- n'T" 'It' The Commoner. VOLUME 3, NUMBER 7, n '"- et"W 8 H ' -v5f" r ' ---- --- -r tsiiu wi. .u x x jr w . n . n .a n n - k a m. ig YttL5 Conducted by 'tWelen Watts Mcty Robin Redbreast. My old Welsh neighbor over the way Crept softly out in the sun In spring, Puishod from her cars the locks of gray And listened to hear the robin sing. Her grandson, playing at marbles, stopped, And, cruel in sport, as boys will bo, Tossed a stone at the bird who, sing ing, hopped, From bough to bough on the apple tree. "Nay," said the grandam, "have you not heard, My poor, bad boy, of the fiery pit? How, drop by drop, this merciful bird Carries tho water which quenches it? He brings cool dew in his little bill And lets it fall on the souls of sin; You can see tho mark on his red breast still, Of fires that scorch as he drops it in. "My poor Bron rhuddyn! My breast burned bird! Singing so sweetly from limb to limb; O, very dear to tho heart of God Is he who pities tho lost, like him." "Amen!" I said, to tho beautiful myth, Sing, bird of God, in my heart as well; Each tender thought is a drop where with To cool and lessen the fires of hell. Prayers of love like rain-drops fall, Tears of pity, of falling dow, O, dear to the heart of tho Lord are all Who suffer llko him for the good '-'thoy do. Whittior. March. The reign of tho midnight is onded, Thoro's a flush of tho dawn on tho hill, Thoro's a carol of birds in tho valley, And paled is tho ovonihg chill. Thoro's a stir of leaves in tho forest, A tinting of gold in tho morn, Tho robin is piping tho spring-time Anew in its freshness is born. sonic; expensive baking powders that contain alum or something worse; dangerous ointments, quack medi cines, poisonous washes, etc. This writer strongly urges that girls should study chemistry in the school, not only for mental discipline and culture, but for its practical and economic value. Tho day when It was deemed a mark of refinement to profess ignorance of culinary matters is, happily, passed. Let us encourage tho cooking schools. Chemistry In Cooking;. A popular writer for a grange paper thinks that a knowlcdgo of'tho chemi cal composition of flour, moat and po tatoes', and tho effect of various meth ods of preparation will enable a housewife to put her learning to eco nomical uses, and to do her cooking on such a basis as to produco palatable dishes with no loss of nutriment, and at minimum expense. As a mattor of fact, this lady says, an uneducated cook, oven though sho enjoys tho re putation of "always making things taste good," is soldom a saving cook; not becauso Bho intends to bo waste ful, but becauso sho has not tho scien tific knowledge regarding food ma terials and their management which would onablo her to be saving. On tho other hand, an intelligent cook has a scientific reason for every di rection and ovory process. Sho not only is able to produco tho most ap posing results, but to do so with tho greatest economy of time, labor and motley. Tho same is true in other depart ments which come under tho care of tho housewife. A knowledge of chem istry and the ability to make a few simple tests would onablo her to avoid the uso of a groat many fraudsfor oxample, washing compounds that are utterly worthless, or Injurious; toilet powdors containing bismuth and ar- The Getter Way. Dear, discouraged sisters, I wish I could sit down with you, in your homes, and talk with you real heart-to-heart talks, such as only thorough ly in earnest women may have. It is because I know, from years of ex perience, just how disheartening much of your trials are that I can enter so fully into your longings and aspira tions after tho "something bettor" which each of you so intensely craves. It is because, too, that I feel that there is but one known road by which you may reach the haven towards which your wistful eyes are turning, that I so earnestly wish to set your feet in the right path. There are many things which you must learn for yourself. Page after page of the book of life must not only bo read, but diligently studied, and tho mistakes which you are sure to make must be used as stepping-stones to carry you over the riotous waters of discontent. One of tho hardest les sons, perhaps, will be tho one that teaches you that absolutely nothing is drudgery, in the senso in which tired, discouraged housekeepers uso the words; thero must be preparatory work in all things, and much of this work seems so useless, so burdon somo; yot thero is a sameness, so far as routine is concerned, in all things under tho sun in the highest, as in tho lowest walks of life. Tho "blu devils" are all of one kin, whether they work in palace or hovel; tho ''mentally mighty," as well as tho fool with the slanting forehead" must all fight tho battles of life, and not every one mav wear, Tip tvo -.mm.',. laurels. But who shall dare say we have failed, oven though wo fall? Wo are all soldiers; wo must each face the foe some time, somewhere, somehow. It may cost us something to be always f a3a3asee666aa Question Box. TV The conductor of the Home Do partment will bo glnd to nnswor $ questions concerning matters of U yj .vw.o uuBUKuopors. matte w a your questions as briof n c0;m U (5 ?ndlT7ad(lrcss nil communications JK to "Homo Department, Tho Com v monor, Lincoln. Nobr." on guard to always present a bold front to every foe, and oftentimes tho foe will seoni hardly worth tho ef fort it costs us; but does not the Good Book say something about 'the little foxes that spoil tho vines?" 9 One of my letters says: "You talk of a person lifting herself out of the ruts of life by willing; yet, under your words I can hear tho sigh: Dear heart, you do not always feel, any more than I do, that, out of the ruts into which your life has fallen, you can lift yourself by willing and do ing." Then we must try to feel that our lives havo fallen into such grooves for some wise purpose. Was it not the Man of Galilee who, as tho burdens of the world pressed heavily upon him, fell upon his face and prayed, "If it bo possible, let thus cup pass from me?" There spoke the human side; but tho Divine knew that this was a work which he alone might do, and he rested in the wisdom of the Father. Is it not, then, "the better part" to do faithfully, hopefully, these tasks that havo, somehow, fallen to our hands? Is there not a certain uplift ing, a sense of honor, in thus doing in a manner worthy of our own self respect? Have we not a pride in hav ing brought comeliness out of confu sion? Try to invent now ways of doing the old tasks; look always for the bright places they are always near you; resolve that you will not let your work drag you down. Do not allow yourself to think always of your work; your hands can be taught to perform your coarser duties the while your mind soars into higher altitudes, just as in your music, while your soul delights in the sentiments and sweet sounds, your trained fingers fly over the ivory keys, with no conscious guidance from your mind. When you had to crono over the old "one, two, three, one, two, three," counting, watching lest you should "finger" wrong that was (or, was it?) tho drudgery, the drudgery of preparation, without which you never could have gained this entrancing mastery over the keys. Many a tear you have shed over the despised "Instruction Book," but do you regret it now, as you bring from the glistening keys such soul- satlsrying strains? It is true, we may not always con- QUGr Sfilf. nr rVintlfrn ntir anvtrnnmnnfai tho tasks imposed may be too great for our frail strength, our cares too multifold, and often there will seem no song to be sung, no seeming ap preciation of all our conscientious duty-doing, and, like my correspon dent, we say "wish we could throw the whole push into the fire and give up." Well, then I do not know but it might be the best thing to do just to thrust everything out of our lives except the one thought of resting, go away by ourselves and just rest And bye-and-byo, when we felt strong enough to face things again, go back with the determination to simplify matters, reduco the demands of duty sot a stern limit to our doing, fitting our burdens to our back, and makin Tu ,of our botter ordering that the life is more than meat, and the body is more than the raiment" It has been said that it Is often better to buy a new stocking than to patch tho old one, and if you can do neither without wearing holes in the family temper, it is no sin to go bare-footed narch Wlnda. JELUei Ur 8l8.tors of the northern states havo not yet finished their " f: ' """"t "" ul me extreme south are already starching their dainty muslins and shaking out their filmy lawns. Over the inland states from tho south to north, tho spring fever is steadily advancing, and tho house-cleaning contagion is also working its way up from the southern borders. The house-wives along tho line of march are beginning to in dulge in fits of abstraction, calcula ing the cost of fresh wall-paper, com paring tints on the color cards, inter esting themselves in - the prices of paints, new carpets, fresh draperies, etc., in a way that is, to say tho least, perfectly alarming to the experienced husband. Whilo our sisters further to tho southward are already in the throes of the disease, we, who are yet exempt, may just as well make the most of our brief respite, our time will soon come. We have among us a great many farm sisters, and I want to talk with them about the flowers we are going to have. I know their lives are busy ones, especially in the spring days, but that must not hinder us having some beauty mixed with the business. First, then, let us think about tho desirable plants we are to have close to the house, where we can enjoy them while we work. Of course tho chickens will put in their protest; but we must outwit them. Wo must not try to raise a numberless variety of mixed plants in little beds dotted all over the yard; if we do, we must guard them with little, crooked, un even sticks, covered with brush, or some other ugly rubbish calculated to save them from the scratching biddies, and the yard will look like a brush heap, itself. It will be better to raise our seedling flowering plants as we do our garden things out of their range, in the vegetable garden. We shall be safe comparatively in planting a few well started clumps of hardy perennials, or biennials, close up along the porch, or the sides of the house; in a border along the yard fences, too, and if we do have to fence them in with sticks and brush, these will soon grow above them, and can take care of themselves. It would have served the purpose better, could we have set them last fall, but if we do not delay the work too long this spring, many of them will do as well. We should have plenty of roses mixed in with the other plants, and along a sunny bor der there should be a sprinkle of ever blooming teas; there should be clumps of fall bloomers, and plenty of hardy garden pinks and petunias. If you get them started this spring (some of the finest will not bloom the year they are set out), you will have them well established for the years to come; they will require little care, will grow better all the time, and you can thus defy the worst scratcher in your flock. Cover every ugly post and fence with hardy vines the blooming kinds. If you are one of the "no time" women, do not plant annuals; do not plant tender kinds that you must "fuss over, or that the roots of which must be put in the cellar for fear of frost Leave such to the woman who has w?Jo; d,ou stick"to the hardy kinds and there are plenty of them -beautiful things, too, in both flower and foliage, it is possible that the S?LS,on ma7 Bugge3t a &rape-vlne, ?o Sm reasons; but don't yoii hivinVT n U y0U lnsIst 0n lea 111 Troses- honeysuck- tSLS tIs' hardy solanums, aris- Sov arao X?Tl?e lvys- wisterias- alieycheaep. hardy; aU , , Query Box. Snow is Li6, poem' "Beautiful S1.,3 m"ch disputed. I do not think it is certainly known who wro?e airL'sLMiSnb0n'1I?-"PlGnty of fresH air, sunshine and hot water, together tf mrTiia-im ityrr i