rjr tw" M$, - The Commoner. VOLUME 3, NUMBER X. 8 Po5t-Nuiiilnl. We used to walk togotlicr In the twi light, Ho whispering tender words so hwocL and low, !As down the green lanes, when the dews wcro falling, And thro' tho woodlands whore the birds woro calling, We wandered in thoso hours so long ago. But now no more wo walk in purple gloaming A down tho lanes my love and I ah, mo! Tho tlmo is past for such romantic roaming Io holds tho baby while I'm getting tea. Wo used to sit with lamp turned low togothor, And talk of love, and Its dtvino ef fects, When nights woro long and wintry was the woollier; Far nobler ho than knight of prince ly feather, And I, to him, tho lovoliest of my sox. Now, oft when wintry winds' howl round the gable, ImmorRod in smoke, ho pores o'er gold and stocks, Tho fact ignoring that across tho tablo, "Tho loveliest of her sex" sits darn ing socks. Oft whon orrayod to please my horo'o fancy, I tripped to meet his welcome call, lie looked unutterable things his dark oyos glowing, In fond approval of my outward show ing His tnsto Hi laces, drosses, jewels all. Now if perchance we leave the house together, When friends Invite, or prima don na sings, lie scans my robes (bought new for tho occasion), AiuMoots tho hills and looks un- uttorable things. Selected. tho shores of its native stream and carried away into captivity by an ex perimenting naturalist. Shut up in a room and given some sticks of wood to play with, its natural instinct asserted itself, and tho poor, home sick animal labored Industriously, if vainly, to construct a dam as best it could from tho material supplied it. Tho world is full of women, in what ever station of life they may bo found, who, like the poor beaver, are Intent on building a homo pf tho scantiest material. Set them down in uncon genial environments, and their first impulso is to bottei- them; a touch horo, a little pulling there, a straightening of this and a resetting of that, a'nd though tho poverty may still bo there, yet the home-touch has imparted an oxpression of. care and comfort It could not otherwise have possessed. The llomo-Maklnji Instinct I do not hold, as do some others, that every woman was intended for a housekeopor, in tho sonso in which tho torm is used today; tho wretchod failures wo see about us refuto that idoa, but 1 do bellovo that away down in tho heart of ovory woman every "mother's daughtor of us" there lies a dream of home. In every woman's soul thoro lives a deslro, more or less intense, to have and to keop a homo of our very own; and with' this desire thoro is also tho ability, in greater or less degroe, to ovolvo this Idoa as successfully as circumstances will allow. In tho coarsest, the roughest, tho fominino instinct dominates, too often in a depraved sense, and tho idea may bo crude and coarse, like tho brain through which it works, but it is there. Often it is but tho mere ani mal instinct of seeking a placo of rest of shelter and security, where ono may find a bod of leaves and a hidden bone, but tho homo-feeling in tho poor heart sanctifies it, and it is to her what no othor place can be. You have all heard tho pathetic Btuu ui uie om beaver, captured o Tho instinct to arrange and adorn is born in all women, and the world is full of homes made from the scan tiest and most unpromising material. Ignorance and poverty may have kept tho tastes crude and coarse, and the hands rough and unskilled, while tho ideas of cleanliness may bo of tho dullest, but in some thing tho woman shows her pride of adornment of or namentation, and if approached in the right spirit, much can bo done to givo her better ideas of lifo through her lovo of homo. Floors will be scoured, windows washed, tho torn wall paper neatly patched, clean pa pers put on her shelves, her fow dishes washed and sot away, her fow cooking utonsils huig up; wonderful contrivances and receptacles are made of pastbard, a few .cheap prints aro hung on tho walls, while her lew poor little treasures are pridefully ar ranged on somo sholf or table, and from tho foul hovel of a short timo bofore, it has become a cleanly, cosy nest to which the family hurry after tho day is done, as honestly nroud of their one-room homo as their richer sisters are of their wonderful man sions. As wo go higher in tho social scale, we find tho same spirit ruling; with larger opportunities and greater ad vantages, wo find a higher grade of ornamentation and arrangement, and homes grow moro beautiful as means to tho end are given; but through it all, wo seo only tho inborn home-making instinct which God has implanted in tho breast of every woman, bo she savago or civilized. Misfit House. Not long ago, I heard a farmer's wife say that she had spent weeks of timo carrying every drop of waste water through the kitchen and over tho entire lehgth of a long porch to throw it into a drain. It would have cost three or four dollars to run a pipe from the kitchen sink, under tho porch, to tho drain, but this was deemed an unnecessary expense, so this woman had walked a distance of over thirty feet and back from the kitchen sink to the drain on an aver ago of eighteen to twenty times ev ery day, and in summer weather even oftener than this, that the fow dol lars might bo saved. Tho loss of time and strength this Involved, whether the worker be mis tress or -maid, meant just so much takon from tho things that toll on the immediate comfort of the family Think of the miles this woman walked, uselessly. Who was to blame? In many houses, and especially farm houses, there seems to have been espe cial pains taken to arrange the rooms as inconveniently as possible, and to so place the well, cistern and out houses as to make as many steps as possible necessary, on the part of tho house-workers. In many 'quite large houses there will be found no closets, and in those found, there will be neither hooks nor shelves. The kitch en is generally one' big, bare room, with no wall cupboards, dish-closets, sinks or drain pipes, the windows all on ono side and the stove, cook-table and work bench necessarily on the other, or dark, side. In many houses, too, will be found a door in ovory corner of the room, and if not a door, then a window; and in such rooms it is impossiblo to arrange furniture with any sort of comfort or convenience. Where a small hall might have readily se cured privacy to one or more bed rooms, the one room must be passe through in order to reach the other, and in one house I know of, three rooms have to be passed through in order to reach the fourth. If farmers, when contemplating building a now dwelling, Would con sult the wife's taste and ideas of ar rangement, they would more often than not find a very great improve ment on their own plannings. There should be more closets, if smaller rooms, riot necessarily, as one old man said, "tp hide dirt in," but to keep articles of wearing apparel, etc., out of tho reach of dust, and to protect other articles from the ravages of ver min. One cannot keep a room loolc- .?3S5.9S3e$2S. 5L 8 Question Box. Tho conductor of tho Homo Do- partment will bo glnd to answer quostions concerning matters of & interest to Housekeepers. Make fy your quostions ns brief as possible ) and address all communications $ to "Homo Dfinnrfmonf. 'Vhn n.v, ii moner, Lincoln, Nobr."' " W. i :e6cS$33S3&$3$. ing neat and orderly where "things" must be piled on chairs or thrown on the floors, and clothing hung about openly on the walls never looks neat when oil tho person; besides, tho odor of cooking often renders the presence of the wearer offensive to delicate ol factories, when tho clothing worn has been hanging on the kitchen walls, to say nothing of the dust and smoke that have discolored the fabric. In building even one room, space may bo planned for a closet in which may bo stored clothing, extra bed clothing, newspapers, and many things which, if left lying about would not only become damaged, but would give to the room an appearance of disorder which no amount of work on the housewife's part could overcome. Just the Same. A correspondent writes; "No right-thinking, high-minded oi mv.1Uj iui u iuumeni, occupy the ) menial position of a hired servant so If You Are Sick Don't Wait Longer Write For. l, My Book. You see this offer everywhere all the time and every week thousands. accept it Don't you know that I must bo curing those thousands, else the offer would ruin me? Will you lot me cure you, too? " I will mail you an order-ood at any drug store for six bottles Dr. ; Shoop's Restorative. You may take i it a month on trial. If it succeeds, the " cost is $5.50. If it fails, I will pay tho druggist myself and your mero word shall decide it -."'' "u uitiLici auuui ;uui UUUULB. You i.t least must know that I have -faith in my treatment, when I make' an offer like that. I know what the remedy will do, and you don't. For your own sake, -let me convince you. Then if it fails, ' let me pay. My success comes from strengthen ing the inside nerves, which alone , operate the vital organs. I have spent ' my lifo in learning how to do it A weak organ means weak nerve power. It is like a weak engine that needs.. ' xuvjio oieuui. iu doctor tne organ is useless; what it needs is power to act My Restorative alone brings back that power, and in most of these dis eases no other way can cure. "" My book will tell you whv. Dimply 8tato which book you want, and V .9 . 3k address Dr. Shonn Box 515 Bucini.. WiV SZ6s,$&'fS$2$S: a b' rMT Wrt . rtW Vwaihwa.a. tOCK. NO. i ON THE HEART. EOOK NO. ON THE KIPKKT8. COOK NO. 4 TOR TVOWIN. COOK NO. 4 FOR WIN. iuM '" nw. u a 11UJEU.MAT.SM long as anything higher could be reached. Not that housework is de- grading, but there is all the difference -in the world between doing the work ' ' of ones own household even doing '- the work with one's own hands-and -going into the kitchen of some one" else as a paid servant, compelled to execute whatever task is assigned you and to comply with the demands of a capricious and exacting mistress; if one should summon courage to com- ' Plain of some injustice and protest ' agamst some task, she is told that 'V hZ 2S?22 P d if she is -. --- ., iu uo tne work required othefho,.'5 at "berty t0 " -" NOW T rlr. -nrnnirt.. m 1.1. Etw1" llfde:stand e when I ten her that is just exactly the, case in --lr' any work whini. W"J case n & tomnf i ,,Z " "r.""" "x: 'en at- f3 v W il.i. or ." We are ail v ocl vams, wnether we call oiir- work a "profession" or a iwd!-W "wages ''WWSoerV fr a sala orradfor wages. We are expected to do the :' S tofdnT d lt just " ' d ctates of nr lt accordinS to the. r EJ 0l our employer; it is 1i ' aMh0, Strict faitlness In lying " naid0toUlWJ!fVVe are h,red to do-- paid to do that enables the employ''-. In any industry to hold his or her' : Place against competition - - she meas in a soclafsnse. ' iTSrt - ' SS li ttleW emPly, nor 1 - -" . 21'' th0 cnPloye expects com- ' . panlonahtp as part ot tho contract t-o oe so much work for so mnMi .-i- pay," and tho Pormanency of ?he em. plovment (lonomic i,r. "ime .om v .oil and how wlmngtrthrwUTa- , or h0 does 80, regardless of the . "bo- ' cial standing" which goes with the- 3 n t t.l y" wwlTirn r !gf.sfl.r(teswiw n-TrrTTTTItl.IHH.II