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WOMAN’S PAGE. Darning and Embroi(/lery Stitches BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Ifthe woman who has a pile of stock- ings to darn will think of the work as a form of embroidery, this idea will Tob the otherwise irksome task of its tedium. And she will be entirely cor- rect in her assumption. The stitchery of darning is a favorite one in needle- craft. It is also allied to weaving for the interlacing of cross threads over and under parallel threads at right angle involves what is termed “the principle of weaving.” Just as it is important to have em- broidery neat and beautiful, so is it to have darns nicely set and worked DIET AND BY LULU HUNT Overweight Children. “My girl friend and I are going to start dieting. We are both 15 yéars old and weigh 160 pounds. Iam 5 feet 5 inches and she is 5 feet 3 inches. We are going to start taking exercise five minutes a day and increase a minute a day until we regch 15 minutes. We are going to go twa or three calories over, but any more than that we are going to put a cent in-a box for each calorie we go over. We both want to reduce to about 126 pounds. If we do, we will write and let you know. M. and E.” ‘The average weight for a girl 5 feet 3 inches tall is 116, and for one 5 feet 5 inches, 122. But 126 pounds would be all right for both of you to aim for, because it is better for chil- dren to be 5-to 10 per cent. over the average. Children who. are frankly fat, as you girls must be, should reduce, for such overweight not only lowers re- sistance to disease, but causes great unhappiness @nd engenders _inferi- ority complexes which may be per- manent. But you must remember this, girls: You are still growing, and you must have as much of your growth foods and the- foods that keep you in health as though you were not dieting. | ‘That means you should have at least taken on the wrong side. ‘There are two essentials in darning hosiery. One is to have raw edgas of the textile deftly con- cealed. The second is not to stretch the hole, for this makes an uneven and unsightly spot. It also adds to the amount of needed stitchery—a matter of real significance if there are many stockings to be done in a short time. To avoid this run a fine thread of the darning medium about the hole and draw it just as ht as stocking textile will permit. Frequently a very narrow seam taken lengthwise of the hose will finish the darning of a good sized hole. If there still remains a hole that must have a woven g, Tun in the warp—parallel threads preferably in rows up and down the stocking follow- ing the direction of the stocking weave. If the darn is worked on the right side of the stocking these threads must. be put over the raw edges. If the work is done on the wrong side of the hosiery, the threads must be set beneath the raw edges. In both cases the raw edge will be worked over on the right side. When running in the filler over and under the warp—the threads running in the opposite direction, and which were laid first—it is also important to have them go over the edge for a right side darn and under for a wrong side darn. When the work is finished there will be no visible edge of the textile on_the outside of the stocking. By deftly running a few extra darn- ing threads over the raw edges in the wrong side they will be neatly con- cealed on that side also, but not so invisibly as on the right side. There is discussion among women as to which is preferable, the right or wrong side darning, but there is no hard and fast rule. When it comes to the seaming of a hole as first described, there is no question, for it must be (Copyright, 1930.) B;h Sugar Cookies. Cream half a cupful of shortening and add one cupful of sugar gradually. Add two beaten eggs and half a tea- spoonful of vanilla and mix thoroughly. Add one and one-half cupfuls of cake or pastry flour sifted with one tea- spoonful of baking ywder and one- fourth teaspoonful of salt. Then add enough more flour to make a dough that can be handled. If the dough is chilled, a softer mixture can be used than if it is rolled immediately. Roll | very thin, cut with a cooky cutter, and bake on greased pans in a moderately ot oven. Before being baked, the cookies may be decorated with nut meats or bifs of dried or candied fruit. Chocolate may be added to the dough if liked. Lobster and Green Pea. Make a white sauce with one and one-half tablespoonfuls of butter, one and one-half tablespoonfuls of flour and one and one-half cupfuls of light cream. Season with salt and paprika, and add a two to six ounce can of lobster, cut in large pieces. Add a can of drained peas and one slightly beaten egg yolk. Add one tablespoonful of lemon juice and a dash of nutmeg, and serve in toasted bread croustades. HEALTH PETERS, M. D. THE EVENING THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN Charming new undies to wear be- neath the slim silhouette frocks. They feature the moulded line through the hips and bodice, so as not to cause con- flicting lines to outer garment, with a delightful flared fullness at lower part of panties. The camisole bodice has narrow shoulder straps. The circular panties are stitched to the camisole bodice that abl.lcn;u pointed treatment both front and Style No, 132 is designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust and made at a sm: outla; In the medium size 2 yards of 39-inch material with 414 yards of binding is sufficient. They will make an excellent gift in new dark peach shade crepe satin trim- med at the upper edge of bodice and lower pantie legs with black Chantilly lace. Join the bodice and panties with a black silk piping. Eggshell shade silk crepe with deep ecru lace, flesh-colored crepe de chine with pale blue binding at waist and around edges, orchid checked voile, nile green ninon and candy striped batiste are other in- teresting ideas. For a pattern of this style, send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The e fruits, and eggs or cheese or | Washington Star's New York Fashion ;'egxuf-oodsm, once a duygF‘You see that | Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth to cut down your calories, and still | street, New York. have what you need, you would have to We st t that when you send for cut out candies and cakes and oily | pattern, you inclose 10 cents additional foods. Not all your milk need be taken | for a copy of our new Fashion Mag- as a drink; when you have some cheese | azine. or custards, or o'.}::r du;hes m,;de ’:( milk, you can omit a glass. r in- stance: If you want ice cream for des- NANCY P AGE sert-some day, you can cut out one of of milk and some of your STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, Ingratitude, Greatest Crime in the World—Shall Inheritance of Adopted Children Be Used For Maintenance? EAR Miss Dix—I notice that in so many of the letters that people write to you they complain bitterly of their misfortunes, yet these very letters contain ‘the answer to their complaints, for they tell of good things in their lives that they entirely overlook. What & pity they can't use a little Pollyanna stuff on their lives and try to be glad instead of being sour! Happiness consists in ap) ating what we have, and we all have enough to make us happy if we only ght so0. A DAILY READER. i Answer—Right you are, and I often think thatythe greatest and the com- , monest sin in the world is the crime of ingratitude. We howl to high heaven ( when {1l fortune betides us, but when blessings are showered upon our heads | we take them as no more than our du | Let us have an ache or a pain and we hold up everything within earshot with a long and detailed account of our sufferings, but we are dumb as an oyster concerning our good health. Let our family relationships be amiable and pleasant and we never so much as say “thank you” to those who minister to our daily welfare, but let us have to put up with the disagreeable peculiarities of a member of our household and we consider that the early Christian martyrs had nothing on us. You rarely hear & man or woman boast of having a good wife, or a good husband, or dutiful children, but most of our shoulders are damp half of the time with the tears that have been shed upon our breasts by those with drunken husbands or nagging wives, or who are the parents of wayward children. As my corespondent says, I get many letters from people who "consider themselves utterly miserable, yet whose very letters show that they have so much to be grateful for that they ought to be ashamed of themselves for voicing a single complaint. They are trouble hounds who go out of their way to hunt up something to worry over, and they are as unreasonable as the princess in the fairy story who could not sleep because there was a crumpled rose leaf under her 40 mattresses of ease. I get many letters, for instance, from women who tell me that they are ma to good, kind men, who provide them with fine houses and good cars and beautiful clothes, and that they have lovely children and good health and agreeable friends, but they wail out that they are utterly miserable because their husbands don’t talk, or don't want to take them out to places of amusement in the evening, or because they have discovered that their hard-working husbands are not the heroes of their girlish dreams, or because their mothers-in-law have to live with them. And they let the one little thing in their lives that they object to ruin all | the balance. They never even give a thought to how lucky they are in being married to men who are kind to them instead of having husbands who beat them, or how fortunate they are that they have husbands who are good providers and who lap them in luxury instead of their having to go out and fight the world for bread for themselves and their children. They never think what happiness they have in their children, nor what a consolation prize it is to & woman to have the material things of life, a good home, good food, pretty clothes, a place in society. And I get letters from men who tell me that they are married to wives who have been faithful helpmates, who are 'fiod housekeepers, good mothers, but who have got old and fat and uninteresting, and who bore them to tears, and they complain because their wives haven't kept themselves young and slim and beautiful and full of pep. And these men don't see what they have to be thankful for in having wives who save their money instead of blowing it in on imported finery, and in having wives who make them comfortable homes and give them the best of food instead of wives who are always gadding around and who feed them out of paper bags and tin cans, and even in having wives that they don’t have to be jealous of, or worry about entertaining. ‘There is no such thing as perfect happiness in the world. There is no situation in life in which there are not some drawbacks, nor is there any lot in life in which there is not some ameliorating circumstance and in which we cannot find some happiness if we look for it. There is just as much sunshine as rain. Just as much pleasure as pain. And if we would think as much about our blessings as we do about our misfortunes we should be better and cheerier for it. e DOROTHY DIX. e : DEAR Dorothy Dix—My sister and her husband are both dead. They left two children, who live with us, and these children inherited two houses, neither very valuable. My husband is & hard-working man and we are buying our home, but we want to do right by the children. Do you think we should draw on the resources of the estate for the maintenance of the children, or should we struggle on, leaving the revenue of the estate to accumulate for the children until they are of age? MRS. M. V. D. I think it is only fair for the children to pay their way as they go, so far as the money is concerned. In the love and affection you and your husband give them you bestow upon them something for which money cannot compensate, but there should be no drain upon your pockets unless it is absolutely necessary. No woman has a right to force her husband to work to support her family, although many wives seem to think that they have. They rob their husbands ruthlessly to pay their family’s doctor bills, to send their younger brothers and sisters through college, and in many a home you will always find some of wife’s relatives camping in the best bedroom. I know many men who have never been able to get ahead any in the world because the money they might have saved their wives spent on their families. In this particular case it is more necessary that you should save your husband’s money than that the children’s money should be saved, because he is getting old, his power of earning is diminishing, while they are young, and when they are grown they will be far more able to work than he will be at that time. . DOROTHY DIX. JANUARY butter. You should reduce slowly. A smaller reduction, while growing, shows much more than it would in an adult, because of the increase in height. You can't count calories quite so accurately as you are planning to, dear girls, but the approximate count- ing does the work. “Dear Dr. Peters: A relative of mine recently died of tuberculosis, and he asked that his dressing gown be given to my husband. We know it was put in the sun for days. but surely this is not enough the _tuberculosis germs? ANXIOUS.” ‘The germs of tuberculosis are killed in one-half hour, if in a dried state, in the direct sunlight, and in several hours in diffused light, or daylight. So there is no danger from the dress- ing gown you mention. However, you three glasses of milk a day, some whole grain bread, liberal amounts of vege- OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRIL A Child. I am always a little nervous when some one talks about THE child. It would be so much nearer right to talk about a child. There are, to be sure. certain fundamental ‘principles of child training upon which many of us agree. Even there we have room for discussion. But when a body lays down laws for the children, look out In the same famiiy there are two boys —one healthy, hungry, active, the other underweight, nervous, shy, finicky about food, careless of sleep, troublesome to handle. Can you say what helps one will help the other? No, because it won't. You will have to deal with each of them as individuals. Jack wears out three pairs of shoes to Trot's one. Are you to give Jackie the shoes he meeds or hold him to Trot'’s standard? Betty gets high marks in school and wins praise from the teach- ers. Dorothy gets poor marks and blame aplenty from the teachers. Are you to haul Dorothy to the standard of Betty? You won't, because you can't. When the principal of the school an- nounces that ALL the children who cannot sing will be excluded from com- mencement exercises he musi stand JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOS. 3. FRISCH. DAD SAID TO JUNIOR,“ IF YOU WISH TO BE A DENTIST WHEN YOU GROW UP, DO LIKE | TELL YOU. BEGIN NOW TO SAVE ALL YOUR OLD MAGAZINES AND “Do as I tell you” is the correct form, not “Do like I tell you.” Periodical is both noun and adjective. Used as & noun, it means a magazine or other publication published at stated intervals. As an adjective, it means occurring, appearing or published from could give it a gasoline bath or send it to the cleaners, to help reassure you. ready to exclude a number of children regardless of other qualities, for he who cannot sing simply cannat sing. What then? Wouldn't it be better and far more economical of energy on all sides to accept the fact that there are those who sing and those who do something else and go on from there? The teacher who lays down a law that says, “Every child who fails to hand in a lyric before Monday afternoon will get a zero in English for the week,” must be prepared either to record & number of zeros for good pupils, to accept work that is not the child’s own effort, to cause tears and tempers and unhappi- ness in many a home, or to accept the fact that children cannot all write lyries. Some general rules, some fundamental principles there are that we can stand upon if we do not stamp too hard. Some general announcements, some regulations for groups we can make if “Speak When Spoken to, Do as You're Bid.” BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. After the first meeting of the G. T. Club, that group of young girls who were interested in Good Taste, Nancy asked the officers to her home for lunch the next day. She allowed Joan to sit at the table ith them. She was pleased with her niece, for Joan sat quietly during the meal, making a remark occasionally, but not clamoring to be heard. Nancy had taught her that she should not break into other people’s conversation. But she had also shown Joan the courtesy of listening to her when the child had the chance to speak. Joan did not fiddle with her silver, nor wiggle around. She was not always so good, and Aunt Nancy blessed her inaudibly. She was such an er):mple to the older girls who were there, Surely lessons in table manners were needed. One girl sat with elbows on the table while her hands propped up the head as if it were too heavy to hold we are careful to leave a loophole for the children who must find a way out and around. I am but saying again that there is no one law, no one method, no one way. Each must find his own. The best any of us can do for a child is to help him when he needs help, at the time he needs it, in the way he needs it. His way may be far from your own, but nothing can alter the fact that it is his own way and none other will serve—for him. What may be fine for the neighbors’ children may not be good for him at all. What helped you in youth may hinder him. Search well | his” heart and follow it. (Copyright, 1930.) Fish Timbales. For 10 minutes cook one cupful of stale bread crumbs with one pint of rich milk seasoned with one teaspoon- ful of salt, one tablespoonful of pre- pared mustard and one tablespoonful of onion juice. Stir in one cupful of flaked canned tunafish. ,Remove from the fire and beat in four eggs that have been slightly beaten. The mixture should be hot enough to coagulate the eggs. Put the mixture in a well greased timbale mold and set in a pan of hot water. Bake in a moderate oven for 45 minutes, or until firm in the center. Unmold on a circular dish and garnish with small potato rosettes and cream . If individual plate service is desired, bake in small timbales. This quantity will serve eight mon, chicken or veal is prepared in this way. Sausage Loaf. Put two cupfuls of raw potato and one small onion through a food chop- per. Add two cupfuls of dry bread lelicious when time to time or at regular intervals. For a prompt reply o your eitquette and Waglish Questions, iaciose SlamD. / crumbs and three cupfuls of slullfi meat. Mix all together and pack a loaf pan. Bake in a moderately hot aven until well dane and rsons. Sal- | “ itself up. Both girls played with silver when they were not eating. One girl took a spoon heaped with ice cream. Aunt Nancy chuckled when she saw Joan look askance at the mouthful. But 'the other girl did worse than that—she filled her spoon to the top and then drew it in and out of her mouth lingeringly and lovingly, taking part of the ice cream each time the spoon went into the mouth. The sight made Nancy shudder. These G. T. girls had much to learn. ‘Write to Nancy Page, care of this paper, inclosing & stamped self-addressed envelope, asking for her leaflet on Table Etiquette. (Copyright, 1930.) Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Often mispron nounce the “e” or “ag.” Often misspelled: Minstrel; not “al.” Synonyms: Assume, pretend, affect, simulate, feign. ‘Word stud sc a word three times and it is you Let us increase our ;ocubulnry by mastering one word each ay. ing, everlasting, ol s ounced: Mattress. Pro- as in “less,” not “us” e ‘Today’s word, Immortal; undy- imperishable. “The . Dm Dorothy Dix—Just what is the greatest thing in life?—X. Y. Z. Answer—Love. wives'.rh'rhe love of parents and children. is is the greatest thing in life. have nothing else. Those who neither they have everything else in the world. (Copyright. 1930.) ‘The love of man for woman. The love of husbands and The love of friend for friend. Those who have love are rich if they love nor are beloved are poor though DOROTHY DIX. Potato-Nut Pudding. Peel four medium-sized sweet pota- toes and cook them until tender. Drain the water off and mash them with a potato masher. To this add one cupful of sugar, one and one-half cupfuls of sweet milk, the yolks of three beaten eggs and one teaspoonful of lemon ex- tract. Mix well and add half a cupful of chopped pecans. Put the mixture in a moderate oven and bake for forty- five minutes. When the pudding is done, remove from the stove and top with half a cupful of chopped pecans. Use the whites of the eggs for a Of Course. Raisin Pie. Mix four level tablespoonfuls of flour with half a cupful of sugar, then add half a cupful of cold water to make a smooth paste. Add one and one-half cupfuls of boiling water and two and one-half cupfus of seedless raisins. Cook for five minutes over a direct fire, stir- E as much as time allows and add one-fourth cupful of lemon juice. Pour into a pastry-lined piepan, cover with pastry and bake for 45 minutes in a rather hot oven. Do not reduce the amount of raisins. They should not be soaked or cooked before being added to you can serve it hot Most people want a hot breakfast dish for. a cold day. Shredded Wheat is de- liciously warming when eaten with hot milk. Crisp the biscuits in the oven and pour hot milk over them. The flavory shreds retain enough crispness to en- courage thorough chewing —that’s one reason it’s so good for children. Delicious for any meal with fresh or stewed fruits. WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT THE SHREDD .WHEAT COMPANY 9, 1930. e never had house-maid's knee, and if it's anything like her foot, I don't want it.” LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. I was sitting on Mary Watkinses frunt steps tawking to her about diffrent sub- jecks, and I smelt sowerkraut cooking, smelling sweet, and I sed, G, sower- kraut. ale!, izzent it awful, Mary Watkins se Awful nothing, your lucky, I sed, and she sed. O my, how can anybody say anything like that about anything so dredful as sowerkraut? Such food, the very thawt of it makes me wish I never had to eat again, and to make it werse we're even having frankferters with it, she sed. . G, frankferters, Oboy, frankferters and’ sowerkraut, I sed, and she sed, O my, how can you? I wish you had to eat it insted of me. I cant bear the very ideer of such ordnerry food, and the very smell gives me the cold shivers up and down. Well, I never care if I eat or not anyway, so what do I care. legl““ T could live without eating, she sed. G, your a reguler angel, I sed, and she sed, O, I am not, such flattery. Of corse I enjoy a teeny little stake with parsley on top of it, or ladyfingers, or something like that, she sed. Wich just then her mother called her and she got up saying, O well, let the rest of them eat it if they wunt to, I gess I mite as well go in to be polite, ‘Wich she did, me sitting ther a while wondering what it would feel like not to like sowerkraut and frankferters, not being able to imagine it, and I looked | through the glass of the vesterbule door, and here what was Mary Watkins doing but just finishing a big forkful with one hand and passing her plate for more alreddy with a happy expres- sion, me thinking, Good nite, if she keeps on eating that much that fast she'll be a angel pritty ¥arn soon. Proving all the angels are proberly in Heaven. Ham Patties. Grind some minced or pressed ham or left-over baked or boiled ham in a food chopper, allowing three heaping tablespoons for each serving. Add a little chopped parsley and a little onion if you like it. Mix lightly. Fill patty pans about three-quarters full, pressing the mixture in so that it will hold its shape. Break an egg into each one. Bake in a moderately hot oven until the eggs are set, Remove carefully from the pan, so as not to break the patties. Serve on individual plates with a strip of toast on each side. g - 7 to one about lizards, don't look for the FEATURES, The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. Lizards! When a man begins to talk nearest cop. He may be a lizard expert or specialist. The more peculiar a man’s hobby or profession, the more likely he is to shield his interests. Not because he may be ashamed of them, but new acqaintances frequently pounce upon him and press him for information not usually calculated to contribute so much to their knowledge as to their curiosity about the man himself. The human fly who crawls up the sheer side of a high bullding is seldom asked to disclose his secret, but foc#; want to know how come he ever started in such a hazardous game. A quiet, thoughtful-looking man sat in a gathering the other night. He might have been engaged in any of a hundred common businesses or profes- sions. Indeed, he resembled anything but the scientist. A few feet away feet were swaying to the music of an orchestra. He seemed lonely. Several young people approached him, and one of them engaged him in conversation. In due time the man told them he knew all about lizards. Yes, that was right. Lizards! Now, why in the world any one should make a lifetime study or be interested in lizards was not compre- hensible to those who sat about him, wondering if he was not a bit cracked to be submerged in such a subject. One of the folks called to another, “Here’s a man in- terested in lizards. “Lizards!” screamed a young woman. “Those dreadful reptiles.” The thoughtful man merely smiled. In a minute he was assailed by the following questions: “Whatever impelled you to take an in- terest in such things?” “Do_you pick them up in your hands?” 1Is that your main business or just a hobby?” Not one of the inquirers asked to know about the peculiarities of the species. They were vastly more inter- ested in the peculiarity of a man who delighted in the study of such things. * K k% Yesterday we stood before an old theater about to be wrecked to make way for a modern structure. For 47 years it has served the patrons of art. Through its dim and deserted interior | phantoms of great actors and actresse: are gazing for the last few times upon the scene of their early triumphs. There was a time when carriages, filled with gay, carefree playergoers, stopped to discharge their burdens, who has‘- ened across the pavement to enter the brilliantly lighted foyer. Lilllan Rus- sell was a reigning star. Outside the stage entrance stood an old man, looking wistfully at the door. His gray hair was uncut and hung in | strings over his ears, while other strands protruded from the shadows of | a dilapidated hat. “See that old guy there,” said a wise one. “Every day he hangs around that entrance. Just a nut, I guess. They say he once played part of a mob, years ago, in the theater. Funny how a guy gets that way.” Soon they are to erase the place, which is going to be tough on the old man. * ok k% ‘There is still a host of people who believe that the old days were superior to the present. “Aside from two or three modern actors,” said an old playgoer, “who of the current crop will live in history? None of them.” Then he proceeded to mention the L - BISCUITS names of a score of thespians whose names are engraved indelibly in the halls of fame. He recalled the name of Ezra Kendall, who more than 30 years ago created gales of laughter with his wit. Some of his stuff we are set- ting down, and is taken directly from Kgfignll’s own lines. le actor describes a visit to & boarding house. “Mrs. Caldwell says, ‘You can have this room for a dollar and we’ll throw in a bed’ and they threw in the bed winen I wasn't looking. And two of the bed slats hit me in my slats. Did you ever sleep on a slat bed? Narrow strips of board, you know, to keep you from falling through if you're thick enough. If you get narrow, you're gone. Then they have a sheet spread over the slats, and if you belleve that what you don’t see won't hurt you you are all right. T got nar- row the first night. I feil through and hit the floor ker- plunk. The next day the landlady says, ‘Did you have the bedspread over you? I says, ‘Not at first, T didn't. No. I says, ‘At first I had the bedspread under S| me, and then I had the bedspread over me.’ And I had so f#l much of the bed spread over me that I couldn’t get up. The first night I said, as_usual, ‘Now I lay me down to sleep.’ But the next night I knew better. ‘These are just a few of the comedy lines that made a past generation chuckle. Dried Peach Betty. Soak one and one-half cupfuls of dried peaches in cold water until plump, then cut in small pieces. Mix two cup- fuls of bread crumbs with one-fourth cupful of butter melted, and arrange alternate layers of peaches and crumbs in a greased baking dish, sprinkling the peaches with sugar and cinnamon. Have the top layer of crumbs. Pour the peach juice over all. Bake in a moderate oven and serve hot with lemon _sauce. —“— A clear coast to health! —— Give your children life’s great- est treasure—health—and let Schindler’'s Peanut * Butter help you with the task. . ‘g Schindlers *fresh roasted’ Peanut Butter A Valuable Opinion —is that given by Dr. Wm. Gerry Morgan, president of the American Medical Association, in his lecture to a student class in Georgetown University recently—to the effect that “baking powder biscuit, prop- erly made, is the easiest digested of all bread.” ERE’S where Self-Rising Washington Flour demonstrates its superiority and its efficiency. It is made of the wheat best suited to your kitchen facilities—and comes ready prepared with the purest of leavening phosphates (the best of all baking powder)—leaving you nothing to guess at in proportions or selection; saves time; saves money and saves disap- pointment—for every baking will be scien- tifically done—and you'll enjoy the ideal biscuits, waffles, etc., made with SELF- RISING WASHINGTON FLOUR. For sale by grocers and delicatessens— si 1S sizes 24-1b. GOOD UNTIL USED. Wilkins-Rogers Miliing Co. 2-1b. sacks up. You ean economically buy the 12.1b. and izes—for ALL WASHINGTON FLOUR