The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 1, Ed. 1 Monday, October 3, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
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Happiness
WORKING CHILD NEEDS
abnormal
SPECIAL PROTECTION
the
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the Children’s Bureau had to
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Delicious Desserts
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Things About Furniture
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Worth Advertising
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cups. Add the juice of 1 lemon,
of the dust.
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Of Dancing
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I slip closed to the
Opens On or About Oct. 5th.
SICAL
CING
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BUSY YEAR FOR
WOMEN'S CLUBS
1 r
West thru 1
Children’s
Mrs. Max West, formerly of-
the Children's Bureau of the
1
5
' do — reaching
real, sound.
Children's Welfare Bureau, of
which Miss Julia Lathrop was
the heal, in 1912. Her work
wase devoted to putting into
simple language for the, moth-
Mrs. John Jacob Rogers, wife of the Massachusetts congressman,
is now cfficial hostess of the House of Representatives. She succeeds
Mrs. Stephen G. Porter who recently died. Mrs. Rogers was a Red
Cross Nurse at Walter Reed Hospital during the war.
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a- sieve.
c.
Own Your Own Furniture
Our Credit Terms Make it Easy
Fakes and Company
Fifth and Houston
Federation Prepares for
State Convention •
with stamped, self lilrtou
envelope laclosod for reply.
In answering questlons she
will not attempt to give medt-
eal advice or advice on feeding
children in difficult cases. She
will make no attempt to deal
B Kosloff.
Mi Oat 10th.
Seventh Anniversary Sale
AT
Sanders Honey & Syrup Market
IN OUR NEW HOME AT 1S07 HOUSTON ST.
»I
■
Harry Brown was formerly a dancing star with
the famous Lew Dockstader’s Minstrels.
*
A "
a
%
*
day common sense advice on
child Into a wage-earning occupa-
tion and that eversthing possible
should be done to Insure that he
will not lose from the experience.
Y 9
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4
I
1. It gives more continuous comfort than any other
investment.
2. Friends who see good furniture in your home are
impressed with your good taste.
3. Beautiful furniture is a helpful influence for re-
finement in the lives of children.
I Appointments from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.
dio 705% Commrce St. Phone Lamar 4555. J
*
BY MRS. MAX WEST
May I call the attention of those
parents whose children are think-
ing of going into employment thia
fall to some recent recommenda-
tions on the subject of the working
child?
A pamphlet. lately Issued by the
U. S. Children’s Bureau, calls at-
tention to the fact that "The child
who goes to work between the ages
of 14 and 19 years of age is in
need of special protection if he is
to arrive at maturity with good
health and a vigorous and well-
developed body.”
Child labor laws attempt to pro-
tect the child from the worst harm
by forbidding his employment in
certain Industries and occupations,
also by specifying the age at which
a child may legally be employed,
but even these, good as they are,
do not cover the whole matter.
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BSai N 1
. J
CLEAN CARPETS
Damp newspapers are a won-
derful help In cleaning carpets.
They should be torn Into small
pieces, moistened with water and
then scattered over the carpet.
After the sweeping has been fin-
ished it will be found that the
s'
Leaders in Eastern
Star Coming Here
ns the rouged and ruffled
jsticated husband hunt-
B I know; nevertheless. I
m," writes IMMURED
1 am tied to an invalid
I see only the ice-man.
ra boy, the post-man, the
nd old men, my father s
w
■ ‘ < J
J
me
. Hundreds of Eastern Star lead-
ers will attend the annual state
convention in Fort Worth Octo-
ber 25 to 27. according to Mrs
E J. Hosley, grand matron of the
state.
The delegates will represent a
membership of 42,000 In BOO
chapters. Fort Worth’s four chap-
ters. Tarrant. Keystone. Poly-
technic and South Side. will have
charge of the entertainment pro-
gram under Mrs. Lona Skinner.
The new South Side chepter.
which was organised a month ago
with 25 members, has increased
to about 100 members. Its chap-
ter will be presented at the annu-
al convention.
Have Your Suits Tailored
NOW BY
ORUCH BROTHERS
THR. UE-GODATE LADIES’ ft GESTSTHoHSla
EXPERT FURRIERS "
We Do All Kinds of Alterations
a direct persosal am
mail, to any resondl
tien that may be mails
4
8
Hr. ’ as outlined by scientists
whone businees is to trace the re-
Back and Wing and all its brancnes positively taught
Each pupil will have Mr. Brown’s personal supervision.
. 818 % MAIN ST.
. Phone Lamar 289
•eesccssesoscccececececeoceccecesecceceeececeeeccecescocccopoo
ignored- as well as from over-
aiged or imagined affection.
BIBLE FILM BANNED.
MANCHRSTER, Eng.. Oct. 3.—
The Manchester Watch Commit-
tee. official movie censors, have
refused to sanction the public ej>
9
I
TRAVELING HINT
If there are bottles to go in
your bag or trunk and you fear
the corks will come out. heat your
sealing wax in a flame and run
the melted part around the cork
where It meets the glass. Thus It 10
will be held in tightly and only S
a smart twist is necessary to re-
move it when you arrive at your
destination.
e-
.221..
has the knack of ‘writing help-
fully and interestingly—as one
mother to another. •
This is the good friend who
will prepare arteles on child
welfare for The Fort Worth
Press. In addition, she will give
"g
khtamia.
I and thru personal letters. From these many
r heart throbs, Winona Wileox has gieaned the
subjects for a remarkable series of “Letters
"to Lovers." This series wi be printed in The
I Fort Worth. Press. The first letter appears be-
I low. If you are in love, if you ever were in
I love, if you ever hope to be in love. these
."Letters.to Lovers” will interest you. They
present and discuss human problems in a hu-
.4 2288
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S 'W?
.—.Mu
• -ai .wlae-e -4-- -h- a--
A full season of activities for
any ques-
ESl• ge
" 5>
IZABETH KING
■ --d
(Two Doors From Monnig’s)
. We wish to thank everyone for the ir continu-
ous patronage these past seven yars. . We have
specialized in only the pure, natural farm prod-
ucts, Pure Honey, Pure Country Serghum Mo-
lasses and Pure East Texas Ribbon, Cane Syrup.
We claim the distinction of beingathe only Fort
Worth store to buy Honey or Syrup by the car
load.
AT ALMOST PRE-WAR PRICES WE OFFER:
1%-Ib pint jars Honey. . .30c nd 35c
. Quart jars Honey.......... ind70c
-gal. jars Honey.......J J.. .11.25
5-I buckets Honey........ a d $1.25
10-Ib buckets Honey. .$1.95 ind $2.20
PURE COUNTRY SORGHUM
50-Ib cans Honey.......... and $9.00
5-Ib buckets at........./ ... .60c
10-Ib buckets at...... J . > nd $1.10
NEW RIBBON CANE syRUP
NOT IN YET y
We also have in connection with us bow an
up to date BAKE SHOP; GROCERY AND MEAT
MARKET, FRUIT AND VIGEI , ¥
DEPOT, DAIRY LUNCH COUNTER, andwil sopn
have a CANDY KITCHEN.
Everything good to eat and at moderate prices.
Shop with us “Where you don’t get stung.”
child welfare problems.
She was appointed
era of America the kind of
You’d
even if generally enforced.
To quote further: "During these
years he (the child) is passing
to the thru the most critical period of
his physical development, when
his body must’meet the unusual
demands of rapid growth and phy-
siological readjustment. If at the
same time, he is subjected to the
mental strain of occupational life,
the burden upon his immature
mothers with
gly unconventional but
modern runs another let-
able women
States with
training and
to undertake
medium of the
eau, and ob-'
BY SISTER MARY
Learn to use dried fruits as well
as canned ones. If during the can-
ning season it was impossible for
you to can, there are all kinds
of dried fruits on the market that
will make quite as delicious des-
serts as the rather expensive fac-
tory canned fruits.
Dried fruits lose none of their
sweetness and minerals during
the preserving process and retain
their natural richness and flavor
to a greater extent than canned
fruits do.
APRICOT BOUCHEES
One-half cup dried apricots,
flaky pie crust, sugar, 1-2 cup
whipping cream.
Wash fruit thoroly thru five
waters. Cover with lukewarm wa-
ter and let stand over night.
►
fourths as much sugar as there
is fruit puree. Cook until the sir-
up jellies when a little is tried
on ai saucer. Pour this into indi-
vidual baked shells. Top each with
a spoonful of slightly sweetened
whipped cream.
APRICOT PUDDING
One-half- cup dried apricots,
1 1-2 cups stale bread crumbs, 1-2
cup sugar, 1 1-2 cups milk, 2 eggs,
juice 1 lemon.
Wash fruit and let stand in wa-
ter to cover over night. Stew in
the same water for two hours.
Let the water cook away as much
as possible without burning the
fruit. Rub the fruif thru a fine
sieve. Add sugar, lemon juice and
yolks of the eggs well beaten.
Mix well. Scald the milk and pour
over the bread crumbs. Let stand
half an hour. Combine the two
mixtures and pour into a buttered
baking dish. Bake in a moderate
oven until set. Then cover with
the whites of the eggs beaten till
stiff and dry with 4 tablespoons
of sugar. Put in the oven to brown
the top. Serve warm or cold.
APRICOT SOUFFLE
Three-quarters cup apricots,
,1-3 cup flour, 4 tablespoons but-
ter. 1-2 cup sugar, milk and apri-
cot juice to make 1 cup, 3 eggs.
Wash and soak apricots. Cook
two hours and drain from juice.
Rub thru a fine sieve. Measure
the juice and use as much more
milk as. is necessary to make 1
cup liquid. Melt butter, stir in
flour and when perfectly smooth
add the fruit juice slowly. stir-
ring constantly. Add milk and
cook until the mixture is very
stiff and leaves the sides of the
pan. Let this cool while beating
the yolks ot the eggs till thick
and lemon-colored. 'Then beat in
yolks, sugar ano apricot pulp.
Fold in the whites of the eggs
beaten stiff and dry. Pour into
a buttered baking dish and bake
in. a moderate oven for twenty-
five minutes. Serve at once wlt>
stewed apricot sauce.
APRICOT SAUCE
daughter, remain at her side,
where the guests may speak
to you, also. The father , of
the bride, however, may min-
gle with the guests, giving
them friendly attention.
You will never congratu-
late a bride. Wish her well
and congratulate the bride-
groom.
You will, as hostess for
your daughter’s wedding
breakfast or dinner, enter
the dining room last, with
the bridegroom’s father or
nearest relative present.
Your husband will lead into
the dining room, escorting
the bridegroom’s nearest
feminine relative.
THREE SPIES ESCAPE
PARIS.—Police all over France
are searching for Paul Courtier,
German spy serving ten years at
Lille Prison, who eeeaped with
two other spies. Duplicate keys
and a rope ladder were used.
3-4 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon corn-
starch. There should be some juice
with the apricots, but if. there
isn’t, add enough water to make
2 cups of apricot puree. Mix the
cornstarch well with the sugar
and stir this into the fruit. Stir
and cook until the sauce thick-
ens.
(Copyright, 1921, N.E.A. Service)
with * the cases of
children. . y *
She WILL answer
stewed apricots thru a-----
There should be 1 1-2’ damp paper has eliminated much
Cook fruit in the same water for
tyo hours. Bubthru.abarsepa.
sieve. Measure and add three- ’ A
e
tion on the home care of‘nor-
mal, healthy children aad the
relationship of mether to child.
All questions should be mail-
ed to Mrs. Max West. In care
of The Fort Worth Press. It
a stamped, self-addressed en-
velope is Inclosed a reply will
be received within a short time.
Aa article by Mrs. West of
interest to all Fort Worth
mothers appears on this page.
hmahas
tained from her help on their
particular problems ’ of child •
care and welfare.
As a writer for The Fort
Worth Press and consultant for
its readers, she will tell other
mothers and prospective moth-
ers, out of her own experience
and her special training and
investigation, how best to
meet the problems of mother-
hood and childhood.
Mrs. West is no theorist on
children. Five babies of her own
she has nursed and tended and
brought up. She has seen the
older ones thru school and col-
lege.
Mrs. West is the usual com-
bination of mother, college
woman, and literary womgj.
She was one of the few av-
-resrA
F b".- 0> . -iT
,-c
------2
Solves 100,000 Love Problems
834 One hundred thousand is the estimate 2
2 Winona Wilcox makes ol the number of love 3
Sr problems she has solved. Sie has done 2
381 this thru the columns of the newspapers 2
! Ta
4. Good furniture will outlast anything else bought
for the home, requires no upkeep and gives great-
est pleasure to greatest number.
physique is a double one, and spe.
Kial precautions are necessary if
normal growth and development
are not to be endangered.
"These precautions consist of
I physical examinations before the
children go to work, to determine
their fitness to work at all, and for
the particular job in prospect, and
the repeating of this examination
at least once a year as long as they
remain at work.
The report gives the minimum
standards of weight and height
for children 14. 15 and 16 years,
of age, as follows:
Age Weight Height
14 years. . . .NO lbs....... Inches
15 years. . . .85 lbs.....58 Inches
16 years.. . .90 lbs.. .59 Inches
And further specifies the meth-
od of making a physical examina-
tion of a boy or girl seeking em-
; ployment. These directions and
; the information given are for the
> use of examining physicians, but
I may- serve to suggest to parents
; that it is no little thing to send a
/Tennessee there’s such a woman, singularly suc-
ingularly happy. Folks who know Miss Charl Wil-
ident of the National Educational Association, say
—Ethe very first of her climb from a small-town posi-
she has given due value to ordinary experiences. Per-
Hf,was just the tacking of bunting over a platform •
9 MV a school entertainment—but she liked it and found 1
| pleasure in it because it served well the purpose of the mo-
Ement With a certain womanly wisdom she sought the joy
eat handinstead of wishing for that jst out of her reach.
The-silver coffee service which you’d find on her table 1
cat dinner—were you there—is a concrete expression of ap-
Precistigm from a group with which she once worked. She
treasures in memory the wedding of a girl employe, who, I
with no near relatives, asked her to give her in marriage. A — _
( Am you missing much because you are looking too far? Dried Fruits Make
U. S. Department of Labor,
has been engaged aa special ad-
riser to readers of The Fort
Worth Press on child problems.
More than two and a half
million American mothers be-
came acquainted with Mrs.
hibition of the film. 'The Dawn of
the WorhL” The film deals with
incidents from the Bible.
!
-
In the United
the experience,
practical ability
the job which
.„,rhave explained why we
tore, why we can't help loving .
eten when common sense has to A
bo sagriticed. Why we suffer in 1 i
health, why we fail in business' Gen. Mason M. Patrick has suc-
from starved, thwarted, neglect- j ceeded Gen. Charles T. Menoher as
chief of the Army Air Service.
. . • d
—a--
____e
scientific information that
doctors and specialists can com-
pile. but don’t seem able to
write so that ordinary folk can
understand.
Mrs. West also has written
extensively for magazines on
the benefit of its members and
the city is planned by the Fort
Worth Federation of Women’s
Clubs. The 21 organizations rep-
resented have started the winter
with renewed interest, it was
shown in the first meeting last
week.
Arrangements are now ^oing
forward for the conventionohhthe
State Federation of Welkn’s
Clubs in Fort Worth Novber
14 to 18.
AT FIRST BAPTIST.
Sessions will be held in the
mornings at the First Baptist au-
ditorium. Sectional conferences
will be held in the early after-
noons. Social entertainments are
being planned by Mrs. W. H.
Moore. Headquarters will be in
the Texas hotel.
Mrs. D. C. Webb, Jr., president
of the local federation, is gener-
al chairman of the state conven-
tion. Mrs. Theodore Mack, vice
president, will represent Fort
Worth as a delegate.
Rural life work under the di-
rection of Mrs. R. H. Buck and
H. K. Taylor, the latter professor
of philosophy and social econom-
is at TWC, will be one of the
many problems taken up by the
Fort Worth federation this year.
THREE OBJECTIVES
"There are three permanent
objectives in this work,” said
Taylor. "They are the establish-
ment of a county library system
to be run in conjunction with the
Carnegie library, and the consol-
idation of schools.”
A lecture course which prom-
ises some of the best national tal-
ent in oratory, politics, poetry and
art is being arranged by the lect-
ure committee headed by Miss
Benita McElwee.
8;' A
5.
-ed
{ IF YOU ARE
{ WELL BRED
You will, during the wed-
ding reception for your
hBY RUTH AGNES ABELING
N ITS quest for happiness at least half of the
I I world is rushing with misguided haste after
hh I a will-o’-the-wisp which vanishes just at the
nBI I edge of realization.
99 I A crystal ball which shatters at the slight-
g fl I est touch, the half has called happiness, and
Ebsi. then wept over the splintered fragments.
TVki j A wanton feather-down, moved by the woo-
N I ing of any fitful breeze, it has called happi-
2k. ness, and then grieved when it was wafted
-e out of sight.
Ajmirage, a fantasy, born of some dream stuff, it has
Md happiness, and then mourned when its nothingness
is revealed.
Blind seeking. Resultant suffering. While all along
the very door of every seeker, the treasure has been un-
I "I want to love—I want to be
I loved—I want to Marry!"
I Thus walls one of the many
I thousands of girls who have made
I Oto their confidante.
I To head these letters to lovers,
I I quota this plaint because it
I voices the supreme and the uni-
Iversal ache of the woman-heart.
■ "I Want my babies. ' continues
I this naive confession,, “and I want
I my own home.
I "Lately I heard my little sis-
| tor's girl friend refer to me as
I "the old maid'! It hurt, horribly.
I "That night, I cried myself to
■ sleep because what the flapper
■ mUd was true! And I don't want
Hto be a spinster!
I . •I have dreamed, as all girls
Edo, and I am afraid to wake up.
B "Give me an anodyne and let
Mme dream again.
I “Or tell me to go forth and
■seek my mate—as my brother
[does!—V. H.
r Cut off from an opportunii;
I to meet a fitting mate, hundreds
ot attractive and capable girls
have thus deClantly confessed to
weeping over their normal need.
Aad’SO What's to be done?
Noting at all in the old way
idery, sacrifice of
consolation,
erhaps, in the new
2a
_ ag _r I A
Brown s School
abyss of starved spinsterhood in
middle life and a lonely old age.
Wouldn’t it be wise for me to go
forth and select a life compan-
ion?” «
“No!” The customary answer
remains the scientific answer.
In 1921 opinion, men and wom-
en have equal rights to love and
its expression. In fact, the cave-
man t instinct still rules all lov-
ers.
The eave-man pursued his bride
and captured her. Today, man ab-
hors the female of the pecies who
usurps his privilege of doing the
wooing.
okr womta
---—-------- ---Aa
_ Child Expert To Write For f
mrinemnd the subject of children. She
it iethe purpose of these let-
19 to condense this modern
Ougt 9* lovers.
WEASELS ATTACK GIRL, i
CARN RVONSHIRE, E n g..
Oct. 3-— ittle Lizzie Thomas. go- >
ing home from school, struck a
weasel, with a stone. The weasel
screamed gad six others attacked
her. A firmer drove them off.
A.
RofeMeeeVeeeveneAvdbeevdbee
of the other half—the half who see! They are the
ho are instantly liked! They are the people whom
; of the world thinks fortune has smiled on—when
if st the reward of their own willingness to value
b which come.
lationship between mind, body .
and soul. I
Lately men who dissect human
emotione have made some as
toundiig revelations about the ef-
teet upon our feelings and con-
duet ot •» instincts, primitive | l
actumulated traditions;
customs.
wAJ man, helpful, thoughtful way.,
Some Revelations About Love
r 1
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Siler, Leon M. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. 1, Ed. 1 Monday, October 3, 1921, newspaper, October 3, 1921; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1552231/m1/3/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.