Evening Star Newspaper, January 16, 1930, Page 38

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Special Use for Old Stockings BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Old stockings can be put to excellent use for the prospective traveler. ‘Whether you yourself are going away, or some friend is to have a trip, the ddea will prove helpful. A pair of old stockings can be trans- formed into a most practical container THE SHEER STOCKING BAGS SHAPE THEMSELVES TO THE SHOES. to hold shoes and protect othar articles | in the trunk or bag from coming in | contact with surfaces which tend to | soil dainty things. 'To make a pair of shoe holders select from the old stocking bag a pair with good upper parts. Those who wear out their hosiery at the toes rather than at the garter line will be able to find & | smooth and fine they come. exercise some preference as to choice of colors. The stockings are cut off from 12 to 14 inches below the upper hem. A fin- ish is given to the lower part by making a turning. The thread which catches it may also be used as a means of gathering, for the bottom of the shoe container is gathered closely, while the upper part is left open to admit the shoe. But the top does boast a gathering string which is held in position by having the top turned down a quarter of an inch. Two openings are button- hole stitched to permit the cord or rib- bon to be run in. 1If preferred the gathering ribbon can be run through another ribbon or colorful tape sewed around the upper edge. A good quality lisle stocking put to this use is even mu practical than silk. Lisle is less inclined to get torn by the heels of dainty shoes. Two pair of these shoe containers are a welcome gift to the traveler, whether the “jour- ney” be more than a week end one or not. & There are ways of adding to the ai- tracti jpearance of such articles as a present, such as adding a few felt flowers, or other attractive ornament. In doing this, however, it must be re- membered that nothing bulky should be considered, as space economy is always desirable. (Copyright, 1930.) BOUND TO WIN A man determines he will win, what- ever obstacles arise; he'll make a better safety pin than ever greeted human eves. He spends his youth, he spends his prime, in following this noble plan; yet, though such conduct is_sublime, in age he is an also ran. The world is calloused and it grins at one whose alms are out of plumb; it cares no hoot for safety pins, no odds how ‘When we determine to succeed we have to offer something sane, some doodad that the people need, or all our efforts are in vain. Perhaps you've read the gripping book by Haydon, who aspired to art; he might have been a splendid cook, he might have made a lusclous tart. He had a dozen noble gifts, as writer he was truly great; yet down through his- tory he drifts, a failure and a luckless skate. As lecturer he was inspired, and though he talked for half a day, his audience was never tired, but people sighed to go away. He might have | lived in opulance and left a high and shining fame; but he was lacking in horse sense, and didn’t choose the prog‘er game. He kept on painting frightful daubs, he stuck to art, and blame the cost; and critics stood in grinning mobs_and said his pictures were a frost. He pawned his coat, he pawned his hat, that he might have a bite to eat; he pawned his corkscrew and his gat, the landlord’s stern de- mands to meet. The only man in all the world who didn’t know he couldn't paint, and his defiance bold he hurled until starvation made him faint. He hadn’t sense enough to choose a course in which he might excel; and men of that sort always lose and have a tragic tale to tell. ;T MASON. great many suftable pairs, and can L WAL’ (Copyright, 1930.) DIET AND HEALTH BY LULU HUNT Nature's Functions. Nature had to desis certain func- tions that keep us alive—the beating of the heart, the respiration, etc.—to carry on without any direction on our part. dh when p:emwne'e‘mt.nu on them, she is very aj protest. Take this matter-of the heart beat- ing, for instance. Apparently it is not abnormal for the heart to have an ex- tra beat, occasionally, or to miss a beat, but if you become htened, and con- centrate on it, you can cause it to cut up all sorts of ca) up, slow down, beat’ larly, etc.—so that you begin to think you-have some fatal organic heart disease. These organs that work without con- scious thought are controlled by the sympathetic nervous , and when fear creeps in, then nervous sys- tem is stimulated, affecting all of the organs under its control. Recently, at the New York Academy g M!d.\oln:i 1 h;lyrdml ’200& &m‘r:::,- g paper given . Lewis A. Con- ner, on the “Psychic Factor in Cardiac He told of the following Disorde: patients: Case 1. An apparently healthy man, in the course of a periodic examination, was found to have a heart murmur which apparently was one of those murmurs that do not affect the heart or the health in any way. From then on he stopped all of his physical activ- ities, dieted rigorously, became ex- tremely nervous, suffered with insomnia and was practically an invalid for three years. Then he we{n to another doc- tor, who recognized the type of murmur he had, told him he did not have or- ganic heart disease, had him go back to his work and gradually increase his exercises. But it took him three more years before he got back his previous health. Case 2. A widow, aged 50, while living in her country home—never in her city home—used to wake up in the night with great palpitation of the heart. Physical examination showed nothing except an occasional premature beat. Her history brought out the fact that her husband, who had a real or- ganic heart trouble, had died in the night at this country home, and she MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice. Dry Cereal. Top Milk. Coddled Eggs. Spoon Bread. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Creamed Salmon. Potato Balls. Lettuce—Russian Dressing. Prune Whip. Tea. DINNER. Clear Soup. Baked Fillet of Halibut. Baked Stuffed Potatoes. Creamed Caulifiower. Beet Salad—French Dressing. Lemon Meringue Pie. Coffee. SPOON BREAD. One cup of white cornmeal stirred into one quart of boiling milk. Take from fire and add one teaspoonful of salt, four eggs, beaten light, one tablespoonful melted butter, melted in dish you bake in. Bake until it sets and serve with plenty of butter. PRUNE WHIP. Dissolve one package of plain gelatin with juice of one lemon in one pint boiling water. Pre- pare two-thirds cup of prune pulp and beat the white of one egg. Just as the gelatin begins to thicken, add the prune pulp, the beaten white of egg and 2 table- spoonfuls sugar. Beat until well blended, and set until thick. Serve with whipped cream. CAULIFLOWER. Soak & small head of cauli- a chili pepper and strain. Stir one-third cup of flour in one- third cup of butter, add the fla- vored milk gradually, stir and cook until thick, season with pep- per and salt, add two cups of the prepared caulifiower and one- PETERS, M. D. had been unable to get a doctor. When it was pointed out to her that she never had these seizures excpt when she was at her country home, and that they were caused by her state of mind and ‘worry over the possibility of not secur- ing & doctor in time, she had no further trouble. Heart disturbances that are caused purely by psychic factors—emotional reactions—are known as cardiac neu- roses, and they may produce practically all the symptoms of true heart disease. ‘The effect of anxiety is so great, both in the real diseases of the h and these neuroses, that Dr. Conner cau- tions physicians on the handling of these patients, and cautions parents who have children suffering from real heart disease not to be constantly re- minding them of it. ‘The treatment of these neuroses of the heart is solely through psycho- therapy—mind therapy. But the physi- cian has to be very careful not to have the patient think that he believes his symptoms are imaginary, for he resents that; that they are not imaginary, but are brought about by agencies outside the heart—through the nervous sys- tem—and are curable. The patients must be encouraged to increase their exercises, and to live a normal life. Naturally, excessive use of stimulants, or tea, coffee and alcohol, must be avoided, and in some cases must be taboo_entirely on account of the effect ;n lt’l‘n‘e nervous system and generai ealth. Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. Utilizing odd pieces of furniture to enhance a room is a real art. The in- genious woman needs no money to cre= ate charm in her home, even if she has a heterogeneous assemblage of pieces. In the {llustration are shown several objects which were brought from vari- ous parts of the house to form this very delightful setting for one large wall of an informally furnished dining room. The chest, if you really must know, was part of a bed-room set, and its mirror is hung over a skirted dressing table which concealed an old-type sew- ing_machine. The chairs are two of a set of six which are used with a gateleg table. The high light in the room is the decorative panel back of the chest. This is two lengths of a scenic wall aper, applied to the wall and shel- acked. No other paper has been used in the room, which makes the limited use of this more fascinating. (Copyright, 1930.) Whole Wheat Muffins. Cream two tablespoonfuls of melted butter with two tablespconfuls of sugar. Add one or two beaten eggs. Mix and sift wse'.her two cupfuls of whole wheat flour, four teaspoonfuls of baking pow- der and half a teaspoonful of salt. To creamed mixture add whole ‘wheat flour mixture and one cupful of milk alternately. Pour into muffin pans and bake in a moderate oven for 20 minutes. Chopped dates or {l:alm or berries may be added for variety. - Mustaches are returning to favor so rapidly in London that wigmakers are busy supplying false upper-lip decora- half cup of cream and serve at once, tions in all styjes for men who cannot wait until they grow one. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Every so often the subject of worms crops up. We have such an aversion to the subject, dating from childhood, that it would never be discussed except that some curious mother is always hot on the trail of worms. She interprets every ordinary and extraordinary symp- tom ‘exhibited by her child, from sleep- lessness to blue circles under the eyes, as an indication of worms. Thread worms are supposed to be fairly common in infancy. I don't know, but my guess is that if children are allowed to play in the dirt when they are of an age to put everything in their mouths, when they pick pacifiers out of the dirt, dig up vegetables and eat them, or eat fruit that is unwashed, it is possible for them to swallow enough worm eggs to make a noticeable “casc" of worms. The well-cared-for child whose food and habits are clean would be singularly unapt to acquire worms, and I doubt if he ever has them except in h's mother's vivid imagination. If the child has worms it isn't be- cause he has eaten too much candy and sweets; it is because his mother has been careless about the food he has eaten. There have been worm eggs upon it, and these swallowed have de- veloped and hatched in the intestines. ‘We feel it better to tell mothers this than to allow them to think, as so many of them do, that worms are just something all children have to suffer and that a dose or two of worm med:- cines Spring and Fall is as much in order as the season’s house cleaning. Worm eggs can be found on un- washed fruits and vegetables, in the ground itself (dirt-eating children would be especially susceptible to worms from this source) and from meat that is of poor quality, is not Government in- spected and is not well cooked. “Measly” pork is wormy pork. When the child has thread worms (we are discussing these at the moment in ex- clusion of all other types of worms) they are passed in the stools and look like small bits of white thread. Worm medicines are ineffective in ridding the child of this type of worm, and worm medicines are always extremely danger- ous drugs to be used by a mother uniess | advised by her doctor. Pin worms can be gotten rid of by giving a physic in the morning, two successive doses of a medicinal enema, for which your doctor can give you the recipe, and another physic afterward. ‘There is never the slightest excuse for giving worm medicines or enemas unless the mother knows the child has worms. There is even less excuse for the mother to allow the child to suffer from worms without taking immediate measures to rid him of them. So long as the child has worms he is liable to infect any and every member of the family and to reinfect himself con- stantly. Scrupulous cleanliness of the hands, the child’s clothing and bedding (sflr::ccssnry to prevent this state of affairs. OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Search for Certainty. One’s attitude of mind has much to do with one's success with children. The closed mind is bound to fail. Chiidhood is such a mercurial thing that anything that savors of the set and the stodgy, | of perfection and dead certainty is bound to fail. Search is the watchword, not certainty. There are some people who never have any doubts as to what is good for other people, especially children. They know. 1 am your mother (or your father) and I know what is good for you.” Now that simply i not so. There is nothing in motherhood or fatherhood that be- stows magic. Neither does wisdom come as manna from heaven. Understanding comes slowly and by way of experience to the best of minds and there is always a wide fringe of doubt, a vast field for research in every probiem that touches humanity. " One would be inclined to laugh at the parent who writes down the life work of the child alongside the date of his birth on the day that the child comes into the world. Yet there are people just as sure of themselves and their knowledge of good and evil for their children as that. Tragedy stalks close beside them, but they remain unconscious of it uj to the moment of catastrophe. Searcg is the word, not certainty. Every parent has hopes and ambitions for his children. It would be too bad if that were not so. But the plan should be no more than a hope for many, many years. Not until the child has shown a decided bent toward the plan, not until he has embodied it in his own sense of purpose, can one have any degree of certainty regarding it. Children show many phases of inter- est, many tendencies that are stages ot gl)‘lt]’l of a far different character. ‘hildren interested in number work may be heading toward music. One who draws well may be developing 8 power to write. Destructive youngsters who carve the furniture may be di- recting energy toward great usefulness, surgery for example. KEven the indica- tions of the child may mislead you. Search on and on. There is no certainty in childhood and little in youth. The essential thing is to furnish the child with a multiplicity of exp: riences. Let him test out many thin so that he will have some basis of ui derstanding, some grounds for reason- ing, some knowledge of things and peo- ple and life's various ways when he reaches the place of choice. One's life work is one's own secret, often a secret from one's seif. Too often young people miss the right answer because some one was certain of that which he mnever knew, that which in the nature of things he never could know. Too often children fall into their life work instead of entering through the royal doors of self-knowledge. The ways of childhood and youth are a mystery even to the children themselves. There is no cer- tainty. Only search. (Copyright, 1930.) Eggs au Gratin. Hard-cook eight eggs. Meanwhile prepare a white sauce as follows: Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter and add three tablespoonfuls of flour, stirring | constantly. When smooth and bubbling add one and one-half cupfuls of milk, a little at a time, and stir until the sauce is smooth. Then add three-fourths tea- spoonful of salt and a pinch of paprika. Shell the hard-cooked eggs, halve them lengthwise, and arrange them in a but- tered baking dish. Pour the white sauce over them and sprinkle the top with half a cupful of grated American cheese and a little paprika. Bake in a medium oven for 15 minutes, or until thoroughly heated and browned on top. Children need “heat energy” food like Schindler’s Peanut But- ter for these cold wintry days. . 9 Schindlers “fresh roasted® Peanut Buger TR, s 3 PARIS.—Here’s Patou's modern ol and her skirt cut long. Notice the doul yellow silk dress and the sleeves. PERSONAL HE BY WILLIAM Proceed With Caution. What is your opinion, asks a corre- spondent, of psychonanalysis in the hands of a trained physician for the relief of psychic speech disturbance? ‘The query is characteristic of the present popular interest in psychic mat- ters. Ten or fifteen years ago the usual MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. - “Faulty Rhymes.” One mother says: I correct my child’s faults by com- posing verses about them. These I teach him with his regular Mother Goose rhymes. I make the ideas posi- tive whenever possible. Here is a rhyme containing three ideas to cor- rect as many faults: I will pick up my toys today. I will not throw my chalk. I will get ready right away ‘When we go cut to walk. (Copyright, 1030.) lceberg Head Lettuce... Nature's Concentrated Sunshine If you can lettuce will bring their golden sunshine to you. On drab winter days it is a vitalizer, satisfying hunger bu minerals o to Science. &at it d-fashioned girl, with her hair cut short ble tabs and white lingerie m‘!‘%‘l‘rl‘xf this ALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D. ,burden of such question was hypnotism, | personal magnetism or “occult” influ- |ence of one kind or another—whatever the mail-order charlatans happened to |call it in their ads. Today most of the, | psychic interest of the laity seems to| be directed toward psychoanalysis. \ I am not sure just what the corre-| spondent meaps by a psychic speech disturbance. Psychic means, in plain language, mental. Psychology is study of the mind. A psychiatrist is a phy- |sician who specializes in diagnosis and |treatment of mental diseases or de- | rangements—psychiatry. Psychoanaly- | sis is analysis of the mind or the men- | tal processes—a kind of probing of the |inner mind, the subconsciousness, the |soul as a romantic individual might! |say. ‘Then psychotherapy is mental | | treatment, mainly by suggestion, but| in many tases by means of medicines | |and other agents. | Any speech disturbance is more or, less psychic, since the function of speech, the organs concerned in speech, are controlled by brain centers and | nerves and association paths. I assume our young friend means getting hot and bothered, stammering. stage fright, sud- | den homesickness and a yearning for the great open spaces when one must | speak in public or before any little gathering of two or three persons. For that, I should say any kind of psychic | treatment & good physician might apply would help. Such treatment is not psy- chicanalysis, but psychotherapeutics. ‘Theoretically, psychoanalysis is one of those wonders of science, practically psychoanalysis is just mischief for idle minds. . If one’s physician thinks psychoan- alysis advisable, he will either under- take it himself or refer the patient to a psychiatrist who 1is competent or skilled in that branch of practice. I-have never known of any benefit being obtained where the patient him- self or herself sought out psychoan- alysis and succeeded in finding some one who would do it. I have observed some unhappy effects of such mistakes. (Copyright, 1930.) 't go to Arizona or California, head t adding no weight. Its vitamins and re the only Fountain of Youth kown |On the birthday cake of the 1i'l | write. SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Cupid’s Birthday. According to mythology, Cupid both the youngest and oldest of the c':kfles' eater they might have placed th candles in the world or none ‘What could have been the meani this business about having such differ- ent birthdays? t seems to me that it must have been because love makes the young old | and the old young. It takes Yeaple out of the calendar and lets them live a love | life where clocks and calendars don't | count. The girl or boy who feels the love sensation at once becomes mature and | important. The woman or man who | feels this later on in life pays no at- tention to the years, but lives accord- ing to the heart. It may be puppy love in one case and silly love in the other, but it is better than no love at all. Love is supposed to come into exist- ence for the sake of that older person, and that suposition is right, up to a certain point. But the main thing about human affection is the way it expands the heart and makes a person live on a larger scale. One may be in love with a picture on a screen or a character in history. Of course, it's better to experience and express love for some real person in the neighborhood. But the main thing is to be capable of the broadening and en- nobling sentiment. Then there is no question about age or anybody. The ageless and impersonal nature of love is due in part to the fact that love is the heart’s idealism. As is often said of a young girl, “she’s only in love with love.” This means that her heart is portraying an image for her to adore, an ideal to worship. If she can find some sort of man who will fit into that picture, she’s doing better than most girls who meet men on the corner or at the drug store. kind of fellow she meets is likely to pel the illusion. We ought to know by this time that theory has been exploded in so many homes that it isn't worth bothering about. But a girl can marry a man who is below the level of her ideal with the hope of jacking him up to the standard. Most men don't like that sort of opera- tion, which is like remodeling a ufimle house to give it style. But it can be done with both a man and a house. ‘This is because love is no more con- cerned with mere individuals than Cupld is with dates. Cupid can work tricks with people the way he does with the almanac. All he needs is a chance. (Copyright, 1930.) JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. The dis- ) MARVELED AT THE FACT THAT A LARGE AUTOMOBILE CAN BE RAISED WITH A LITTLE JACK. “BUT IT TAKES A LOT OF UACK' TO KEEP IT UP,” SAID DAD, WHO SPENDS OVER TWENTY DOLLARS A WEEK ON HIS MACHINE, ““Who spends more than $20” is pre- ferred to “over $20.” L Marvel (MAR-vel), used as a verb, means to be strack: with surprise, won- der or astonishment; as, Marvel not, my brethren, if the world hate you; He marveled at the inequalities of hu- man destiny. Marvel, as a noun, means that which excites astonishment; as, He was a marvel at the piano. It is a stronger word than wonder. P AR Bishop Heber, author of the hymn “From Greenland’s Icy Mountains,” said it took him only 15 minutes to PEATURES.’ The Sidewalks Gen. John G. Harbord, who, as every one knows, was in charge of the service of supply during the World War, speak- ing before an intimate gathering, said, among several in- teresting things: “The late war was responsible for such words as ‘u derlying,’ ‘fun HE SENT WIS WiFE ETTER - ‘camoufiage.’ " Continuing, the general said: “One day a military cen- sor, in examining a letter sent by a sol- dier to his back home, the following Letty: Please write me no am 3,000 miles to enjoy this war in peace.'” The general went on: “A man named McPherson, nationally unknown, went his set. ‘What's the matter?’ inquired the salesman, ‘Won't it work?' ‘Aye! Avye!" replied McPherson, ‘but the tubes f | don’t give enough light to read by.' The war was also responsible,” saigwGen. Harbord, “for epic poems and equestrian statues. Radio,” he added, “has caused a joke to suffer from premature old age and has made it difficult for after-din- ner speakers.” e Irving Cobb says: “A man with a double life.” Clarence Budington Kelland, the novelist, in introducing a singer, sald: ‘He is a characteristic American singer and a native of Russia.” o We happened to be present when 3,500 people stormed the doors in re- sponse to an advertisement that Einstein's relativity would be presented that evening by a certain man. Most of the folks probably thought it was a new movie. * ok ok % It was probably a typographical error, but a newspaper printed this a few days ago: “He was elected a vile president of the —— corporation.” * k% % Albert Payson Terhune and your cor- respondent were lunching together. Mr. Terhune is famous for his dog storje: Before we left the dining room at le; three dog owners sou%hc his advice. One man’s dog was unable to ascend the stairs, another pet had something else the matter with it and so on. To each Mr. Terhune gave a few words sug- gesting remedies. Wherever the dog- story writer goes, there is always some one waiting to put questions to him. Such 1§ the penalty of fame in a given line. * ok ok ‘We met & man who will never gamble again, even to matching pennies. He is a singer. Several years we were fellow passengers on an Atlantic liner. Signs had been conspicuously pusted warning the voyagers against card sharps who were said to be.aboard. Now, a card trickster is an innocuous appearing person. Sometimes he plays the role of a buyer or business man go- ing abroad. Or he may be a “retired” gentleman, traveling for his health. His contederate may be a personable young woman or a man of decelving appearance. They seldom start to work the first day out. They must become acquainted with the potential suckers before they spring the trap. In tim poker is suggested. The voyage becomes monotonous and passengers must em- ploy idle time. The sharp starts to work. Of course he loses in the begin- ning. This simply baits the sap who has no idea that the friendly soul is going to “take him” eventually. At any rafe the singer was induced to sit in a game of bridge with a sharp and his female companion. Another victim was in the game, too. Before the ship landed at Plymouth, the singer had lost $1,500, which con- stituted his entire bankroll. He com- plained to the captain of the liner, who called the winners to his ‘cabin. They insisted that the game had been on the level, but the skipper knew better. He demanded that they return at least a part of the money to the victim. To save trouble they handed the singer "R R enough to pay his railroad fare from mental,’ ‘basic’ and | wife | nagging letters. I| away, and I want| into a radio store and complained about | double chin should not attempt to lead | e, bridge or | of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. the dock to the city whither he was bound. The victim sags, that he will believe in signs in the future. * 4 ‘The man in the * * soft, brown hat sauntered casually through the foyer of the smart hotel. He approached ths bell captain and Wwhispered a name. ‘The captain called a bellhop. The hop began to page the owner of the name. His voice rang through the foyer. Then a modishly attired young fel- low answered to the name. As he did so, the man in the brown hat, iaid a restraining hand on his arm and sald: “I'm from )?elqpulrters. The chief wants to see you.” It was merely a pineh. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. CTHE 'ca\’éFl Reddy Merfy was cutting shavings off of a board with the little blade of his pen nife, and we herd- fire engines about 3 blocks away and Reddy sed, ere, mind these. And he quick layed the board and the nife on my frunt steps and ran like anything. Him always wunting to see where every fire is no matter where it is, and I started to cut more shavings off of the board and all of a sudden some- thing broke, being the little blade of Reddys pen nife, me thinking, Good nite, heck he’ll be as mad as the dooce. And 1 was still deciding weather it would be a good ideer to go in the house and leeve it out on the step as if it had broke itself, when Reddy came back, saying, Falts alarm. Meening the fire, and I sed, That's a pritty good of a pen -nife, you got, I meen the big blade is all rite, and Red- dy sed, What's you tawking about, the big blade is the bum one, the little blade is the ony one that’s any good. Go_on, the big blade is much better and Im willing to bet you any amount of money cn it, I sed. Ill bet you 2 cents, I sed, and he sed, Good nite how . can it, its got hunks out of, dont you think I know about my own pen nife? and I sed, All rite, then dont bet if you dont wunt to. ' Sure I wunt to, its a shame to take the money, Reddy sed, and I sed, Then all rite, you owe me 2 cents, because loock at your nife, the little blade is broke all a ways off, so the big blade must be tiwce as good no matter how bum it is. Wheres the 2 cents? I sed. ‘What, good nite, what the heck, thats a heck of a note, I dont owe you any- thing, your crazy, Reddy sed, and I sed, The heck you dont, and he sed, The heck I do. And he started to be so worried about ‘weather he owed me 2 cents or not he forgot to remember about me breaking his pen nife, and I hurry up went in the house like’ somebody that thawt they herd -somebody call them before he had too long of a time to think it "WHIPPED CREME” USES Here is the way to wonderful new and different whi cremz effects in cake, rt, salad, sauce and candy making. SrELEC R, HE big bakeries use huge ma- chines whirling at 40 revolu- tions a minute, driven by 60- horse power motors to mix the flour they use. But you haven’t any such facilities—and that’s why you should use —which is intended solely and expressly for family use. Washington Flour is made of a spe- cially selected growth of wheat—which you can handily condition. That's why you will get such superior results with Washington Flour—making your baking always a success—with never a worry. every With Mayonnaise, Thousand Island, Roquefort or French Dressing, head lettuce is @ most tooth- some dish. Eat half o head once or twice o day, and note how it tones your body and soothes your nerves. Your grocer has it—soll fresh ond crisp. Buy it today for tonight's di ner and tommorrow’s luncheon. JCEBERG Natures Concentrated Sunshirne, . Jfom ARIZONA arnd CALIFORNIA ¢ WGPA . 20 ways with Plain Washington Flour For all purposes—and al- flavor you enjoy because of its wholesomeness. that natural Self-rising Washington Flour —mixed with purest of leavening phosphates — ready to make delicious ;bii'fcuih, waffles, etc., in a oniomically buy the 12.1b. and 24-lb. sizes—for ALL WASHINGTON FLOUR 1S GOOD UNTIL USED. Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co. ‘Washington,

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