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NEW RRITAW .DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1930. ; : 'Once Overs Love’s Reawakening i The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON With Mary and Nocel Safe for the | Phil Night, Madge Discusses the Verit- suite zen Letter With Dicky and Lillian Registared U. 8. Patent Office By C. D. Batchelor This. Modem “Milk Maid” Heads Sales - Of Da_ir_y __C_Qmpany In Three Cities New York, July 25.—A vibrantly healthy, pleasant faggd, capable looking woman rose -at a luncheon | of the National Federation of Busi- ness and Professional Women the other day, where everyone in turn was introduci herself and describ- ing her business, and said “I am Grace Roberts, Omaha milkman:" Everybody tention was caught. Amused glances turned her way “I am not a milk maid,” Miss Roberts continued, in her clear, ringing voice that carried all over the huge dining room “Not that 1 couldn’'t milk a cow if T had to. But I don't. I have charge of the [ pable woman who had built her life into her business. She already managed the office and more or less | directed the salesmen. Why not give her direct charge? They de- cided to experiment in having a woman boss for their men. They discovered it worked perfectly. | “I think a_woman has the advan- tage, if anything, over a man in an executive position,” Miss Roberts l:!a*fld the opinion that has grown {out of 10 years experience. *Wor-« en often can get along easily, with less friction, with a group of men |than a man boss can. That is if | she just takes her job for granted land dopsn't waste time and energy | worrying. salesman for our dairy which serves g M | rretiing in Miss Roberts’ opinion, Omaha, Sfoux City and Lincoln e e {iing i amen it i dan My particular concern is increasing | must guard against. She said: figures of sales of all of our products | | T woraariilint CAiE A5 thelr | ratber than the actual milk being [work for worrying because they {and increasing efficiency in service, | think the men in the firm don't like put into botties."” |them. Other women can’t do theirs That brief statement failed, how- for worrying for fear men will get ever, to even vaguely descri b % their jobs away from them. It success Miss Roberts % women would quit worrying the responsibility of her joh, Grace Rober looked aroudd |about this, that and the,other, and important position she occupies in | for more Work to do . . . and be- |do their jobs a little bit better than her home town and the surprise it came viee president of her com- anybody elee could do them, thera is to find a wo occupying it pany would be nothing left in the busi. Boss of 200 Salesmen ; ness world women couldn’t do.” For Grace Roberts is vice presi- important thing in the world Rose With Her Firm dent of the Roberts Dairy Co., and “It was, to me,” she insists today. { Her philesophy of a career is just sales manager for the dairies in the | “I actually think the reason I got |as interesting as her advice on | three mentioned citie: She hires|.yooy was the segousness and re. | Methods of work. She said: and fires the force of 200 salesmen, | “Any job is fun. You can make plans ther sales taiks. checks up on | SPORSibility with which I regarded | your job what you want to make it. them, and directs the entire sales my work. T think I really believed | T advise women fo just take _any pomcy—of the company. And the t things in that dajry could job they can get, stay put and work ; if I missed a day. So I j hard, concentrating on what they and owns it is no relation wh er missed one.” have at hand to do today, not what ever to the Roberts family of w More Work to Conquer they might do if they got this or Miss Grace is a part. Her success | Not only that, however. Miss |that tomorrow. I think if I had s due to her ability, not famliy ties! berts was s=o intrigued by her |moved around I wouldn't have got- Twenty years azo Grace Roberts, she began looking around |ten the position I have. I just then a litfls girl in her teens. need- for more work to do when she fin- | grew up in the concern and natur- ed a job bad Shé had had ished. Little by little she increased |ally it arricd me into a mors stenography so she scoured Omaha scope of her own responsibility. |important position as expanded. ntil she located a place that needed As the company enlarged. so did | I believe that any girl who wants n office girl-of-all-work. It was a her job, and incidentally so did her [to get ahcad can. First, she has dairy. She applied and got the job pay envelope. {to want to Second, she has to get and day in ami day out, week in| Ten years ago the company ex{a joh. Third, she has to work hard | and week out she was sure that her panded tremendously. The officers [at it. I think those three rules will ttle, unimport joh was the most of the company considered this ca- | make a success of anyone.” Roberts who founded the comp oviedse. 1o com: | For Restaurant Wear e Nobert Koch S S § o 5 parts of chopped ice coarse salt. It will requi ! % Look Sharp at F ourteen | e T I—m e e i s B eon Stre & i grapeju 1 cup orange juice up lemon juice, 5 cups iced wat | | AII ii IHI rakes, but so much gentler on the | lawn! Made of long. pliable prongs, attached to a handle, broom. thev gather a mod v for Edzed by the New York Dr. lago Galdston Academy of Medicine THE CONSUMPTION GERM Next to Louis Pasteur, the bright est name in the history of bacter ifaA N ology, that branch of modern sci- il ‘\ ence which deals with ger: and /) e \ germ life s that of Robert Koch— itV ot HORIZONTAL volce. 3 Gets up. 11 Organ of the discoverer of the tubercle bacil- iy <_/ 1 Lastin 39 Starting 4 Witticism. smell. 15, and promulgator of what in iz s bacteriology are known as Koch's 9 Wireless. bar. 3 Wooly 12 Unfriendly. | PAC(erioloE by e O T aral surface of 14 Sewing sy s ; g i 122-:,,?,:,”" i 5 cloth. implements. Togthelaborsan g : pUlsE S s 2 VERTICAL g Redacts. 16 Bird, ibis. Robert Koch we owe the nce. It also is extremely use 13 Wing. of the tubercle bacillus, the i a (Costume from Maybelle Mannin 15 To xgmnk. 1 Widespread 7 Not any. 20 Black bird. he tuber bacillu: h E and refusa, u rorm A ing.y 17 To harass. fright. 8 Eaperiment. 21 Female sheep, | '°ponsible for r use it s ‘fl}l‘m?m‘ e iar 0 Strong cord. 23 jargon. pidrs 3 ¢ 4 d be taken to 19 Surfeits. 26 Compound SRR e 22 Shelter. ether. s leisure-hour grace aid dignified beauty in a réstaurant cos- the ciegante made of red chiffon, polka-dotied in coin dots of : is made with the new drop shoulder line from which small 2 sl s H ¢ s i n® 1 little cufs of whiie 23 At the | = 27 Feeble- eor : 3 e P oreca = g e e } i : 2 Golinr of the Sanis : minded : s Rl e e crisp organdie z &, 28 Reckoned 5 S S 4 5 { 1 water at least, is to be ounted for hy Sh ) B L k flatter the feminine figure. It is topped hy a lacy ck hat that flares 27 Stuck in the U "‘I""""]"“" the difficulties in artificially culti- esa eauty, 1K€ off the 1ace. dropping in graceful manter in the rear cally. mud. = L 2ting the tubercle hacillus 29 Chum IAIS] n“m] :_;2;:;,5;.::‘5. This germ, which belongs He“ Mama ks a special class known as the acid st 31 Larlat, 32 Mathematical 7°(8 €A R c 3 Swarming e bacillis B g or 35 Whole. 2 nosy exactir conditlons, 84 To adore. that only very slowly 37 Makes S 3 . ! Hates 36 Sooner thAde | ywnereqs most 38 Singing fim Frow was 18 Dry 2 Paradise. gtd te presenc frock has fitted lines ¥nd-a flar 1 alj-around skirt that BN R E 5 other germs 37 Wing. show a marked grosth in from to 24 hours, tuberculosis germs re- e quire weeks for appreciable growth and multiplication The isolation and ide Ation of the germ of tuberculosis marks one of the epochs in the history of e medicine. Previous to the discov- v gl d New Britain Herald 15c. Practical ery of the tubercle bacillus, we gwere ] s At MARE THIS MODEL AT HOME Dainty Warin Weather Frock Pattern 1987 ¥Frozen ¥ as much in the dark about the Watermelon Iced Tea | White Plague as we are today about Gt the cause of cer. With the Ohilleat Bl Tever knowledge of the germ responsible Cinnamon Drops for tuberculosis, however, we have by ANNE ADAMS il / "his charming model has unusual e i = . square details of neck and skirt flare . Date Coffee Cake i T ! ) that make it deligntrully individual e for breakfastlunch N : ’ fA And, too, it is very simple to cut an ble for :ur‘:;:n or FLAPPEE{ FAZ}'Z\"Y SAYS: : . put together. The soft cape collar % removes the necessity for sleeves, although there are sleeves with the pattern if you care to use them ’attern 1987 is cool and summery oned of volle, georgette, fhlfl,c\fl. te or silk crepe. Small designs such as dots, coins them thorough immediately There were long contests of wills! her and her child but al- e who was forced ; made mountains| 2 cups flour, 1-3 cup sugar, 3 tea- ceeded only ons baking powder very tendencies ' salt. 4 tablespoons fat, 1 egz, 1 cup minate milk Mix flour. sugar. baking t. Cut in fat with k nd milk. Pour to thi child would ather has, made hpout the rest of the child 2 hurry to get b thing had happened to them Home to the Yaken. How dwinkle as looked strange things! Bowser the to make h 7 such a way that will become so. Tt true that our dis- ding certain faults in ally those which our *own per- HIS FATHER'S FAULTS of a three being aware of it we develop the very faults we fear RG his sonal disappoin makes us 80 | By Alice Judson Peale unwise and unsk 1 taat without to grezsed pan mixture Date Mixture -3 cup chopped dates, 1-3 cup dark brown sugar, 1 teaspoon cinna- | mon. 3 tablespoons soft butter. | Mix ingredients and press into the soft dough Bake 20 minutes 1n| | moderate oven: <Cut in bars and| serve warm with butter. . 1 Frozen Fruit salad | 1 cup mayonnaise, 1-2 cup whip- ana rings vie with flowers for popu- larity among the warm weather prints. Pastel grounds printed in vivid colors are smart just now. May be obtained only in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40. Size 14 requires 3 5-8 yards of 39 inch material No dressmaking experience is nee cessary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple, exact instructions are §° a10 _Elp the Fox : g S | G cre: 1 tablespoon a late = g B Wrow was afraid,of them - 1 cope with these nus Satatn; et SR g L g | Send FIFTEEN CENTS (150) ‘n but he was \art hem | fo1 fk r since he was a f:‘;{ (hc‘uah;‘?”f’h",'? """’r e - ; coins carefuly wrapped, or tamps :k«rzwq a‘: ; i e oy didios i that : o Piia ,v,”’ /[ canned pineapple, 1 cup diced pears 2 t beautiful curves for cach yuv‘«rn\.A:Ia:. sure to write '31»:{;:9 talks Yong to find .out tI r either throush talking to peo- Cfb?e Day 1 tablespoon lemon juice ] s v:' be § annglzn{ax::;:;.-’;::,. 3 tlamivon B NAME ‘ “n'«‘d'fi Mvr" fr: i e u:’n’”nff\’ d :;1r,c§k=“ n& 7 5 ;:oian‘\(n::,lar;]x:soj:f o(\o": h’v\o.‘A :xra“:rr ;'hd'v youthful Ann DeBrow has in (0212 BOOK of Y’A‘T'T'l RNS lir » I-:,'x;‘.:: ‘1; "n: “Bov ook Jim | the subject ok ' BY MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE | Cool and add to rest of ingredients | A [herited the eame entrancing loveli- :jx:‘l}\:\"::“v?n:hl.]sdr;-{"[l"?k‘)‘;fi".\l‘nf’;é‘:;i Crow into the house to show to| She went on to tell that from the | MENUS FOR A®JULY SUNDAY | which have Been mixed together. | y\r-ss‘(ha' made h:“r m;::’hm;‘ Jr‘;slr:‘ Loy e Mother Brown. “For godness' sake!"” ent she looked upon her baby's Breakfast | Pour into tray in refrigerator and | | Reed. a famous Fo h\es :;1" ¥ ahew1 Dok WULpK femy e maa 2 exclaimed Mother Brown ‘What un- face she knew he would be Cantaloupe | freeze 4 hours. vears ago. Ann, who is shown erel e tt Cook | ; . i A d for | at Port Aransas, Tex., hopes to at- ald Pattern Department, 243 West der the sun are you going to do with |like his father, a man in whom ghe | Soft Cooked Eggs . Broiled Bacon | 1If preferred the salad may be| Women live in the present an l Wl sl L, e et e, | that Crow 2" Pmd been bitterly disappointed. | Date Coftee Cake Coffee }frozen by packing in mold and bgry- lll. 2