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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 20, 1908)
THE ' OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY HORNING. DECEMBER 20, 1908 m 'A 1 1 It III N'S , V TT TT 77 M T7I f)? '."Sail V MS A H.I --it; ' 7i VU'.. V i ? :: r 7 . H'!isT to-' Experi- : : - 7 i. 1 .y. I XV. Ml 11 UlttTt?pZ( . ! ill ( v ,. r 'j .i Millie. .v'f v5 N I 1 w How Does ence Compare With This New Jersey Woman's Plan? i 6 ES" remarked Mm Grace W. Y Pitman, in an address before the - New Jersey Coniresi of Moth ers at Atlantic City, recently "I know of a very nice little woman who keeps Herself, her htithmA and ttvo rrowinr children well sup- plied with food for $6 a week, More than that, any woman with a keen business sense can do as well -provided, of course, she follows a carefully planned system" " Good-natured protest arose from all parts of the hall; inquiries were hurled at the speaker from every side. Miss pitman was ", don't mean, tf course, that the girl who never brewed a cup of tea or made her own bed before she was married could per form a seeming miracle like this, but many women can and do.'' f ft r ? i ""Wi without lceboio to buy day by day. OST bousewlvct." declared Mlsa Pitman. Hrho livef In Faeiatc, N. J., "don't know the value ot the penny. Tner don't know bow to ave the pennlee and nlckele and dime. ' Mil Pitman, who ha btied her eyetera of houee-. hold eeanomlca upon a thorough atudy sten4lnc over many year of living In varloue part Of the United States, deelafea ehe will tnake tuoh teaching her life work. Bhe will show fretting and extravagant wives ' the golden road to economy, she will shed the illumi nating knowledge of saving and dissipate, the ig norance which . darkens so many homes. Bhe will teach people how to live on any Income, great or small. ';".;--' "' ; ' ' ;- - . " i - How, then, shafi a Housewife provide her family tible .on a weekt a ( Miss-pitman has devised a system by whph all expenditures are regulated on a percentage basis. The average percentages for expenditures should be,, regulated, she .estimates, as follows: . Rent, 17 per ' cent.; heat, i per eent.; light. VA per cent; food, IS per cent; wages principally of the washwoman tt per cent; Incidentals, including doctor dentist and . medicine, J per cents other expenses, from soap to darning cotton, 1 her cent; personal expenditure. In eluding clothing, IS per cent; education, ztt per cent; ' religion. JO per cent, snd investment of surplus, 7H per t cent " : ff - ; : " . ; -- . , According to this system, a man earning 125 ft 'month would expend, .after ti had been deducted for his monthly carfare, 17 .per cent of his balance, or $20.74. for rent; $4.88 for heat; $1.81 for light.' $34 ll tor food; $10.87 for washing and domestlo assistance; -$M for incidentals; $18.$0 for personals; 8.6( tor operating expenses of the household; $ 18. 30 for re- ; Uglon; $3.05 for education, and have $9.18 remaining ' for investment V . ' .' o'.'.y. . ' -- No matter what th salary, these percentages : would apply. In various localities expenditures will vary: rent will ba higher in the city than in the . country, in which case if the pereentage for rent goes up the percentage for some other expenses roust be lowered. . - . ' "These averages," explains Miss Pitman, "are tioml- rsl, and are be sea on investigations into the eost ot. pend for their recreations on amusements that art free free lectures and so forth. "Howover, whon a family has worked out the eye tern and arrives at the proper percentage, its beads know just how much to spend for each need, to too penny. Expenditures will be reduced to an accurate and un failing system. I consider 11500 a pretty nice salary, and a family of four can live comfortably Upon It and save money." Aflss Pitman's system allows 80 per cent of one's salary for the physical life. Wives, mothers and daugh ters certainly -could hot dress in silks upon the amount allowed for clothing and pin mony But scores of women, she says. Can dresa well on $7.16 a, month; many men can do on less than this, while a reservation of $2 each for son and daughter will amply provide necessary clothing. Under this system, and on this Salary, there Is little money to spend for education. On tnagasino at 10 cents is not denied; 60 cents may be allowed for newspapers, and 83 for musical lessons for the child. - For food there is a calculated expenditure of 88 per cent, of the income, or $84.16 a month, By practice and experience this can be reduoed. Miss Pitman claims, to about $4 a week. The housewife planning to keep house systematically should begin, if possible; with an allow ance of $10 a week. The housewife. It is understood, is without money to buy supplies by the wholesale; in fact. Miss Pitman has found, it Is no less expensive for people living in apart- Such arti cle, as sugar and flour are purchased every other week, regularly. Five dollars la allowed for the larger table expense, including th cost ot vegetables, meats, etc Basing her experience upon the average appetite ot a family Of tour persons, Miss Pitman, for one week, sets down a proscribed list as follows: Coffee. 30 cents; butter. (0 cents; milk, $1.12; eggs, 80 cents; cereals, 10 cents; one a month, cocoa, 23 cents; teas, 10 cents; salt, 10 cents; pepper, 10 cents; cornstarch, 10 cents: mustard, $ cents; lard, 45 cents. Supplies bought one a month must be bought at different times tea the first week, lard th second, salt snd mustard the third and pepper and cornstarch the fourth. Every two weeks there will be bought flour at 85 cents and sugar At 49 cents. Each week there is. a surplus, which must be saved for expediencies, for fruit in preserving times and such extra occasions ss th Christmas and Thanks giving dinner. , "With this card system," explained Miss Pitman, "there is a regular time for buying all food supplies. In cluding the staples and supplies for the table each day. It is ao arranged that the staple are bought at Inter vals; it would be a mistake to buy all the sugar and flour at ones. Starting with no money, in three years the housewife will have accumulated a nice fund. "Of course, to run a household on these lines means that a housewife will have to get down and knuckle to It But that is the only thing that counts for success. Now, the housewife without a wholesale' fund will buy , ... , . r , m - ft . . MEAT53READt t J T. j v tt J - I VEOETABltSfrq s As 5 JITTER 5gQ. jfo L3o -flol""" : m miiz B. POWDER .33 3T cereal .io io lTTrtTo COCOA SALT .10 .10 PEPPER -IO C STARCH" .10 MUSTARD .08 " LARD 4S WCEKL SURPLUS" 8 5" 7S 15 11$ TOTAtTOBtSPCVr .WBtOWKltRS t j j "$ IO. 10. I Q. 0. ' to," her eggs, say two dozen, each week. In the winter eggs are dearer than in the summer, but when she has her fund she will buy eggs when they ara cheap and pre serve them for winter use. By this system the surplus each month takes care of the needs of the season for pre serving and canning and holiday dinners and guests. "As a matter of fact, most liounewlves go in debt at these times. Last year I made an inquiry among sixty-seven butchers and grocers to And how housewives stood after Thanksgiving and Christmas. They told m that most of them contracted bills at these times that required months to pay. "What sort of meals, you ask. would one have in th household regulated on this basis?' "Tou will have good nutritious meals," declares Miss s TKANGE, isn't it, to think of millions Of dollar that hare rio owners! , One is to ore inclined to think of tie great." army of men and women who have no dollars to speak of. ' Yet the fact remains that the felose of every year sees a great ampnnt of "orphan" and unclaim ed cash in this country as well as in ethers. Jut how much there is has never been estimated ae curately; so far as known, because it is a difficult almost impossible estimate to make. T living of twenty families In twenty different sections of the United States during a period of twenty years. "Conditions vary in airrerent localities, and 17 per rnt would be extreme! high rent for some sections. while it would be, quite low !n the big cities. The percentage for rent may have to be increased, for instance, to S0M per cent, so soma ether percentage must ha Invar. - - - Where there, is a regular income a family canf a craug the 'percentage basis In three . months, - but where th ' income fluctuates It "-will require nine months to strike the proper averages.. When the. Income goes below $1600, down .to $600 a year, the percentage tor expenditures for the Intellectual life . must b pretty wau Umiiad and people must de- , O GIVH an Illustration. When effort were be ing mad to straighten the affair of th sus pended Knickerbocker Trust Company in New York city alt astonishing condition of affairs was revealed. ' : :'' ' Notwithstanding th efforts of a force) of "sixty Or more agents, aided W tho postofllc authorities, soan 880 persons who had deposited money In th bank could not b locatad. ' ' Their depoeita aggrgat4 In amount $700,000. ' Whn opening deposit accounts depositors are re quested to glv their addressee. In looking up these 880 missing depositors th agents found vacant lota, I : stables, stoneyards and 'almost anything- xcept resi dences at a cumber t th addresses given. ' i in on instance a person to whom certifies! ot deposit, tor more than $10,000 had been issued as far back as 1884 had never been heard ot from th day he placed his money in the institution. ;-, Alter a-search of considerable length agenLi lo cated him in a quiet Connecticut community. He was very weaitny man and was living a retired life. . The agents declared that he had o much mon that he had actually forgotten the $20,0.06 deposit- wnicn is nara to oeiieve. Nevertheless, there is a very large ' amount of money, in the aggregate, lying in savings banks and other financial institutions throughout th counts which is ia reality without owner. . In some states . such accounts pass Into th posses sion of th stata after a certain number of years. In Pennsylvania, tor uamol. the law direct th dluuw sitlon of money of the dead or missing after their ac counts have been inactive for thirty year. This law was passed in 187f; it requires that offi cers, of savings funds make returns of such accounts to the state treasurer and turn over to that official the moneys which thus escheat to the state One ot the largest Institutions in the state since the passage of the law has turned over something like $35,000. Another, in one year, turned over $2400. In a number ot states there are no legislative regu lations Ilk in Pennsylvania, and financial Institution sre considerably enriched by th " money . ot missing depositors. One such institution in an eastern Stat is said to hav paid for a splendid new building largely jwltH money in its vaults .that bad no owners, or, at least Don that could b found. It is not to be Inferred that financial institutions, a 'a rule, hold and Use the money of miasm uetwiurs with dishonest intent Most of them make earnest en deavors to locate the owners of accouuts. tsoumimes -accounts get into the missing owners' list in singular ; way. .-. Some Um ago a prominent savings institution un- -earthed, after considerable search, a man who had $200 on deposit there and knew nothing of his good fortune.'' It seems the money had been placed there in his. name several years before by a relative, but the relative had neglected to inform him of the fact. a . A great deal of money in the aggregate escheats to various state treasuries each year from estates of ; people who dl without heirs. As a general thing the separate amounts are comparatively small, but now and then a fortune of considerable slse goes that way. . Only a little while ago the newapaper told of $16,000 that was lying in a Philadelphia . bank vault waiting to be claimed by a soldier of fortune, a man who had been rich in British South Africa, had lost hlaf estates In the Boer war and had drifted to ''ottS'-. countries since, at on time being a conductor on New tork-Coney Island trolley car. The money comes .from th BritiSn government to ropay jn k; losses on his estate, for several months earnest efforts, to And the man proved unavailing. Pitman. "Take the average breakfast for four you can have cereal, a boiled egg. toast or brsad and coffee. There will be two quarts of milk- a day, which will be ample. For diuner there will be soup, chopped steak, rice, carrots or som other vegetable, wafers, chees and coffee. . , "Now, living on $10 a wek the allowance for' th beginner you will not be able to afford the choice cuts of meat, but you can affdrd the most nutritious.. The housewife must make ber own soups; she will not be able to afford the canned soups, , Soups can be made from bones and meat in the stock pot In which sh,wlll keep an the odds and ends of her meats.' "Not very often wilt she afford a pot roast, rib roast top sirloin or rgund roast Poultry must b entirely cut out, except for special occasion. She can have pork once in a while, and, Ot course, sh can get good chopped beef and soup meats. .. - "Th housewife should select her own round Steak at the butcher's and hav it chopped; she should never buy the prepared chopped meat. Su will, of course, buy the vegetables that are in season; rice is cheap; carrots snd similar vegetables are low In price. She must watch to markets and uy the cheap vegetables. "By careful buying and an economical use of things a family can easily cut down expense for food to $ a week. As I saldj experience is necessary. Upon this basis there won't be much cream, nor desserts for that matter. For desserts th housewife can well get fruits and remember th fruits a they coma in season. Rica can be used often instead ot potatoes and bean instead Of meat. Many foods are cheap, but nutritious. Miss Pitman has also formulated a system for per sons living on allowance and for wag earners. Chil dren, maintained by their parents, she declares, should be given money to spend, and taught Its value. From 10 to 15' they should glv an account of their expenditures to their parents and bgin to make small Investments. The system for persons living on an al lowance, which includes children, provides 7$ per cent of their Income for the physical life, and 85 per cent for the intellectual, which includes religion, education and investments, " 1 1 , f ; 1 When the child begins to earn money it becomes k wage earner, and should expend it wages according to a regular schedule. About tS per cent, of children. Mies Pitman 'said, leav high school to Cam their own living. A personal account should be kept of all ex penditure., so that when the child grows up it will have th training and will know the value of th penny.1- .-; s;r ' V ...: '.'"..'s; ;;; , A wag earner should average 13 per cent' of the income for board, 2 per cant, tor-clothing and per sonal expense. 5 per cent for wages of helpers, 5 for Incidental expenses, 10 for religion, i tor education and 10 for investment. With moat persons, Mlsa Pitman says. It takes twenty to thirty years to work out the problems of life. , - '. RESULTS OF INVESTIGATION An Investigation into the cost of living of families with varying incomes was recently made by a special committee on the standard of living of the iJchool ot Philanthropy, in New York, which showed interesting revolts. Three groups of people, one earning an aver age income of-fTom $6U0 to $700, another earning $70v to $800 and another $800 to $900 a year, were taken, and the expenses of each group for rent carfare, fue., furniture, insurance, food, clothing and education aver aged. It was estimated that a family with an Income ol 850 a year averages 25 per cent for rent, 44 per cert for food, etc. in all. 85 percent, for four Items food, clothing, light, fuel; 2 per cent tor education, recre ation, dues to societies, and 12V4 per cent for heaHh insurance, furniture, carfare, meals away from hsst., and miscellaneous expenses. ... It was found that tha average expenditures of f first group, with an Income of less than $700 for r; 1 was $154. food $270, clothing $91. fuel ana Usui $ , Of the second" group, wun an income 01 ir imtu ren $3 $900 rent K a JlorcJInr to Miss Pitman's plan, a Income of $00 would avrag per year; $252 for food, $135 for clothing anl p-ri and 149.DU ior in , However. 1 na o" n the second-group, w in an "V." ,"""" t lis, food $320. clothing $102 and ful an l i 1 and of the third group, with an Income ) t t JoJSfnt 817. food $245. clothing $112 and fuel . fairiHv wit 8U.1 f.r B $ nr In. creases the cost of living aoev i: i'i nr costs-the poor more to live, fomiuoi ivf v 1; rich. One can get a better apart -int 1 'r comparatively, than for $li. wh.e I. laborer earning $1 a day. In rr.'M; -r' , below that of a man earnlns $j to 1-j a v