar- gain. This mattress cost only $10.98.” “The salesman tried to talk me into buying another. ‘A Conscience Brand mattress,’ he said, ‘will last you for years, madam, for a reasonable price, too. They have long-fibre filler, either cotton-felt or hair. They are made in a sanitary, sunlight factory out of clean new materials and just as carefully, madam, as youd make a cake!” “‘Have you one at $10.98? said I. ‘Not quite that low, Ma’am,’ he answered. ‘The idea in Conscience Brand is comfort and wear first. They are manufactured to a quality, not to a price. The filler is always long-fibre. Here, take it in your hand and see it spring back, elastic-like. Years after the ordinary short-fibre mattress has packed down into & hard, ropy mat, Conscience Brand Brady, M. D. Grewth, I am 15 years old, 4 feet and 6 inches tall, and weigh 90 pounds. Pleaze tell me something which will make me grow taller~—(The Littleat Girl.) Answer—Girls aged 15 years have an average stature of 61l: inches and an average weight of 108 pounds, Boys of that age have a lead of 1% inches and about 2 pounds over the girls. If I knew of a remedy which Wwould increase stature, I'd take seve eral bottles of it mysel Being petite shouldn’t worry a girl so much. Oc- casionally growth seems to be stimu- lated by carefully administered hor- mone medication, but this is a mat-|" ter which your family physician alone is competent to consider. Let the Baby Kiek. Should the baby's feet or legs be kept straightened out by {!I'M cloth- ing? If she ii 1 0 draw her legs up she will they straighten ‘out again n she grows i ‘ CONSCIENCE BRAND Mattresses: Pillows ‘Box Sprirgs kick and draw -up her legs she likes. They will straighten out and give her visible means of support| &oon enough. i Have a Little Draft. Is it particularly beneficial to have your hat ventilated? Would such ventilation of a man's_hat help to} prevent baldness?—(E. W. 8. = Answer—VYes. And the larger thel ventilator openings and the more of them in the hat the better for thef ing to give her plenty of room to health of the man and his hair.” Contscience Brand Is & .:::::, :tfvo-hnl’l apart- i e ‘d S about doors and windows?—(Mrs. J. oandout HK) And you will find Answer>No. A window should al- ‘ways be lowered from three to thirty inches, particularly' at night. If you like fresh air but fear a draft, keep one suited to your purse. Ask your a screen of unbleached musiin in-th ELITE MATTRESS Window, not less than thirty inches The fineot fak rmattress. dealer to show yeu high. SR can bay, Mighest ;fi the variety best fit- Brussels Sprouts Salad.. Bleand eaduring, Soak one quart of brussels sprouts take this Conscience in cold selted water for thirty min- B =¥ utes, pick ovef and cook In boiling salted wgter until tender. Drain and chill. Lineja salad bowl or dish with one head “of #ettuyce. and heap the sprouts in -the center. Mix one-half cup of salad oil, four tablespoons of vinenr,.:n‘f-::nrm cup o!, tll::p 0 n of ci m?..m: teaspoon of & \&8poon of salt and one igg until' well blended. ver the eprouts ‘BEDDING COMPA > RICHMOND RNATIONAL BALTIMORE INTE CONSCIENCE BRAND s