MUiMManMi IHiimiVm 1 1 mimiri -TBTi'W)PSr-"6T- - mapn mmMiMtmlMiiwtMm''' The Commoner. VOLUME' 9, DUMBER 6 tmrtntK&s jpr r B- Tho Hurrying Hours How often tho thought comes homo to mo, As the moments hurry away, Of tho many things I intend to do Somehow, sometime, some day. They aro promises that have never been kept, Though J always meant to be true; But time is too short for. all the things That a body intends to do. 1 will answer a letter, or read a book, 1 will write a bit of rhyme; 1 will do tho things that I ought to do Some day when 1 have tho time. So 1 look beyond, as I hope and plan, For the days that are just ahead; Whilo tho day that is here goes into its grave "With its opportunities dead. Today is tho only day we have; Of tomorrow, we cannot be sure; To 'solzo the chanco as it comes along, Is the way to make it secure. For overy year is a shorter year, And this is a truth sublime moment misspent is a jewel lost From tho treasury of Time. Arthur Lewis. tant than soap and water and a good wash rag, aided and abetted by plenty of sunlight and fresh air, and these will not fail to clear the. prem ises of many deadly foes to health and happiness. "Health Foods" .Veryqpon'' planting time will be upon usi and it is well to have your garden seeds ready. 1 you have but a f,dw fe"et of ground, you can grow many things, and there is nothing more healthful than an abundant supply of "early greens." Tho let tuces, cresses, spinaches, and many other quick-growing salad vegetables aro better than drugs for clearing tho complexion and giving bright ness to the oye, and all of them aro oasny grown, ouvo oil is Training a Child It is unfortunate, in a way, for tho general business of education that the young child is usually so winsome. If he did not appeal so strongly to grow-up people, they would not tolerate his dictatorship, and it would be bettor for him in the end. But most adults like to see a little thing assert himself; they think it is quite a joke that one so small should show so much spirit, and so they encourace his tyranny by rewarding him with their smiles when he knocks some one in the face, for instance. Of course, no physical harm can come of this dur ing the first two or three years, while he is so helpless; but the boy of eight or nine years is a different proposition. He may now proceed on exactly the same principle as ho did at two years old, but, instead of his expressions being received with smiles, they are returned with blows. Herein lies the tragedy of child training in many a homo. The, child acquires certain attitudes toward people during tho first two years that he can not possibly be allowed to continue during later years." As he grows older, the parent, the teacher, and possibly society at large, are in constant conflict with him to undo what was unwittingly established in the beginning. The only way a child can tell that some actions are wrong is trat they are resented by the people about him; they do not turn out well, so they must be abandoned. On the whole and in the long run, that child, will be lar nappier who early suffers for tie less than seventy-five cents a pound. If any one said that beef had gone up to seventy-five cents a pound, you would at once have said that the nrice was prohibitive. Yet .housekeepers again and again pay fifty, sixty, seventy and eignty cents a pound for meat when purchasing chickens, ducks and broilers. In the final cost of the chicken is to be con sidered the fuel, especially if the fuel is gas. Evaporated Fruits These may be made very palatable, with proper cooking. Get the, choic est brand possible, wash thoroughly, and put to soak in plenty of water for twelve hours, or over night. Pour off this water, and boil the fruit in clear water in a porcelain-lined ket tle closely covered. As the fruit is already soft and tender it will re quire but little further cooking, and when it has boiled up well, add sugar as liked. The soaking will carry off the strong taste, will soften the fruit, and the little cooking will not dis sipate the flavor. roeom- monAed by all nhvalclanR im nnn n? tho most nutritious of fnnii nrnriuoiV ar na""ier wno eiy suffers for . . . - r-- -- v. liiiiMwnn inv tho cnirn nf . . ,,- ,i i j---. ., ..., vuk ouo Ul 1W1UCUIUIC ads, whether fruit or vegetables, is an excellent medicine for the spring months. If one can handle a hot bed, even a small ono will pay for its cost many timeB over in starting seedlings for early transplanting to the border, while tho rapid-growing radishes and lettuce will bo ready for use in a very short while. The work of hot-bed making and tending is not arduous, and with the help of tho "glide mon" in excavating and getting the soil ready, it will take but little of the housewifo's time and strength to look after it successfully. The houses of many people are usually dirty, painfully and plainly so, and tho mansions of the rich are often more unclean in an obscure and subtle manner than one can well be lieve. It is a foolhardy thing to in veigh against a stylo or fashion, but tho fashion that is so evidently per nicious and harmful as the profuse use of shades, curtains, hangings, carpets, cupboards, crooked-legged tables, and tho like incumbrances, should bo done away with in the in terests of health. They are all dirt catchers and diseaBe breeders, says the Family Doctor, and under their protection the germs and bacillus in crease and multiply to an alarming extent. There is no better disinfec- peace, to continue his erring ways. Sooner or later, the parent must for bid actions that earlier have been allowed, and right here begins the struggle which often results serious ly for both the boy and his parents. M. V. O'Shea, in Twentieth Cen tury Magazine. Tho Cocoa Bean Cocoa, or more properly cacao, is a product of the seeds of several small trees which belong to the trop ical countries of America.- The fruit is in form of a seed-pod, and each fruit contains from twenty to forty seeus, wnicn are called cocoa beans. The seeds are roasted before being put upon the market in the form of cnetery lood. After the fat is re moved it is sold as cocoa butter, and is used for the making of toilet preparations, and in surgery and medicines in various ways. For the cocoa we use on our tables, the bean is ground up, and when sweetened and pressed into cakes, it is called chocolate; chocolate is consumed either in solid or liquid form, and is considered very nourishing. Ttnh chocolate and cocoa in form of bev erages, are sipped, rather than drank, in the form of broths; they contain much nourishment, and finely ground solid matter held in suspen sion. Where it agrees with one's digestive organs, it is much more healthful and harmless than either tea or coffee. If through mischance, these marks have been obliterated, find the cen ter of the curve of, the upper part of tlie sleeve and place it exactly at the. top of the shoulder nearly al ways the top of the shoulder is an inch or so forward of the shoulder seam. The inside seam of sleeve is placed usually three inches forward of the under arm seam;. but patterns vary somewhat, as well as the arm, or form, and the eye must be trained to know the line and the shape that feels comfortable and looks right. The garment must be tried on to fit the sleeve in, and much must be learned by experiments, and tho work should be done very carefully and slowly at first. If,' in making an outer garment, such as a coat, the high-shouldered effect is desired, hem the lining of the sleeves over the seam; for a sloping line, hem the lining of the coat over the- seam. In case of a lapped seam, the turned edge should be on the right side of the garment, and ono edge should be left slightly wider than the other. After stitching the seam together, the widest turninc should be turned in and tacked down to the garment so it will cover tho nar rower edge; the stitching should ex tend as near the edge as possible, the wider turning of the seam being finished before the stitching ic done as in a' run, or felled, seam. Tlie wider edge should always be placed on the upper side of the machine in order that the right side of tlie stitch may be on the outside of the seam. In fitting a bodice, the seams join ing the form to hack, and the darts should never be altered, and the shoulder seam as little as possible. Other seams may be taken up or let out in any necessary way to make the correct shape. AVr 0L,P AND WELL TRIED REMEDY miib. Wnun.ow'8 Soothing Byiiui lor children tc '. Srhit1l?,lway?,b0 U8rd ,or chUdfonThllo ucuiinjr. It softens tho guniB, allays tho uaiii i8,,d ?" and la tho best remedy for C hoea. Tweuty-nve cents a bottle. Tho Cost of n Chicken In Good Housekeeping, Helen Louise Johnson, who is considered an authority on culinary matters, gives the following as to cost of a chicken: The chicken was pur chased with head, feet and feathers removed. It was partially drawn, as they are usually prepared for city markets, .weighed three and three fourths pounds, and cost seventy-five cents. At the market, the chicken weighed three and three-fourths pounds; when ready for fricasseeing, it weighed three pounds, the twelve ounces being tho weight of head feet and waste portions. The chick en was carefully stewed, removed from the broth and weighed. It was found to have lost eight ounces in cooking, hence there was remaining to serve two and one-half pounds of chicken, for which had been paid seventy-five cents thirty cents a pound. After the chicken had been consumed, the weight of the bones gristle, skin, etc., was determined' these weighed one pound and five ounces. The edible part of the chicken was exactly one pound and three ounces, The chicken,' then, cost just seventy-five centsor a Ht- Qucry Box" M. Heal the cold sores hy apply ing spirits .of camphor several times a day. V. A. Recipe for mustard pickles will be given in season. If given now, it would doubtless be lost or mislaid by the time . it would be wanted. Mrs. D. For the liquid blueing, get one ounce of- soluble blue and one-half ounce of oxalic acid, pulver ized. Dissolve in one quart of pure rainwater. The acid will hold the GOOD CHANGE Cofl'co to Postum Odds and Ends It is said of Loujsa Alcott, that she never had 'any inclination to marry; she loved freedom and activ ity and independence; she could not cherish illusions tenderly, and al ways said that she got tired of every body, and felt sure she should tire of her husband if she ever married Women stand well in the world of science, me discovery of radium was made by" Madame Curie; Mrs Hertha Ayrton of London has gained world-wide reputation in the domain of electricity, and one of the most successful users of the Finsen rays in tuberculosis is Dr Mary Jackson, of Illinois. Dickens, the novelist, was born Fe7nUar&,7'812' alld dIed Je 9 1870. His biographer tells us tha't tho first twenty years of his life was spent in apprenticeship to poverty the second twenty, in hard work and growth, and the last third of his life was full of prosperity and adulation. For tho.Home Seamstress It is not at all necessary to make mistakes in setting in sleeves if the notches on all reliable patterns are properly marked when cutting out The large army of persons who have found relief from many chronic ailments by changing from coffee to Postum as a daily average, is grow ing each day. It is only a simple question of try ing it for oneself in order to know the joy of returning health as real ized by an Illinois young lady. She writes: "I had been a coffee drinker near ly all my life and it affected my stomach caused insomnia and I was seldom without a headache. I had heard about Postum and how bene ficial it was, so concluded to quit coffee and try it. "I was delighted with the change. I can now sleep well and seldom ever have headache. My stomach has got ten strong and I can eat without suf fering afterwards. I think my whole system greatly benefited by Postum. "My brother also suffered from stomach truble while he drank coffee, but now, since using Postum he feels so much better he would not go hack to coffee for anything." Name given hy Postum Co., Battle Sri,1,011', Read "The Rad to WellyUle," in pkgs. , "There's a Reason" Ever read the abovo'letter? A new 0119 appears from time to time. They " are. genuine, true. -and. full nf lmm.n s I interest. . V 1 .v UmilH J' YTTTOffi hAlM Ktfjg