00342 edtagantiniefinbrchert orthiedinin s paponnt coane m’l\onflly-.lmunnyflna-mmmmm dmmmmmuwwm-amu lovvnh’mnv-“m.ï¬mubflmm mmmmmmmmmurmm dMâ€"MM.uâ€"ï¬umum paid by their Whenever possible, jobs are filled from within the ranks of the organization, and that, Mrs. Statier feels, gives each employee incentive to look ahead and prepare for advancement. If a woman wants to proâ€" gress in the hotel business, Mrs. Statler believes that it is not so im« portant where she starts, because she says that conditions need not limit her advancement A girl who will begin with whatever job is open wmmmmwwmmmwu-mt of her work and of her own enlarging interests. _ p ‘This question of how to achieve success in the hotel business is one to Which Mrs. Statler has given considerable thought not only beâ€" cause of her own interesting and successful career, but because young MM.&MMMMMM&My tells them that if she herself were just starting out now she would try uwmumwammmw»â€" -m,umwm-a»nmw get a working wam'hhmnuu.nuwwm-hw siders invaluable. Bik ssm and wmmman ammlovees have a chance to see their idens -;&;â€"lhmnmhn.chmwmthdrm take form for the betterment of hotel service, Mrs. Stuiler says, wmmmuwmmuï¬mnmm- ... T ortbledinin, 4 qrdpcnnnt mmeppieen n ra P RETCT CCC In the housekeeping department, which does so much to uphold Mr. Statler‘s original ideal of making his hotels "a home away from home," women are solving the same problems which war has brought to every homeâ€"maker The hotel housekeeper meets the problems on a much larger scale, but to solve them she must have the basic qualities needed by a good housekeeper in her own home. ‘The food department also offers opportunities which, Mrs. Statâ€" ler comments, are of special interest to women The research kitchen in New York where recipes are tested before being sent to the hotels for their use is directed and staffed by women who are graduate dietâ€" Women are capably handling many different duties throughout the, eight hotels, Mrs. Statler reports. Hotel Pennsylvania, the Statier hotel in New York, has a woman personnel manager who was hired not because she was a woman, nor yet in spite of it, but simply because she was the individual qualified for the job. During these wartime years, women have been acting in some Statler botels as room clerks. For years even before the war, women have been employed as floor clerks in some of the larger hotels, where there may be as many as 125 rooms on a single floorâ€"really, Mrs. Statler points out, the equivalent of a small hotel in itself. By HELEN HENLEY in the Christian Science Monitor If you think that keeping house for the family poses some neat problems in the face of wartime shortages and restrictions, how would you feel to be responsible for 9,775 rooms that must always be ready for guests to drop into at a moment‘s notice? That large housekeeping task represents only one angle of the complicated business of hotel maintenance which Mrs. E. M. Statier, as Chairman of the Board of the riotels Statier Company, Inc., oversees with an efficiency born of experience and with an interest that reaches out to each department and each employee of the eight hotels inâ€"the Statier chain. Six of these are Statlcrâ€"owned, and two Statierâ€"operated. Sometimes, Mrs. Statler says, when she attends meetings of deâ€" partment heads and employees in their different hotels, she is delighted to find someone present who has been with the company even longer than she has. That speaks well for employee loyalty, for Mrs Statier herself has put in 27 years with the organization, and surpassing that record takes some doing! She served for 10 years as her husband‘s secretary, gaining in that capacity such intimate understanding of the business that when he passed on, she became Chairman of the Board and has continued in that responsible post for the past 17 years. Thursday, December 27, 1945 Women Proving Capable You wil TRQ $ERT 777 L mi, Auldtac Selants Mon :M YÂ¥ -lhr:::‘“. vicher . You new a " w'fl“...mr“ news. Write “c.hh‘muufluom ï¬mnï¬h:d:_d‘lï¬m.... ... lots of lusciousness! NO SUGAR Mainly For The Ovistion Scie One, Norway Street, Boston 15, Moss. povarne n n N i t 0 WA 4 o + + + +4 “..'m PM oramanatemcamse . CJ Pemennteiidy TÂ¥ cppee + . pverbermey ypprneiy MILADY STATE Lu “l.:r' h&:n to« (regas saie h M of four misture. 2K-='-l~-h 20 top. Magle _ M tap. aube _ }4 cup shortening MAGIC Peach Layer Cake L es a0 ##9# Teill® possant sc 1 cup white corn syrup 2 onds, unbeaten 14 cup mmilk 1 tp. vanilia 14 top, almond extract rimmingen Pn / Soften gelatine in cold water and add to hot cranberry juice and stir until dissolved; cool, When beginâ€" ning to thicken add other ingreâ€" dients. Pour into individual moulds and chill in electric refrigerator. Unmould in nests of crisp lettuce, garnish with parsley and serve with mayonnaise. e BANANA ROLLS 6 slices cooked tongue, 6 peeled bananas, cheese sauce. Spread each alice of tongue lightly with prepared cream musâ€" tard, (mild mustard to which a little cream is added). Wrap a alice around each banana. Place in a greased baking pan and pour the cheese sauce over it. Bake in an electric oven of 350 degs. for 30 mins. Baste with cheese sauce. of the holiday. FESTIVE CHICKEN SALAD 4 taps, gelatine, %, cup cold water, 2 cups hot cranberry julce, 2 cups diced, cooked chicken, !; cup diced tender celery, %; tsp. sait, 4& tsp. pepper, 1 thep. lemon cuqeunllnnpnl.ldcl.e- tric oven of 350 degs. for 10 mins. and place in a large greased bow!. Combine sugar syrup, water and salt in saucepan; cover and bring to m boil. Uncover and cook to a soft ball stage. Melt chocolate and butter; combine with syrup; add vanilia. Pour chocolate syrup over cereal and mix well. Drop by spoonfuls onto wax paper and cool. TAKE A TIP 1 Nothing can spoll Te TGal galety more completely than an accident in the home. Here are a few precautions: Do not handle electrical appi. ances with wet hands. Do not yank at cords or run them under rugs. Do not neglect purchasing extra lamp buibs of various sizes so they will be on hand if needed. e Best Wishes for the New Year, Homemakers! Most of us look forâ€" ward to 1946 with great hope, promise and a strong personal reâ€" wolve. We hope for a new year of peace and prosperity; we have promise of a more normal way of life, and are determined to make up for the war years and to reâ€" member those less fortunate than RECIPES We think the following recipes will be helpful over the remainder thaps. flour, % cup milk and 1% cups grated cheese. Melt fat, add flour and stir until smooth. Stir in milk slowly. CANDIED APPLES WITH COFFEE SAUCE 8 tart apples, aliced, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup water, 2 tsps. orange rind. Boil sugar, water and orange rind 2 mins. Cook sliced apple® with syrup in a covered dish until mymwcum liquid is necessary, add water.) Put in serving dishes and top with coffee sauce. Coffee Sauce: !, cup sugar, % tep. sait, 2 thaps. flour, 1 cup cold coffee, } tsp. vanilla and 1 beaten egg white. Mix sugar, sait and flour with the coffee. Stir over low heat until smooth. Cool to lukewarm, add vanilia and fold in beaten egg _ Do not place fancy in 1 lamp buibs. mmmmm outlets. Usually 1200 watts is as much as the ordinary circult will supply. p.-gmpdulalil-'l- out fuse. A blown fuse is a warnâ€" uummum An.uu--tdunvn-d the same strength is required. mnmunn_hu‘ mu“hâ€!"‘"‘ to use an extension cord. 5 cups puffed rice or puffed wheat, % cup sugar, 4 cup light corn syrup, !& cup water, 4 tsp. sait, 14 squares chocolate, 1‘% tbsps. butter, 1 tsp. vanilia. | _ paper, meats at moderate temperature (325 degs.) to prevent evaporation of gravy and tasty fat. Mr. N. C. says: Vinegar "moth» er" will not form if a half teaspoon sait is added to a newly opened bottie. Miss B. R. says. Wrap cheese in a cloth wrung out of vinegar and then wyap in wax paper. _ _ _ _ _ white. k 1110 Bd in Acodhnber d 4g0008 Many thanks for your heartfelt Christmas wishes, You have been most gracious, Happy New Year to you all n Anne Allan invites you to write to her clo The Grimsby Independâ€" ent. Send in your suggestions on homemaking problems and watch this column for replics. Ywmuflmmmhn nmuhmmp-oflmtw â€"*="Â¥esg, -ln::-hh:ih:â€p::- personnel Mwmflâ€m":cf"owmum man 45 Army â€"Ox", the tive customers out to dinner. lmvdllumcnflllw.mn":‘-nr‘l:p‘:mm r, woodwork or mirrors. THE SUGGESTION I_OK CHOCOLATE PUFFED CLUsSTERSs or cotton near highâ€"wattage rice or puffed the festive THE GRIMSBY INDEPENDENT fat, 2 j Canadian soldiers will never forget those scenes on the Norâ€" mandy beaches in early June, 1944, when thousands of fighting men and masses of equipment poured ashore to strengthen and enlarge the beachhead. Sequences of the film "The True Glory" pay tribute to the mamvmu-‘cmm-l.*‘h.iuu.. ____ It all goes weil, more than the sandman will visit these and thous« -tdo*:-d.t::mhdll&uh“du qixst A Song At Twilight"â€"Before The Sandman Calls 8 ore ... hC C221 i t n Anmiarae t or Operation "Muskâ€"Ox", the uu‘wmmmwwmumnomcmuurm. ross the top of Canada. Some| The map shows the route to be followed, starting at Churchill on will be in the party,| Hudson Bay, touching in at Victoria Island beyond the Arctic Circle, snowmobiles, and will‘ and ending in early spring at Edmonton, Alberta. Air supply will be work of those men who helped to make the initial attacks successful. The above photo shows convoy balloons floating over a Canadian secâ€" tion of the beach as still waterproofed Crusader and Sherman tanks move inland to boister the attacking infantry. Fund, will play santa Claus again this year to as many as possible of the phinch havmpaee aud hemelies bays and aisle of" England, Wakiee 25. For, through the of Canadians, Christmas Cheer tor Prank Chuirer Suxifery‘te The Evoning Telegram Britith War Vietims" THREE