Evening Star Newspaper, December 18, 1930, Page 48

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&flom&'&nflg work of the rs and Dl m how boasts ;t least shop W] this work n‘l!mD sort of clermy and_inex- of work afe ,gnon from l.hemko(mkln.l b . mew dress because of the help afforded by these specialists. On the chiffon or georgette dreu ed that woujd other- wise have to be finished very earefully by hand can now be run threugh the hemstitehing machine in a few minutes. It is usually possible to have pleating | done at the small shop where the hem- stitching is done, and this, foo, may be | made to serve as a short cut in home | dressmaking. The sketch shows a new | dress that _fllskea use of both pitot and pleating. le flounces on the skirt are picot finished at the lower edge and nleawd at the top, ana the frill at the front d# bodice as well sleeve frills i lre ished and fulled in the same mn flounces call for straight . I-m.u aterial: Those used o) lleevh are Mlcht but sllfhfl] ed towsrd the short- arms, THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Two Ways to Make It! Youll like this slender thodel im- mensely. It's a lovely pattéfned crepy ‘vxl‘ogolentn exquisite dark winé red color- The low placement of the circular skirt flounce 5 d to the up{x’r ih disgonal outline ghes the figure a chafming iengtheficd line. ‘The narrow tie belt holds the dress snugly to the fizure at the natural e | Poach somé Tide front Sraight St of o B Ml?fl rial shaped into"a V fermation in ng. e idea is & good one to carry out in & new dress, but éven more herprul in femodeling an 6ld dress. 'The pleated flounoes may be made from cnnhlmng material of mal color or shme material in contras| lns mlur A black or navy biue crepe de chine might ge eflecclvel remodeled with pleated lounces of b ick or navy blue georgette. BY D. C. PEATTIE. There is one- Christmas decoration about which even the most conscien- tious need have no qualms. I speak of the mistletoe, a plant parasitic on other plants, especially the' most use- ful trees. Buy all you want of it. The more you buy “the better the health of the orcherds and forests. I once had a college professof who found something to complain of in the purchase of mistletoe. At this rate the plant. he said, would soon be ex- tinct. Of this there is not much dan- ger, though it i possible, in the East- ern United States, that it might be practically exterminated. However, the pine forests of the Westerfi States are ridden with mistletoe, and when that supply gives out the apple farmers of Normandy will be delighted to send us thelr mlmewe and prepay the freight harges, too. In my library are several rare books that tell the story of mistletoe, but none of them offer convincing explana- tions as to why we Kiss under the anistletoe. 1 find, however, that an ancient volume, entitled “Golden Cab- inet of Secrets,” falsely purporting to have been written by Aristotle, states that a “true love powder” can be made in this wise: “Take," says the ancient recipe, “elecampane, the seeds or flowers, vervain and the berries of mistietoe. - Beat them, after being well dried in an oven, into a powder, and give it to the party you design upon in a glass of wine and it will work wonderful effect to your advantage.” I am sure this is a certain way to win your girl, and mistietoe is common just now, but, of course, if you haven't any seeds of elecampane the charm won't work and you are simply 1n bad luck. In that case I would trying the magical properties nr two. doun some florist’s lady’s-sl long-stémmed roses or of maidenhaif fern, rs in a bed marked ‘‘Merry Whole to be Christmn.s" and paild for with Uncle John's Yuletide check. Spanish Poached Eggs. ‘Také a green pepper, cut out all the seeds, éut up in small pieccs and fry the pepper with &ome chopped omfons and parsley snaurgpper and salt. @ come tomaty to the other mgredlen'a and pour all over the eggs on toasted slices of bread. An Overweight Blonde. Dear Miss Leeds: (1) My hgir is fair, but is turning darker. sruu 1d T use & blonde rinse to brighten it: (2) I am 17 years old, 6 fect 1 inch tell and weigh 160 pounds. 1 have tried redueing by dieting and exereise, but without sueness. Shall I try a reducing mediéine? out (3) What colors are becmnmfl I thF a fair skin. Answet.—(1) You may Hse the Juue n the | of ong lemon in a pint nr water to rinse your hair after your shampoo with cas- tile seap. Leave the rinse on for 10 minutes, then rinse it off in elear water. ~ Avoid strong bleaching rinses because, after 4 nuniber of applcations, ‘:’hey]wm make your kair dry, dull and Titt] 2 Da nm fhink of taking #ny féduc- BY WILLIAM Should Stick to His Fire. Spenklng'of the resusclhthm of the newborn, Yandell Héndérson says: “It is really vathet Judierots that al over thé country foday a doctor w on his hands a non-bfeathing new- born child has no befter recourse (han Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE l?fl. ELDRED. ed with the question, leed my child?” goes the next more Impurta nt query, “Hov can I get him to eat it?” Seemingly the rav- enous appetites with which all chil. dren should be blesséd are flcfifloun The usxnl chflc;'in the usu: where there 1§ always énough sometimes too mueh, is more often Lhnn not completely indifferent {6 his meals. The overfed baby may @fink regu- larly only part of his bofle feedings and cannot be lured to tak> more. The chil of 2 or théréaboute, who plays #nd should logically be s meals a bore dhd has J en them 1f there vere only oné reascn for the existence of such conditiens, it would | be simple éncugh to right it, but there aré as many rcasoms as there are chil- | drén end homes. Each one has an ef- fect on the other, and this effeet is very hard to trace down and eerrect. Recenfly I lis‘ned while a fond aunt harped on the theme of her | nephew's appetitelessness. She exhib- ited an actuel pfide in the methods be- ing used to induce the child to eat. She did admit that. when possible, she stayed away from his sister's home, for the constant reminders and promises 829 | | eat, | the “waistiine. Being adjustable, it may be WOrn at a point as best suits its wearer. The mintature view shows how utter< Iy chic it i§ wifh cape collar for “Sun- day nights” and smart restaurant wear. Transparent velvet, metal chiffon, canton creps marocain are 16vely m,E ?M fot its development. Style No. 829 is designed Jor sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 40 and 42 inches Tl Sizé 36 uites 3% yards of 39-inch material with 7 yard of zz-lnch contrasting. tuuest that wlun you send for you order a copy of our fon R be in every home (oi of wants to look her best .rat expense, and this book u the way. It also eontaing exesls St " “et G st For a pattern ol (m ‘style, nnCTL and threats all through a meal did get on her nerves. If the child’s lack of appetite #s caused by some physical reasen, then all steh methods simply postpone the day of cure. If they are, as one could readily guess, just psyého- logieal ones, cnenuraged by the family's i rformances en he didn’t then there ean be no cure mntil | family opens its eyes end sees it selt ‘The picture of the grandmother run- | ning about the house after the boy, A late of food n one hand and a spoon in the other, cornering him and téas- 1m{ him to take just one more bite “for grandma” is so absurd that one won- dérs how the family can fail to see it. And this has been going on for seven yéars. ‘We have a leaflet outlining the usual peychological and physteal reasons for | a lack of appetite. If you wish to ob- tain it. send with your request a self- addreséed, stamped envelope to “Your Baby and Mine” department of this newspapef. In addition, I might re- mind mothers that vitamin B is called the appetite vitamin, for it has a difect effect upon the -appetite. Vitavose, a Wheat getm sugar product, and veast in varjous are fich in vitemin B, which is found in miJk, vegetables, e internal organs (liver, ki eys and sweetbreads) and ole-grain cereals ‘When the ¢hild is mrkcdly without desire to finish his tle- or consyme ordinary amounts of food, it is well to meke an effort to provide additional "awin B m%che of the other of the 2.0 ibsms., For the small baby give vitayose with the fofmula Of yeast 2d- nu three titmes dnfly. for the [ liver, eggs. vhole- l.n 2 %fim &m"”“‘“ street, New York. A I oate) are flcul-&?w nge impetiis 40 & lazy appetite. THE EVENING STAR. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patest Office. %ocm?fln@! “ 5 S ins (O iy e —30| When Officer “Jim” Newkirk was a popular figure around Union Station and he always wore odd socks? Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Foggy Weather. My morning papets report an unusual numbet of local automobile accidents for the previous evening. Three killed, eleven injured, to say nothing of numer« ous minor collisions. Why? A heavy fog hung over the region during the evening in question. Many drivers do not seem to know that fgggy weather has a psychology all its own. It's a simple matter, however, Anyshing seen in a fog seems to be farther away than it actually is. That's because the fog obliterates the details of the observed object. And, of course, when the details are obliterated you nats urally judge that the object is far away. In other words, foggy atmosphere plays the part of a mental subsmu(e for re- moteness. If you have ever drlven a car in log%y weather you must have noticed approaching machines appear all of a sudden. You think they are driv- ing fast. When you finally get your proper bearing on their distance from you, they instantly seem to be about twice as large as they actually are. That's becauss speed, and also because you were unable to see the surrounding objects that give you the customary clues to their size. Mental confusion is the result—and Accident. (Copyright. 1930.) MILADY - BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. ing drugs without a dector's prescrip- tion Suth a latge degree of over- weight is probably due to some inter- nal condition which may be corrected, so my advice to you is that you see a doctor about it. Perhaps you have not given dieting and exercise a fair trial for a sufficiently long period to obtain ts. (3) 1 shall’ be glad to mail you my leaflet which tells what colors and Styles of clothes are becoming to dif- ferent types, if you will send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope it. You forgét to mention fhe of your eyes. If they are. blue, deeper shades of the same_color are most be- comihg, but you should avoid greens unless you want your eyés fo look green also. byBro]:.‘n*.db!Me. peach, rose, tust, wine, black ‘and cream afe usually spif- able for the blonde. LO1S LBJDS PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. B, 'b telephone thé fife departiment to héive a fescue crew emne eunrng hat up to the door. fil the hospitals, throt cm :mmrees. 1iand the health deparfments, by ten or loanihg inhalators to obsteedclam and midwives, should take over this serviee? | Tee distinguished authority en re- | suscitation hasn't told the half of it, tors in the country today, some of estimation, who simply do not know how to resuscitate dnybody. Such docs tors are the omes who so gladly pass the responmnmy in Y.bue emrgmcla to the fire départment, theé to anybody who is rendy % rush tnw the picture. A medical man who takes more than the usual small pride in his “experi- ence” naively described how he had |tried letting his engine idle while warm- |ing up in his stall garage one cold | morning with the g cclosed, and, by Genvge, hé just managed to get to the o e and that was all! As & mat act, the doétor hind not dohe |any such foolish experiment at all—hé had been slightly gassed with carbon monoxide, and that narrow escapé | taught hith the @anget. Obviously no one who knows the !efrlble abruptness |of that form of death would willingly engage in any sueh egperiment. The inhalator mentioned by Prof. Henderson 1s merely dn inflatable bag in whieh air or oxygen and carbon dioxide gas may be mixed in the right | proportions for thé victim to inhale, | while Sehafer's method of artificiai | respiretion is being used. A mixture of 7 or & per cent of carbon Gioxide in |air or oxygen is a mueh mére powerful imiant fp the victtnrs bréathing is pure oxygen or air alone. dioxide In fhe air we breathe is_the natural stimulant of respiration. It is | partieularly essentigl in the institution |ot breathing in the newborn. 1t is probably the explanation for the bene- Tietar festilts of Mouth-to-miouth M- | suffation in establishing respiration in | th newborn. The expired air contains 4 to 5 per cent of carbon dioxide | Such inha! | able wher it is Jikely that there may be victims of drowning, gassing; smoke asphyxiation or to restiscitate Caflmn unities still have those antigim and dangerous lung motors or breathing machines, | which in the name of bumanity should be junked and replaced by inhalators. The bLreathing of an atmosphere of |oxygen with 7 per éent carbom dioxide | helps the victim of menoxide hyxia- tion to blow off or eMminate from the lungs the poison. S6 it is eéxcellent treatment, even where breathing has | n6t actually eeased. Anyhow, it i a disgrace to the pro- fessional standard of the local medical faculty when these cases are turned over to the well-meaning but crude efforts. of firemen. A hospital that has to call in firemen to render first aid is a poor excuse. (Copyright. 1930.) | ABE MARTIN SAYS | The only time to catch Mrs. Lafe Bud at home is when the gang plays bridge at hér house. It mus! lpuh to be overwhelm- in'ly elected ds @ wet an* then have to nlphonoanlmo home uu'na& (Copyright; I can festify. There are a lot of doc- (the top gently pour ome eupful of eold them very important men in their own dlum oven. Serve with hot whipped tors should be kept avail- | DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX for & sehool 6f mattimony harnionige théir dispositions prevent JUSTIOR. Thank for that phirase—hit-and-skip marriages. It certainly Y describe any of the modérn marriages ih which the yuung husbands smke out blindly in their fury at each other’s faults and weaknesses, to the divorce court, without éven waiting to sdp what damage 2,‘,‘;’,',.".‘;’.’5.',‘3.."‘;1 Whethet the one he or she left 18 fatally injured or not. agree with you that a school of matrihony would fill a long-felt wn.nt and have a wide fleld of usefulness. It is a little cynical, when you come think of it, that marriage is the only undertaking in the world whic lsl.hmx‘ht to fequire no training, no knowledge, no previous experience. We let mere children tindertake & business that taxes the wisdom of gray beards, and we let boys and girls, whose judgmen® we would not trust to buy an automobile or a fur coat, select their life mates. We send novices out to handle situations that require the finesse of a trained diplomat. No wonder that we have so many divorces. The marvel Is that they are not universal. rtainly a school of matrimony would help & lot if # only made youngsters realiz‘ée that zynsrrlnge wasn't just a lark or a thrill or a chance that you took at happiness and whose result -depended upon your luck, but that it was an exact science, to be studied seriously and with all the intelligence that one posessed, and that the way it turned out was just as anvihhlg as that two plus two make four, or that two minus two leaves nothing. The theory that clashing dispositions éan be harmonized is as revolutionaty as Einstein's theory of relativity. Most husbands and wives, when they find that they do not think alike and have different tastes and opifiions, flm it out 16 the bitter end, but a school of matrimony could teach the young 1s how foolish this is. It could teach them that a husband or wife has just e right to an individual opinion as mn,e{hu and that it 18 1un a8 mu up to married le to avold topics upon which they disagree when théy talk with éach other a6 it is when me{.hold convérse with outsiders. No man tells the m; thlt he takes to dinner that she is & f00l, no matter what he thinks on the subject, does he criticize the politics of his best customer or client. “There should be speéial courses in humor, and How to del with in-laws, and the best and most successful way to aj , and what to do with & wife who cries or a husband who swears, and how to cure & wife of extravagance and & husband of tight-fistedness and so L Oh, yes, nmelamedoltnehnolnl attimony, and I would advise making its curriculum so strentiote and so kmg lt by thé time a student had got his of her P. M. (Prepared Mate) degree he or she would be old enough to know what he or she redlly heeded in a wife or hll,sbn.nd DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1930.) ODES OF THE MOMENT you misjudged their | Chooolaté Pudding. Grate or break into small pieces two cakes of unsweeténed-ehocolate. Take one quart of miflk, and aftér taking out one cupful in which to dissolve the choeolate, boil up ofice, add the cheeo- late and boil all once. Take off and let cool. Beat until well mixed the yolks of five eggs, ihcluding the white of one, and make very sweet. Pour the chocolate on the eggs, place over the fire, then stif until it thickens. Take off quickly, add & teaspoonful of vanilla and brown in the oven. Indian Pudding. Add half a cupful of cornmeal gradu- ally to one quart of scalded milk, stir- rmz éonistantly. Cook 6ver hot water for 15 minutes; ther add three-fowrths eupful of molasses, one feaspoonful .of £alt, one-fourth cupful of butter, two ten eggs, half a teaspoonfal of cin- pamon and a pinch of ginger. Trans- fer to a buttered baking dish and over milk. Bake for three hours in a me- cream. s eghtfn Wotld you gnake your ftiends truly happy this Christmas? Would you makeé theit lives & litclé more comfort- able, a listle brighter and a little easier dutifig the months and years thae follow Christmas? Then seléct West- inghouse Electrical Applisnces for yout gifes. You can be 49 sute of theit lasting séfvice 4§ you ate of theif iise- fulness. And you ¢an be sute, ilso, that your friends will be grateful many, many times for the thoughtful- ness that prompted your choice. Olectrical Sifts - T Sich of & Withinghidse Dhalid (S mmw WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, DhkCrmbiuR 18, 1930 SONNYSAYINGS ‘Whoo-hoo! Has you got all the seals you need? Christmas is sneakin’ up on you! OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRE It is hatd for children to hold their minds on & task for any length of time. for their active young tudy fe W”l‘: whmfl L lor theé period of work, of sitting atill and lis- téning, mmbe(olk;":dzyivfl'lodo{ Some _relief eary les must be offered or mm wm be trouble. m%:r children ou! nven Q3 nh free recess in the ma-n- ing session. If the conditions permit, the children should run rmly about and shout as loud as they wish. The Joud shout is the expression ol the Iings for expansion and fresh air, of the strained muscles and aching nerves for change of posture relief from pres- sure. It is not wise to ask a class of little children to play quietly, to walk on tiptoe, to have a game of tag v\lth- out making a sound. Noise goes healthy play. - Forbid the joyful lm’u‘ und you kil the play. ‘You will notice that when the ¢hil- dren do their home work they comcen- trate on a task and work steadily in silence for a time. Once the hard ex- is done or )oy(ul shout sort. 'mecnudmummhm yawn, move about, tell a story about some- thing that happened that day, laugh and chat until either hls sense of duty calls him back ft) ‘K or somebody minds him t lltfl! receas Ia ecessds of those few ne fifiutes’ complete lelnnuon, and you deprive him of the power necessary for the remainder of the job. Often & child practicing & musie les- son will toll faithfully on a difficult gu.nge. get it fairly well, and then reak into frills and runs and rounde- precede any shout of relief, any recreational exercise. | Some children grow so tense about a | lesson that they, forget to stop. On| on, lesson T lesson, ‘worl i Dectime without pause. Fhut i3 not good. The child Wm be too Well" the pledslm mteflulc mem Thé othéf lflqulzt.lymx FEATUR BEDTIME STORIES Stumpy Is Upset. T U S e, i oo, S egtos e ES. By Thornton W. Burgess. t of him. He wasn't what might very gixt mommml:mpmm out on favorite tussock and, after a look all around to make sufg that all was safe, began to make his tollet. He was combing his fur with the nails of his one front paw and thinking how peace- ful and safe eve was when he saw & Mouse come out of a little hole in the snow, sit up to look about and h | start for another little hole beside a what welriu‘;' on_about hln; :Iu: was sur prising many people 3 wasn't that there were more about. No, that wasn't it. It was because against the white mow Lhey were more readily seen. he Crow, Sammy Jay, Tommy Tit v,he Chickadee, and Slatey the Junco he saw nearly every day. Several times he saw Peter Rabbit long before Peter came near enough to speak. Twice he saw Reddy Fox at a distance. He was quite satisfied to see Reddy at a distance. And of course all these little’ people saw him. “I don't see how any one can hide when all the world is white. I mean I don't see how any one can hope to keep from being seen less hiding un&r or in something said he. ts ‘never were intended for led Jerry Muskrat. it there are people who have white coats, and a white world Just suits them.. That reminds me, one of these is a fellow you had best watch out_for.” “Who is he"" asked Btllmvrv “Shadow the Weasel," lied Jerry. “He is a little fellow, but lt would be jus* like him to attack you if he should dfscover that you have but three legs, id unless you could get him into the water I am afrald you wotld not have much chance. “I saw him once last Suthmer and he wasn’t white; he was, brown,” sald Stumpy. "He ha.s changed his coat, or Mother Nature has changed it for him since then,” said Jerry. “It was brown in the Summer but it is white now. It is as white as this snow. The only thing about him not white is the tip of his tail. ‘This is black. Watch out for him. He is dangerous any time of year, but more so now than any other time be- cause he is hatder to see.” Stumpy promised that he would watch out and !.henw ‘my forgot all about Shadow the You see Shadow was a rare visitor to the Smil- ing Pool and those living there seldom Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. The _ banister-back “chair 8 one the aristocrats of the Early American period, being made at about the same timeé as the more, simple slatback and Windsor ctairs. If you are in seareh of an odd chalr to give your living room 4 more homelike appearance, you would do very well to select one of this type. As a chair to be used with a desk or at the bridge table, this will be found vefy pleasing, and being of mll'mh tops to e 'l ‘fl‘et; x pene; hunt for the right ki paper, to flndlbwkhemidgnly?mm he , 46 ask if he lohhee'xh :fi.smmmmfl: mao h lghble. [} fil mmmuw his Afl emdmn need: MM from wrk, and this rellef is usuall somé form of Q atlnkt ‘worl s always a 2y and idle children 1930.) pecéasitates ¢ healthy s seldom tnaige i 1. _ (€opyrisht. - sturdy construction it may als6 be placed {h 4 prominent position where it will receive hard usage. Not so with some of these dainty little chairs with the apindly leu whlch dre lovely to terrif; uttve:fn‘o' . yet why man an selects 'gt and most delicate chll.l' in a room. The illustration shows the chair fn combinatioh with & table and kerosetie been wired for electrieity. & Ehair has a cane seat, but is equipped with a loose pad of lattice-péttern armiuire. (Copyright, 1930.) il w i stalk of goldenrod. As the Mouse scur- tied along, making a pretty trail of fine lootprlm.s In the snow, he passed or started to pass what Stumpy had taken to be a little lump of snow. He had noticed it when he had first climbed out on the tussock. Just as that Mouse was oppositeé that little lump #t came to MNfe. Yes, sir, “THE ONLY THING ABOUT HIM THAT ISN'T WHITE IS THE TIP OF HIS TAIL. it came to life with an abruptness that was startling to say the least. There was a squeak of m.m from the Mouse and that was all. A slim, trim little mson in a white coat had pounced on with a flerceness dreadful fo see. It was so sudden and so wholly un- expected that Stumpy was so startled he fell over backward into the Laugh- ing Brook with a splash. n he ventured to put his head out of water for a look he was just in time to see a rapidly moving tiny black spot inst the white snow. He guessed what it was. He guessed it was the black tip of a tail. “That must have been Shadow the ‘Weasél, and he was sitting right therc all the tifme,” gasped Stumpy. He was right. That u Jun who it was. LITTLE BENNY BY LE8 PAPE. Ma was looking at her list of the peeple she has e%“mrh!:nwt ?nr:u;u for llrudy or_still 3 ny pop. i 1 $00AYS paper. o tays ihg. cle 2 e part about m-. 8 & mee us a chance $0 be reely chlflhm wuh- tS. In othef Werds he is to give all we can to the peeple wi reely need it, and then we’ll be doitig reel good insted of observing CHristmias in, namé ony, she sed, I just happeéned to think 6f that seeing your cuzzen Gerties nafiie here on my list. The poor woman Has had such a hard time with 3 such children and such an im rflu&m band. ma sed, Its'a golde: me to be a living proof of P. Willis Hinkles ideer, she sed. Im with you, pop sed. awt to giye her a nice little sufn of mibney. hefés nuthi like mmoney when your poor, and in fact many rich peeple seem to place a value on it too, he said, and ma I think it would show more thawt and attention if I gave her something more definite that she reely needs. For instants Hookbinders has a sale of elothes trees for 8 dollers and 90 cents, and nuthing like 2 nice clothes tree keeping a poor familys house from look- ing still poorer by ving cl hats dragging around homelessly in- stead of neetly hun. up. And speek~ ing of clothes I l¥ Hews an mnin‘ fl-'l. just haj 1 think we Hewses afé rolling in mone; Hews just fiade an- other ki e stock mafket, pop sed, -and _ma sed, Certeny, ts just why she Wont appreciate an; g thats not reely hice ard a little expeénsive. Help ai@ sucker, pop séd. And he got behind fhe g page and ma Kepp on making marks ch her list. Adopt the Flour that’s made for YOUR ‘use PLA!N for all pu shorteakes, waffles; i gy SELF lusmc s, doughnut: for biscuits, ; etc.—ready mixed with the exactly correét prapomom of purest leavening Phosphatés—which take the place of balnn‘ powder: It takeés a certain growth of wheat to make flour suitable for use with kitchen facilities. Bakeries, with machiftery and teniperature contfols, can use all but the housewife reqflnu kind of Washington Flour=and ev you use it vineed of its superior nnrtt and that distinet mikes it YOUR Flour. Mkin‘ of flour; flour. That's ou'll be con- Both PLAIN WASHINGTON FLOUR and SELF RISING WASHINGTON FLOUR for sale by grocers and in all sizes from 2-1b. sacks up. Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co. “*iiste= essens generally—

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