iS$ t TUESDAY EVENING. OCTOBER 12, 1920. THE PC DEN 5ANDARD-EXAM1NER s s
r Worn an Dietician To Supervise Employes' Meals Is
I Solution of Hotel's 'Labor Turnover' Problem
NEW YORK Hem's another ocupa I
tlon for women. Miss E!np. Becker h
n dietician (n a larp hot I She I
m at the head of the department of
tetlCfl r.f ilv Hotel Pennsylvania
Hbi the New York hotel which ha a ihe rep
citation of being th larc : . in tin
E3Hl world.
Sbc ir not a cook nor a hou?ci;r p-1
er yet she has entire supervision of
the n ca!:' of all ihe hotel's onipn.;. .
Tlif.sc number sibout 2000 perens. ao-j
orriin to rcer nt figures.
Miss Decker is a Cornell graduate.,
P lur.ne her college v.ork she ipeclaJ-j
lBO! in docicatic science and dleteUeO.I
TO r.OLVE LABOR PROBLEM
i; ii'n : ion ol be "labor tnroxn i
Bfl Was given .is the primary reason fori
the establishment of this depnnr:irnt I
To obtain better satisfied rmnlnypp, I
and so rcduc1 1 h number of mm and
I k worker leaving (heir jobs, Miss Becker
. . belter selection of food for cm-
A greater variety and a good variety
Tasteful preparation cf employes'
food
refinement of service in employes'
food.
;'!ur- are four inployes' dining
rooms at the Pennsylvania, a pafeteria
for the below-sta.r female help. a
oafeti'rki for the helo5" ? airs male hi ip
.'. cafeteria for the maids, 2nd a din
In inim for the under of.'iccrj of ihe
hotel.
But Miss Becker loo ahead "o an
other phase of her work.
"!n my f-pinion a 11 LstlCS i !uri
ratfllt f r quests mav enme to he one
i i ri fl uup "tanl features of ihe
fuiu hotel," .che says. "It certain! Is
Ihe meat econoialcrl and healthful!
method for both the hotel and the
f-UOEts "
FOOD CONSUMED
A few nf the figures e p piled from
;he f rst year';; cperaiicn of tne Hqtel
Penntjylvanla indicate te greainofS ttt
"Irs field Jn its first :enr. (ha ffg'.tirs
tvt show, the hotel used 200.000 dozeri
. !i3 ' j
flics Elnn Becker, dietician, and the poetry kitchen of the Hotel Pennsylvania
cps.s Mid 14Q,O0j) gal' ns rf n.il : and
cream. The average d !y consumption I
of ire crep.m was more thau CCo .!
luhs. Ab.iuot Blai t n - of poultry I
i Ar Uugiteti and His Son
A Great Married Life Story by
PAH McGLONE GIBSON
A VISITOR
a Mr. Halsey looked at me frr a mn.
jP ment. and then I heerd him murmur.
as if to himself: "Why, pf course, Bob
Hr Carletcn.'" And then lie turned and
Df held out his band to me, and Bald.:
Hft "Tell your mother, little girl, that I
Hlj am oipg to call ou her very socn "
Bif, "I don't bolieve I'll go riding cn the
L pony. Kenneth.'' 1 said. "I want to
H' see my mother. 1 want t: si-e her
rfght away," and I did not know why
HI i:.y voice choked as I said (his.,
1 1 turned slowly and wmt acroo'rnd
H 1 down the street to my mother's cot
tage. She was at the gate to meet me
as usual, and before I said anything
else. I blurted out: "Mother, dear,
ft nrhp i Boh Carleton?"
My mother turned so pale I though:
;Iie "- going to faint, oud tben ahe
jnK gasped: Where did you hear that
Hi
Hfl "Kenneth Kenneth's father ha-- Jufil
Vil come heme, Mid when I told him (hat
HEl 1 :. - Ann Whltson, your little girl.
jRlfl be said; 'Why, of course, Bob Uaile-
nl ion! Mid he told me to tell you he
KTi weft ceming over very soon to b e
HI- Mj mother (rembled and caught lie;
Hl'j bands rcross the fence to steady iier-
Hl self. "I am afraid we won't be able to
91, m-o Kv'nneth's father," hhe aid "be:
jElj cause we're goiug to SeaTP here loaior-
Hl! row."
9r I "Why mother, you never told me
Bl abour if Where are w go'ng?'1
Hlll My mother hesitated ahJ then said.
Hl i ate going to roc about putting you
pff PCilOO this fall."
HV "Lut I don't want to leave you, and
Hff besides I thought I was going io ihe
Hl same school with Grace Cameron
Hit, "Do you "love her so much?" she
III ,;i ''
For the first limp I stopped lo 'hiv;k
about ihe matter, and I discovered
Hr much to my childish surprise ihur I
little: benny'wV
Note Book
By LEE PAPE
1 4
HBI This aftirnoon m'' and Pud.s Sini-
Ht kins was setting on Pudses frunt steps
jHO feeling like doing sumthlpg but nut be-
lng able lu think of cnythlng to do,
and I Bed, I tell you lots wats do, lots
HH take ;i Piny wawk some .van s, there
back
QoSh. Q, ail rita, lets take a loug
aHUf ' i yawh we ever took. Bed Puds.
Wu h we started to do, wawklng
HGj fgat as enything and swinging our
Huj arms ambitious, me siylng. This is
HI4 grate exercize all rite, wen it conies to
Hl wawking theres nuthlng like a fine
long wawk.
BH You let, it makes the blood slreu-
Ki late and everything, -ed luds.
Bj Ami we kepp on wawking and
01 wal king, almost as fast but not quite,
rii Jn t !ove Grace at all And i said
so wi h the usual frankness of cli i.
!un !
"Then whv do yen w.i. i to gv to
selioo' with her9" my mother a.s'u J,
Again I found a reason that sur
priced ce, "It is because, ' 1 bfthl,
quickly "that I I do not go to school
vvitft lier I will nevei see KeLLetb,
again, for he wcnl visit me v .my i
I ciu . I, nhd I know he will visit Grace."
"Oh. It's Kenneth you love!" said
lay nil thcr.
'.'Yes, I lo c hiui 1 w.ml to see him ,
always, ami I think perhaps tha: -f I
cat: only see him when Grace is ground
I'll try if endure h -
"I fiink Tt is high time that you wens,
K0ng away," said my mother. "Don't
you i;now, Ann. dear, that you mutj
reVer that yoa love a little boy.
Glil? de.n't say these things. You urej
g. tting to be a big girl now. you
I'll aw."
1 remember," said a voice close he
s!1e ua. and my in ther and I both
hioi: . i startled; ' I remember .
tine'ly. Marga'-et Whilson. when you
would not tell a man thai you lned,
him oven when he told you first '
:h. mother, it's Kenneth s daddyl"
I exclaimed.
"Yes, dear, I know!" s,he answered.
"Yp.il look quite as young as you did
! when I left you. so many, many j rs
ago Margaret' said Kenneth's fa-:
ther.
"Did vou know eaeh other when you
were liltle boys and girlsr" I asked
; eagerly.
"Yes, dear," ahsjrered Mr Halsey.
I' Wt v.sed to i:njw each other when !
we were Just about the age of you
land Kenneth."
Then he turned to my mother, and
bald in a low voter "Why did you take
! your own name?"
It was the only name, 1 learned. 1
' had .he right to bear!"
und after a wile Puds sed. This is
grate all rite, how mutch ferther shall
we wawk. mutch?
Sure, let:; go' about 10 times ferther.
Oni dont forget we huff to wawk all
the way back again, you don't want to
start back vet, do you ' I sod,
I leek, no, lets lake a fearse long
wawk, sed Pud:. Wlch we keVp on!
fining slower and slower, ami after a1
Wile I sed. I limn bleeye wawjclng is
the best exercbte; do ou. Puds.'
No, it all goes to the legs, sed Pudsj
And wo kepp on going about 5 more
blocks the slowest c't, and a huckster
waggln with a big Btop hanging flown
in bark started to. go past In tin- other
direektinn. Puds Baying, There goes a
pcetchy hitch. Penny, Wat do you s,i
we catch it back?
Sure, what do you say' I sed. And
we 8ii uk up- in back of thf huckster
I wuggin and seroutehed down on tin
j step and it took us all thu way back
ill but 3 blocks.
Proving you cant judge the end by
the beginning.
uu ;
The daughter of a Parisian artist
I Was married recently n a bridal gown
I of white satin; uniquely painted by i
' artist friends of her father.
HICKORY
I GARTERS
lMJa.l:.lll:!!llldjii.1'
(notour) . jicf
are made of the same high grade, reliable elastic,
y J non-elastic and metal parts, despite the increased
fc! corfl of materials. The guarantee label on each
pair means absolute satisfaction to you or your
M "Stockings held the HICKORY uo
I t re 'toclflngi held to finely slay
1 11 Chicago A. STEIN & COMPANY New York
"iJHB. r- . -
' A- ) - I BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBUBBMB BBB1. f
tind ii' tons cf Other meats were used
each week. Moic thin 16.000 rolls
w-rre ronsutned each day. about '500 1
loaves of French bread, 150 six-poun 1
Min lAieh loaves anrl 50 loave3 of vyib,
graham and other varieties of bread
More hnn t,006,0p0 meals were served
during the year.
i ADVENTURES 0? THE TWINS
i
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
i -
MP.KIi: EELS BESITER.
Mnrkle Muskrat had a clos squeak
whi n he choired on his t hew ii.g-gum
in school, but he coughed pretty hard
land got over it all right ' But he
couldn't tell Just what became of the
precious $;ufl hi had paid a penny for,
whether it had gone all Eno wuy do in
Into his lummy, or whether it had
jumped right out of his mouth lie
looked all around everywhere, but he
) glad the old gum wai gone after all.
it having been only a worry almost
every minute since he'd bought it.
After they'd all riUTrcned around two
or three limes, up one aisle and down
the other, thev stopped. Nancy went
to marking papers, Nick put down his
QlOUth-organ and 'went to hunt up tru
ants, and Mr Scribble Scratch, the
fairy schoolmaster, laid down his rub'r.
"Turn, sit, position?" he- command
ed, and ciiry pupil sat down where
slarklcs Sfuskral ;i felling much better now, but alas, it was not to
be fOl" long;
didn't see a sign of it. It worried
hini at first because, you see. if some I
one had stepped on u r.ud got all stuck
up they'd be sure to t;ll the teacher
and then he'd a'. whose it was, and
how be got it and the school board.
Mr. Owl, Judge1 Crow. L'r. Mink. Pro
fessor Hare and Mr. I'. P. Chuck
would think he was just awful It
wouldn't be any fun for the liltle boy
in Meadow Grove school, I can tell '
you.
Hut after while, when nothlne hap- ;
pened. Mnrkle brightened up - He was
he belonged and folded his paws.
"We shall now have speaking." said
Scribble Scratch looking very impor
tant. Secretly he was very proud of
his pupils and the way thej could re
cite poems. H' always left out num
ber problems when company was
there, for Sain Snake's boy got his
answers wrong, having no fingers nor
toes to count on.
Murkle Muskrat was feeling much
better now. quite happy. Indeed, but
alas, it was not to bo for long'
(Copyright, 1020. X. E. )
I Sister Mary's Kitchen
To wash the tie lung on feather pil
lows without filliiiK the entire house
with fluff Is no trick at all If one
knows how- Mal e u bag of old muslin
irK- enpUgh to hold the feathers from
one pair ol plljows. Shake and work
ihe feathers away from one corner
of the pillow. Rip the ticking about
four liiehes In this corner quite fr e
from feathers. Sew the muslin bag
nil up e.cept for four inches at one
corner. The pillow and bag are then
sewed together at these four-inch op
enings and the fathers shaken from
the pillow into the bag
MIM 1 1 K TOMORROW.
Hrea kfast - Fresh fruit, broiled ba
con, diced potatoes warm" d In cream
sauce, corn muffins, coffee.
Luncheon Succotash, pear salad,
hot rolls, tea
Dlnhei Chicken and pork chop pie,
mashed potatoes, creamed onions, to
nriato solad1 apple nie. coffee.
MY OWN RECEIPES
Pnlesa very young chickens jro used
In the Chicken pit, they must be par
boiled first. When cooking chicken In
a pie, the gash cut in the crust must
be l. 1 k artd w-ide enough that then
will be no chance of Its closing In the
bakiiig A gus la formed which must
escape.
SUCCOTASH.
I cars sweet corn
2 pint lima beans
4 cup cream
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon salt
j 1 teaspoon pepper.
Cut corn from cob Cook beans In
water to cover for ten nlnntes. ,dd
corn and cook until Vegetables are
tender. Add cream, butler, salt and
pepper. Cook long enough to melt
butter and thoroughly heat cream.
The corn and beans should "be cooked
in n llttlf water as possible to pre
vent binning, ami constant watching
la necessary, as corn cut from the cob
sticks very, very quickly
IM K SAIiAD.
2 large pears
1 oajuige
:i4 CUP sugar
c up Water
m cup black walnut meats
b. cup seeded grups
Rolled drcssim;
cup whipped crpa.ni.
Pare pears and cut in halves, Re
move core. Make a syrup of the sugar
f
-
and water. Add pears and orange
cut in thin slices. 'ook until the pears
an- transparent. Remove from syrup
and cook. Cook syrup until it reaches
Ihe Jelly Btage, Pill tb cavity of the
peats with this jelly and slices of or
ange Arrange on hearts of lettuce,
pour ovci boib-d dressing and top with
a spoonful of stiffly beaten unsweet
ened cream.
Women will go to great lengths to
save a penhj and too often to equally
great lengths tO spend a dollar.
p
Rippling'
I Rhymes
j Uy W ALT MASON
111 1 it vn i.i i s i 1
We were camped beside a lake, by
a eucalyptus tree, someone hollered,
'There's .1 BUake! ft's a rattler! Huii
chee!" Thin we dropped our diver
chores in tho twinkling of an ear; sane
ihd useful tasks are boles when a rat
tlesnake Is near. And we formed a
ring around, round the human race's
foe, and our fingers clawed the ground
for some boulders we might throw
Vnd we threw, with bated breath at
five feet of writhing ain" battle, murd-
r, sudden death, dune up in a mottled
skin' Rocks were flying, thick and
fast some thrown crooked, others
straight, and the serpent to the last,
dared us with a deathless hate. He is
lshmael. u,js -Mike, with his rattles
"ii behtml. Which when playing tunes,
Can wake terrors In the bravest mind
Harried t(J the barren la mis. driven
from the fO-ld and farm, even snakes
of other brands view the rattler with
alarm. He has not a friend at court,
where snake advocates appear, but he
is a dead game .-qort, and a stranger
to all fear. And I feltra sense of shami
when w.-d killed thai mottled thing.
ue had played a tinhorn game throw
ing bulders o a ring. And ti.e recollec
tion makes luke-warm pains niide
dotyi m heck, even wJep wejre kill
ing Kiia,e- sportsmanship would be
on deck?
HEALTH
BY UNCLE SAM, M. D.
lealth Questions Will Be An
wared if Sent to Information
Bureau, U S. Public HeaJth Serv
ice, Washington, O. C.
IHE SCHIO K TEST.
A fw years ago a very simple test j
w-as discovered to tell whether a per
son could or could not CPtCh dlph
(therla. This Is known as the Schick j
'test. It consists In injecting a few;
drops of a prepared diphtheria toxin 1
Into the skip, and then watching I
whether a characteristic red spot ap- I
pear-, where the injection was made.
If such a spot does not appear with
I in two or three days it shows that the
person 'cannot catch diphtheria.
For those in whom the character-1
j latlc redness appears, and who are j
therefore known to b liable to catch j
diphtheria, doctors now advise a
course of protective injections slml
J)ai tr those which have proven so suc
Ce'SSful against typhoid fever. This
protcrtH treatment consists of three
Miiall Injections, a week apart. There
lit) no sore, as there is in smallpox
vaccination, and the injections are
, harmless. The protection lasts for
years, and perhaps even for life
Why ont have the doctor make a
B :hiCk test on your child, and If this
shows the lack of protection against
diphtheria have him give the three
I protective injections?
SORE TRROAT.
Q. Plfasc tell me what makes my
head and nose stay raw and sore all
the time, and what to do for It? What
causes coated tongue and parched lip.-;
and bad taste in mouth of mornings,
and what to do for them"
A This question Illustrates a diffi
culty which I have so frequently dls
cussed in this column. The writer Is
1 under the Impression that merely by
I describing a few symptoms it wlil be
possible to determine (he nature of his
ailment It is as Jf an automobile drlt -cr
should write to a service station
and say ' What makes my car refuse to
take even modernt blip- on high'"'
This patient should consult a good
physician and submit to a thorough
examination
on
ARGENTINA MAY BRING
AUSTRIAN IMMIGRANTS
BTJENOS AIRES, Oct. 11. Immi
I gration of Austrian workers to Argen
; tina. is being promoted by Dr. M.
I Puchs, former consul general of Aus
' I ria -II ungary here, who has been sent
back to this country by the minister
of the interior of the Austrian Re
public to establish credits to be used
in aiding workmen to emigrate and in
building up Austrian Industrie;.
Dr. Kuchs said that the decline In
the exchange value of Austrian mone
makes It almost Impossible for work
men to pay their own passages In order
to emigrate. At the same time, he
Bays, ihe condition of the republic is
such that it is imperative to reduce
the population of the country.
00
Sweden has civil service retirement
legislation which provides means for
old employes after they have retired .1
Children Cry for Fletcher's ' I
The Kind You ITave Always Bought has borne tho si-n-i-ture.
of Clias. ii. Fletcher, and has been made under his I
personal supervision for over 3U years. Allow no one I
to deceive ou In this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
Just-ns-oi)l" are but experiments, and endanger tho
health of Children Experience against Experiment. f
r What isCASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- ii
Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither I
Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. For 1
more than thirty years it bus been in constant use for tho
relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and
Diarrhoea; allaying Feverlshness arising therefrom, jj
and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the as
similation of Food ; giving healtbv and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend, j
The KineS Vou Have Always Bought I
In Use For Over 30 Years j
the : c.tHTwiieoapurr, hew von cm,
EaBHHBBSKBBflBLBBBBBBBB
I DR. VANCE'S DAILY ARTICLE I
Slovly and with great effort he,
dragged himself across the street to
wtre I iis waiting for a car. He nras
the nrost misshapen piece of humanity
I hail ever seen.
lie was G'J years old, ho said, and
looked the part. His deformities dat-
ed .from his hirth. His mother had
I been scared by a bull and the pre
natal penalty had landed on the body
of her unoffending offspring and
'smashed It beyond repah , and for 60
years and more he had dragged the
thing along the earth, watching the
straight and virile and lithe forms of
his fellows function with ease and
grace.
I helped him aboard the car to
and seat, and then It was that he
flung his Ueslion in my faci
"Preacher; why Is it that more people
do not get victory
Victory'.' The question all but took
away my breath. Who was he to
tall; of victory? From the hour of his
; birth his life had been one long, crush
ing, deadening defeat If he had spok
en of pain, of anguish, of disappoint
ment, of bitter resentment, of foiled
ambition, of despair I COUM hav un
derstood him; but the thin lips, pallid
with pain, wore speaking of victory.
Hr. had victory. He had won a
bigger Victory than was ever won by
arms on the field of battle. He was I
not speaking of victory In war, or vie- f
tory in business, or victory in conflicts
where he was matched against hla
fellow men
He was speaking of victory-, of con
quering in a conflict where "the daunt
less soul of a man matches Itself
against fear and hate and unrest and
all the foes that would destroy it I
saw the poor wretch straighten up and j
fling off bis handicap, for I saw that
i he was not his body
Victory Is on the inside It is a splr
ltual glory It Is not merely what you
win over things. It is what you win
oo
WO ST1 MING 0 F.R COLUMBUS j
COLUMBUS. O. If Uncle Sam
I Wants to carry mail through Columbug
air he's gotta behave himself. The
least bit of sportive conduct on the
1 part of the postofficc mall planes
while above Columbus "will result in
the pinching of the pilots. If the cli H
dads have their way. They're draft
'lng an ordinance to forbid -all stunt
j flying over the city.
i -. Ud
I About 4,000,000 children of tb
t inted States belong to the Modern
I Health Crusade, a competitive svstem
of every dav hygiene.
J'L gn II J-JII I -?JT.n.ln TT-mr ... m.i.j . , .... i . . . , ,. . , n . . . . m-m r I .. - . .
I The Homsewifes Burden I
TJ . When a woman is almost distracted from overwork, her home rH I
yj ia in disorder, cn'ing children, and on top of all is suffering from L I
Q backache, bearing down pains, or some other form of feminine ills, Kl
then she should remember that hundreds of women in just her con-
dition have been restored to health and regained their youthful Mn
fit strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and QJ
not vet until she has given it a fair trial. feM
Proof that it Restored the Health or These Two Women RI
M Coirp, IlL " Some time ago I got so Chattanooga, Term. u I used Lydia f-j'M j
I 4 AviLli fomale trotibli thai thought E. Pinkham?s Vegetable Compound Dufl
IjJ I voultl have to bo operated on, had before mj baby came when I. could i KctM
-) a a bad dispiacemcnt. My right side longer keep up. It sti-ongthened my gJ jf
jy vrould pain me and I 'was so nervous I back and relieviai uu of th..- i;l ctu-ct CJ2
' could, not hold a i of water. Many which so of ten develops at such times. TJfm
V. V times I would have, to stop my work That was myilrst exporience with;the Pnj j
yiA and sil down or I would fall' on tho V Compound. Years after- kHJl
floor in a faint, I consulted several wards I took it during the Change of ky
!,.': "' doctors did every one tpld me tho same Life ami got along so well I scarcely M
Rff but I kept fighting to keep from having ever had t tjo down during the lay WSI
v-' the operation. 1 had read so many and 1 sldora had dizzy, faint spells. Kli
kyl time d! LydiaE Pinkham's Vegetable lam now well and strong, can do all kyQ
lL Compound and it helped my Mst.-i so my housework wMth perfect oaseandit A
SnT1 1 began taking ii. 1 have n-wr tVH i a .unf.-ri tome to be able to say to Vtfm 11
-'c " . better than I have since then and other suffering women take Lydia E. k rj ;
I keep house and am able to do all my Rnkham's medicino and be strong.' WJA
. H work The Vegetable Compouud is I will be glad to have you use my name RfJ
GrJ certainly one grand medicine.' Mrs. J. Lfitwillbe the means of helping any Ka j
R. M ATTiiEws, 331.1 Sycamore Street, one ' Mrs. l Fajrbubn? 600 rM
Cain., 111. Orchard Ivnob AveChattanooga,Tenn, cJ I
:': Ailing, Overworked Housewives Should Rely Upon K
I
&X LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS SUn