y c j; n;. kh www f" , J -T E' h i : ; s The Commoner. VOLUME 13, NUMBER 9 7 Plrll i aSX JHPNflTOaUBfe 7 1 ) P D 8 FT m m r Solitudo Laugh, and tho world laughs with you; Woop, and you woop alone; For tho Bad old earth must horrow Its mirth, But has troublo enough of Its own. Sing, and tho hills will answer; Sigh, it Is lost on tho air; Tho echoes hound to a joyous sound, But shrink from voicing care. Itojolco, and men will seek you; Grieve, and they turn and go; Thoy want full measure for all your pleasure, But thoy do not want your woo. Bo glad, and your friends aro many; Bo sad, and you lose them all; Thoro aro none to decline your ncc tarod wine, But alono you must drink lifo's gall. Foast, and your halls aro crowded; I'asc, anu tuo world goes by; Succoed and give, and it helps you livo, But no man can help you die. Thoro is room In tho halls of pleasuro For a largo and lordly train; But ono by ono, wo must all Olo on, Through tho narrow aisles of pain. Ella Wheolor-Wilcox. sour or rot because they aro for gotten until tho dish Is wanted again. Then, too, many women (and men who help about tho kitchen) will set foods on tho stove or in tho oven in china or porcelain dishes, and let the dishes burn along with the food, or become so full of a network of tiny cracks that they aro anything but pleasant to look at or sanitary to use. Still another way Is tho cooking of too many kinds of food at one time, and allowing tho family to got an overdose and a' consequent distaste, and tho "loft-over" (often of oxponsivo foods) must be thrown out, because they do not try to make a dish of tho surplus disguised with something else. Cooking too much, and having too much loft-over is an extravagance. No foods aro cheap these days, and one must use up every scrap and fragment; but it is better to havo a small lack than an overdose. Try not to havo scraps. Words of tho above poem sent in by Mrs. T. G. Redfleld, North Yakima, Wash.; Mrs. M. A. Brown; B. F. Nowkirk, Newell, S. D.; who will ploaso accept thanks for same. Tho samo poem is sent In by an other reader and credited to Colonel Joyco. Poems Wanted Mrs. B. A. Young, Mllner, Idaho, would liko words of poem, "Ken tucky Belle," tho story of an old horse saving tho soldier frqm the enemy. Pleaso send direct to her. Mrs. M. Robinson would like words of tho poems, "The Ride of Jennie McNoal," "College Oil Cans," and words of a poem, "The lark is up to meet tho sun." As tho first two poems aro quite long, they might bo sent .direct to her address. And pleaso acpept thanks for all. 'Saving at tho Spigot" It is a singular thing that, if you begin to tell tho averago woman where she might be a little more sav ing by taking caro of what she has, she will meet you at once with tho assurance that she does tho very thing recommonded, and a great many other things, and is just as careful as she can bo that nothing Is wasted. Maybe It is the matter of wasting table scraps; and she will tell you that she never lets a scran of food or bread get out of the Kitchen; that she uses up every crumb. Yet If you happen Into her back-yard, or look into her garbare can, you will find enough scraps thrown out to have made several meals. Another way she wastes is In the matter of clothes. Often you will find the children's clothes either lying for days at a time in a tub of suds, or left handing out In the weather, on the line or on shrubbery or on the fence. Still another ts In fall ing to take the stitch in time, and thus allowing the clothes to go to pieces from their own weight. Another way la to put away foods In the dishes In which they were served at table with no covering, and allow them to "Bakers Bread" A writer in To-Day's Magazine tolls us that in an inspection of 600 bakeries in New York, 431 of them wore found to bo located in cellars whore the dust blew In from tho street above; 171 had no windows at all, and 122 but ono small window each. Of eight hundred men em ploved in tho bakeries, 200 were suffering from respiratory diseases, such as bronchitis and tuberculosis; one out of every two tenement bakers was found to be afflicted with an Infectious or loathsome disease. Since this Inspection, the members of the Housewives league hive pledged themselves each to, inspect personally the bakery from which her own household is supplied. Some of the states have secured a law to enforce sanitary bakeshops and forbid the employment of men afflicted with disease. In delivering, from the oven to the consumer, the bread comes in con tact with six pairs of hands, and most of them, like the hands of the. driver of the wagon that delivers It are not clean hands. It is in some cities demanded that the bread be wrapped in paper; but there are still hands that come in contact with the naked loaf. Do you ever watch the oaf of bread In its journey to your homo? ' Domestic Economy It is said there are over 1,200 In stitutions in the United States today tnat are offering courses In home economics; some hundreds are col leges, and 650 are high schools. In the University of California the new learning is written inits catalogue along with Latin and Greek and the higher mathematics. ' Instead of da in the past, being a subject of're- ?M5?..rof wolan t0 "do ner own things it is now an honor, and household economics la now a bieh branch of learning aa a science. In tho new order of things, there are necessarily many mistakes, but little l "Uie the Wy te r1earln. "d I the ES.!d?.a f homo wlsher in health, happiness and higher living. Health Notes Lack, of sufficient sleep soon shows In oneg appearance. Bight hours' sleep out of twenty-four la required for the best resulta. Clipping the ends of the hair about once a month will stimulate the roots and cause new growth. Dandruff should bo cured at once as it ruins the. hair. It is easy cured. The woman who has blonde hair, or tho one with gray hair, must keep it perfectly clean, as dust shows up quickly on light hair in a most ugly fashion. Washing with alcohol will cause tho hair to turn gray. Borax and ammonia are both injurious. The persistent use of peroxide of hydrogen on cold sores will soon cure them. Dab it on thoroughly every few minutes, and it will draw the pus and any poison out, when of course the place will heal. Use it freely on any sore that shows any indication of festering. Nicotine, the active principle of tobacco is claimed by chemists to be, next to prusslc acid, the most rapidly fatal poison known. What ever differences of opinion there may be upon tho adisabillty of smoking for men, there is none whatever as to Us pernicious effect on boys. The tender tissues of a growing boy can not absorb even a small quantity of It without most serious results. Cigarettes are particularly injurious. Celluloid contains in its composi tion gun cotton and camphor, both highly inflammable. No one iweaT Ing collar, comb or other ornaments, should -place her head close to a gas jet or other unprotected light, as celluloid catches fire so quickly and burns so rapidly that it would hard-, ly be possible to avoid being seri ously burned. A cough may be caused by many' tningsoesmes lung troubles.' The,re. Is tho sympathetic cough that goeff with the stomach, and the ,"nervoud" cough that is caused by some nerve derangement,, besides many other causes.. The cure is to remove the cause. "Quilting Bees" In the long ago, there was no gatherings more full' of pleasure than the quilting bees, where the housewives gathered to help out a neighbor at her quilt or comfort making, and the men usually made a bee" at the same time, cutting, splitting and storing wood for the winter's use. There, was always a good dinner, at which there was un qualified good cheer and fun; and as the day ended, the young folks came and the elders who did. not care to stay went home, feeling that the day was well spent, while the everting was spent as only healthy, happy young people can spend it. In those days, neighbors would gather to help one another, and there was always engagements ahead, as long as the winter lasted. Every housewife prided herself on her bed furnishing, and there were always stacks and stacks of good, warm quilts, home-made blankets, clean "goose-feather" pil lows, and If the mattress was filled with clean corn husks or swe t, fresh oaten straw it was of untold comfort to the healthy, tired body, even if the great soft feather bed was lack- - u aMea -d washed and dved and mZT ."?' "comforts" wlu, i ffllfng Sf cll? Att wool. There w l nX " filled" bed-covering f , W00N on day by tfio dMfrflnfcepBflEX. um. and good w0Ta6srddne,to Cotton-filled quilts and comforts get hard and heavy, and after washing are not as warm as one would like-' but tho wool-filled are light and warm, soft and "live." as lrm there' is a piece of one left. The greatest difficulty now is to get tho wool cleaned and carded into bats but at some mills this Is done, either In bats of various sizes, or in one or two large sheets. Of the cleaned batted wool two to three pounds makes a warm quilt, while for a com fort as much as four pounds may be used and the work done by "tack ing." These weights will make a full-sized, double-bed quilt. If a good grade of calico, or cretonne is used, fifteen yards will cover both sides. Wool-filled auilts jiva iw Water Bugs and Cockroaches The first thing necessary to their extermination is to clean out every corner and crevice with a strong solution of boiling water and soap powder, or carbolic acid, though the soap powder is cheap and effective. Get Into every hiding place with the liquid, and especially into the dark corners. Take out all the dust, and dirt, if you have to use an old knife blade to reach it. Use only the strongest soap powder on the mar ket; one of the very best liquids is a caustic soda solution made Qf lime and sal soda. This is too strong for tho hands, but-just right for the bugs. Kemember that boiling water is the only absolutely Certain destruc tive, and it will kill anything it touches. When you have flooded every hiding place, get the strongest Persian insect .powder you -can find. Scatter it freely, everywhere' in their runs, and while Itt.may not kill in stantly, it' will shorten their life In a very little while. Do not forget to scatter the powder around the steam pipes, the sink' pipes, or any large cracks in tho floor, or openings about the, -pipes ,th rough ,wbich the bugs can coinie...,ryJs essentially necessary to, dp this in the kitchen, so tiebugs carf.get thqir dbse'before reaching the .pantry.' Meantime, every particle of food must be closely covered, as in' spite of cleanliness, uncovered food attracts the bugs. Not even the crumbs 'must be Wft about.. Your, neighbor nfay not be as careful as, yourself; so yo,u must keep everything eatable out o'f their reach, even If yqu cook less, and live closely until ydu are" rid of them. It Is claimed that water bugs and cock roaches carry disease germs about with them; but whether they do or not, they are first coiiBln to the bed bug, and no one wants to eat food that has first been sampled by them, or covered with their filthy tracks. Several "house cleanings" niust he made, as the unreached eggs will hatch, and a new army must be fought; but if killed before the breeding time, successively, tho sup ply will give out In time, and you have only to keep up a vigilant out look, in order to be free of them. i t Starting Lavender Lavender seeds should be sown about the time jf the bloqtning of the trees In April: the bed" should be ,? tired and tYt0 8tt 8h prepared, sifted and made firm and level, smoothing with a smooth board. After sowing the seeds in, rows, cover lightly by siflfffg soij qver tnem tfeaf mold ami sand well mixefd being good; then press the S0A.5aIn w,tIr . and spray with water until mdlsf? cover tHe row with bits of wdss in order to keep the grqund radial until tBe seeds germinate. The sol! shduld still be kept moist after the Rlarita appear, out care must be taken not to make it wet: the bed must bd pro tected frdra rata an frdm sun until the plains arB atrdng enough to gto unsheltered, -the- plant will tfot bloom until the gfecdiid Reason. U wwaiNMii !!.,