$j & The Commoner. VOLUME 11, NUMBER 42 B - r: rv n i i ii i iii ' " i r Irv dlfflJIMni c. ZH JsmfAu it t ir jj 1 ir is mS m eV '. m v? When Baby's Hair Was Cut The day thoy cut the baby's hair The house was all a-fldget; 8uch fuss they made, you would have said He was a king the midget! Sorao wanted this; some wanted that; Some thought that it was dreadful 40 lay a hand upon a strand Of all that precious hcadful; While others said to leave a curl Would bo the height of folly, tlnless they put him with the girls And called him Sue or Mollie. The barber's shears wont snip-a-snip, The golden fluff was flying, Grandmother had a trembling lip, And Aunt was almost crying. The monfolks said, "Why, hollo, Boy, You're looking five years older!" But mother hugged the shaven head Close up against her shoulder. Ah, well; the nest must lose its birds, The cradle yield its treasure; Time will not stay a single day, .For any pleader's pleasure. And when the hour's work was weighed, The scales were even, maybe; For father gained a little man, When mother lost her baby. Medical Magazine. just to get back to the country, and meet, with the old friends. Why not make something of your life be sides toil? The Sociable Side of Life What are you doing about it the Social center" idea? Are you giv ing it any thought? But thought is not enough "Blessed are they that do," you know, and faith without Works is dead. So, it behooves you to get busy and decide on what is to bo done for the social side of life, for both the youths and the grown ups. It is a poor way to spend your Afternoons and evenings camped up about a stove, or asleep over your paper or book. No wonder the young, stirring blood listens for the call of the city. It is not only the young people that weary of the monotony of themselves; we all long for com panionship with other minds. There is no tonic like it, and it is the best thing "to take" for the cure of "nerves." There should be in every community some place whore the people can gather, young and old, and get acquainted; where they will feel Jtree .to come, and to bring others. The country school house is better than nothing, but there Bhould be a hall built and kept up especially for social meetings, men's clubs, women's clubs, boys' and girls' clubs, social gatherings of all kinds, public meetings, lectures, dances, and for Informal neighborhood meetings where one neighbor can learn to know another. "It is better to wear out than to rust out," and that Is Just what a great many men and women are doing rusting rotting from disuse. Stir up the social eenter Idea; work for it, and Insist ' on others working for It. It is' the social life of the city or the dream of It that takes our young people from us, and it Is also the dream of many old people to go to town, or city, when they get old, so they can have the advantages of social gather ings. Many families leave the farm and village Just for the sake of being with people; .and when they get to the city, they do not fit In, and they are lonely and longing all their days The New Cookery Paper-bag cookery seems to have taken the world by storm, so far as real, enthusiastic interest goes, and the gas companies, especially, are giving "demonstrations" in various cities, showing the housewife how she may successfully do away with the cleaning of pots and pans, and provide better flavored foods for her family with the paper-bags and the gas oven. The bags are made of an especially prepared celulloso paper which retains all the juices and flavors of the food, and it is positively stated that the meats cooked in these new "utensils" retain their weight, allowing little or no shrinkage.0 With gas, gasoline, alcohol and electricity as fuel, with all the other labor saving machinery now to be had for the household, and now the doing away with the disagreeable work of cleaning the pots and pans, the fortu nate woman who can command all, or even the greater part of these housekeeping aids, can surely find time to grow, mentally. Every day, there are "demonstrations" of vari ous domestic labor-saving machinery and devices at the various business houses, department stores and other centers of interest, and the woman who can find time to attend them and money to invest, even to a limited extent, in them, will find it greatly to her advantage to learn all she cant The fireless cooker still holds a "prominent place in the in terest of the housewife, since baking, roasting, and all other cookery can be carried on with them. There are untold numbers of lesser helps, all of them good in practical hands, but some of them mere "junk" in the hands of the impractical or easily discouraged women. It will not pay to buy everything; these demonstra tions, and the reading of good, re liable magazine literature on the subject, will guide one fairly well in the matter. If you live where these things can be seen, bo sure to look at them, and try to understand the principle on which thoy are worked. not yet largely in the individual homo, but in hotels, restaurants, and public places. Everything, from the cooking to the delivery of shaving water is expected to be done by elec tricity, music will bo furnished, auto matic dumb waiters will carry orders to the basement, and the servant question will be solvedj as at most two or three human servants can carry on the business of the whole establishment. The argument one most often hears against the "woman in busi ness" is that it unfits her for domesticity, and wrecks the home life, but it is not conclusively proven by actual facts. Down deep in every woman's heart is the love and long ing for home, and it has been proven that "a woman can make a home out of a wood shed, if "put to it." But where a woman has to lead a busi ness life in order to support herself and perhaps others, it" is a hard matter for her to carry both burdens without failing In health sooner or later; no man would attempt it. If women were more fairly dealt with m. regard to money matters, the ma jority would vastly prefer the com forts of the home. . Educating the Woman "R. P.," one of our brother read ers, writes me that he Is very much averse to , the forming of clubs by the country women, for the gathering only gives them opportunities for a more extended retailing of scandal and gossip. I'm sorry this brother has to associate with women of such' low mentalities; but you know it Is an accepted saying that, "As the hus band, so the wife Is' and It Is true to a very great extent. It may be, that R. P. sets a bad example for his women folks to follow, and if he would lead them along the higher patnways, tnoy might do better. Seems to me that I have heard that some men are given to gossip, and "telling good stories." Would it not be a good idea to form clubs ad mitting both the women and the men, and thus they might better each other. Try It, brother. Take your wife to your own club meetings, and let her learn how better to use her mind. Comments Press dispatches to the daily papers make mention of the organiz ing of societies known as the "League Against Lending Books." In order to become a member, one must own at least two books, and register a solemn vow that ho will not lend any book, no matter to whom. Such a society would doubt less become popular In more locali ties than a few, for the majority of book lovers have had their choicest books depleted by borrowers who forgot to return them. Where there are publlq, or even circulating libraries where a book may be taken out for a certain number of days by paying a small sum for the privilege, there seems to be no excuse for the borrower from individuals. Many people who are supposed to be governed by the rales of strictest honesty will yet literally "steal" the book of their best friend, by borrow ing It with no Intention whatever of returning It to the owner. Yet these rogues would bo very indignant if one accuses them of dishonesty. Electricity Is gradually taking the place of first aid to the housekeeper, Taking Precautions It is not advisable that one should begin to "coddle" 'the body as soon as the chilly season comes .on, but it is a very good thing to take neces sary precautions againBt "catching cold" which some people do as soon as the wind changes in the autumn. Nasal catarrh, the "catching cold" In the head, Is usually a slight, brief fever, which ordinarily passes off In a few days, even without treatment of any kind: but thin nmit tnwm sometimes becomes chronic, and the recuperative powers of the body be comes weakened and exhausted Every "common cold in the head" tends to a succeeding one, and the person who suffers from them be comes more and more liable to further attacks, not alone from the weather, but from inhaling dust, or whatever Irritates the already weak ened and Inflamed mucus membrane. roe earner stage of a cold In the head Is often successfully treated by snuffing up a solution of naif na water, or a two per cent solution of carbolic acid, two or three times a day. A glass cup; with an opening at the bottom to which Is attached a piece of rubber tubing of sufficient length, in the free end of which ia a class or hard rubber piece that flta wf?efln0tri1' fa,almot a necessity, but the fluid can be "snuffed up" out of the palm of the hand successfully The head Bhpuld be thrown well back so the fluid will flow down into the mouth, and the patient will soon earn how to keep it from going down into the throat; the throat should bo gargled with the same kind of fluid Borax and common baking soda equal parts of each, In a pint of water, or borax and salt, a teaspoon ful of each to the pint, are all good. This should be used several times a day, but necessarily morning and evening. A "simple cold" sometimes leads to serious results, but often can be broken up if the patient stays in a warm room, using plain nourish ment and inducing a gentle moisture of the skin. For the little folks, care must be exercised in regard to clothing, and to exposure in many forms. Begin now, and ward off many of the diseases of winter. Learning the Art of Resting We have so many old-young people that we are lead to wonder why men and women get old at so early an age. One woman, over sixty years old, said to me a few days since, "I a-m never tired, and I always feel active and cheerful; I can stand more than many women of forty years of age. It all depends on getting rested and keeping rested, and it is only by following a few common-sense rules, that this can be accomplished." One of these rules is to concentrate the muscles; settle yourself somewhere and keep perfectly still; arrange your feet, aTms, legs, head, hands and feet so you are perfectly comfortable, and then sit in this position for five minutes. Don't cough, don't move, don't fidget; don't do anything but breathe deep long easy, breaths as you do when asleep J keep the mouth closed, and shut or-leave the eyes open, as you see fit, but don't try to see things. Then, begin to move one set of muscles, say the arms, stretch ing them out alternately, doing this twenty-five to fifty times; while us ing your muscles you may sing, or hum tunes. Begin working your knees, and feet, your toes, and your ankles as you did your arms. Bend ing exercises for the hips come next, leaning the body forward and draw ing the lower limbs up; continue this with all the joints, but do not keep It up until tired. Begin easy and in crease the dose. Then, learn to rest, for you will be a little tired. Rest the neck and head. In walking about, tne neaa snould be well back on the neck, never thrust forward or rest ing on the breast. If sitting, rest the head on the back of the chair, or against some sunnort. Mont women have backache simply because they uo. not rest me back. When stand ing, stand straight; when sitting, sit back as far as possible In the chair. The chair should tfe low enough for the feet to rest on the floor. Rest tho hair by letting It down; rest the eyes by closing them for a time; rest the mind by thinking of pleasant things. Learn to rest the body all over, taking from flvo to ten minutes every day. Don't wait until you "have time." Take it. Rest,, and see how much better you will feel In a week's time. For the Toilet An easy way to make a good cold cream is to stand a jar In hot water and put in tho following: Half an ounce each of white wax and sper maceti; add four ounces of oil of sweet almonds; stir until all Is dis solved, then add two ounces of rose, orange-flower or lavender water, and beat briskly until cool. Lavender water is one of the most refreshing and delightful of toilet waters, made by the following h . : u .jgr jf Tg gfr Mjl - .