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_WOMA The Sidewalks N’S PAGE. of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. A letter from a reader says, “Dear Sir: Although perhaps-a little tardy, I desire to comment on"the’ manner in which The Star and other gréat news- papers handled the election news. To one who knows nothing of the intrica- cles of , modern publishing, the feat: assumed the proportions of a miracle. The work behind the scenes prior to the .election must have entailed incal- culable ‘labor. I wonder if it would be asking to much for you to publish something about the pioneer papers of America when the telegraph and news- gathering organizations were unknown. ‘Thanking you, I am, G. F. H." Probably the question should be re- | ferred to our colleague, Mr. Haskins, | but in as much as the “Sidewalks” | reader has put it to us we shall give | him a brief, though we hope, an ade- quate reply. | The first newspaper established in | Amngerica, acording to the most au: thentic information, was published at Boston, Scptember 25, 1690. Its first printing attracted the attention of the colonial legiglature, which declared its publication contrary to law and charged that it contained “reflections of a very high nature.” Apparently the au- thorities prohibited 'its further publi- cation, for ® second number does not appear to have been issued. Benjamin Harris was the publisher and Richard Pierce pfinted it. * The first 1egular paper published in North America . was also printed at Boston.,, It was known as the News- Letter, and“its date September 24, 1704. One of its issues invited advertise- ments and the first -one -ever printed in a paper was as follows: “Lost on the 10th of April last, off Mr. Ship- pen's wharf, in Bos- ton, two iron anvils weighing . between 120 and 40 pounds each; whoever has taken them up and will bring or give true intelligence of them to John Campbell, postmas- ter, shall have a sufficient reward.” The first news- paper published in Virginia was estab- lished in-1780. The subscription was $50 a year. The price for advertising, $10 the first ‘week’ and §7 for each sub- sequent ihsertion. It was a weekly paper. . : The oldést daily newspaper, the Pennsylvania Packet and General Ad- vertiser, which was commenced in 1771 by John’, Dunlap, was published in 1784, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur- days, by Danfel C. Claypole. Its last issue as a tel-weekly was Saturday, September 18, 1784. On September 21 of that year it began as a daily. The name was later changed to American Daily Advertiser. Afterward it was THE HRST DALY 3 1 was eéstablished March 1, 1783 and was called the New York Dally Advertiser. It Wwas published by Francis Child & Co., 17 Dutch street. The price was 4 cents a copy. The first success- ful dafly paper in Boston was known as the Boston Daily Advertiser and be- gan publication about 1813. Others followed in slow succession until the present “miracle” was accom- plisted. Rl i All may not be gold that glitters. At any five-and-ten store one may pur- chase a ring whose stone sparkles after the fashion of a diamond. Which leads us to the observation that not all cars parked in a dark road contain petting | parties. Two young women and a male friend, according to information, drove to Maryland recently and drew up at a particularly lonely spot. The girls were sisters, the man, a friend of the family. Each time a strange machine passed, the trio felt a sense of guilt. Finally they decided that as long' as others might suspect them of petting they might as well play the role. One young woman sat in the rear of the car and borrowed the male companion’s hat. When a ine was seen ap- roaching from the rear she raised the t and held it near her head. The approaching headlights flashing on it gave the impression that the party was a foursome and that there was.a “boy friend” in the back seat as well as in front. How often we err in judgment. One day a friend of ours was about his busi- ness and striding rapidly down a street. From a doorway a man suddenly emerged and ac- AT %oswd o\:r ‘{rl;n‘d. e was invited to I—;AN"STO accompany he stranger _to “the chief’s office.” The request came with such suddenness that the friend was literally “knocked cold.” He couldn't imagine what chief desired to see him and the stranger 4 he had never seen before. He real- ized, however, that the request was really a command when the stranger a police badge. Of course, he was a detective. The officer was not at fault, for our friend proved to be the “double” of a man wanted for embezzlement. It was a matter of but a few moments for him to establish his identity and he left the chief, who wished him well. * ok * A lonely and ownerless car stands in an obscure corner of a local garage, Its owner will never guide it along smooth and dustless roads again. He was an aviator and lost his life in a crash any months ago. No relatives have claimed his old mechanical buddy and called the North American. The first daily gper in New York it has probably clicked off its last mile. MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE @ BY MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif., November 22.— Hollywood saw in the announcement to wed of John Barrymore and Dolores | Costello yesterday the culmination of | one of the colony's most stormy ro- mances. . When John Barrymore saw the little | blonde daughted of the Costellos on a | Hollywood lot and singled her out, not | only for his attentions but for a rgle oppesite him in the picture he was to make, every would-be actress in Holly~ wood and many established ones envied Dolcres Costello. 2 ‘When those attentions became per- his daughter Maurice eran motion picture the little beauty, objection, but his listened to, went unh: d y s Time went on—so did romance. And one day Maurice Costello, for 30 years and more bappily married and the mas- ter of his home, asserted his right as & father and forbade his daughter see Barrymore. The matter came to an issue between Costello and his wife. To his dismay, she sided with her da: ter, and the father who had made grand gesture, “Choose him or me,” left the home. When the parents’ divorce came Hollywood watched for a lessening of the romantic interest.” It was whis- pered that the daughter would bring her parents together again. But love remained triumphant—there has never been a lessening of interest between the iwo since the moment they met. Dolores Costello's dressing room walls | have been lined with pictures of Barry- | more—the world’s most perfect profile, reproduced with every possible lighting and in a wide variety of costumes. Maurice Costello, rapidly Jlnylnc and | embittered hy the signal fallure of his dramatic gesture, ap m -time to | time in pictures, small parts mostly; character roles or father or lawyer Toles—the usual thing for the actor who | has been years in the profession. Once he occupied the niche in motion ictures that John 0re NOw olds. Without stage experience and fame such as Barrymore has, Costello was the screen’s most romantic lover, That was in the days when pictures, still in their infancy, were a distinctly a:pame thing from the cinema of to- Y. The actors. of -Costello’s group ‘are a bit bewildered by the rapid changes of | the present. industry, They stand | waiting pathetically for the cinema to| turn about and ccme back to them and MERRICK. to the things they know and under- stand. Helene Costello married, and her father was not at her wedding. She married a boy she had known before | she became a cinema actress. And that boy retired gracefully from all money- earning activities when he had placed a gold band on the fourth finger of his pretty wage-earning wife. Three months of a purely ornamental husband were enough for Helene Cos- tello. Her divorce went into the rapid- fire annals which include Madge Bel- iamy and Pauline X Loagk: ore is not only famous for the' most perfect profile. He stands in the most enviable position today.of any lywood, for he the best in art to both silent and pictures. He bas the most trenchant in the profession and a.biting sar- casm. A pet monkey is a prominent member of his entor ow on urage, to | studio lot being built with a cage in place of the conventional bay window. “And . an Original mng the first wmmber gt otion .picture colony to._abide by the &m-dny I.nuntgn to wed law re- cently passed in California. All the t hi eloped by airplane to Agua across the ican border. (Copyright, 1928. by North American Newspaper Alliance.) Grape Tarts. Cover six tart pans with ple crust, rick with a2 fork and bake in a very ot oven, 450 degrees, for 10 minutes or until well browned. Then slip from the pans and cool. Cut white grapes in half, removing the seeds, but do not peel them. Fill the tart shells with the grapes. Mix three-quarters of a cup of sugar with one tablespoon of corn starch and the "grated rind’of one- half lemon. Add three-quarters cup of boiling water and stir constantly until the mixture is boiling and quite thick. Remove from the fire, add a teaspoon of lemon juice and pour a few table- spoons of the uce over each tart, Chill and serve plain or with a spoon of whipped sweetened cream. High-Priced Chess. PARIS (). —The dearest chess board in the world has been offered for sale here. The price asked is 40,000 francs, or 81,568. Richly decorated, it'was made 1;1 lrlnl,v - before - Columbus discovered merics for Flavor! The flavor of Virginia Sweet Pancakes is so distinctive and delicious because it is blended from the 3 Staffs of Life. You'll enjoy Virginia Sweet Syrup, too, Its eold-fime maple flavor is proof of its unusually high content of virgin maple, combined only with the finest granulated sugar. THE FISHBACK CO. Indianapolis, Ind. Manufacturers of Natiomally Ad- vertised Food Products THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart. Silhouettes. ‘The really smart woman maintains her favorite silhouette even in negligee, which, of course, means the swathed hip, the uneven hemline and the femi- nine detail of tiers. This hostess gown (by Christiane) is of green velvet and chiffon and point- edly emphasizes these marks of fashion. In it she enjoys her luxurious hours of leisure or serves tea to ‘her -intimate friends. Green and light blue and the darker daytime shades are favorites. (Cobyright, 1928.) MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Pictures of Themselves. One mother says: ‘When my 4-year-old' daughter and my 3-year-old son are all tired from &uyln! outdoors, .or if they are bored death by too long a period of play in the house on rainy days, I get out the snap-shot album. The pictures are of themselves and of their friends, taken at different ages, and they have lots of fun in trying to decide who is who in the baby pictures. (Copyright, 1928.) D. C.,. THURSDAY, Thinks Hubby Complains More. Does Husband or Wife Work Harder? DorothyDix Only Way in Which Men Show Themselves Superior to Women Is in Putting Over the Farce of the “Tired Business Man.” THERE is nothing that fills me with such ‘admiration of the ingenuity and resourcefulness and far-sightedness of the American man as the fact that he has net only evolved but has actually put across the myth of the tired business man, which is the best all-round alibi that human ingenuity has ever devised. It is a blanket excuse that covers every sin of omission and commission and leaves him free to. do what he wants to do and leave undone those things which he does not want to do. For instance, the tired business man is too exhausted to walk the baby with the colic at night or to take care of the children on Sunday afternoon, but he is not too tired to play 18 holes of golf. The tired business man is too fatigued to take his wife out to the movies of an evening, but not too fatigued to step out to a night club. The tired business man is too worn out to play cards when the neighbors drop in of an evening, but when it comes to sitting up in an all-night poker game—oh, boy! The tired business man's exhausted brain does not permit him to read good books, but he can tell you the batting average of every base ball player for the last 10 years, and he reads tons of dope about Tunney and Dempsey, and knows the past record and future pmspec'_s o‘l every promising horse on the tracks. To my mind the indisputable proof that men really ‘are cleverer than women and have better brains is shown in the jay they have gotten away with the theory that man's work is harder than woman’s and that it is more fatiguing to sit at a mahogany-topped desk than it is to wrestle with a-cook stove and sewing machine and vacuum cleaner. Thab i takes‘more out of you to dictate a few letters and go into conference than it does to wash the faces, and settle the quarrels of a houseful of children who are up t6-some new devilment every hour of the day. That women have let men beat them to this tired stuff shows a lamentable weakness in the feminine intellect. We- might just as well have the tired housewlfe who has to be coddled and catered to as the tired business man. There are times when I wish that the tired business man didn't give all of his energy to his business'and that he would save a little more of it to use in his home life, For I am very sure that if men would give one hundredth part of the effort they e to succeed in business to succeeding in marriage we would not lead the world in the number of divorces. T believe that if men made one thousandth part of !he'eflort they do to “sell” themselves to their employers or to their customers and clients to selling themselves to their wives we would have na snare disgruntled, dissatisfied, dis- couraged wives hunting for affinities or slumping in their housekeeping, because they say to themselves: “What's the use of working yourself to death tor 4 man who never notices what you do, anyway?"” 2 So I wish the tired business man wasn't too tirad to study his wife’s psychology and find cut how to work her, for women are simple creatures who will purr under any man's hand if he will only take the trouble to stroke their fur the right way. I wish men weren't too tired when they come home at night to hand their wives a few compliments, and, believe me, they wouldn’t have to give friend wife so much money if they would give them a little more jollying. And I wish that the tired business man wasn't too tired to be an agreeable fireside companion and treat his wife to a little of the sparkling conversation and a few of the good storles for which he is noted abroad, for no weman's idea of & pleasant evening at home is sitting up in a silence so thick that you could cut it with.a knife with a man wk:o o.nly. gr.unls when he is spoken to. I WISH that the tired business man wasn't too tired to get acquainted with his children and to chum: with them. when they were little, for if a father misses the opportunity of getting on friendly terms: with his boys and girls while they are still in rompers it is forever too late. And it would pay him to do so, for'the best investment that any man ever makes is what he puts into his ¢hildren, and the greatest fortune that he can ever give them is when he gives them himself. The one speculation that always pays 100 per cent on the dollar is when you gamble on your children’s futures. 1 wish the tired-business man wasn't o tired that he passed the buck up to his wife and let Maria do it when it comes to rearing the children. Not one woman in a millon. has the strength of character to control self-willed youngsters, The very tenderness of her mother love makes her incapable of dealing firmly with them. Nor has she the knowledge of life needed to guide them. It's the men who have been down the road, who know from experience where the pitfalls are and the hairpin turns where the youngsters are likely to skid, who are equipped to erect the red lanterns at the dangerous places and save the blundering youngsters from going over the brink. So I wish that the tired business man would more around the home and a little bit less in the office. get so tired of paying alimony and there wouldn'’t be so many tired wives wishing their husbands weren’t too tired to be the kind of lovers they used to be before wear himself out a little bit If he did, he wouldn’t NOVEMBER ' 22, 1928. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. No use tryin' to save snowflakes fer drandpa, Baby. All they is good fer is mud-puddles. (Copyright, 1928.) }{;hday Chicken Salad. Simmer a chicken weighing about five pounds, or two smaller chickens; until tender in a small quantity of water. When about half done, add a teaspoonful of salt. Let the. chicken cool in the broth. After it is cold re- move the skin, stfip the meat from the bones and cut it into small pieces of even size. In the meantime allow a few silces of onion to soak in a cupful of mild vinegar to give the vinegar g slight onion flavor. Remove a cupful of chicken fat from the cold broth and mix with this vinegar. Pour this mix- ture over the chicken, adding more salt and vinegar if needed to season it well. A few drops of tobasco sauce improves it. Let this stand or marinate for sev- eral hours, or over night. Cut three bunches of celery stalks and some of the tender leaves into small pleces and let etand in a cold place until crisp. Mix enough thick, well seasoned mayon- naise dressing with the chicken to coat the pieces well. Shortly before the salad is to be served add the celery and more mayonnaise if needed. Stir the mixture lightly so-as not to break up the chicken. Add still more salt if needed. Pile the salad lightly on crisp lettuce and serve at once. If desired add one-fourth cupful of capers when the celery and chicken are combined. Hard-cooked eggs may be used as'a garnish or cut -in pieces ‘and mixed with the chicken to make it go farther. Devil’s Food Cake. Melt four squares unsweetened chocolate over hot water. Meanwhile cream together one-third cup of but- ter and one cup sugar. When thor- oughly blended add two eggs and beat thoroughly. Then stir in one cup sour milk or buttermilk, one teaspoon va- FEATURES. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. R in Is Safe Barrier. of ingestion or inhalation of lead while Whole Skin I F | She skin 15 being treated with ft. Nev: Dr. Alice Hamilton is tcday recog-|ertheless, Dr. Hamilton Taintains that | nized as the -foremost -uu}m-ng on in- | painters, whose hands and forearms are | dustrial poisons, in the U:iled States. | smeared with white lead in oil for eight | This distinguished physician is a pretty | hours a day and throughout the greater | satisfactory -answer to a question one part of the year “may pe assumed to | sometimes s _even today, namely, |absorb from the skin quantities of lead \c:;: a]wm: ttain emincace in medi- | wl}:lc: ;re probably very small but | cal science? < ° : | which throughout the yea:s slowly ac- | ““Taking off ‘with the acksowledgment | cumulates In the skeleton > oz | that Hamilton-belleves and tcaches that | ~Ceriainly painters absorb the lead, such poisons as lead, benzol or anilin | but are they not exposed, at.least now derivatives such as-phenylendiamin (a|and then, to inhalation or swallowing dye sometimas used for fiss and even|of dust, as when sandpapering or scrap- | for_hair dye) and phenol may ab- | ing old paint, or fumes, as when burn- sorbed -through the skin, I .wish t0|ing off old pant? I prefer Tanquerrel's quote a few passages from Her work: | opinion to Hamilton's about that. Tan- |~ “The fleld which still aaits a thor- | querrel didn't assume anything: he tried ough exploration .is the pathological | to prove it and couldn't. Mind, I never physioiogy and chemistry of lead poi- | heard of Tanquerrel until Dr. Hamilton soning, the exact mode of absorption of | told me about his work. . lead, * * * Much work has already been & “It is impossible to sa done in’ this field, but with results | Hamilton, * which are miore or less eontradictory | sonsoning of painters is caused by the and unconvincing. |lead paint which is so ofien smeared Dr. Hamilton covers the ground thor- | over their hands. We hate become ace oughly. She speaks of t@e work of 2 |customed to assume that skin absorpe French physician named Tanquerrel | tion is practically negligible as a mode who studied industrial lead poisoning a | of industrial poiscning, but the belief century ago and has bsen called the | rest® upen an assumption; it has never k“Colur;lbusi of glncl polsamxnga“ Tan- | been proved.” querrel notice at severe lead poison- | Hers Dr. Hamilton seems to tul ing could always be traced to lead va- |table on us. First she tells us u:: g'.: pors or emanations, and only the mild- | sosption of lead may be “assumed,” est or slowest poisoning followed contact | and then she dashes cold water on the with solid lead or lead pain'. He tried | alternative assumption. After all, the to settle the question by experimenting |doctor is a woman! Even so, I wish on dogs and rabbits, but he could not sho'd tell us, in not to »xceed a thou= poison them with lead through the skin, | sand words, how to go about proving & and he was skeptical of the possibility | negative. Her argument here reminds of lead being absorbed through the un- | me of a favorite refuge of the old timers | broken skin. Although the author cites | who, when you gzt 'em cornered, de- several other invéstigators who experi- | mand that you prove that nobody ever mented with animals, and among them | has a “cold” after getting his feet wet. some who believed they had proved that | (Copyright, 1928.) traces of lead are absorbed through the | s unbroken skin, none of taese witnesses = can stand in court today, for none of | Coal Found in North Africa. The first important coal discovery in observes Dr, thy lead poie them abeolutely excludes he possibility | | the whole of North Africa has just been reported by a party of French engineers. | It is just north of Udja, Morocco. Ex- | tensive manganese deposits have also | been found in the Atlas Mountains of Morccco. | |WHO REMEMBERS? | BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. §. Patent Office. = HAR CAVE 0T IN HANDFULS Pimples on Scalp, Face, Hands. Cuticura Healed, *My skin became rough and pim- ples broke out on my face, hands | < Ht/itcame’out in handfuls until I was |almost bald. - I could not sleep at “‘Inight. Iwas in that condition for fover two years. ! “Ibeganusing Cuticura Soapand | Ointment and inthree weeks I coutd !s:ea change. I continued and was “If they keep on increasin’ th’ speed ' limit any more, some of us fellas what can't change models "1l hafta go back to racin’ street cars.” (Copyright, 1928, Oatmeal Pancakes. Put two cupfuls of rolled oats into three cupfuls of boiling water. Cover and let stand for 15 minutes. Add a when {rying, add.a tablespoonful of sugar and, one by one, two unbeaten eggs. Mix all together and immediately 1ry the batter by the spoonful in butter. Should the pancakes not hold ‘ther when frying, add a talbespoonful of flour to the batter. Serve as hot as possible with powdered sugar or with a compote of fruit. Sugared sliced onngeks are good served with these anc: TINTEX BRINGS (olor-Smartness toHome-Decoration «+..color is the new smart woteinhome-decoration .. .. even house- hold linens follow the modern trend forcolor. . and women find Tintex o simple to use’, . .. on curtains, draper- ies, bed and table covers, sheets and pillowcases,luncheonand dinner cloths, ete, _They find, too, that Tintex Tints . bring color-smartness into ion without muss, without . .and with perfect resultsalways. ... the colors sponsored {)y Paris for use in the home.. .. appearon actual eamples of silk....on the new “Tintex Color Card. Ask your dealer to show it to you! w»—THE TINTEX GROUP—s Products for every Home- tinting and Dyeing Need Tintez Gray Box—Tints and dyes all materials. Tintes Blue Box—For lace-trimmed silke—tints the silk, lace remains white. Tintes Color Remover—Removes old color from any ‘material o0 it can be dyed & new color. Whitex - A special bluing for restoring whiteaess to Yellowad slks and woclens. —_— F-- L B PANCAKE FLOUR BUCKWHEAT FLOUR and SYRUP ntex they were married, and there would be fewer flapper dlu:hpbgs and cake-eater sons hurtling on to destruction. — | & 1 size up people as they go, résolved to find some good in each; and, having conned them to and fro, I find that every one's a peach, Of coursé men have their little faults, which cause high moralists to stare, and as along their paths they waltz they show ‘a blemish here there. If we keep looking all the time for blemishesand wensand warts, ignoring a]l the points sublime, we will see faults of many sorts. The more we look the more we’ll think that .man is but a false alarm, the human race is on the blink, devoid of all its pi e charm. Determined that we shall be- hold the moral flaw, the mental kink, we can't distinguish human gold, but find all things are lead or zinc. The pessimist who cannot find a thing that's worth a second gaze, won't let the sunshine reach his mind. he looks for clouds through all his days. I con- template the human race and say it is a great success; I watch the people as they chase in merriment or in distress; ROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1928.) 1 sée their virtues more and more, and every delegate I meet is better than the one before. It is a better attitude, to keep the worth of men in mind, than /| that of one who's prone to brood upon the frailties of mankind. I often meet a delegate whose manner jars me and repels, but I don't brand him as a skate who never will be wearing bells. “The fact,” I think, “that we don't jibe is evidence I'm lacking taste; he doubt- less ornaments the tribe in which the two of us are placed.” WALT MASON. Spinach or Kale Scallop. Boil until tender in as little salted water as possible either spinach or kale, drain thoroughly, then chop fine. To each cupful of the greens add a table- spoonful of softened butter, one raw egg yolk, half a teaspoonful of salt, a pinch of pepper and paprika, and a spéck of nutmeg. Arrange in two layers in & baking dish, scattering crisply cooked diced bacon and a tea- spoonful of chopped onion between. | Cover the top with fine bread crumbs, scatter grated cheese over all and bake nilla and one-fourth teaspoon salt. Sift | together two cups cake flour and one- | half teaspoon baking powder; add this to the liquid mixture and stir in the | melted chocolate. Beat the mixture | until smooth and well blended, then | pour into two well greased layer cake | pans. Bake in a moderate oven—375 degrees—for 20 minutes- Cool, put to- gether with marshmallow frosting be- tween and on top of the layers. When John L. Sullivan met all comers in Washington at the old ‘Theater Comique and kow he knocked Jordan Rensler, a local heavyweight, to the canvas 11 times in a single minute? ; The’ Best Friend Every Housewife - Self-Rising | / o |completely healed after using three cakes of Cuticura Soap and four box- |es of Cuticura Ointment.” (Signed), |Miss Audra Hutch, R. 6, Box 55, | Milan, Tenn. Use Cuticura Soap and Ointment for daily toilet purposes. ‘SoapSe. Ofntment 36 and ide. Taleam e. Bold| S uticura Shaving Stick 25c. of . Is convinced that they are good as wheat; | quickly to a crisp brown. Blended from many choice coffees . . to suit an expert’s critical taste Only after countless, patient experiments—com- * bining and re-combining many coffee flavors— was the mellow, full-bodied flavor of Maxwell House Coffee achieved. Now this delicious blend is preferred all over the country in the most exclusive homes. t TINTS AnD DYES ANYTHING ANY COLOR Distributors PARK & TILFORD Newlom MAXWELL HOUSE Corr 1928, P. Co. E . lac. Makes perfect bis-, cuits, waffles, etc., and shortens the time —because ready prepared with the exact proportions of the purest phos- phates. saved the baking powder and the labor of mixing it. Your grocer and delicatessen sell Washington Flour —in all sizes from cks up. The and 24-lb. 5-1b. 12.1b. sizes are nomical. You are Try this Self- Rising Recipe for - Waffles | 214 ¥epps Self<Rising Washington Fiour. 2‘<||gp§ milk. ¥4 cup butter. Sift _and measure the Self - Rising Washington Flour. Beat egg volks; add milk. Add to the flour. Add melted but- ter and egg whites beat- en-light. Bake in a hot waffle iron. expense of Send for our new COOK BOOK with a hundred prac- tital;recipes. “Fine for the Kitchen most eco- Wilkins-Rogers Mii}ing Co. “A Home Industry”