NO DRUDGERY IN 1980
Home cooking will be as obsolete 50 years from now as home-cobbled shoes or home-knitted socks are to-day. Thq pies that mother used to make—which are one-quarter sentiment and threequarters hard work—will all be in the past tense, and woman's lot in general1 will lose much of its drudgery. So says August Heinrich, one of the leading caterers of San Francisco (according to a report published in the "Christian Science Monitor"). Compactness will be the keynote of the apartment of the future, with mechanical contrivances to do the housework. All furniture will.be "built in," and most articles will do double duty. Food will be delivered already prepared for eating, done up in artistic packages. Greater happiness,/he believes, will be the result.
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Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 5, 7 January 1930, Page 13
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125NO DRUDGERY IN 1980 Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 5, 7 January 1930, Page 13
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