She watched eagerly for the girl to reappear; finally she was rewarded by seeing the two waitresses enter together.
The waitresses at Crosby Place were of a girlish dignity which never expected and was never visibly offered the familiar pleasantries which are the portion of that strange, sad, English creation, the barmaid.
The gentle influence of her presence had spread to a restaurant in the neighborhood where, another day, in trying for Crosby Place, I was misled by the mediaeval aspect of the entrance, and where I found waitresses again instead of waiters.
Waitresses should not grasp the edge of the plate or put the thumb over the rim in placing or handling.
Several of the waitresses were now engaged in rearranging the tables, but they seemed not to heed us.
She wore the snowy vestments of the other attending vestals, with the difference that the cap that crowned the waitresses was omitted in her case.
Volunteer waitresses helped out their paid sisters during these days of hardship.
Among the most active of the uniformed waitresses was Mr. Patterson's nineteen-year-old daughter.
I'll go and ask the waitresses if they have seen them," said Nancy, as she ran toward the hall.
Mrs. Paxton had realized that ever since the day that Floretta had told of being caught mimicking Mrs. Fenton for the amusement of the waitresses and maids, Mrs. Fenton had shunned them.
The air was heavy with the scent of blossoms; and the waitresses ran to and fro, dressed in Tyrolese costume; the prettier they were the more they ran.
From outside came the clamour of voices and laughter, and the waitresses sped to and fro.
And the waitresses sped, vying with one another, coquetting with their patrons, smiling gayly with sharp retorts; their eyes bright, their trays laden with foaming beer mugs.
It was almost deserted, and the waitresses were all in the garden, running forward and backward under the trees.
They all have the same look, a good deal," said the girl, glancing over the room where the waitresses stood ranged against the wall with their hands folded at their waists.
They've struck, all the International waitresseshave struck, and last night in Piccadilly they were standing on the kerb and picketing and her among them.
Much he cares for my waitressesif he can get the dibs.
Her idea of Hostels for the International waitresses had been wrung out of her prematurely during her earlier discussions with her husband.
Your trouble with your waitresses is over, Sir Isaac?
It is said to be customary in certain places to have waitresses announce people.
A cook equal to the Gildings' chef can be had to come in and cook your dinner at about the price of two charwomen; skilled butlers or waitresses are to be had in all cities of any size at comparatively reasonable fees.
By the time all were seated, seven young waitresses were filing into the room, bearing in their hands the trays of steaming soup.
Nina Edmonds was in charge of the tables and waitresses and as she really knew how to lay the service correctly and had clever ideas for decorating, Rosemary was sure the dining room would present an attractive appearance.
The girls she selected to act as cooks wept because they were not appointed waitresses and those tolled off to serve at the tables were affronted because they had not been elected to cook.
The boys are going to wear white aprons and caps and stand behind the tables and serve the food, while the girls act as waitresses and carry out the dishes and look after the silver.
Aunt Trudy and Winnie beamed on Rosemary, sure that she would do well whatever she undertook, while Sarah demanded to know who the waitresses were to be.
The new order of waitresseswill so conduct themselves that after a time no one will think of offering them tips; but there are occasions when souvenirs are quite suitable, and may be accepted with perfect propriety.
If so, I have a nice place for two waitresses in a resort patronized by none but the best people of the neighborhood.
These scouts and envoys of infamy are at the public dances; they waylay waitresses and working girls who are struggling to keep themselves on wages that are insufficient for their actual needs of food and clothing.
There is a strong feeling amongst the waitresses that it is just these compulsory watercresses which have made us Englishmen what we are.
Chambermaid-waitresses and parlor maids to do such as to answer the door bell are also still used.
The four clubs that succeeded in making the change discharged their white chambermaid-waitresses after one week each and re-employed Negroes at the old wage of $35 a month.
Since then wages have been such that employers have largely used chambermaid-waitresses or chauffeur-butlers instead of regular butlers.
Negro to white chambermaid-waitresses at an increase of $10 a month for each worker.
She kept her watch on whatever went on in that dining-room, and on the two elderly waitresses whom she had helped Miss Elder to secure when the house filled up.
Morton was talking earnestly with Vivian at the other end of the table, from which the two angular waitresses had some time since removed the last plate.
Your waitresses are the limit, Auntie," he said, "but the cook is all to the good.
We can be waitresses for Auntie till we get something else," Sue practically insisted.
Very instructive is the information given by Karl Schneidt in a pamphlet on "The Misery of Waitresses in Berlin,"[110] in regard to the causes that drive so many of them to prostitution.
The Women's Legion led the way in providing cooks and waitresses for camps and sent out 1,200 of these inside a year.
The saving in fats done by the women is very great and their economies admirable and the women are waitresses in the camps and messes.
There is, I trust, however, nothing improper in making mention of the striking display of jewelry worn by the waitresses at the Eldridge House.
Most hotel waitresses look to me as though, on reaching womanhood, they had inhaled a great breath and held it forever after.
Has it ever struck you that hotel waitresses are a race apart?
While the proportion of servants andwaitresses falls from 61.
Between the first-generation and the second-generation Germans the proportion of servants and waitresses falls from a third of all female bread-winners to a quarter.
He had oatmeal and a blueberry muffin, drank coffee, and listened to the waitresses chatter about their dates.
Mr. Hennage turned and beckoned to one of the waitresses whose duty it was, on Donna's days off, to take her place at the cash counter.
She was the recipient of confidences from waitresses engaged in the innocent pastime of across- the-counter flirtations with conductors and brakemen.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "waitresses" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.