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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75560 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ A-B-C
+ OF
+ HOUSEKEEPING
+
+
+ BY
+ CHRISTINE TERHUNE HERRICK
+
+
+ HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
+ NEW YORK & LONDON
+
+
+
+
+HARPER’S A-B-C SERIES
+
+ A-B-C OF HOUSEKEEPING.
+ By CHRISTINE TERHUNE HERRICK
+
+ A-B-C OF ELECTRICITY.
+ By WILLIAM H. MEADOWCROFT
+
+ A-B-C OF GARDENING. By EBEN E. REXFORD
+
+ A-B-C OF GOOD FORM. By ANNE SEYMOUR
+
+ 16mo, Cloth
+
+
+HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY HARPER & BROTHERS
+
+ PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+ PUBLISHED MAY, 1915
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. CHOOSING A HOME 1
+
+ II. FURNISHING THE HOME 13
+
+ III. THE TABLE 26
+
+ IV. CONCERNING HOUSEHOLD ACCOUNTS 38
+
+ V. THE HOUSE IN ORDER 50
+
+ VI. HYGIENE AND PLUMBING 63
+
+ VII. THE HOME WITHOUT A SERVANT 75
+
+ VIII. IN THE LAUNDRY 88
+
+ IX. WHEN COMPANY COMES 99
+
+ X. THE CHILD IN THE HOUSE 111
+
+
+
+
+A-B-C OF HOUSEKEEPING
+
+I
+
+CHOOSING A HOME
+
+
+The choice of a home is usually decided by the pocket-book. Other
+considerations carry weight, but matters of convenience, preference,
+and location are lighter in the scale than the sum one can afford to
+pay for a shelter. What proportion this will bear to the rest of the
+income must be settled by each one for himself after an estimate of the
+other expenses which must be met.
+
+When a whole house is taken and the cost of heating and the charge of
+the outer premises, as well as the entire care of the place, have to be
+assumed by the tenant, one-fifth or one-sixth of the income is all he
+should give for rent. The price of coal, the wage to be paid the person
+who is to clean snow from the sidewalk in winter and dirt from it the
+rest of the year, look after the furnace and ashes, put out garbage;
+the consideration of the services of the one who must sweep front
+steps, halls, and stairs; the small repairs every house demands from
+time to time, will all have to be added to the sum devoted to rent.
+While the tenant and his wife may perform part or all of these duties,
+it is only reasonable that they should understand how much they are
+saving in actual cash, and comprehend that what they economize in this
+respect is the equivalent of what they would pay to the landlord were
+they to occupy an apartment in a flat building.
+
+This state of affairs justifies the man who lives in an apartment
+in allowing a larger proportion of his income for his rooftree. The
+details to which I have referred just now are included in the price
+paid for a flat, to say nothing of the reduction of work when all the
+living is on one floor, when stairs do not exist for the housekeeper,
+and her responsibilities end at her own front door.
+
+The selection of a location is determined by the make-up of the family
+and the man’s place and time of business. These considerations must be
+taken into account before the house-hunting is begun. Distance from
+the center of the town usually means a reduced rent, better air, and
+more attractive surroundings. To counterbalance these are the long
+journey back and forth, night and morning, the cost of transportation,
+inability to come home for the midday meal. As a rule these drawbacks
+do not equal the advantages to be gained by a home remote from the
+business district.
+
+In order to accomplish the strenuous task of finding a home with the
+least outlay of labor and worry--for in any case there will be enough
+of both these commodities--as much planning as possible should be done
+in advance. The number of rooms necessary should be settled, as well
+as the sum which can be paid for rent. The sections of the city which
+are suitable should be studied and, if feasible, traversed, so as to
+get a general idea of them. Sometimes even a cursory inspection of a
+neighborhood decides the would-be tenant against it.
+
+Then, when lists of houses or apartments have been culled from
+advertisements and secured from real-estate agents the actual work of
+house-hunting is begun. One resolution to be laid down at first and
+adhered to positively is not to go over a house or an apartment if the
+first glance shows it to be undesirable. When six rooms are the limit
+for a flat there is no more sense in inspecting a ten-room apartment
+than there is in scanning a house at twelve hundred a year if seven
+hundred and fifty is the extreme price that can be paid for rent. Such
+examination not only consumes time and strength, but it also provokes
+dissatisfaction with smaller and cheaper quarters which may be seen
+afterward.
+
+A few essentials must be fixed in the mind, to which any house or flat
+should conform. It must be light--not a dim twilight illumination, but,
+if possible, sunshine, either direct or reflected--in the living and
+sleeping rooms. The kitchen must not be a dark corner, not only because
+such work-places affect the health of those who occupy them, but also
+because of the additional charge there will be for gas or electricity
+burned by day as well as by night.
+
+The matter of heat must next be considered. When a house is taken the
+rent is usually higher if there is a first-class heating arrangement
+included. Old-fashioned appliances mean lower rent, but they also
+require increased work on the part of the tenant or servant and are
+often unsatisfactory in the amount of warmth they supply. A good
+furnace or steam-heating plant may add to the actual sum of the rent,
+but it is generally cheaper in the long run. The quantity of coal
+burned by such a plant should be ascertained before concluding to take
+the house.
+
+All these questions are eliminated for the man who engages a
+steam-heated apartment, but he may change the place and keep the pain.
+The comfort of the entire winter depends upon a sufficient amount of
+heat, and radiators should be examined and a number of direct inquiries
+put so as to make sure that adequate warmth may be secured in bitter
+weather. The time when the heat is turned on and off should also be
+learned, since it is quite possible to shiver and suffer in September
+and May as well as at Christmas-time.
+
+Plumbing is always to be investigated closely, whether in a house or an
+apartment. No amount of gilding and marble fittings can compensate for
+cheap plumbing and a poor supply of hot water. The dweller in a house
+is dependent upon his own kitchen fire for hot water, as a general
+thing, but in nearly all apartment-houses the hot water is declared to
+be supplied from the cellar. Even in high-priced flats hot water is
+not always ready, and queries as to this are to be voiced before the
+lease is signed. More than that, care must be taken to make sure that
+the plumbing is in perfect repair and is not likely to give way at
+inconvenient seasons.
+
+All these details are essential and there are others little less
+important. The quantity of closet room, the pantries, the facilities
+for washing and drying clothes, the quiet of the house as assured or
+banished by the character of the neighbors and other tenants, the
+cleanliness of paint and paper, must all be looked after.
+
+No matter what inducements in the way of lowered rent are offered, it
+is always a mistake to go into a house which is not absolutely clean.
+This does not mean only that it should be swept and scoured before
+taking possession of it, but that paint and paper should be refreshed.
+The latter is not to be done by pasting fresh paper on over that which
+already covers the walls, as is the custom of many decorators--a custom
+connived at by landlords because of the saving of expense it implies.
+The incoming tenant must insist that the walls shall be scraped clean
+before the new paper is hung and that fresh paint shall be used
+wherever it is needed. It is hard enough to keep a house spotless
+in the best of circumstances, and when one enters a dwelling and
+establishes himself in the midst of the dirt of the departed tenants
+the task is the most discouraging that can be undertaken.
+
+Moreover, vermin must be banished. This is an easy thing to say, but
+hardly a housekeeper of middle age can be found in the length and
+breadth of the country who has not had a struggle with the pest in some
+form or other. In one home it may have been cockroaches or water-bugs;
+in another it may have been black or red ants; in many it has been that
+worst and most dreaded of plagues, bedbugs. Sporadic cases of any of
+these may be conquered without much difficulty, but when once the enemy
+is intrenched in the home it seems almost as if the only way to get rid
+of them finally is by burning the house down!
+
+On all considerations, therefore, the house-hunter must make sure that
+vermin are not established in the new dwelling. If there is even a
+possibility of their presence she must insist upon radical measures
+being taken before she will contemplate entering the house. When the
+pests have been there and have been driven out it is still wise to
+take reasonable precautions against their return. No picture-moldings
+should be tolerated in the bedrooms, since these make a lurking-place
+for insects. The walls of sleeping-rooms should be painted rather than
+papered, and dark cupboards, drawers, etc., should be scoured out,
+disinfected, and painted.
+
+I have dwelt upon the need of such care in the bedrooms, but it is no
+less essential in the kitchen and pantries. While bedbugs occasionally
+get a foothold even here, the usual plague is the roach or Croton-bug.
+He is said to be inoffensive and he does not possess the deadly odor of
+the _Cimex lectularius_, but apart from the damage he undoubtedly does
+in nibbling table-linen and the like, he is an exceedingly unpleasant
+housemate. He frequents uncovered garbage-pails, bread and cake boxes
+which have been left open, wire safes with imperfectly closing doors,
+and the provision compartments of refrigerators; and it does not tend
+to improve the appetite to have him pop out of the cereal carton or run
+from under the cold roast.
+
+So every precaution should be taken against such creatures as well
+as against mice and rats before renting the house. Mice-holes should
+be choked up with broken glass and dusted with red pepper; boiling
+water should, when possible, be poured down the runways of insects;
+borax scattered about their haunts. After that, strict care in the
+way of keeping food put away closely, pains to see that no crumbs
+or drippings are allowed on the floor or the shelves, and rigorous
+cleanliness of every vessel which has been employed in cooking are the
+best agencies against the return of the adversaries.
+
+Other points should be looked to about the kitchen. The stove is the
+chief consideration after light, cleanliness, and pantry space.
+
+Locality has much to do in determining by what means cooking shall be
+done. In the country, where gas is not and wood or coal is burned, a
+good range, suitable for either, must be depended upon. Of such ranges
+there are many, and there are divers items to be regarded in each
+make. The size and fashion of the fuel-box is one. The average kitchen
+stove will burn a ton of coal in from five to seven weeks, the time
+contingent not only upon the care of the cook, but upon the size of the
+range. One should be selected with a maximum of heat for a minimum of
+fuel consumption. The range with an upper oven is easier for the cook,
+who by its means is spared constant stooping and bending, but some
+ranges with the upper oven are said to burn more fuel.
+
+No range or stove should be considered which does not provide adequate
+means for heating water. When there is running hot water in the house
+a boiler is usually arranged at the side of the stove, but in the
+country, where the water must be drawn by a pump or from the well and
+put into the reservoir by the pailful, a large enough receptacle must
+be furnished to make it possible to have the supply for the day all
+poured in at once. In this way the man of the house may attend to this
+heavy duty in the morning or at night, so that no woman may have to
+strain her back by filling and lifting pails of water during the day.
+
+The coal or wood stove in the country may be supplemented by an oil
+or gasolene stove. Of these there is a good variety, each possessing
+its own special merits, but they are not to be considered in renting
+a house, since they are purchased by the tenant, not supplied by the
+landlord.
+
+In every large city, and in many small towns, cookery by gas has
+superseded coal and wood almost entirely. The cleanliness and
+convenience of gas in cooking, while inferior to those of electricity,
+are yet so far ahead of the other means to which we have been
+accustomed that the amount of time and trouble the gas saves is
+incalculable. The stove is generally owned by the local company, who
+install it and keep it in order, but in some places effort is made
+by the landlord to charge the tenant for the use of the stove. Common
+usage will have to determine the tenant’s course in the matter, but as
+a rule the stove is included in the rent and it is worth while for the
+man renting the house to make an attempt to secure this concession.
+
+There is a difference in gas-stoves and an up-to-date kind should
+be selected, fitted with an upper oven as well as a lower one, and
+possessing such features as a low flame for simmering, a plate-warmer,
+the latest make of broiler, etc. The inexperienced housekeeper is
+frequently imposed upon and the old-fashioned stove is foisted off upon
+her. This should be guarded against when the house is rented.
+
+The inside of the house has received principal attention in this
+consideration of the rented home. The outer surroundings usually
+compel a measure of thought and are obvious enough to force themselves
+upon even the uncritical observer. Yet there are a few points worth
+emphasizing.
+
+The character of the neighborhood in a country or a small town
+generally proclaims itself and the details that must be noticed have
+to do with sanitary conditions, the presence or absence of such
+nuisances as unsavory factories or businesses, the vicinity of noisy
+occupations, the over-close proximity to public schools with the
+accompanying racket at certain hours of the day, etc. In the city the
+drawbacks may be less self-assertive but no less objectionable. Before
+renting a house in a street it is always wise to learn something of the
+people who occupy the adjoining dwellings, to make sure that there are
+no unpleasing features connected with the section and so insure oneself
+against future annoyances.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+FURNISHING THE HOME
+
+
+The first details to be regarded in furnishing a house have to do with
+the woodwork and walls.
+
+Sometimes the landlord has settled these and the tenant has no choice.
+This is especially likely to be the case with the woodwork. If it is a
+cheap and unattractive variety of “hardwood,” so called, or is painted
+in imitation of hardwood, it is difficult to induce the owner to change
+this. When he will consent to paint to please the tenant selection
+should be made either of white or of a soft, neutral tint which will
+not conflict with any color of furniture. The painting which simulates
+the graining of a natural wood is distinctly bad and should never be
+tolerated except when it cannot be changed.
+
+The kitchen should be painted throughout, walls as well as woodwork,
+and in some good light color, such as buff; this will give the room a
+bright, cheery look, and the steam which accumulates on the walls of a
+kitchen can be scrubbed off the paint as it cannot be from a kalsomined
+or papered wall.
+
+In choosing papers, the tenant should bear in mind that they will have
+to be lived with for a long time, and should pick out such as can stand
+familiar association without becoming objectionable. Striking patterns
+and assertive hues should be avoided. When two or three rooms open
+into one another it is well to have them papered alike and thus avoid
+the patchy effect produced by several small rooms all with different
+wall-coverings. In this day cheap papers which are also pretty and
+artistic can easily be found and it is worth while to bestow a good
+deal of time and thought upon their choice.
+
+If possible, all painting and papering should be done and the workmen
+out of the house before the tenant moves in. This plan permits the
+rooms to be cleaned and saves double toil to the housekeeper.
+
+The furniture of the house does not always lie within the tenant’s
+power of selection. Few are the homes which are freshly furnished
+throughout by a young couple. Almost invariably there are “left-overs”
+and “hand-downs” which are presented to the newly married pair,
+and they are fortunate indeed if such relics are desirable and not
+discarded pieces which no one else wants.
+
+When even a portion of the furniture is to be bought, it should not
+be purchased at random. “Sets” of any sort are best avoided. For the
+parlor of a modest establishment, wicker and willow articles are far
+better than the conspicuous styles which attain a sudden popularity and
+then become old-fashioned and out of date. Comfort should be considered
+in every item chosen and nothing taken merely because it looks well or
+is reasonable in price. While sets are deprecated, a room need not look
+like a harlequin collection. A certain uniformity of style and coloring
+is to be studied, that the apartment may produce a harmonious effect.
+Odd pieces, such as a deep arm-chair, a fancy tea-table, an attractive
+set of book-shelves, are entirely suitable and will not strike an
+incongruous note in the general surroundings.
+
+Bare floors are more used now than carpets, and rugs may make islands
+of safety here and there on the smooth surface. When fine antique rugs
+have not been given and cannot be bought, the best choice is from among
+the many good varieties of inoffensive native rugs. Or a rug may be
+made of a quiet-toned carpet, the breadths sewed together to form a
+square of the size desired, and surrounded with a border to match. Good
+druggets or art-squares may be found for the dining-room, matting or
+bare floors and rugs will serve for the bedrooms, and hall and stairs
+are to be covered with the runners which come for these purposes or
+with a neat stair carpet in quiet colors and pattern.
+
+The dining-room furniture demands a good deal of deliberation. It
+is a mistake to buy it in too great a hurry and so to be laden down
+with something one does not really want. The table and sideboard are
+usually purchased for a lifetime, and it is better to put up with
+makeshifts for a while on the chance of finding something really good
+and satisfactory than to buy in a hurry and repent at leisure.
+
+The wood of the dining-room furniture is not so much a matter of choice
+in many cases as of necessity. One must buy what one can. Every one
+cannot have mahogany or Circassian walnut, and it is a comfort that so
+many of the less costly woods are made up into excellent designs. It is
+much better to buy a good article of a low-priced material than a cheap
+variety of the more expensive woods. Oak, ash, cherry, birch, gumwood
+and other native growths may be found in pieces of excellent lines
+which will satisfy even an artistic eye. When there is money enough
+to get all that is wanted for the dining-room, a serving-table and a
+china-closet of some kind may be added to the sideboard, dining-table,
+and chairs that rank as essentials.
+
+The requirements of the kitchen will receive more detailed
+consideration later on. Among the must-haves are the range, to which
+reference has already been made; a good kitchen table, supplied either
+with a zinc top or with a shelf to draw out and use as a bread-board; a
+refrigerator; a wire meat-safe; liberal pantry room, shelf room, and,
+if possible, a kitchen cabinet.
+
+When the bedrooms are to be furnished the same simplicity must be
+followed which is recommended for the other apartments. The less
+furniture the bedroom contains the better, from a sanitary point of
+view. The Biblical inventory of a bed and a table, a stool and a
+candlestick, had much to commend it. The bedstead should be of iron
+or iron and brass; the dresser, table, etc., of white enamel or some
+light-colored wood. The heavy pieces our grandparents took for granted
+are fortunately out of vogue in a modest household. A box-couch
+may be included in the furnishing of the room, or what is known as
+a utility-box for holding shirtwaists and the like, and it is to be
+hoped there is either abundant closet room or an extra wardrobe or
+clothes-press.
+
+Such are the large and important furnishings of the house. These may be
+reduced or increased, simplified or elaborated, in accordance with the
+preference and powers of the owners of the dwelling.
+
+Other articles, hardly less essential, have to be considered. Take the
+question of draperies, for instance.
+
+Within the past few years the fashion has grown of having two and
+sometimes three pairs of curtains for each window--inner hangings of
+lace or some similar fabric, outer draperies of rich and heavy goods,
+and frequently these will be supplemented by sash-curtains close
+against the pane, to say nothing of one or two shades to the window.
+
+This may answer for the woman who is at a loss what to do with her
+money and can devise no better use to make of it than a multiplication
+of her possessions, but the custom is not one the young housekeeper
+need feel it incumbent upon her to follow. One shade of a neutral
+tint at each window of her living-rooms, a pair of curtains of some
+material which can be readily washed, are all that she requires. For
+the principal rooms a good Madras, a pretty scrim, a pleasing though
+inexpensive lace (all fabrics which will look well after careful
+washing) will meet every necessity and present an attractive appearance.
+
+In the chambers two shades may be demanded by those who wish to have
+a dark room for sleeping, but short white curtains of wash-goods, or
+sash-curtains, are sufficient here, and something of the same sort,
+but possibly a little better in quality, can be procured for the
+dining-room. As a rule plain, straight curtains, without ruffles, are
+not only more easily laundered, but look better after they are done up
+than those pranked out with frills.
+
+When ornaments are to be considered one generally makes the best of
+what one has. The newly settled couple may be thankful if they have
+not been burdened with pictures and bric-à-brac which not only do not
+please their personal taste, but refuse to harmonize with one another
+or with anything else. In some cases one can only make the best of
+conditions, and after endeavoring to arrange the unwelcome gifts to
+the best advantage and scattering them over the house so as to dispel
+the curse to as many different quarters as possible, resign oneself to
+endurance until such time as the presents can be removed, one at a time.
+
+Those fortunate persons who can buy their own luxuries will recall the
+Oriental proverb: “If thou hast but two loaves of bread, sell one and
+buy jacinths for the soul!” What form the jacinths may take will be
+determined by individual preference. One will find more joy and uplift
+in really fine pictures than in anything else; another will concentrate
+upon books and magazines; another will turn from both of these and
+toward music. It makes little difference which way the window is opened
+into the Infinite. The vital point is that such an outlet must be
+provided if soul and spirit are to be nourished and grow as well as
+body and physical strength.
+
+However much the importance of such plenishing as this may impress
+either the man or the woman, the latter would be profoundly lacking
+if she did not display a keen interest in other essentials of her new
+home. The pictures, the books, the other arts, may rejoice and help
+her, but she would be wanting in femininity if she failed to select her
+table and bed linen with almost as much thought as she would expend
+upon her “jacinths.”
+
+Even with unlimited means, it is not wise to buy more linen than
+can be used in a small household. Plenty there should be, but not a
+large stock which will lie aside and yellow from lack of service.
+Three or four dinner-cloths, each with its accompaniment of a dozen
+napkins, will be ample for her average needs, especially if she uses a
+centerpiece and doilies on the bare table for breakfast and lunch. In
+her purchasing she should avoid the fringed articles; these wear badly
+and are difficult to do up well. Fruit-plate doilies to place under
+finger-bowls, fish-cloths, centerpieces, tray-cloths, sideboard and
+dresser covers, tea and carving cloths, and other ornamental as well as
+useful linens will probably be given to her by relatives or friends, or
+she may pick them up from time to time as she has need for them or the
+chance to purchase them advantageously. As her table-cloths and larger
+pieces begin to wear out she can usually cut from them squares which
+will serve to lay under hot baked potatoes in the dish, to wrap about
+rolls or other hot bread, to use for fish-cloths.
+
+A dozen each of dish and china towels she should have, and the
+same number of heavier towels for kitchen use, as well as three
+roller-towels. But the napery in this line she should keep under her
+own hand, if she has hired service in her kitchen and pantry, and give
+the towels out a few at a time in order to save her linen as well as to
+inculcate habits of care.
+
+When bed-linen is to be considered, the housekeeper should follow the
+same line as that she has laid down in her purchase of table-linen.
+The ornamental may be selected as suits her fancy, but there are
+certain must-haves in the plainer articles. Six pairs of cotton sheets
+are none too many, and pillow-slips to go with them. If she and her
+family cherish a weakness for linen pillow-slips, some of these may be
+provided in place of so many pairs of the cotton cases. For three beds
+three or four spreads should be procured, so as to allow of change, and
+these spreads should be of the kind which wash easily and look well
+afterward. Mattress-covers are also essential, as are blankets and
+extra coverings. Silk or lace counterpanes cannot be reckoned among
+must-haves, any more than can like dressings for the bureau, but may be
+supplied at will.
+
+At least two or three dozen fine towels must be included in the list
+of essentials, half a dozen good firm bath-towels, and wash-cloths at
+discretion, as well as a dozen heavier towels for the use of domestics.
+Guest-towels, bath-sheets, bath-mats, and the like are luxuries which
+may be accumulated after the necessities are attained.
+
+When the housekeeper is filling out her list of household linens and
+cottons she must not overlook dusters, floor-cloths, mop-cloths,
+dish-cloths, or mops--I hope she uses the latter!--and other similar
+requirements. In this advanced day there are new articles in this line
+which present themselves constantly and which the housekeeper must
+decide for herself to be luxuries or necessities.
+
+For supplying the china-closet a fixed rule is almost impossible. The
+best plan is for the housekeeper to make out for herself what her
+family will need and then to consult an intelligent clerk in a good
+china-shop. Sometimes it is cheaper to buy a whole set of china than
+to select from “open stock” the pieces that are absolutely required.
+Soup, dinner, dessert plates; plates for lunch and for breakfast,
+for afternoon tea, for salad, for entrées; service plates; meat and
+vegetable dishes in china or silver, can all be purchased in a charming
+variety and at a reasonable price. The same is true of glassware. Many
+gifts will fit in well here, and the stock of silver is pretty sure to
+be received from the family or friends.
+
+In the kitchen matters are different. Few persons present culinary
+plenishing, and it almost always devolves upon the housekeeper to
+select it for herself. While she may have developed needs in certain
+explicit directions, there are a few rules which can be laid down for
+her general guidance, certain articles which it is safe to declare
+essentials. Such are the following:
+
+ Two 1-quart saucepans
+ One 2-quart saucepan
+ One 5-quart saucepan
+ One 3-quart double boiler
+ One 2-quart double boiler
+ Two baking-pans for meat _or_ one plain baking-pan and
+ one covered roaster
+ One large frying-pan
+ One small frying-pan
+ One colander
+ One graduated quart measure
+ One graduated half-pint cup
+ One meat-broiler
+ One fish or oyster broiler
+ Three jelly-cake tins
+ One large cake-tin
+ One biscuit-pan
+ One set muffin-tins
+ Three bread-tins
+ Three pie-plates
+ One 2-quart pitcher
+ Two jelly-molds
+ One pudding-mold
+ One steamer
+ One teakettle
+ One teapot
+ One coffee-pot
+ Fireless cooker
+ Chopping bowl and knife
+ Meat chopper or grinder
+ Soapstone griddle
+ Cake-turner
+ Bread bowl and board
+ Rolling-pin
+ Board for cutting meat
+ Board for cutting bread
+ Meat-saw
+ Bread-knife
+ Bread-box
+ Cake-box
+ Butter-paddles
+ Potato-beetle
+ Egg-beater
+ Scales
+ Lemon-squeezer
+ Meat-fork
+ One large crockery mixing-bowl
+ Two small crockery mixing-bowls
+ One platter
+ Two pudding-dishes
+ Set of skewers
+ Cheese or vegetable grater
+ Nutmeg-grater
+ Vegetable-press
+ Soup-strainer
+ Coffee or tea strainer
+ Coffee-mill
+ Corkscrew
+ Pair of scissors
+ Can-opener
+ Small vegetable-knives
+ Mixing-spoons
+ Flour-dredger
+ Salt-shaker
+ Cake-cutters
+ Split spoon
+ Skimmer
+ Ice-pick
+
+Other no less important articles are as follows:
+
+ Two dish-pans
+ A garbage-pail with cover
+ Sink-brush
+ Soap-shaker
+ Wire dish-cloth
+ Oil-can
+ Brooms, dust-pans, whisk brooms, carpet-sweeper, etc.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE TABLE
+
+
+The judicious purchase and use of food is the chief economical
+possibility of housekeeping.
+
+The rent is an incompressible item. Every month that immutable charge
+presents itself. It cannot be cut down. The only way to reduce it is by
+changing the dwelling.
+
+Fuel may be used with a discretion which lessens outlay, but in cold
+weather the house must be kept comfortable, even though the coal
+bills mount high. When certain repairs are due they have to be made
+or the rooms become unbearably shabby. Only in the domain of food is
+it feasible to apply a wise judgment in buying, a cultivated skill in
+cooking which induces cheap selections to be as savory in taste, as
+nutritious in qualities, as those which cost far more.
+
+Such ability in marketing and preparation does not come by nature. It
+must be studied and worked for, but it is worth the effort.
+
+At the first glimpse nothing seems simpler than for the young
+housekeeper to sally forth to a good market, make her selections, order
+them cut off and sent home, and pay for them--or have them charged!
+(Usually it is fatally easy to open a charge account!) The same notion
+prevails as to buying groceries. If a good shop is chosen, there is
+apparently no trouble about the transaction.
+
+Possibly there need be no difficulties if the family purse is so well
+filled that a little more or less expenditure is of no real importance.
+But few are the homes in which this state of affairs exists and most
+of us find it desirable, if not actually essential, to study the
+comparative prices of staples in different shops and localities, to
+learn if there is an advantage in making some purchases at one shop
+and some at another, instead of giving all the family custom to one
+merchant.
+
+Earlier reference has been made to the proportion of the income which
+is to go for rent. Positive assertions as to how much shall be spent
+on the food of the family are far less easy to make, and the degree of
+definiteness with which they are uttered is hampered by the constant
+changes in the price of food.
+
+Not more than ten years ago a liberal allowance for the food of an
+adult was from three dollars to three dollars and a half a week. This
+covered only the price of the commodities and did not allow for the
+fuel used in preparation, service, etc. To-day this expenditure would
+be totally inadequate for the same order of nourishment it would
+have included a decade back. At that time a breakfast consisting of
+fruit, cereal, bacon, fish or eggs, bread, coffee or tea; a luncheon
+comprising a solid dish of meat, fish, eggs, or cheese, one or two
+vegetables, or a hot bread, a simple sweet, and tea or cocoa; a dinner
+of soup, a meat, two vegetables, a salad, crackers and cheese, or a
+good sweet, and coffee--could all have been secured in the family at a
+little over three dollars a head, when there were three or more to be
+fed. From four and a half to five dollars per capita would be required
+at the present time for a similar provision.
+
+The rise in prices may have altered the sums of our estimates; it has
+not lessened the necessity for a study of the proportion of the family
+means which must go for nutriment. This must be determined by the heads
+of the house in conclave. The harder part of the work devolves upon the
+woman, who must devise economies and carry them into effect, both in
+marketing and in cooking.
+
+The inexperienced housekeeper should try to gain a few lessons in
+the best methods of purchasing. Sometimes a brief attendance at a
+cooking-school is of aid; or she may be able to join a class for
+learning how to market--such classes exist and are most helpful--or she
+may gain counsel from some older and more experienced housewife, or by
+conning books on these topics. In this day there is no excuse for even
+a beginner making the mistakes which have supplied material for many of
+the hackneyed jokes at the expense of young matrons.
+
+Important as is the practical and personal lesson in knowing how
+to market wisely, much can be gained from manuals on the subject.
+Some of these furnish cuts and charts of the various animals, with
+descriptions of the portions and of the uses to which each may be put.
+Instructions as to the periods of the year when certain articles are
+at their best are also supplied. Prices can be learned from the market
+reports published in the daily papers and much is to be acquired by
+going from one shop to another. After a little the housekeeper will
+become acquainted with the appearance of meat and be able to judge for
+herself if it looks fresh and good. She can likewise observe how the
+shops are kept and in which certain obvious sanitary arrangements are
+complied with. She will not need much tuition to inform her that she
+should turn aside from shops where the food is not guarded from flies
+and dust, where strict cleanliness does not prevail in the salesmen and
+the appurtenances, and the objects on sale are not handled with proper
+care.
+
+A few points it may be well to emphasize for the benefit of the
+beginner. The fat of meat should be white and clean, the lean a clear
+red, the joints of poultry must break easily and the skin look smooth
+and healthful. When a fowl is yellow, bony, and hairy it is bound to be
+old and tough. The gills of fish should be fresh and the eyes bright.
+
+I cannot speak too strongly against the growing habit of marketing by
+telephone. Not only is the housekeeper who follows this custom at the
+mercy of her marketman, who can put off on her any cut which has been
+rejected by the wiser housewives who have come in person to do their
+trading; he is subjected to the pleasing temptation to cut off more
+than she has ordered or charge her for a heavier piece than he sends
+home.
+
+The woman who goes to market gains other advantages beyond those of
+seeing for herself the appearance and the size of the piece she orders
+and has cut off while she stands by and superintends the process. She
+also has offered to her chances for bargains she would never get if she
+marketed by telephone. Often there will be a change in the market or in
+the weather that will bring down the cost of articles which are usually
+high-priced, and the woman who does her own marketing is the one to
+benefit by this as well as by suggestions which introduce variety into
+her bill of fare.
+
+This same variety is to be studied by the sensible housekeeper, not
+only on account of the gratification it gives her to set a pleasing
+provision before her family, but also because of the genuine good that
+is gained by avoiding a monotony which fails to encourage the appetite.
+Moreover, saving is aided by this diversity, since cheap dishes can be
+slipped into the commissary without awakening the suspicions of the
+eaters that economy is being practised at their expense.
+
+Among the rational details to be observed in buying meat is that of
+insisting that all “trimmings” shall be sent home. When a roast of
+beef or a breast of lamb or a shoulder of mutton or veal is boned and
+rolled, the bones should never be left at the market for the butcher
+to sell over again, but sent with the meat that they may be used as a
+foundation for soup or gravy stock. The giblets and feet of poultry
+should also be demanded. When chops are “Frenched” or a steak cut into
+seemliness, none of the scraps should be considered unworthy of saving.
+All have their place in the stock-pot or as stew-meat.
+
+Too large a piece of meat should not be bought by the woman with a
+small family. Meat merchants have a way of discouraging the purchase of
+the smaller roasts on the plea that they dry out in cooking. If they do
+it is because the work is not properly done. It is quite possible to
+make a small roast toothsome and tender instead of dry and hard if the
+housekeeper will cook it in the right way and with due care.
+
+Steak and chops, the frequent resource of the woman with a small
+family, are expensive luxuries. She is wise if she learns how to cook
+the cheaper cuts in a sufficiently attractive fashion to make her
+family contented with these instead of leaving them longing for the
+higher-priced portions.
+
+A “run” upon any one kind of food should be avoided as much as having
+fixed days for specific viands. Fish on Friday one may take as a matter
+of course, but there is no real reason why one should have roast beef
+every Sunday or a boiled dinner on Saturday night. I know it is the
+plaint of the majority of housewives that it is most difficult to
+secure variety in the meat dishes, but this trouble should not exist
+in a family where practically all sorts of meat can be eaten. In one
+household such as I know, where veal and pork are both taboo, and fish
+can be eaten by only one person, the choice is narrowed down a good
+deal. Even then, however, with a knowledge of how to prepare savory
+stews, minces, hashes, scallops, croquettes, fritters, meat-pies,
+stuffed peppers, tomatoes and peppers with a meat filling, as well as
+roast, boiled, broiled, braised, and fried meat dishes, there should
+be no wail over the trials of the housekeeper in changing her menus
+frequently.
+
+No time can be considered wasted which is bestowed on the study of how
+to cook cheap meat well. Always it should be recollected that many of
+the so-called cheap cuts really contain a greater amount of nutriment
+than the choicer selections. As I have said on various occasions, the
+housekeeper must be prepared to pay a price for excellence of food,
+and if she cannot pay this in hard cash she must supply the equivalent
+in careful cookery and wise seasoning. A knowledge of the uses of
+curry powder, anchovy, and other condiments in changing and modifying
+the tastes of familiar foods, a willingness to give the time to slow
+and long cooking which will bring out the best flavor of the meat, an
+acquaintance with the manifold ways in which left-overs of food can
+be utilized in pleasing combinations, are among the branches which a
+housekeeper of small means finds well worth her study.
+
+Reference has been made to the help a fireless cooker is to the woman
+who keeps house well. It is a saving of time, fuel, labor, and food
+values. By its assistance the housekeeper can prepare her meal hours
+ahead of time and go about other pursuits in the calm certainty that
+when she is ready for her dinner it will be ready for her, and as
+good as if she had simmered over the kitchen fire all the afternoon,
+using up her fuel and herself. There are several varieties of these
+cookers, all of them on practically the same plan, and it will pay a
+woman to look about her to find which kind suits her best. For soups,
+stews, cereals, they are unequaled, as for making jams, preserves, or
+anything else which demands a long period of deliberate cooking.
+
+Special attention has been given to the purchase of meat, but there is
+almost equal judgment to be shown in buying groceries. Here there is a
+chance for the inexperienced marketer to be imposed upon. Certain fixed
+principles she should follow.
+
+The first of these is that it is, as a rule, unwise to buy in bulk.
+That is, there is little gained in a small family by laying in large
+supplies at a time. A barrel of flour is likely to be musty and weevily
+before it can be used; corn meal in large quantities develops vermin;
+so do cereals purchased by a number of packages or pounds at a time.
+Care should be taken to select an honest grocer or to know enough of
+prices not to be overcharged, and then to order supplies as they are
+needed.
+
+Buying in bulk means more than this: it also refers to getting the
+“loose” crackers, cereals, and the like, instead of those inclosed
+in cartons. The latter is always the better plan, and care should be
+taken to select a good variety that is put up by manufacturers whose
+names are a guarantee of the excellence of the products. Until one has
+investigated the matter one has no idea of how many cheap and poor
+materials are foisted off upon a guileless public, bearing the stamp of
+unknown makers, with the assurance that they are “just as good” as like
+articles put up by well-known houses.
+
+This fiction is especially prevalent about canned goods. When these
+are first-class they are admirable, and fortunately there are daily
+increasing numbers of fine and trustworthy establishments who can
+fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, etc., in conditions which assure the
+complete protection of the consumer. Yet there are still in existence
+small and unscrupulous concerns whose output is cheap and poor if not
+actually dangerous to health, and these should be boycotted by all
+housekeepers.
+
+Care should be exercised in buying fresh vegetables and fruits. In
+most of our large cities the laws as to protecting these against dust
+and dirt are being enforced more vigorously with every year, and here,
+too, the housewife can help to bring about a better state of affairs
+by insisting upon purchasing only such articles as have been properly
+cared for. Vegetables which are to be cooked before eating may not
+suffer so much by being exposed to dust, but salads and berries and
+other fruits or vegetables which are eaten raw are a menace when they
+have been suffered to lie and wilt in a current of air laden with dust
+and disease germs.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+CONCERNING HOUSEHOLD ACCOUNTS
+
+
+One of the first items of business to be considered by a newly married
+couple, or a pair who are about to begin housekeeping, is the division
+of the income between the husband and wife.
+
+This does not imply that their interests are to be opposed or that they
+are to have absolutely separate purses. It does mean that there must be
+a clear understanding on both sides of what the expenditure is to be
+for certain purposes and that the funds for food, domestic service, and
+other strictly housekeeping outlay should be in the hands of the wife.
+
+This point has been much debated and the pros and cons on both sides
+exploited. Some men argue that the possession of ready money will
+lead the wife to extravagance, that it is far better to have all
+articles charged and the bills paid by the husband, that women do
+not understand household accounts or bookkeeping. Enough foolish and
+shallow women exist to lend a trifling force to this position. But the
+general and growing view is that the housekeeper upon whom is laid
+the responsibility of purveying for an establishment rises to the
+emergency, that she does better work and makes wiser purchases when
+she is trusted with an allowance for such expenses, that an exhaustive
+knowledge of double-entry bookkeeping is not demanded for simple
+domestic accounts, that even the immature and untrained wife gains
+knowledge by experience and competence by errors made and corrected.
+
+Certain disbursements seem naturally to devolve upon the man of the
+house. That he should pay the rent, defray outside or general repairs,
+perhaps meet the coal bill, appears a matter of course. But it is
+unquestionably the province of the wife to buy provisions and pay for
+them, either in cash or by weekly or monthly accounts. Charges for
+work done in the house, the replacement of cooking utensils, household
+linen and the like, the bills for gas and electric light, all should be
+within her control, to be settled by her as they fall due, after she
+has examined them and convinced herself that they are correct.
+
+If other arrangement is made than this, it should be after careful
+consideration and unbiased discussion of the advantages and demerits of
+the system. As a general thing such a division as that just suggested
+proves the best.
+
+Exactly what proportion of the income shall be placed in the hands of
+the wife is a matter which must be decided by individual circumstances.
+Estimate has already been made as to the allowance to be given to
+food, and it can readily be seen that this must be determined by
+the character and size of the family as well as by the conditions
+surrounding them. The household of a farmer or of one who commands a
+garden and dairy can be kept on a much smaller pecuniary expenditure
+for actual food than is possible in the home of a dweller in the city,
+who must buy and pay for every particle of food which comes into the
+house. The sum disbursed may amount to the same thing in the long
+run, since the cost of keeping up the garden plot or caring for the
+cattle must be met by the man of the house, but he will not need to
+give as much cash into his wife’s hands as will be required in other
+circumstances.
+
+However the amount may be apportioned, whatever may be the charges
+laid upon the wife and those assumed by the husband, the necessity of
+strict and accurate household accounts should be insisted upon. I am
+not advocating any special system. I have known excellent outlines
+of domestic expenses which simply darkened counsel with words for
+some housekeepers and rendered the business of following their outlay
+confusion worse confounded. Sometimes a woman with little more than a
+common-school education and an ordinary working knowledge of arithmetic
+can keep her accounts with a conciseness and cleanness many a trained
+bookkeeper might envy. If a housekeeper has a system which proves
+satisfactory it is a mistake for her to try to change it for one which
+may be more scientific but is less useful.
+
+Merely as a suggested guide I would advise the beginner to provide
+herself with two books, one small and cheap, to be slipped into the
+pocket when going to market, the other larger and of better quality.
+In the first one, to which is attached a pencil, is to be set down
+every purchase and its cost, as soon as made. The memory should never
+be trusted in these matters, but each outlay--no matter how small,
+if it be nothing more than a car-fare or a three-cent bunch of
+parsley--entered immediately. Then these items are to be transferred
+in ink to the larger book as soon as possible after the housekeeper’s
+return to the home. It is fatal to accuracy and to really helpful
+bookkeeping to let the accounts accumulate before they are written down
+and balanced.
+
+Still keeping along the most elementary principles of household
+accounts, let me counsel that on the left-hand page be written the
+amount of money in hand, while the sums expended and the items for
+which they are paid out are set down on the opposite page. The two
+pages may be balanced each day or as the bottom of each page is
+reached, as best suits the housekeeper. The one immutable rule is that
+the sum which the written balance shows ought to be in her purse should
+absolutely be there. This may sound like the very primer of household
+expenses, but no woman who has ever gone through the anguish of trying
+to determine what has become of the stray dime her figures show should
+be in her possession, or of discovering how she happens to have a
+quarter more than her ciphering proves to belong to her, will ever make
+light of the endeavor to square her accounts and her cash balance. Such
+struggles are avoided by the consistent practice of noting down each
+payment as soon as made.
+
+Possibly the most important decision the young housekeeper has to make
+in beginning her domestic bookkeeping is how she shall pay for her
+purchases. Shall it be cash or credit? And if the latter, how often
+shall bills be paid?
+
+From the standpoint of wise economy it is safe to state that the
+strictly cash habit is probably the most economical method to follow.
+The old saying of “pay as you go, and if you can’t pay don’t go!” is
+put into practical effect. Foolish as it may be, the fact remains
+that we all feel a certain reluctance to part with actual cash which
+lays a detaining grasp upon us when we might be tempted to “plunge”
+if the charge were not to be presented until the end of the week or
+month. The housekeeper thinks more than once before she buys the more
+expensive cut of meat, the higher-priced fruits or vegetables than her
+purse shows she ought to purchase. And there is undoubtedly a comfort
+beyond words in the knowledge that no vexing bills are coming in after
+the food has been consumed and forgotten. When feasible, there are
+countless advantages in paying cash for everything which is brought
+into the house and leaving to credit only such items as cannot well be
+met except periodically--such as fuel, light, wages, and in some cases
+milk and ice.
+
+On the other hand, the charge system has something to its account. It
+is much more convenient, in the first place. When one is in a hurry
+to finish her marketing and get on to something else the nuisance of
+having to wait for change is vexatious. Sometimes the article desired
+is not in stock and must be ordered. One hesitates to pay for it before
+it is certain that it can be obtained. Again, the telephone marketing
+or commanding of groceries, disadvantageous as it is, must sometimes be
+followed because of illness or inclement weather, and then the habit
+of paying cash is a bother. Moreover, there is little doubt that the
+charge customer usually receives a meed of consideration often refused
+the cash payer. It is also a genuine inconvenience to pay cash for milk
+and for ice and for certain other commodities, such as butter and eggs
+supplied by special dealers.
+
+I have not touched upon the possibility that ready money may be
+lacking, as is sometimes the case with the man on a salary and still
+more with the one who does piecework and is not paid on a fixed day.
+Often the need for paying “real money” amounts to a hardship, not
+because the purchaser is not solvent, but because his remuneration is
+slow in arriving. At such periods the charge account partakes of the
+nature of a sheet-anchor. And yet there are strong arguments against it.
+
+Perhaps it is useless to lay stress on the disadvantages of the charge
+account, and yet I would feel I was in error if I did not speak a word
+of warning against the fatal facility attending on credit arrangements.
+It is altogether too easy to have an article charged, forgetting that a
+day of reckoning can only be postponed at the best. The housekeeper who
+for good and sufficient reasons decides to pay by check periodically
+should lay down for herself certain fixed rules.
+
+One of the chief of these is to have short accounts. A grocer’s or a
+butcher’s bill should be presented weekly and paid punctually. When
+the bill comes in it should be gone over carefully and the items on it
+checked up, to be sure, in the first place, that every article charged
+has been delivered; in the second place, that the charge set against
+it is that which was stated when the purchase was made. It is a common
+occurrence to find an increase of from one to five cents on several
+entries on a bill. The error may be due to the bookkeeper’s mistake
+or to the dealer’s dishonesty. In either event the blunder should be
+called to the merchant’s attention and corrected. He will respect the
+housekeeper none the less because he learns she is on the alert for
+possible discrepancies.
+
+Another principle to be followed is that the marketer should not be
+led into making foolish or extravagant purchases because they are to
+be charged. In the majority of cases it is a mistake for the small
+housekeeper to buy in quantity, since the cash saved by the transaction
+is offset by the waste of the material, either by spoiling or because
+of extravagant use. Yet when the purchase can be charged it is easy to
+yield to the temptation toward what seems at the first glance like an
+economy.
+
+Again, the possession of the charge account should not be permitted to
+lead the housekeeper into the habit of vicarious marketing--either by
+telephone or by messenger or by ordering through an employee of the
+concern she patronizes. Other mistakes may also be made, but these are
+probably the most frequent and those into which the woman who is not on
+her guard against pitfalls in the domestic path is likely to slip.
+
+I have said that it is not feasible to state here a fixed sum to
+which the housekeeper must limit her outlay for food. Her best plan
+for arriving at an approximate estimate is by a process of averages.
+A single day or even a single week cannot furnish a standard any more
+than can a single meal. The wisest method is by the aid of strict
+system to keep track of her expenditures and then study how the economy
+of one time offsets the liberality of another.
+
+To illustrate: when the holiday season is at hand expenses are bound to
+increase. The cost of the Thanksgiving or the Christmas turkey and pies
+cannot be appreciably reduced. But it is possible to make a science of
+economical purchasing and catering--this, too, without stinting the
+family or feeding them poorly--so that the burden of high-priced food
+may not hopelessly swamp the income.
+
+A like principle may be followed on other occasions. If company must
+be entertained, if a family feast must be observed, prudent marketing
+and skilful cookery may delude the household into an ignorance of the
+fact that money is being saved to carry the housekeeper over the time
+of increased bills. Constant thought and consideration are required for
+this, but to the lover of housekeeping the occupation after a while
+becomes almost like a game in which she pits her wits against the cost
+of living and glories when she comes out ahead.
+
+Here is an enterprise in which the habit of going to market for oneself
+and the custom of keeping strict account of disbursements both help
+the worker. She can pick up at a bargain a cut of meat, a selection
+of fish, a choice of vegetables or of fruit, or an occasion in canned
+goods which will at once bring down her average and permit her to lay
+aside a little toward the next heavy pull upon her purse. This is
+especially likely to be the case in the period of preserving, pickling,
+and similar pursuits, when often a happy “find” in fruit will help to
+lighten the unavoidable weight of conserving of any sort.
+
+The wise student of housekeeping need not let her family recognize the
+alternation of a feast and a fast at the table. When they eat a larded
+lamb’s liver, they will not suspect an economy; when they rejoice in
+filleted sole they will have no idea that the cheapness of flounders is
+responsible for their treat, any more than they guess that a delectable
+trifle which redeems a rather simple dinner is made from the remains
+of stale cake, the left-overs of a couple of jars of jam, and a simple
+custard.
+
+Some of the so-called economies do not economize. A bread-pudding which
+requires eggs, milk, sugar, butter, and raisins to the value of fifteen
+or twenty cents to use up three cents’ worth of stale bread can by no
+stretch of the imagination be regarded as a saving. Better make toast
+of the bread, save it for stuffing, or dry it and keep it for crumbs
+to serve in frying. But there are genuine economies galore, and the
+woman who makes a science of them will lay up for herself a series of
+agreeable sensations when she balances her housekeeping accounts at the
+end of the month.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+THE HOUSE IN ORDER
+
+
+Putting the house in order is one thing.
+
+Keeping it in order is quite another.
+
+Once upon a time there was a theory that every house, no matter how
+well kept, how frequently swept and scrubbed, must be torn up by
+the roots twice a year, for the spring and fall cleaning. At those
+dreadful periods mere men fled from before the devastating broom and
+scrubbing-brush wielded by the woman of the family. Even when they
+stole home in the evening to the slim meal which was all the worn-out
+housekeeper could provide, the halls and stairs were likely to be
+blocked by pails of suds, by furniture or rolls of carpet _en route_.
+
+To the aged survivors of that epoch the phrase “housecleaning-time” is
+still enough to provoke a shudder. I have heard the assertion made that
+it lasted at least six weeks, although all seem to be agreed that the
+spring visitation was more severe than that of the autumn.
+
+Even in this day and generation there are found certain authorities to
+declare that a house cannot be kept so clean that it does not once in
+so often require a thorough going-over. In a way there is an element
+of truth in their claim. In every home there are nooks and corners not
+in constant use, and therefore not regularly cleaned; store-closets,
+trunk-rooms, cupboards or drawers reserved for extra bedding, clothing,
+furnishings, into whose closed confines dust mysteriously seeps,
+wherein moth and other vermin make their breeding-places.
+
+At least once a year--and better, twice in a twelvemonth--these
+“glory-holes” should be emptied, the contents looked over, beaten or
+dusted, the floors, walls, shelves, etc., wiped off carefully. This is
+the time to give away or throw away treasured possessions no longer of
+use to their owners and which may be of service elsewhere; to rearrange
+such articles as escape banishment; to put aside for the next season
+the summer or winter clothing, hangings, and the like which are not
+needed at the moment. So long as dirt and dust continue to exist and
+to work themselves into the most jealously guarded precincts, so long
+must the housekeeper bestow at least a semi-annual inspection on her
+reserves and their quarters.
+
+She fails signally to understand her business, however, if she
+permits an accumulation of dirt with the comforting conviction that
+it will all be removed in the spring and fall clearance. More and
+more we understand the importance of purity to health, and with this
+comprehension we have grown to perceive that the best method of
+retaining high cleanliness is by never allowing the dirt to get the
+better of us. A little brushing and sweeping and cleaning here and
+there as it is needed, a more attentive treatment once a week, will
+keep the house clean without making the labor a burden.
+
+The system which should be the housekeeper’s most valued ally in the
+effort after efficiency comes into play here. By the time she is fairly
+settled in her new home she should have evolved a routine which, so
+far from being an irksome groove, will be rather a track on which the
+domestic wheels revolve without undue friction and the consequent wear
+and tear.
+
+Take into consideration first the round of the day as it has to do with
+keeping the house in order. When the maid or the housekeeper herself
+comes down in the morning to start the breakfast, either by making a
+fire with wood or coal, or by lighting the oil or gas flame, or turning
+the key that sets the electric current to work, she should open the
+windows to let in fresh air and the light which reveals the dusty or
+the untidy corners.
+
+While the kettle is boiling or the cereal simmering she may have to
+set the table, or if this has been done the night before and a light
+cloth thrown over it to protect from the dust, the dust-pan and broom
+may be called into service or the carpet-sweeper run over the places
+which demand attention. The fortunate woman who has a vacuum-cleaner,
+either one of the hand variety or the larger style which connects with
+the electric current supplying the house, has work simplified and time
+saved, as well as strength conserved.
+
+In those homes where an early and rather hasty breakfast is obligatory
+for the sake of the commuter or the business man who must get to his
+office promptly, or the children who must be off to school, it is
+better to have done what superficial tidying was possible the night
+before and to let the sweeping and dusting go until after the morning
+meal is despatched and the workers on their way. If a system is
+followed which obliges the readers of books and newspapers to put them
+in their place before going to bed, which insists that toys, tools,
+and clothing shall not be left lying about for some one besides the
+scatterers to put away the next morning, there need be no confusion
+encompassing the breakfast-table. A few moments should have been
+snatched for dusting the more conspicuous portions of the dining-room
+furniture, and distress of digestion should never be induced by the
+presence of dirt or disorder in the surroundings.
+
+When the housekeeper has the home to herself, has disposed of the
+details of dish-washing, bed-making, etc., has planned for her
+meals and made out the list for her marketing, she should turn her
+attention to the removal of the “matter out of place,” as dirt has been
+gracefully termed. The living-room will probably require her first
+efforts after she has reduced the dining-room to the proper condition
+of shining tidiness.
+
+I have referred to the vacuum-cleaner. I wish I could put one into the
+hands of every housekeeper! Several kinds are on the market and I carry
+no brief for any special make, but I know there is more than one good
+variety. The woman of slender means can use one of the hand-machines,
+which, while perhaps more tiresome to work than the cleaner run by
+electricity, will yet make much less call upon the strength than the
+ordinary broom and do the work much more effectively. Not the least of
+the advantages of the vacuum-cleaner is a merit it possesses in common
+with the ordinary carpet-sweeper--that it does not scatter dust as well
+as gather it up.
+
+More than this, the vacuum-cleaner enables the worker to remove the
+dust from draperies without taking them down, to clean walls by a less
+arduous means than going over them with a cloth-wrapped brush or broom.
+Decidedly, one of the best investments a housekeeper can make is a
+good vacuum-cleaner; and she will find that it soon pays for itself in
+the amount of time and toil it saves. The work it takes a woman hours
+to accomplish is done by the vacuum-cleaner in a fraction of the time
+she would bestow on cleansing by the old methods, and more than one
+housekeeper has found that she saved the wages of an extra helper by
+the purchase of a vacuum-cleaner that she could handle herself.
+
+When such a cleaner is out of the question, a substitute for minor
+work in this line is a carpet-sweeper. True, it cannot go into corners
+and its accomplishment must be supplemented by a dust-pan and broom,
+but even so, it saves much stooping and struggle to the housekeeper. A
+trustworthy variety should be selected; it should be emptied regularly
+and kept in perfect working order. With this there should be provided
+what is known as a dustless mop--there are several makes of these--to
+use on the bare floors after the rugs have been treated by the sweeper.
+
+As a matter of course everything of this sort, as well as the use of
+a broom which raises dust, should be concluded before the housekeeper
+attacks the furniture with the brush for the upholstered pieces, a
+flannelette or cheese-cloth duster for the hardwood, or one of the
+so-called oiled dusters. Of these, too, a good choice is offered at
+house-furnishing establishments. While the cleaning goes on the windows
+should be open, but not in such a way as to blow the dust, and the
+doors into the other part of the house should be kept closed. The old
+method, still practised by untrained maids or by housekeepers whose
+zeal is in excess of their knowledge, of cleaning two or three rooms at
+once and driving the dust from one room to another should be entirely
+out of date in these sanitary days.
+
+The same sort of surface-cleaning should be followed throughout the
+house, in halls and chambers, as well as in the down-stairs rooms. Even
+in the tidiest household dust is likely to gather from day to day, and
+if neglected twenty-four hours its presence is unpleasantly conspicuous.
+
+This superficial care answers excellently for part of the time, but it
+is not sufficient without a more thorough attack at least once a week.
+The housekeeper need not follow the modes of her mother and grandmother
+and have the whole house swept from top to bottom on one day of the
+week, unless she finds, after study of ways and means, that this
+simplifies living for her. A better plan is to have one room or two
+done a day, so that the labor is lightened by being spread out through
+the week.
+
+The same method should be followed in each room that is to be cleaned.
+The smaller ornaments should be wiped and laid away, either in the
+bureau drawer or on some large piece of furniture which cannot be
+moved but may have its surface and the objects put on it covered with
+a sweeping-sheet. Lighter articles, such as chairs and small tables,
+should be dusted and then carried from the room. The postponement of
+the dusting until they are brought back after the room has been swept
+means a fresh scattering of the dust about the clean chamber.
+
+Sweeping-sheets, made of cotton cloth bound with red, that they may not
+be confused with the regulation bed-linen, should be at hand to lay
+over such large pieces as cannot be removed. The sweeping should be
+done from the sides of the room toward the center, recollecting always
+to have at least one window opened and all doors closed. When the dust
+is all in one compact heap it should be taken up in the dust-pan,
+transferred at once to a newspaper, this rolled up tight and put aside
+to be carried down to the furnace or the ash-can. After the dust has
+settled the walls can be gone over with a cloth or with a broom about
+which has been wrapped a duster, or a hair brush with a long handle,
+such as comes for this purpose.
+
+The above method can be followed in a room with a carpeted floor or
+with a large rug fastened down. When small loose rugs are used they may
+be swept first, then rolled up and carried from the room, after which
+the bare floor is dusted or wiped off with oil or rubbed with one of
+the good waxing preparations which the popularity of the hardwood floor
+has brought into the market. In a house supplied with a vacuum-cleaner
+the floor and the rugs can both be cleansed without the labor of
+carrying out the latter, and the upholstered furniture will not need
+the offices of the small brush in removing the dust from folds and
+tufts.
+
+Water should not be used on a hardwood floor. It may be wiped off with
+a cloth dipped in crude oil and turpentine mingled in equal parts, and
+the mixture must be well rubbed in. In default of this, kerosene may
+be employed, observing moderation in the quantity of the oil applied.
+Too much of any kind of dressing makes an unpleasant odor which lingers
+persistently.
+
+It may be said, by the way, that when oilcloth is washed the cloth
+should be wrung out nearly dry. If the water gets under the oilcloth
+this will rot.
+
+When windows are to be washed the dust and dirt from the frames should
+be removed before the glass is touched. If not, the panes will be
+streaked. Warm water should be used, and no soap; this would make the
+glass cloudy. A little borax or ammonia may be added to the water, and
+in cold weather alcohol should be mixed with the water to prevent this
+from freezing on the cloth.
+
+In scouring paint the soap or other preparation should be applied on a
+flannel or the paint will be scratched. Hardwood finishings, such as
+door-posts, window-frames, and the like, should have the same sort of
+oiling as is used for the floors.
+
+If the silver which is in daily family service is always washed as
+it should be after each meal there is no reason why it should become
+dull and dingy and require a weekly scouring. Scalding-hot water is an
+essential; the silver should be rinsed off in hot suds, dropped into
+the almost boiling clean water, fished out quickly, a piece or two at a
+time, and dried immediately. No draining of silver or glass should ever
+be allowed, no matter what compromises are permitted in this line with
+china and crockery.
+
+Close to the worker’s hand should stand a few helps toward keeping her
+silver and glass bright and shining. A bottle of household ammonia
+or a box of borax is one of her best aids. Also she should have a
+little coarse salt with which to take egg stains from silver, and a
+cake or box of good silver polish in case some of the pieces look less
+brilliant than they should. A chamois-skin to give a final polish is
+also a desideratum. If silver has been laid away and become dull so
+that a general scouring is demanded, it is well for the housekeeper
+to have one of the patented devices by which silver can be cleansed
+by an immersion in a bath of soda and salt contained in an aluminum
+pan. Again, there are several good articles of this kind for sale at
+reasonable prices.
+
+The daily equipment for dish-washing should consist of two dish-pans
+for the housekeeper who does not possess a butler’s-pantry sink with
+running water. In one of these pans the silver and china should be
+rinsed free of all grease before they are put into the clean hot suds
+of the other pan. The glasses should be washed in the clear water
+before soap has been added; next come the silver pieces, and these,
+like the glasses, should be wiped dry as soon as they are taken out.
+
+The ideal method is to dry the china in the same way, but if it is
+perfectly clean when taken from the suds, the pieces ranged in a rack
+and boiling water poured over them, they will usually dry evenly and
+show no marks or streaks. This method undoubtedly saves much time
+and bother. A dish-mop is better for use in washing dishes than a
+dish-cloth, since it keeps the hands from the hot water, but should be
+scalded after each service and boiled once a day. The towels should be
+washed and boiled with equal regularity.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+HYGIENE AND PLUMBING
+
+
+Some of the apparently minor details of housekeeping really possess
+more importance than those which seem to bulk larger.
+
+Consider drains, for instance. In this day it is taken for granted that
+no one buys or rents a house without being assured that the plumbing
+is in perfect order, as well as having been of the best quality in
+the beginning. I say that this is taken for granted, and yet I feel I
+should modify this statement, recollecting homes in which I have been
+a guest where the plumbing is obsolete and neglected to a degree which
+would be dangerous with even the most up-to-date fittings. When such
+carelessness exists relative to the old-fashioned closed plumbing with
+the cheapest and least scientific of traps and stop-cocks, one gains a
+rather alarming notion of the hazards to which householders recklessly
+subject their families.
+
+Let me state here that the absence of evil odor is no proof that drains
+and traps are in excellent order. The deadly sewer-gas is practically
+without smell, and persons can be badly poisoned by it with no warning
+on the part of their olfactory nerves. There are tests which will
+demonstrate the presence of noxious vapors, but these must be made by
+sanitary engineers or specialists in this line. Unless the dweller in
+any home is positively assured that the drains, plumbing, etc., are in
+perfect condition there should be no delay in making such tests and in
+proving the good or evil state of the house-fittings.
+
+This is not sufficient, however. The drains must be kept clear, not
+only for such a simple hygienic reason as the desire to guard against
+disease, but also because a greasy or dirty pipe soon means a choked
+pipe, and this in turn brings the inconvenience of a sink which cannot
+be used, of a backed-up overflow of waste water, with the possible
+accompaniment of injured floor-coverings, walls, and ceilings.
+
+The expert may be required to decide as to the perfection of drains.
+The veriest beginner in housekeeping needs little education to know
+how to keep them free. In the first place she should see that nothing
+is thrown down a waste-pipe but the things it is meant to carry off.
+When wads of paper, broken pasteboard boxes, rolls of hair-combings,
+and similar refuse are flung into the mouth of even a wide and
+generous waste-pipe there is pretty sure to be trouble sooner or
+later. When grease and particles of food, tea-leaves, coffee-grounds,
+and collections of dust are dumped into a sink, or a corresponding
+amount of debris is permitted to try to make its way through the pipe
+running from the wash-basin, no one but the person guilty of such gross
+carelessness may be to blame, but the whole household is likely to
+suffer for the offense.
+
+In view of the fact that most persons are heedless, the housekeeper
+should protect herself and others against risks. One of the
+simplest helps to this is the use of washing-soda--a chemical
+which is absolutely ruinous to clothing when used as a detergent
+in laundry-work, but is admirable for cutting grease or fat which
+has accumulated in waste-pipes and for eating away other foreign
+particles which have gathered there. I hasten to add that it will not
+disintegrate strands of hair or bone buttons--both of which are often
+found by plumbers in the joints of choked pipes they have been called
+in to open!
+
+Another aid to keeping the pipes clean and free is household ammonia.
+This does not need to be poured clear into the pipes, but when it has
+been employed in rinsing greasy dishes or in cleansing the sink, or in
+brightening glass or silver, the hot water to which it has been added
+is of distinct benefit to the waste-pipes. It may be suggested, by the
+way, that one of the best methods for using the washing-soda is to lay
+a good-sized lump of it over the drain-pipe from the sink so that the
+water which goes down carries particles of the soda with it on their
+cleansing errand.
+
+Either ammonia or a solution of washing-soda should be used in rinsing
+out the set-tubs after laundry-work has been done. When one thinks of
+the human waste from the skin which adheres to the clothing and is
+washed off from it in these tubs, there is a degree of foulness in the
+notion of letting the tubs pass with no more cleansing than the rinsing
+they get from the second or third water through which the clothes are
+passed.
+
+Other cleansing preparations come which are perhaps less severe in
+their effect on the hands than the common washing-soda. Many of those
+on the market are known to be excellent by the proof they have given
+housekeepers. The names of several of these will at once suggest
+themselves to any one who keeps up with the times in the line of
+domestic helps. Whatever the chosen cleaning medium may be, a bottle or
+box of it should always stand in the bath-room, not only for rinsing
+out pipes and keeping them clear, but also for preserving the purity of
+basin and tub and toilet-bowl.
+
+I have often been impressed by the carelessness of housekeepers in
+this detail, especially in homes where there are several children.
+Evidently these have never been taught the niceties of rinsing out the
+tub after bathing, or the basin after washing the hands. Around each
+vessel runs a high-tide mark of soap or dirt, the mere sight of which
+is enough to deter the observer from using bowl or bath. The touch of
+the hand to the inside of either will almost always discover a sediment
+or accretion of grease or dirt or both. This accumulation is readily
+removed by a soap-rubbed cloth or by one dipped in ammonia or other
+detersive. Such care may seem a trifling detail, but it is one which
+should never be neglected.
+
+In connection with this a word does not come amiss as to the superior
+attractiveness of nickel bath-room fittings, or of those of the kitchen
+or butler’s pantry, when they are kept bright and clean, over those
+which are suffered to lapse into dinginess. When the nickel coating is
+hopelessly scoured off it is not a serious matter to have the fittings
+done over and made to look like new.
+
+The whole care of the bath-room deserves more attention than it usually
+receives. Soiled towels and wet wash-cloths should not be flung down
+here and there, or stray medicine-bottles and medicine-boxes left in
+untidy rows on the shelves. The medicine-cabinet should be kept in
+order; the towels and wash-cloths folded neatly and hung up after
+using; clean towels in plenty in readiness for the chance guest; the
+soap-dish should be scoured scrupulously as often as once a day. Of
+course it takes time to do these little things, but their presence
+or absence marks the difference between the good and the careless
+housekeeper.
+
+Washing-soda has another use beyond that of keeping drain-pipes
+clear. A solution of it is excellent for washing out the ice-box or
+refrigerator. This process should take place at least once a week. When
+this is said it is not meant that the ice-box should not be cleared out
+oftener than that. A new piece of ice should not go into it if there
+is a possibility of bits of food of any sort having been left in the
+corners or cracks of the ice-chamber. Daily inspection of the contents
+of the refrigerator will make sure that all food in it is keeping well
+and is sweet and fresh.
+
+In most well-made refrigerators of the day the shelves are so built
+that they can be slipped in and out. By this plan they can be scrubbed
+clean and the sides of the refrigerator can also be scoured off, as
+would not be feasible with non-detachable shelves. After it has been
+made clean a few pieces of charcoal should be laid in the corners. This
+will keep the place sweet by absorbing the odors from food, and every
+few days the fragments of charcoal should be thrown out and new ones
+put in their place.
+
+Even with this care the ice-box will sometimes get a close smell; at
+such times a small shovel should be made nearly red-hot, a little
+ground coffee sprinkled upon it, and this put into the refrigerator
+for a few minutes. It should be understood by every housekeeper that
+butter, milk, and cream should never be kept near strong-smelling
+articles of food. They absorb the odors and taste of the items they
+have been with.
+
+Milk is usually kept in open dishes or pans for those who wish to get
+the full good of the cream which rises to the surface, and nothing
+else except other milk products or perhaps fresh eggs should be
+permitted near it.
+
+When highly flavored foods of any sort must be kept in a refrigerator
+they should either be closely covered--which is not always possible
+or desirable--or put in a chamber by themselves. Butter should not be
+suffered to remain in the wooden boxes or plates on which it is often
+sent home; lettuce and greens should either be washed before they are
+put away or wrapped in clean paper. Lettuce is best rinsed and then
+done up in a clean cloth before it is laid near the ice.
+
+When canned goods of any sort are opened they should at once be turned
+from the tin. They will keep indefinitely in the can while this is
+sealed, but as soon as the air gets at the contents a chemical change
+is wrought by the contact of the fluid and the tin and the food soon
+becomes affected and a positive menace to health. The housekeeper
+should always have in her stock a number of small bowls or dishes into
+which to turn the fruit, vegetables, etc., which have been sent home to
+her in a can.
+
+A wire meat-safe is an important item to have in the pantry, when
+there is room for such a convenience. Lacking this space, the dweller
+in flats achieves a compromise by a box built outside of her kitchen
+window, covered on top with oilcloth or other water-proof material,
+that the contents may be kept dry. According to the exposure of the
+window to the sun, the sides of the box may either be of wire netting
+or solid wood. In length the box matches the width of the window and is
+usually high enough to allow of two shelves. In this improvised outdoor
+pantry can be kept in cool weather many articles which would otherwise
+crowd the refrigerator unduly and would perhaps wither or spoil in the
+warm kitchen or pantry.
+
+Every convenience she can lay her hands on the housekeeper is within
+her rights in securing. When it is worth while it pays for itself in
+sparing her busy hands and feet, in easing the tire of her overworked
+back. On her floor she should have linoleum, as it is easier to keep
+clean than the bare boards, more sanitary and more convenient than rugs.
+
+The study of how to arrange her kitchen so as to save herself steps
+is one of the first things the new housekeeper should undertake. The
+table should stand near the sink and not too far from the stove; the
+utensils most frequently in service should be hung on a row of hooks
+close at hand or be ranged on a couple of shelves above the table.
+Here, too, should be such articles of seasoning, etc., as are in
+constant demand--the salt-box, the pepper-cruet, the vinegar-bottle,
+the flour-dredger, and the like. The bread-box and bread-board should
+be near the table on which the loaf is to be sliced; the bread-knife
+should be close by.
+
+One of the greatest conveniences for a kitchen is that piece of
+furniture called a kitchen cabinet, which unites the functions of a
+dresser, a receptacle for provisions, a table or shelf at which to
+make bread and roll pastry, and various other qualities that must be
+known to be appreciated fully. These cabinets come in different sizes,
+styles, and finish, and are easily made by the clever home carpenter.
+
+The fireless cooker must not pass unnoticed, whether this be of the
+home-made hay-box kind or of the more elaborate variety containing
+plates to heat for cooking the contents of the vessels of the cooker.
+Whichever make is selected, the cooker itself is one of the most potent
+aids the housekeeper can have as a saver of time, of fuel, of labor,
+and of fatigue. By its assistance the meal virtually cooks itself, once
+it has been started in the right way. Food prepared in the fireless
+cooker preserves its flavor as it cannot do if cooked in the oven or on
+top of the stove, and there is far less waste of the material of each
+article than if it were suffered to go off in steam and aroma.
+
+The most popular fuel of the day is undoubtedly gas, since the cost
+of electric equipment puts it beyond the reach of most housekeepers
+of moderate means. Yet there are many parts of the country where all
+cookery must be done by coal or even by wood, and where the only solace
+of the worker is that she has the comfort of the heat in winter and the
+benefits of slow cooking at all times.
+
+For housekeepers who must buy their coal it is well to know that the
+most advantageous mixture for the average-sized range is a mixture of
+egg-coal and nut-coal, in the proportion of equal parts of the red ash
+and the white ash. The latter burns more slowly than the former, while
+this gives a stronger fire and makes fewer cinders.
+
+A fresh fire need not be made more than once a week if the housekeeper
+is careful to rake out the ashes at bedtime, put on fresh coal, open
+the draughts for ten or fifteen minutes or until the new coal is fairly
+kindled, then close the draughts and leave the upper door of the stove
+open. In the morning the draughts have only to be opened after the
+upper door has been closed and a little fresh coal put on as soon as
+the fire has begun to be red. Not until this has begun to burn well
+should a further small supply of coal be added. This mode is much more
+economical of fuel and work than making a fresh fire every day.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE HOME WITHOUT A SERVANT
+
+
+The housekeeper who undertakes to run her establishment without a
+servant is beset by certain disadvantages. When she has had a bad
+night, is suffering from indisposition of any kind, or wishes to
+undertake some piece of work, such as dressmaking, for which she
+desires to have her time free, it is inconvenient to feel that without
+her personal effort no part of the business of the house will be done,
+that all responsibility as well as all performance falls upon her.
+
+On the other hand, great are the comforts of the woman who has no
+one but herself to do her work. These should be considered, since an
+enormously large proportion of American housekeepers employ no regular
+servant and many others call in assistance only for such toil as
+washing and ironing and heavy cleaning.
+
+The woman who does not keep a maid can run her kitchen to suit herself
+and have things done as she prefers. She need not be constantly worried
+because the cook neglects to line the garbage-pail with a newspaper
+or to put on the cover, persistently leaves the refrigerator open in
+hot weather and will not save left-overs. The mistress knows that the
+dishes are washed by an approved method, since she does it herself,
+and this position also enables her to have the utensils and general
+plenishing of the kitchen and pantry in the order she likes.
+
+The same freedom obtains in other parts of the house. There is no
+uncertainty as to whether towels and napkins are used in the prescribed
+routine; no doubt if the beds are properly aired and made, the corners
+of the rooms swept and the top shelves dusted, sanitary precautions
+observed as to drains and similar niceties of care followed. The woman
+who does her own work can be sure of an attention to details which
+she could not compel from a hireling except at the cost of close
+watchfulness and more or less nagging.
+
+More than this, the economies to be compassed in a house where no maid
+is kept far exceed the mere outlay for food which is required to supply
+an extra person. No one but the mistress of the home will watch for
+small leaks, and, having bought judiciously, will take pains that the
+saving thus practised is not lost by careless use of materials. She
+will plan her meals so as to utilize remnants, will see that the trifle
+which seems of no importance is put aside to combine with another
+apparently negligible quantity, will guard worn-out household linens
+for other services than the rag-bag, will watch for the first breaks
+in table-cloth or napkins and stop them with a wise stitch or two.
+Through it all she will possess the delightful sense of having her home
+to herself, of knowing there is not a nook or a corner of it where she
+does not reign supreme, and that her theories are put into practice
+from the top of the house to the bottom.
+
+Such delightful sensations as these are of course out of the question
+for the woman who undertakes housekeeping without a good working
+knowledge of how to conduct it. The theories to which reference has
+been made may be the best of their kind, but unless they are backed
+by the ability to do the things they describe there is likely to be
+trouble. Still, the woman who has more book instruction in the line of
+housekeeping than actual experience can learn by doing and in time
+reach a point where her independence is a joy to her. The best aid she
+can have in this endeavor is system, the habit of doing each task at a
+certain hour and in a certain way, and she need not consider the time
+wasted she bestows on planning out her routine so as to make it at once
+easy and efficient.
+
+In a city apartment or a small house fitted with the latest
+improvements the way is much simplified. If one can have a fire by
+striking a match and turning on the gas-stove, is supplied with
+hot water by a means outside her own kitchen, has milk, ice, meat,
+and other provisions brought to the door of her pantry, and no
+responsibility as to getting rid of ashes or garbage, she may feel that
+her lines have fallen in pleasant places.
+
+Naturally, a woman who lives in these conditions must direct her work
+in a very different way from that incumbent upon the dweller in a
+village or on a farm, who must build and keep in her own fires for
+cooking and heating, warm every drop of hot water that is used--often
+perhaps having to draw or pump it first--fill the lamps by which the
+house is lighted, and do all the many other duties which are performed
+for the dweller in a city flat and taken by her for granted. Yet as
+much efficiency, as delightful a life, exist in these conditions as
+can be found in a home where the work is reduced to a minimum. The
+housekeeper who must put up with inconveniences will generally find
+that they are offset by benefits which go far to counterbalance the
+drawbacks.
+
+If the city housekeeper with all modern improvements at her command
+requires system in her work, it is even more necessary for the one who
+must do without such aids. At the same time she must secure every help
+she can. When she can get one of the gasolene-stoves which, if properly
+managed, are hardly second to a gas-range in excellence, or, if lacking
+one of these, she can secure a good oil-stove with an oven; if she can
+provide herself with an oil hot-water-back or heater which will warm
+the water for cooking and bathing; if she purchases all such aids as
+fireless cookers, steamers, hand vacuum-cleaners, and other up-to-date
+appliances, she will simplify her labor and at the same time preserve
+the youth and strength that would be devoured by the adherence to the
+methods of her grandmother in a day when twentieth-century living is
+taken for granted on even the remote rural free-delivery route.
+
+In addition to this she should study the art of sparing herself in
+other ways, even of shirking when it is wise. By this advice there
+is no implication that she should be careless of work that should be
+done or perform it in the wrong way. But often duties can be postponed
+with no harm to anything except the housekeeper’s supersensitive
+conscientiousness, just as there are times when it is even wiser
+to leave the room unswept or undusted than to wear oneself down to
+absolute fatigue and the fretfulness or irritability such weariness
+connotes.
+
+One of the first rules for the home-worker to lay down for herself is
+that no positive moral superiority is displayed by standing at one’s
+occupations. There is no reason except a custom better broken than
+preserved why a woman should not have a high stool or chair on which
+to sit while washing and drying dishes, while preparing vegetables,
+beating eggs, creaming butter or flour, and performing other such
+tasks, as well as while ironing small pieces. The stool or chair should
+also be accompanied by a hassock or footstool on which to rest the
+feet. The fact that some of the old type of housekeepers will call the
+practice lazy does not in the least affect the common sense of the
+suggestion and the habit.
+
+Another means for rendering kitchen work agreeable is to have the
+right sort of utensils with which to accomplish it. I have spoken of
+some of the conveniences already. Certain of them are high-priced, but
+many of the aids to easy and pleasant cookery are inexpensive. To have
+plenty of bowls and spoons, the right kind of measuring-cups, pans,
+and pudding-dishes, is as essential in its way as the purchase of a
+bread or cake mixer or a washing-machine. Too often housekeepers put
+up with the poor outfits they have and let a mistaken economy prevent
+their securing the right kind of tools. Nothing worth having is gained
+by washing dishes in a rusty and battered pan, drying them on ragged
+towels, any more than by serving your puddings in a chipped bake-dish
+or measuring ingredients in a leaky cup. This is not real economy; it
+is either slovenliness or sloth. When a woman does her own work she can
+surely trust herself to take care of the articles she uses, and she
+should not stint herself in buying those she needs.
+
+Also she should dress for the part of maid-of-all-work when she is
+filling that rôle. Tightly fitting waists and long skirts should never
+be worn, and wash frocks are the best, since the material not only does
+not harbor odors of cooking as does a woolen fabric, but the garment
+can be washed when it is soiled.
+
+A shirtwaist and short skirt or a one-piece frock is the best uniform,
+and always there should be a large and comprehensive apron with a
+high bib and shoulder-straps. In addition to this it is well to have
+a couple of aprons supplied with sleeves, which can be slipped on
+over an afternoon frock when getting dinner ready or when washing up
+afterward. All the aprons should be long enough to come down well
+to the hem of the gown and should be of some pretty goods, such as
+gingham or percale, or one of the crinkly fabrics which do not need to
+be ironed after washing. There is no reason why a woman who does her
+own work should not look attractive while she is at the process. Above
+all, she should abjure curl-papers, kid curlers, and similar atrocities
+both while at her duties and when presiding at the breakfast-table for
+a family which should surely take away with them an agreeable mental
+picture of the mistress of the house. If these adjuncts are actually
+necessary to render the wearer presentable later in the day, she should
+at least conceal them under a pretty boudoir cap. Such a cap is
+advisable not only on account of the appearance, but as a protection to
+the hair from smoke and steam.
+
+After the morning meal is over the housekeeper may either put her
+dishes to soak in hot water, leave her beds to air, and go out to do
+her marketing, or she may decide to postpone the purchasing until
+later in the day and despatch her household duties before she leaves
+the house. Often it seems wiser to go to market late in the morning,
+or even in the afternoon, and thus have the best part of the forenoon
+unbroken for domestic occupations. The systematic housekeeper can
+usually plan her meals so that this plan can be followed without
+inconvenience.
+
+In the well-kept flat there is not very much to do when there are only
+two in the family. With so few in the house articles do not get out
+of place to any marked extent, and when the windows have been opened
+in the chambers and living-room while breakfast was going on there is
+little to hinder the housekeeper from devoting only a short time to
+pushing furniture back into place, running a carpet-sweeper over the
+floor, and doing necessary dusting. A bed or two must be made, the
+bath-room put in order, the dishes washed, and the dining-room and
+kitchen set to rights; but in the apartment where the woman does her
+own work there will be no accumulation of other persons’ dirt to be
+removed.
+
+When a whole house is occupied there is more to be done. Halls and
+stairs must be brushed, perhaps front steps swept, stoves looked after
+in winter, and flies beaten out and rooms shaded in summer. Other
+duties will present themselves if there is more than a single floor
+to be kept in order--a floor on which are found kitchen, pantry, and
+dining-room as well as chambers and bath-room.
+
+Whether it be an apartment or a whole house, the same order of work
+should be followed. The morning should be the time applied to turning
+off any heavy or disagreeable work which has to be done. Cleaning,
+sweeping, dusting, making ready of vegetables for dinner, preparing the
+pudding or other dessert which is to be cooked later in the day, should
+always be planned for the early hours of the day. This is the time when
+the energies are at their best and freshest, and it is also the period
+when interruptions are least likely. In the afternoon one cannot be
+secure against callers or other demands upon leisure--to say nothing of
+the comfort one feels in knowing that the unpleasing portions of the
+day’s toil are done and over with!
+
+The young housekeeper who becomes absorbed in her new occupation
+sometimes slips into the fault of yielding herself to it too
+unreservedly. When a woman really loves the work of cooking and
+planning, of keeping her house in exquisite order and contriving to
+make supply and demand meet one another, she is in danger of becoming
+given over to it. Her husband is not likely to be able to understand
+her attitude, and although he may enjoy a well-kept home, he will
+probably feel he desires something more in his wife than a domestic
+devotee.
+
+Against the danger of drifting into this position the young housekeeper
+should be on the alert. No one else is as much interested as is she
+in the business of running her particular home, and the sooner she
+appreciates this the better for her and the more agreeable for every
+one else. At first she will possibly wish to talk of little else, but
+after the very earliest novelty has worn off she should wake up to the
+perception that there are other things in the world besides her home.
+She should see that she must keep herself in good mental condition as
+well as keep her house; that the time is not wasted that she spends in
+reading, in wise recreation, especially in permitting herself a little
+rest each afternoon which will help preserve her freshness and vigor
+and put her into condition to make life pleasant for her husband when
+he comes home at night.
+
+For this is as important a point as any other in housekeeping. Even a
+man who loves his home wearies of finding a worn-out wife at dinner
+every evening, and of being confined for subjects of conversation to
+the round of the happenings connected with the butcher, the baker, and
+the grocer. He likes a lively, fresh wife awaiting him; he enjoys being
+entertained after the hard toil of the day; he is pleased when she is
+glad to go with him for a little outing or a mild dissipation. To be
+in readiness for this is an object the housekeeper should have in view
+through the work of the day, and she should resolutely cut out any
+additional labor which will interfere with her making the dwelling a
+home as well as a mere place to live in.
+
+As a practical illustration of this let me commend the habit of letting
+the dinner-dishes wait to be washed until the next morning when there
+is something on hand with which this work would clash. While it is
+undoubtedly agreeable to go to bed with the pleasant sensation that
+there are no “hangovers” in the way of undischarged duties, it is
+often wiser to postpone a task than to perform it at the cost of hurry
+and flurry. The dishes may be put in a pan with hot water and a little
+washing-powder, and left until after breakfast the next day, when they
+may be washed without haste or nervousness.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+IN THE LAUNDRY
+
+
+Whether or not a housekeeper expects to do her own washing and ironing,
+she should know in every detail how it is to be done. The occasion
+may not arise for her to put her hands into the wash-tub or to wield
+a flat-iron, but she should understand the operations and know how to
+correct intelligently the errors of her laundress.
+
+There has been a good deal said of the burden of laundry-work, and
+yet I have known many women who preferred undertaking it themselves
+to trusting it to the charge of an ignorant or untrained washerwoman.
+This is sometimes the only variety that can be secured in the country
+or in small places, but the laundry, which is the resource so often
+of dwellers in the city, is frequently far more injurious to clothing
+than the treatment of the poorest laundress. In such circumstances or
+when economy seems necessary the housekeeper who has the ability to do
+up the clothing of her family and the bed and table linen possesses a
+power which means not only comfort, but saving of wear and tear as well
+as of money.
+
+In the effort to provide the A-B-C of laundry-work a beginning must be
+made with directions for sorting and preparing the clothes for washing.
+
+The first step is to separate towels and bed-linen from starched
+white garments and place them in different piles, with flannels and
+stockings in a third gathering. This should be done on the evening
+preceding wash-day, as the labor is much lessened by putting the
+clothes into soak overnight. The method--or lack of method--of the
+careless laundress is to throw those garments to be submitted to this
+preliminary treatment into a tub of warm water to which has been added
+some washing-powder or detersive and leave them thus all night.
+
+Instead of this the clothing should be looked over carefully, dipping
+the worst-soiled portions into warm water and rubbing the spots well
+with laundry soap. Each garment should then be rolled up with the
+soaped side inward, and all the rolls thus made packed down into a tub
+of lukewarm water to which has been added a small quantity of borax,
+household ammonia, or other equally good and harmless detersive.
+
+Just here it is well to make a slight digression on this subject.
+I have already spoken of the injurious effects of washing-soda in
+laundry-work. It cuts and perforates the linen on which it is used,
+but it is so potent in taking out dirt that I have known laundresses
+to bring it with them in their pockets when its use was forbidden
+by a housekeeper. Washing-soda is possibly the most destructive of
+these agencies, but there are others on the market, sold as patented
+preparations, which are hardly less harmful. Of a number of them it
+is true that they are helpful if used in moderation. The trouble is
+that the unskilled worker is likely to imagine that where a little is
+good much would be better, and to apply the powder or fluid with a
+liberality that has disastrous results.
+
+Even when borax or ammonia--probably the least deleterious of all
+detersives--is used, it should be in small quantities when the clothing
+is to be left with it for any length of time. Therefore there should be
+very little put in the tub in which the raiment is to be soaked.
+
+Woolens, cotton and wool, or silk and wool, colored clothes, and
+stockings are not given this soaking, but left to one side until the
+next morning.
+
+When the actual washing begins flannels should have the first
+attention. They should be given especial care, since upon this depends
+their coming from the wash smooth and soft instead of thickened and
+rough. Soap should not be rubbed upon them unless there are badly
+soiled spots, and then these should be soaped without applying soap
+to the rest of the garment. A little ammonia should be added to the
+water in which they are washed, and this should be lukewarm and made
+into suds by the addition of shaved soap before the flannels are put
+in. They should not be rubbed on the board but between the hands, with
+frequent dipping up and down in the water until they look clean.
+
+The flannels are then squeezed between the hands until as much water
+as possible is gone from them, when they are thrown for rinsing into
+water of the same temperature as that from which they were taken. This
+is essential. Water which is either colder or hotter will thicken and
+shrink the flannels. After a thorough rinsing they are again wrung out
+and hung to dry at once, in the shade, if an outdoor drying-place is
+used. They look better if they are ironed while still slightly damp.
+When both colored and white flannels are to be washed the latter should
+come second, that specks of lint from them may not disfigure the
+colored articles.
+
+The second water from the flannels will answer very well for the first
+washing of the other clothes. It is not necessary to practise this
+economy in a flat furnished with hot water from the cellar, but the
+fact is worth recalling when the supply of warm water is insufficient.
+
+Too many pieces should not be put into the tub at once, as the clothes
+cannot be washed properly if crowded together, and plenty of water is
+demanded to get them clean. The water should be warm and the clothes
+which have been soaked overnight will require little rubbing on the
+board in order to make them clean. It may be mentioned that clothing
+which is worn long enough to become badly soiled will need an amount of
+hard rubbing which will wear it out much sooner than garments that have
+been thrown into the wash before they are very dirty.
+
+The boiler, half full of cold water, should be at hand. Colored clothes
+are never boiled, and they may be washed separately if this seems more
+convenient. After the soiled spots on the white clothes have been well
+soaped the pieces should be dropped into the boiler. The addition of a
+tablespoonful of kerosene to the water is beneficial. The boiler should
+be put on the stove and the water brought to a boil, stirring the
+clothes up from the bottom with a clothes-stick from time to time. The
+boiling should not continue long, but the clothes be removed as soon as
+the water has fairly boiled. Too long on the fire yellows the clothing.
+
+Clean hot water should be at hand and into this each article should
+be dropped as it comes from the boiler. Careful rinsing is one of the
+secrets of having clothes a good color after washing. Each piece should
+be turned inside out to rinse it sufficiently. The garments to be blued
+should be transferred from the rinsing water to cold water to which
+a few drops of bluing have been added. Judgment must be used in this
+addition or the clothing will be too blue. A favorite trick of careless
+laundresses is to save themselves the scrubbing which would make the
+garments clean, and cover their fault by making them very blue.
+
+After the bluing the unstarched pieces may be wrung and hung out to
+dry. The other pieces must be starched as will be directed a little
+further on.
+
+The rinsing water in which the clothes were dipped after coming from
+the boiler will serve for the first washing of the colored garments. As
+these need no bluing, such of them as do not require starching may be
+rinsed and hung out at once to dry. Those that must be stiffened may be
+dipped into the starch, wrung out, well shaken, and dried.
+
+For boiled starch, a half-cupful of the dry starch is needed in
+proportion to a quart of boiling water. The starch is made to a paste
+with cold water, the boiling water poured upon it, and the mixture
+stirred over the fire until it is clear and smooth. Some laundresses
+insist upon boiling the starch an hour, but good results may be gained
+with the preparation made as just directed. This starch is of the right
+consistency for shirts, aprons, etc., but it must be thinned to use for
+either table-linen or for delicate underwear until it is little thicker
+than single cream. If shirt bosoms or cuffs or the cuffs of shirtwaists
+are to be stiffened, raw starch must be added to the boiled. Raw starch
+is prepared by moistening a handful of the raw starch to a paste with a
+little cold water, increasing the water until a quart of it has been
+used, and stirring it with a piece of fine white soap.
+
+The pieces which have already been passed through the boiled starch
+may be dipped into the raw starch for additional stiffening, after the
+first starch has dried in them. They are well moistened in the raw
+starch, rolled up and left for half an hour or so, and ironed while
+damp. The quantity for which direction has just been made is rather
+large for a small family, but the proportions may be used in smaller
+measure.
+
+Cheap soap and starch should never be employed; they are an
+extravagance in the end. The soap should be bought, in a small family,
+about a dozen cakes at a time and dried. One cake is enough for a small
+wash, unless left floating in the tub after its use is over.
+
+All stains should be looked to before the clothes are washed at all.
+Fruit and wine stains, like those from coffee and tea, may be taken
+out by stretching the spotted part over a basin and pouring boiling
+water through the fabric. The process should be repeated several times
+or until the stain is gone. Soap will often “set” a spot which would
+come out if washed in clear water. Fruit stains, rust stains--such as
+iron-mold--and sometimes ink stains may be removed by wetting the
+spots with lemon-juice, sprinkling salt upon this, and laying the
+article in the sun. The operation must be done more than once before
+the spot will come out entirely. The same treatment will sometimes
+obliterate mildew stains, but if these prove obstinate, boiling in
+buttermilk the article marked will perhaps take them out. Turpentine
+will remove paint stains, and oil marks must be washed with cold water
+and a good white soap. Grass stains are sometimes taken out by rubbing
+with butter and then washing this out. All spots or stains are far
+harder to get rid of after they have once been put through the regular
+wash.
+
+Fine pieces of linen like doilies, centerpieces, embroidered and
+lace-trimmed handkerchiefs, or very delicate lingerie underwear should
+never be washed with the ordinary clothing unless the housekeeper gives
+her special attention to them. They should under no circumstances be
+rubbed on the wash-board, but rubbed between the hands in a good suds
+made of warm water and a fine white soap, and rinsed very carefully. If
+they are to be stiffened at all the starch water through which they are
+passed should be no heavier than milk. While still warm such articles
+should be pressed on the wrong side; and if embroidered, a thick woolen
+cloth must be laid under the ironing-sheet. By this method the work on
+the article stands out well.
+
+A little experience with ironing is worth more than instruction.
+When the clothes have been well sprinkled and folded, the work done
+evenly, and each piece rolled up tightly when dampened, a strong arm
+and steady, smooth strokes will give good results; but practice is
+needed to make the work entirely satisfactory. Experience will tell
+when the iron is the right heat. For starched clothes a greater heat is
+needed than for flannels; the iron must be tried on a piece of paper
+to make sure it is not too hot. Each piece pressed should be ironed
+until dry to make a smooth finish. Table and bed linen should be ironed
+lengthwise. Always the irons should be well wiped off before using, and
+when not in service they should stand on end on a shelf. Never should
+they be left on the range when not in use; this roughens the surface.
+
+The electric iron is a great aid, but this must be used with care or it
+will be short-circuited and burned out. Always the power must be turned
+off when the iron is laid aside for even a few minutes.
+
+No advice as to laundry-work would be complete that did not speak a
+word relative to mending. The woman who does her own work will be on
+the alert for breaks or thin places in any article and will lay pieces
+thus damaged to one side as they are pressed. As a matter of course
+it is well to make repairs before the washing is done, when this is
+possible, but many garments are far pleasanter to mend after laundering
+than before. Stockings do not gain enough harm by being washed before
+darning to offset the unpleasantness of having to mend them while they
+are still soiled.
+
+When possible, fine articles which have to be darned or carefully
+mended with a patch or by piecing are best repaired before they are
+ironed. After they have been washed they can be put aside until the
+housekeeper has time to mend them properly, and they can then have an
+iron run over them and the mended spot smoothed.
+
+The life of fine table-linen can be prolonged indefinitely by attention
+to the first break in the hemstitching, the first wear of a thread in
+the fabric, the first hole in lace. After the material once begins
+to go, even long and careful mending will scarcely save it, but
+watchfulness for the earliest symptoms of wear will postpone the evil
+day.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+WHEN COMPANY COMES
+
+
+Elaborate entertaining should not be undertaken by a young couple of
+moderate means. Hospitality should be a matter of course, but never on
+a scale that makes it a burden to carry out at the time or to pay for
+afterward.
+
+Perhaps the best and in many respects the most agreeable form of
+hospitality is that which calls in the occasional guest to an informal
+meal--a sort of improvised party. The husband asks a crony to dine on a
+certain night, the wife invites a friend to meet him. Little change is
+made in the family meal--perhaps a salad added as well as a sweet, or
+more unusual items ordered, or a special dessert prepared, but nothing
+which would bring the repast into the line of a dinner-party. There is
+no state and ceremony and everything is pleasant and jolly. Such little
+dinners are among the most charming forms of entertainment that can
+be achieved by young people of moderate means. When it seems well to
+widen the circle of invited guests, all to be done is to increase the
+provision made without departing from the simplicity which is one of
+the features of this kind of entertaining.
+
+In the properly regulated home, where the observances of polite society
+are followed as much when the family is alone as when there is company,
+guests have no terrors. When the unexpected visitor arrives the table
+is found spread for two in the same style that it would be for ten. The
+napery is fresh and well laundered; the silver, glass, and china are
+shining--clean and arranged in correct order--the knife at the right of
+the plate with the soup or bouillon spoon, the fork at the left with
+the napkin; the bread-and-butter plate, with its slice of bread or roll
+and the butter-ball, near the fork, to correspond with the water-glass
+on the other side.
+
+In such a home the maid is taught to follow the orderly sequence of
+courses, changing the plates and crumbing the table with as much pains
+for one as for half a dozen. Little by little she becomes accustomed to
+the routine, so that when a more formal entertainment is planned her
+work seems to her merely an amplification of that to which she has
+grown wonted.
+
+At the same time a warning should be uttered to the housekeeper of
+small ménage against attempting to ape the hospitality of those whose
+incomes far exceed her own. Pretense is always absurd, and the woman
+who undertakes to imitate the style of the wealthy and fashionable
+hostess only renders herself ridiculous without in the least impressing
+those with whom she is striving to compete. Such entertaining strains
+her income and is in reality far inferior to the little parties she
+might give that would possess a merit all their own.
+
+The hostess who aspires to give dinners should make them small, in
+the first place. Six is an excellent number--four besides the man
+and woman of the house--and it is rarely safe for the beginner to
+have more than eight all told, unless she is prepared to hire extra
+service. Fully as much attention should be bestowed upon the selection
+of the guests as upon the items of the bill of fare. Friends may be
+unexceptionable taken alone or in their own environment who do not mix
+with those from another circle, and in these conditions even the most
+delightful develop unexpected powers of boring and being bored. To get
+the right persons together at a dinner and to seat them in the proper
+combinations requires a good deal of social skill, and for this reason
+it is better for the tyro in entertaining to start with small parties
+and only work up to the larger affairs as she becomes more accustomed
+to exercising general hospitality.
+
+Experiments in food should never be tried on company. Only those
+articles should be served which the maid has proved her ability to
+prepare perfectly and to serve correctly. When innovations are to be
+presented it should be in the privacy of the family circle. A dinner
+that is confined to a few courses should be remarkable rather for their
+excellence than for their unusual character or for their costliness.
+I have known housekeepers who won themselves a reputation for their
+dinners when the items of these were of the simplest character, but
+were beautifully cooked and served with a touch of unusualness which
+redeemed them from the commonplace.
+
+Again let me warn the hostess against attempting too much on such
+occasions. In any establishment not supplied with a corps of trained
+servants a great deal of the work of even the quietest dinner falls
+upon the hostess. To her it comes to see that the table is set,
+the many small and fussy details looked after; generally she must
+give the final touches of seasoning or blending to soup, sauces, and
+salad-dressing. It is no wonder if sometimes she comes to the table too
+tired either to enjoy the food or to lead the talk of the board and
+play the part so important for a hostess who desires to have her guests
+enjoy their evening.
+
+Such fatigue is not necessary if the rules I have laid down are
+followed. If, for example, the cook can make an unapproachable tomato
+or oyster bisque; if she can roast a leg of lamb so that it will melt
+in the mouth, prepare candied sweet-potatoes to tempt an epicure, and
+spinach with the knack of a French chef; if there is some special sweet
+dish for which she has made herself famous, whether this be a prune
+soufflé with whipped cream, or a frozen mousse or ice--then let the
+hostess confine herself to these items for her company dinners until
+her maid has acquired further accomplishments. What difference does
+it make if precisely the same dinner was served to a knot of friends
+last week? The guests are different this time, even if the dishes are
+unchanged, and these are good enough to stand repetition though they
+appear half a dozen times in succession!
+
+In a neighborhood where dinner is usually served in the middle of the
+day and the period for social festivity is in the evening, supper may
+take the place of dinner and be no less attractive. When this is the
+case, I would advise the hostess to adopt some specialty and stick to
+it, with only a few variations.
+
+For instance, I know one housekeeper who was transplanted from the
+South to another section of the country, and who there became famous
+for the meals she served from her mother’s cook-book. Fried chicken
+with cream gravy, Southern sweet-potatoes, beaten biscuit, Sally
+Lunn, waffles, fried oysters, batter-bread, syllabubs, were among the
+dainties she offered her appreciative guests. Not that she had all
+these at one time, but she rang the changes on them, to the delectation
+of the company.
+
+Another woman I know who was born and raised in New England made a
+success much farther south than this by feasting her friends on such
+delicacies as genuine baked beans, cooked in a bean-pot (she made the
+fireless cooker take the place of the ancient brick oven), Boston brown
+bread--she called it “rye ’n’ Injun”--fried pork with cream gravy,
+even creamed codfish and boiled potatoes, made to taste as no one had
+ever before dreamed such things could taste. Of course doughnuts and
+coffee were included in her menus, and pumpkin-pies and other dishes
+of that sort. It was amusing and, in a way, pathetic to see the joy of
+the exiles from New England before whom were placed the viands they had
+been used to in the long-ago.
+
+The simplicity of the provision should not be made an excuse for
+departing from the orthodox methods of service. A supper such as I have
+described can be served with as much daintiness as a formal dinner, and
+the courses should follow one another in as orderly a style.
+
+As strict in the lines of its etiquette as a dinner is the lunch, where
+usually women are the only guests. Such a meal as this may also be
+limited in its items. It may begin with bouillon or soup in cups and,
+without pausing for an entrée, may go directly on to a solid course,
+such as chicken in some form, chops, cutlets, and the like, with a
+vegetable or two; this be followed by a salad with crackers and cheese,
+and the meal wind up with a sweet of light character, and coffee.
+When one has a well-enough trained maid to introduce such an entrée
+as oyster pâtés, crab meat _au gratin_, eggs _à la Bénédictine_,
+or something of the kind, and can reconcile the extra cost to her
+economical conscience, the guests will probably enjoy the additional
+provision, but no hostess can feel she is guilty of social stinginess
+if she omits these features and follows the simpler lines.
+
+The same caution may be given here as with the dinner--to introduce no
+novelties for the first time. Use the family as an experiment station
+before presenting the new dishes or the untried fashion of serving them
+to outsiders.
+
+Like the luncheon is the breakfast-party, with this difference--that
+men are frequently invited to the latter, while they are seldom at the
+formal luncheon. For such a breakfast, to be served at twelve-thirty or
+one, the first item may be fruit; the soup may be omitted and the meat
+course, consisting of some such dish as broiled or fried chicken, chops
+or steak or fish, should be accompanied by a good hot bread as well as
+by potatoes daintily cooked; and coffee in large cups may be served the
+same time. A sweet to wind up a meal like this is rather out of place
+unless it takes the form of waffles or griddle-cakes of a delicate
+variety with maple syrup or honey. Sometimes the breakfast concludes
+as it began, with fruit, although of a different kind from that with
+which the meal opened. When oranges or grapefruit prelude the repast,
+grapes, etc., may end it.
+
+All these affairs I have mentioned are for a small number. The
+afternoon tea is the best method of entertaining guests on a larger
+scale, and with a minimum of expense.
+
+I do not need to go here into the details of sending out cards for
+such an affair. Whether the tea be a single one, given for the amiable
+purpose of wiping out social obligations, or as a means of introducing
+a visitor to the local friends of the hostess; or a series of three
+or four afternoons, the method followed is the same and the guest who
+comes expects nothing beyond a light refreshment. At the more elaborate
+affairs of this sort coffee or chocolate may be served as well as
+tea, or a bowl of punch offered. The edible provisions are always
+practically the same and cover a range of sandwiches of different
+kinds--piquant, solid, and sweet--varied by toast buttered plain or
+sprinkled with cinnamon, hot scones, small buttered biscuit and similar
+cates, followed by cakes of various kinds, plain or fancy, and in some
+cases bonbons and salted nuts. The last are not really necessary.
+
+At such a tea as this, if it comprise more than a few intimates, the
+maid is usually in attendance to open the door, direct the guests to
+the drawing-room, bring hot tea or hot water when needed, remove soiled
+cups and perhaps pass the food. In the latter service the hostess may
+have the aid of her friends, who usually appreciate the honor of being
+asked to “pour” or to help act as hostesses in introducing new-comers,
+looking after the comfort of strangers and making sure that no one is
+neglected in the distribution of refreshments.
+
+Thus far reference has been made to hospitality exercised in the home
+where a maid is kept. Far more numerous are those establishments in
+which no regular service is employed. Even in these one’s friends may
+be entertained as delightfully, if not as formally, as in the houses
+supplied with hired domestics.
+
+The regulation dinner is practically out of the question, and it is
+wiser not to attempt it. But merry informal suppers, luncheons, and
+breakfasts can be compassed and often these are greater successes
+than those parties given under the supervision of a staff of trained
+servants. The main point to be guarded against is the attempt at
+anything which cannot be put through well. As soon as struggle is
+made to do the impossible the effort becomes not only a burden to
+the host and hostess, but a sort of nightmare to the guests. Better
+have a roast-oyster party in the kitchen, where selected members of
+the company do the cooking over the gas-stove, while others take upon
+themselves the responsibility of serving the eaters, and the whole
+affair is a jolly picnic, than to endeavor to manage a stately function
+with insufficient aid and appurtenances.
+
+The same sort of informality may mark the afternoon-tea party in
+the home where no maid is kept. All the making ready can be done in
+advance, the sandwiches cut and piled, the cakes arranged, the china
+and tea equipage set out, so that nothing is needed but to start the
+kettle to boiling and make the tea when it is needed. A friend will
+preside at the tea-table, other friends will look after other details
+and leave the hostess free to welcome and entertain her guests. Such a
+party as this is one of the pleasantest, least costly, and generally
+satisfactory ways of gathering one’s friends about one for a social
+hour or two.
+
+The hostess of small means and no maid should concentrate upon some
+such line of entertaining as this and stick to it. She should aspire
+to become known for her merry afternoon teas, her pleasant Sunday-night
+suppers, her gay and informal after-theater spreads, where the
+chafing-dish is the principal feature and where her guests are so well
+amused that they think far less of the simple food put before them than
+they do of the good-fellowship they have enjoyed. Formal entertaining
+may have to be foregone, but the substitutes she offers are more
+genuinely satisfactory both to the guests who share them and to the
+host and hostess who have to pay for them!
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE CHILD IN THE HOUSE
+
+
+With the introduction of a baby into an establishment the whole general
+management of the place is changed.
+
+That is to say, it is changed for a while. A serious mistake is made
+when even so important an event as the arrival of a new member of the
+family is permitted to cause a permanent alteration in the conduct
+of the home. The most devoted of husbands and fathers will yield his
+position as first-and-foremost for a while to the latest advent; will
+take it for granted that his wife shall be absorbed in the needs of the
+baby, shall have no conversation but that which deals with its joys and
+woes, its accidents and accomplishments; but eventually any man worth
+a row of pins will recollect that after all he was a human being, a
+husband, and a householder before he was a parent, and will claim a few
+of the rights coming to him in those capacities.
+
+The prospective mother who grasps this truth and puts it into practical
+service after the baby comes is much more likely to make a success of
+her wifehood and matronhood than the one who is all mother and nothing
+else. If the child is well and is properly trained there is no reason
+why it should not be a satisfactory member of society and a joy to the
+household and to all about it instead of a nuisance to every one except
+its most devoted parent.
+
+A great deal more of the comfort of the child and its future good
+habits is settled within the first month of its life than is suspected
+by those who have had little to do with the care of babies. If it
+is started with regular habits of eating and sleeping, is from the
+beginning accustomed to lie in its cradle or crib instead of being held
+in the arms constantly and lifted and rocked at its first whimper, it
+takes such treatment for granted and forms no habit of making demands
+for that which is difficult for the attendant always to supply and does
+no good to the child to receive.
+
+With a delicate or sickly babe the same strict rules cannot be enforced
+as with a healthy infant, and yet even a puny child is better off
+if kept to a steady regimen than if fed, taken up, and put down at
+uncertain intervals, and allowed to accumulate a crop of irregular
+fashions of eating and sleeping. Sometimes the struggle to implant a
+sense of law and order is a difficult undertaking when the ill health
+of the child or the carelessness of the first nurse has brought it into
+bad ways, but persistence in the effort is worth while for the sake of
+the comfort success is bound to bring later to all concerned.
+
+The periods of feeding are determined by the doctor, to begin with, and
+the space between them is gradually widened as the child grows older.
+The system which should be the guide of the housekeeper in her home has
+as large a field of usefulness applied to children as anywhere else.
+The baby should be washed and dressed at a regular hour; the time for
+its meals and its outing should be invariable; the hour for undressing
+it, washing it, and making it ready for bed should never vary except in
+cases of rare exigency. If it is a healthy child it will fall naturally
+into the habit of taking a morning nap after the bath and the meal, of
+waking at a certain time, and then of lying comfortably in the bed or
+on a couch or in its carriage with no wails to be lifted and walked
+with. Modern medical science has declared that the less handling a
+little baby receives the better for it, and that for some months its
+growth should be in most respects as much like that of a vegetable as
+possible.
+
+As the child gets older and begins to use its limbs it will be good for
+it to be exercised rather more, but nature is a pretty safe guide to
+follow in this respect. The baby who is well and normal is not slow to
+show its growth and progress, and it is far wiser for the parent to be
+led by these than to attempt to hurry development either of body or of
+mind. The child will assert itself soon enough, and so decidedly as to
+leave no room for doubt as to its proclivities.
+
+Possibly it may sound a trifle absurd to say that from the first the
+child should have the habit of obedience implanted, yet this is no
+absurdity, but a serious and important fact. At an astonishingly early
+age the infant endeavors to pit its small will against that of its
+seniors, and the initial step in revolt is promptly followed by others
+unless the attempt is checked at once.
+
+Neither time nor place is sufficient here to go into the reasons why
+the training of a child in obedience, even at the cost of suffering
+and punishment, is not the exercise over the weak of the tyranny of
+the strong, but the display of superior wisdom for the benefit of the
+inexperienced. It is enough to remind those who think that a child
+should be allowed to grow up naturally, unrestrained by rule and
+severity, when severity is required to enforce discipline, that all
+through life the human being must conform to constituted authority
+as exemplified in the laws of health, of the state, of teachers and
+employers, of morality, of religion. In view of this the sooner the
+child learns to defer to those in whose charge it is the better for it
+later on, the less cruel the lessons life holds in store for it.
+
+Apart from this there can be no doubt that the well-trained child is
+actually happier than the one with no law but its own whim. Also it is
+much pleasanter company than the self-willed, undisciplined infant who
+follows its own sweet will regardless of the comfort or preference of
+others.
+
+The same kind of regimen established for a child in babyhood should
+be pursued when it grows older and begins to share more actively in
+the life of the household. The mistaken custom of permitting a child
+to keep the same hours, eat the same diet, and follow practically the
+same life as its elders cannot be sufficiently condemned. The habit of
+going to bed early after a light meal, of having the heaviest repast
+in the middle of the day, of partaking of such food as is particularly
+suited to the needs of a growing child, of being debarred rich and
+indigestible articles of diet, of having postponed until more advanced
+years exciting amusements and pursuits instead of being hurried into
+them while hardly out of infancy, should all be enforced. A child is
+not a miniature man or woman, but an immature human being who must
+develop naturally, as plants grow, and is wronged by being forced
+into premature bloom or fruition, mentally or emotionally as much as
+physically.
+
+The child’s food should be carefully considered by the mother and she
+should not regard the time wasted she bestows in studying food values
+and devising the best sort of diet for the nursery. Not until the first
+teeth begin to come should starchy food of any sort be given, and then
+with caution. Until the saliva flows freely to help digest starch,
+bread in any form, crackers, etc., should be withheld. As the child
+reaches the stage where solid food is allowed this should continue to
+be simple in character. A child does not have the longing for variety
+common to more sophisticated palates.
+
+For the breakfast of the child of two or more years of age a cereal,
+well cooked, with plenty of milk, should be given. Sugar should not
+accompany it. When sweet is desirable, as it often is, it should be
+taken in some other way than as an adjunct to a regular article of
+diet. With the cereal and milk the child seldom needs anything more,
+but if the consumption of the porridge is not sufficient, a soft-boiled
+egg or a poached egg may be supplied, with a little toast. Milk should
+be the drink.
+
+In the middle of the morning a supplementary meal may be taken, and
+this may consist of a piece of bread and butter and a glass of milk.
+Whole-wheat bread is better than that made from the bolted flour. When
+there is a tendency to constipation Graham bread is good.
+
+At noon the substantial provision of the day is to be served and a
+cup of soup may begin the dinner, followed by a very small piece of
+steak or chop cut up fine, or by an egg, if one has not been taken at
+breakfast, a baked potato, well mashed, with butter or cream and salt
+upon it. Rice is also excellent when served with plenty of good butter.
+A plain sweet, like stewed fruit, a milk pudding, one of rice, of
+arrowroot, tapioca, or a custard, will answer. Milk may again be drunk
+unless the child has eaten a meat soup or broth and meat besides.
+
+Generally the little one who has taken so substantial a meal as this
+at noon will need nothing more until supper-time, when bread and milk,
+crackers and milk, or something of the sort may be provided; or bread
+and a good plain jam or stewed fruit, like prunes or apple-sauce, with
+a glass of milk. After this comes the child’s bed-time, and it should
+be put to sleep in a quiet room, alone, with the door open if symptoms
+of nervousness declare themselves, but without a nurse or other
+attendant. This may sound hard-hearted, but the child who is accustomed
+to such solitude from infancy will not feel it an infliction, and the
+saving of inconvenience to the parents in the habit of going to sleep
+unattended is incalculable.
+
+The good manners of the child should receive early consideration.
+The habit of courtesy implanted in infancy gives a finish of manner
+in later life that no surface polish can impart. It is as easy for a
+little boy and girl to be taught to rise when elders come into the
+room, to take their turn at the table, to handle a knife, fork, and
+spoon properly, to eat in a decent fashion, to say, “Thank you,” “If
+you please,” and the like, and to show the thoughtfulness for the
+feelings and comfort of others which is the foundation of all good
+breeding, as it is to let the youngsters grow up as they will and
+hammer superficial manners into them when they are older. The good old
+rule that “children should be seen and not heard” is sadly in need of a
+revival in many homes, and parents cannot wonder at the unpopularity of
+their offspring when they reflect upon the disagreeable qualities these
+often possess.
+
+All this does not mean that children should constantly be snubbed and
+repressed until individuality and initiative are crushed out of them.
+In most children these characteristics are strong and triumphant. But a
+certain measure of deference to elders should be inculcated--a respect
+which will prevent a child from interrupting the conversation of his
+seniors, a regard for the conventions which, after all, have more to do
+with peace and amity in the family than many of us are willing to admit.
+
+As the child grows older and begins school and kindergarten, other
+children will be associated with him, and from them he will learn many
+things it would never occur to his parents to teach him. Sometimes it
+seems as though the least that children acquire at school is their
+regular lessons. These become almost a side issue. The influence of the
+strange boy or girl often carries more weight with a child than all
+the precepts of father, mother, and teacher. Part of this effect is
+transitory, but much of it sticks through life; and while the children
+are little more than babies it becomes incumbent upon the parents--by
+which is usually meant the mother--to strengthen the bond between
+herself and her child so that she may the more effectually offset the
+outside forces that sway him.
+
+The sooner the mother recognizes that this is her lifelong “job” and a
+most important one, the better for all concerned. The mere animal care
+of the child any competent nurse could bestow, and sometimes it seems
+as if the charge of a specialist who understood the ins and outs of
+dietetics and was able to study the child’s constitution impersonally
+might perhaps be better than the attention received from the average
+parent. With regard to the question of instruction in book learning
+there is little doubt that a well-qualified teacher is far more capable
+than the most devoted father or mother. All such duties as these can be
+delegated to those who are trained and paid for the work.
+
+When it comes to the companionship, however, it is another matter.
+Here is something only the mother can give. It is “up to her” to
+study the ins and outs of her child’s nature; to know where and how
+to bring pressure in order to counterbalance another influence; to
+make herself so one with him that he turns to her instinctively, with
+complete confidence in her ability to meet his need; to be so close
+in his intimacy that she grasps his thoughts almost before they are
+formulated; to persuade him unconsciously to rely upon her judgment,
+her companionship, her understanding to an extent that will hold him in
+temptation and move him to range himself on the side of right against
+wrong.
+
+Of course it is not always easy. The mother does not resign her own
+individuality by the mere fact of motherhood; she does not lay aside
+her special interests when she takes up those of her child. Yet if she
+lets him suspect that anything comes ahead of his well-being in her
+heart she makes a fatal mistake; she starts the rift between them which
+may widen into a chasm not to be bridged by all her agony and tears.
+
+It may sometimes be hard to yield up one’s own will and preference in
+this way, and yet the mother gets her pay as she goes along, and her
+labor brings its reward in a fashion unequaled in any other vocation in
+the universe. Nothing in the whole world pays so well as being a mother!
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+
+ Italics are shown thus: _sloping_.
+
+ Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.
+
+ Perceived typographical errors have been changed.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75560 ***
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+ A-b-c Of Housekeeping | Project Gutenberg
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75560 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover">
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter1">
+<img src="images/fig1.jpg" alt="front">
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="c">
+A-B-C<br>
+OF<br>
+HOUSEKEEPING</p>
+
+
+<p class="c">BY<br>
+CHRISTINE TERHUNE HERRICK</p>
+
+
+<p class="c">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS PUBLISHERS<br>
+NEW YORK &amp; LONDON
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="c sp up">HARPER’S A-B-C SERIES</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="pad">
+<p class="sp">
+A-B-C OF HOUSEKEEPING.<br>
+<span class="pad">By <span class="smcap">Christine Terhune Herrick</span></span><br>
+</p>
+<p class="sp">A-B-C OF ELECTRICITY.<br>
+<span class="pad">By <span class="smcap">William H. Meadowcroft</span></span><br>
+</p>
+<p class="sp">A-B-C OF GARDENING. By <span class="smcap">Eben E. Rexford</span><br>
+</p>
+<p class="sp">A-B-C OF GOOD FORM. By <span class="smcap">Anne Seymour</span><br>
+</p></div>
+<p class="c"> 16mo, Cloth
+</p>
+
+<hr class="r5">
+
+<p class="c sp">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, NEW YORK</p>
+
+<p class="c p6 sans med">
+COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY HARPER &amp; BROTHERS</p>
+<hr class="r65">
+<p class="c sans med">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA<br>
+PUBLISHED MAY, 1915
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="ph2">CONTENTS</p>
+</div>
+
+<table class="large">
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><span class="med">CHAP.</span></td>
+ <td class="tdl"></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><span class="med">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c1">I.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Choosing a Home</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">1</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c2">II.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Furnishing the Home</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">13</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c3">III.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Table</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">26</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c4">IV.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Concerning Household Accounts</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">38</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c5">V.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The House in Order</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">50</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c6">VI.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Hygiene and Plumbing</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">63</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c7">VII.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Home Without a Servant</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">75</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c8">VIII.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In the Laundry</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">88</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c9">IX.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">When Company Comes</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">99</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c10">X.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Child in the House</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">111</td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
+
+<h1 id="c1">A-B-C OF HOUSEKEEPING</h1>
+</div>
+
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+<p class="c large sp">CHOOSING A HOME</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE choice of a home is usually decided
+by the pocket-book. Other considerations
+carry weight, but matters of convenience,
+preference, and location are lighter in
+the scale than the sum one can afford to pay
+for a shelter. What proportion this will bear
+to the rest of the income must be settled by
+each one for himself after an estimate of the
+other expenses which must be met.</p>
+
+<p>When a whole house is taken and the cost
+of heating and the charge of the outer premises,
+as well as the entire care of the place,
+have to be assumed by the tenant, one-fifth
+or one-sixth of the income is all he should
+give for rent. The price of coal, the wage to
+be paid the person who is to clean snow from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>
+the sidewalk in winter and dirt from it the rest
+of the year, look after the furnace and ashes, put
+out garbage; the consideration of the services
+of the one who must sweep front steps, halls,
+and stairs; the small repairs every house demands
+from time to time, will all have to be
+added to the sum devoted to rent. While the
+tenant and his wife may perform part or all of
+these duties, it is only reasonable that they
+should understand how much they are saving
+in actual cash, and comprehend that what they
+economize in this respect is the equivalent of
+what they would pay to the landlord were they
+to occupy an apartment in a flat building.</p>
+
+<p>This state of affairs justifies the man who
+lives in an apartment in allowing a larger
+proportion of his income for his rooftree.
+The details to which I have referred just now
+are included in the price paid for a flat, to
+say nothing of the reduction of work when
+all the living is on one floor, when stairs do not
+exist for the housekeeper, and her responsibilities
+end at her own front door.</p>
+
+<p>The selection of a location is determined by
+the make-up of the family and the man’s
+place and time of business. These considerations
+must be taken into account before the
+house-hunting is begun. Distance from the
+center of the town usually means a reduced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>
+rent, better air, and more attractive surroundings.
+To counterbalance these are the
+long journey back and forth, night and morning,
+the cost of transportation, inability to
+come home for the midday meal. As a rule
+these drawbacks do not equal the advantages
+to be gained by a home remote from the business
+district.</p>
+
+<p>In order to accomplish the strenuous task
+of finding a home with the least outlay of
+labor and worry—for in any case there will be
+enough of both these commodities—as much
+planning as possible should be done in advance.
+The number of rooms necessary
+should be settled, as well as the sum which
+can be paid for rent. The sections of the city
+which are suitable should be studied and, if
+feasible, traversed, so as to get a general idea
+of them. Sometimes even a cursory inspection
+of a neighborhood decides the would-be
+tenant against it.</p>
+
+<p>Then, when lists of houses or apartments
+have been culled from advertisements and
+secured from real-estate agents the actual
+work of house-hunting is begun. One resolution
+to be laid down at first and adhered to
+positively is not to go over a house or an
+apartment if the first glance shows it to be
+undesirable. When six rooms are the limit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>
+for a flat there is no more sense in inspecting
+a ten-room apartment than there is in scanning
+a house at twelve hundred a year if seven
+hundred and fifty is the extreme price that
+can be paid for rent. Such examination not
+only consumes time and strength, but it also
+provokes dissatisfaction with smaller and
+cheaper quarters which may be seen afterward.</p>
+
+<p>A few essentials must be fixed in the
+mind, to which any house or flat should conform.
+It must be light—not a dim twilight
+illumination, but, if possible, sunshine, either
+direct or reflected—in the living and sleeping
+rooms. The kitchen must not be a dark
+corner, not only because such work-places
+affect the health of those who occupy them,
+but also because of the additional charge
+there will be for gas or electricity burned by
+day as well as by night.</p>
+
+<p>The matter of heat must next be considered.
+When a house is taken the rent is
+usually higher if there is a first-class heating
+arrangement included. Old-fashioned appliances
+mean lower rent, but they also require
+increased work on the part of the tenant
+or servant and are often unsatisfactory in the
+amount of warmth they supply. A good furnace
+or steam-heating plant may add to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>
+actual sum of the rent, but it is generally
+cheaper in the long run. The quantity of
+coal burned by such a plant should be ascertained
+before concluding to take the house.</p>
+
+<p>All these questions are eliminated for the
+man who engages a steam-heated apartment,
+but he may change the place and keep the
+pain. The comfort of the entire winter depends
+upon a sufficient amount of heat, and
+radiators should be examined and a number
+of direct inquiries put so as to make sure that
+adequate warmth may be secured in bitter
+weather. The time when the heat is turned
+on and off should also be learned, since it is
+quite possible to shiver and suffer in September
+and May as well as at Christmas-time.</p>
+
+<p>Plumbing is always to be investigated
+closely, whether in a house or an apartment.
+No amount of gilding and marble fittings can
+compensate for cheap plumbing and a poor
+supply of hot water. The dweller in a house
+is dependent upon his own kitchen fire for
+hot water, as a general thing, but in nearly
+all apartment-houses the hot water is declared
+to be supplied from the cellar. Even
+in high-priced flats hot water is not always
+ready, and queries as to this are to be voiced
+before the lease is signed. More than that,
+care must be taken to make sure that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
+plumbing is in perfect repair and is not likely
+to give way at inconvenient seasons.</p>
+
+<p>All these details are essential and there are
+others little less important. The quantity
+of closet room, the pantries, the facilities for
+washing and drying clothes, the quiet of the
+house as assured or banished by the character
+of the neighbors and other tenants, the cleanliness
+of paint and paper, must all be looked
+after.</p>
+
+<p>No matter what inducements in the way
+of lowered rent are offered, it is always a mistake
+to go into a house which is not absolutely
+clean. This does not mean only that it
+should be swept and scoured before taking
+possession of it, but that paint and paper
+should be refreshed. The latter is not to be
+done by pasting fresh paper on over that
+which already covers the walls, as is the custom
+of many decorators—a custom connived
+at by landlords because of the saving of
+expense it implies. The incoming tenant
+must insist that the walls shall be scraped
+clean before the new paper is hung and that
+fresh paint shall be used wherever it is needed.
+It is hard enough to keep a house spotless in
+the best of circumstances, and when one enters
+a dwelling and establishes himself in the
+midst of the dirt of the departed tenants the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
+task is the most discouraging that can be undertaken.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, vermin must be banished. This
+is an easy thing to say, but hardly a housekeeper
+of middle age can be found in the
+length and breadth of the country who has
+not had a struggle with the pest in some form
+or other. In one home it may have been cockroaches
+or water-bugs; in another it may
+have been black or red ants; in many it has
+been that worst and most dreaded of plagues,
+bedbugs. Sporadic cases of any of these may
+be conquered without much difficulty, but
+when once the enemy is intrenched in the
+home it seems almost as if the only way to
+get rid of them finally is by burning the house
+down!</p>
+
+<p>On all considerations, therefore, the house-hunter
+must make sure that vermin are not
+established in the new dwelling. If there is
+even a possibility of their presence she must
+insist upon radical measures being taken before
+she will contemplate entering the house.
+When the pests have been there and have been
+driven out it is still wise to take reasonable
+precautions against their return. No picture-moldings
+should be tolerated in the bedrooms,
+since these make a lurking-place for insects.
+The walls of sleeping-rooms should be painted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
+rather than papered, and dark cupboards,
+drawers, etc., should be scoured out, disinfected,
+and painted.</p>
+
+<p>I have dwelt upon the need of such care in
+the bedrooms, but it is no less essential in the
+kitchen and pantries. While bedbugs occasionally
+get a foothold even here, the usual
+plague is the roach or Croton-bug. He is said
+to be inoffensive and he does not possess
+the deadly odor of the <i>Cimex lectularius</i>, but
+apart from the damage he undoubtedly does
+in nibbling table-linen and the like, he is an
+exceedingly unpleasant housemate. He frequents
+uncovered garbage-pails, bread and
+cake boxes which have been left open, wire
+safes with imperfectly closing doors, and the
+provision compartments of refrigerators; and
+it does not tend to improve the appetite to
+have him pop out of the cereal carton or run
+from under the cold roast.</p>
+
+<p>So every precaution should be taken against
+such creatures as well as against mice and
+rats before renting the house. Mice-holes
+should be choked up with broken glass and
+dusted with red pepper; boiling water should,
+when possible, be poured down the runways
+of insects; borax scattered about their
+haunts. After that, strict care in the way of
+keeping food put away closely, pains to see<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
+that no crumbs or drippings are allowed on
+the floor or the shelves, and rigorous cleanliness
+of every vessel which has been employed
+in cooking are the best agencies against the
+return of the adversaries.</p>
+
+<p>Other points should be looked to about the
+kitchen. The stove is the chief consideration
+after light, cleanliness, and pantry space.</p>
+
+<p>Locality has much to do in determining by
+what means cooking shall be done. In the
+country, where gas is not and wood or coal is
+burned, a good range, suitable for either, must
+be depended upon. Of such ranges there are
+many, and there are divers items to be regarded
+in each make. The size and fashion
+of the fuel-box is one. The average kitchen
+stove will burn a ton of coal in from five to
+seven weeks, the time contingent not only
+upon the care of the cook, but upon the size
+of the range. One should be selected with a
+maximum of heat for a minimum of fuel consumption.
+The range with an upper oven
+is easier for the cook, who by its means is
+spared constant stooping and bending, but
+some ranges with the upper oven are said to
+burn more fuel.</p>
+
+<p>No range or stove should be considered
+which does not provide adequate means for
+heating water. When there is running hot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
+water in the house a boiler is usually arranged
+at the side of the stove, but in the country,
+where the water must be drawn by a pump or
+from the well and put into the reservoir by
+the pailful, a large enough receptacle must be
+furnished to make it possible to have the supply
+for the day all poured in at once. In this
+way the man of the house may attend to this
+heavy duty in the morning or at night, so
+that no woman may have to strain her back
+by filling and lifting pails of water during the
+day.</p>
+
+<p>The coal or wood stove in the country may
+be supplemented by an oil or gasolene stove.
+Of these there is a good variety, each possessing
+its own special merits, but they are
+not to be considered in renting a house, since
+they are purchased by the tenant, not supplied
+by the landlord.</p>
+
+<p>In every large city, and in many small
+towns, cookery by gas has superseded coal
+and wood almost entirely. The cleanliness
+and convenience of gas in cooking, while
+inferior to those of electricity, are yet so far
+ahead of the other means to which we have
+been accustomed that the amount of time and
+trouble the gas saves is incalculable. The
+stove is generally owned by the local company,
+who install it and keep it in order, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
+in some places effort is made by the landlord
+to charge the tenant for the use of the stove.
+Common usage will have to determine the
+tenant’s course in the matter, but as a rule
+the stove is included in the rent and it is
+worth while for the man renting the house
+to make an attempt to secure this concession.</p>
+
+<p>There is a difference in gas-stoves and an
+up-to-date kind should be selected, fitted with
+an upper oven as well as a lower one, and
+possessing such features as a low flame for
+simmering, a plate-warmer, the latest make
+of broiler, etc. The inexperienced housekeeper
+is frequently imposed upon and the
+old-fashioned stove is foisted off upon her.
+This should be guarded against when the
+house is rented.</p>
+
+<p>The inside of the house has received principal
+attention in this consideration of the
+rented home. The outer surroundings usually
+compel a measure of thought and are
+obvious enough to force themselves upon
+even the uncritical observer. Yet there are
+a few points worth emphasizing.</p>
+
+<p>The character of the neighborhood in a
+country or a small town generally proclaims
+itself and the details that must be noticed
+have to do with sanitary conditions, the
+presence or absence of such nuisances as unsavory<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
+factories or businesses, the vicinity of
+noisy occupations, the over-close proximity
+to public schools with the accompanying
+racket at certain hours of the day, etc. In
+the city the drawbacks may be less self-assertive
+but no less objectionable. Before
+renting a house in a street it is always wise
+to learn something of the people who occupy
+the adjoining dwellings, to make sure that
+there are no unpleasing features connected
+with the section and so insure oneself against
+future annoyances.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c2">II</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">FURNISHING THE HOME</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE first details to be regarded in furnishing
+a house have to do with the
+woodwork and walls.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the landlord has settled these
+and the tenant has no choice. This is especially
+likely to be the case with the woodwork.
+If it is a cheap and unattractive variety
+of “hardwood,” so called, or is painted
+in imitation of hardwood, it is difficult to induce
+the owner to change this. When he will
+consent to paint to please the tenant selection
+should be made either of white or of a soft,
+neutral tint which will not conflict with any
+color of furniture. The painting which simulates
+the graining of a natural wood is distinctly
+bad and should never be tolerated
+except when it cannot be changed.</p>
+
+<p>The kitchen should be painted throughout,
+walls as well as woodwork, and in some good
+light color, such as buff; this will give the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
+room a bright, cheery look, and the steam
+which accumulates on the walls of a kitchen
+can be scrubbed off the paint as it cannot be
+from a kalsomined or papered wall.</p>
+
+<p>In choosing papers, the tenant should bear
+in mind that they will have to be lived with
+for a long time, and should pick out such as
+can stand familiar association without becoming
+objectionable. Striking patterns and
+assertive hues should be avoided. When two
+or three rooms open into one another it is
+well to have them papered alike and thus
+avoid the patchy effect produced by several
+small rooms all with different wall-coverings.
+In this day cheap papers which are also
+pretty and artistic can easily be found and
+it is worth while to bestow a good deal of
+time and thought upon their choice.</p>
+
+<p>If possible, all painting and papering should
+be done and the workmen out of the house
+before the tenant moves in. This plan permits
+the rooms to be cleaned and saves
+double toil to the housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p>The furniture of the house does not always
+lie within the tenant’s power of selection.
+Few are the homes which are freshly furnished
+throughout by a young couple. Almost
+invariably there are “left-overs” and
+“hand-downs” which are presented to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
+newly married pair, and they are fortunate
+indeed if such relics are desirable and not
+discarded pieces which no one else wants.</p>
+
+<p>When even a portion of the furniture is to
+be bought, it should not be purchased at
+random. “Sets” of any sort are best avoided.
+For the parlor of a modest establishment,
+wicker and willow articles are far better than
+the conspicuous styles which attain a sudden
+popularity and then become old-fashioned
+and out of date. Comfort should be considered
+in every item chosen and nothing
+taken merely because it looks well or is reasonable
+in price. While sets are deprecated,
+a room need not look like a harlequin collection.
+A certain uniformity of style and coloring
+is to be studied, that the apartment may
+produce a harmonious effect. Odd pieces,
+such as a deep arm-chair, a fancy tea-table,
+an attractive set of book-shelves, are entirely
+suitable and will not strike an incongruous
+note in the general surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>Bare floors are more used now than carpets,
+and rugs may make islands of safety
+here and there on the smooth surface. When
+fine antique rugs have not been given and
+cannot be bought, the best choice is from
+among the many good varieties of inoffensive
+native rugs. Or a rug may be made of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
+quiet-toned carpet, the breadths sewed together
+to form a square of the size desired,
+and surrounded with a border to match.
+Good druggets or art-squares may be found
+for the dining-room, matting or bare floors
+and rugs will serve for the bedrooms, and hall
+and stairs are to be covered with the runners
+which come for these purposes or with a neat
+stair carpet in quiet colors and pattern.</p>
+
+<p>The dining-room furniture demands a good
+deal of deliberation. It is a mistake to buy
+it in too great a hurry and so to be laden down
+with something one does not really want.
+The table and sideboard are usually purchased
+for a lifetime, and it is better to put
+up with makeshifts for a while on the chance
+of finding something really good and satisfactory
+than to buy in a hurry and repent
+at leisure.</p>
+
+<p>The wood of the dining-room furniture is
+not so much a matter of choice in many cases
+as of necessity. One must buy what one can.
+Every one cannot have mahogany or Circassian
+walnut, and it is a comfort that so
+many of the less costly woods are made up
+into excellent designs. It is much better to
+buy a good article of a low-priced material
+than a cheap variety of the more expensive
+woods. Oak, ash, cherry, birch, gumwood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
+and other native growths may be found in
+pieces of excellent lines which will satisfy
+even an artistic eye. When there is money
+enough to get all that is wanted for the dining-room,
+a serving-table and a china-closet
+of some kind may be added to the sideboard,
+dining-table, and chairs that rank as essentials.</p>
+
+<p>The requirements of the kitchen will receive
+more detailed consideration later on.
+Among the must-haves are the range, to
+which reference has already been made; a
+good kitchen table, supplied either with a
+zinc top or with a shelf to draw out and use
+as a bread-board; a refrigerator; a wire meat-safe;
+liberal pantry room, shelf room, and, if
+possible, a kitchen cabinet.</p>
+
+<p>When the bedrooms are to be furnished
+the same simplicity must be followed which
+is recommended for the other apartments.
+The less furniture the bedroom contains the
+better, from a sanitary point of view. The
+Biblical inventory of a bed and a table, a stool
+and a candlestick, had much to commend it.
+The bedstead should be of iron or iron and
+brass; the dresser, table, etc., of white enamel
+or some light-colored wood. The heavy
+pieces our grandparents took for granted are
+fortunately out of vogue in a modest household.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
+A box-couch may be included in the
+furnishing of the room, or what is known as a
+utility-box for holding shirtwaists and the
+like, and it is to be hoped there is either
+abundant closet room or an extra wardrobe
+or clothes-press.</p>
+
+<p>Such are the large and important furnishings
+of the house. These may be reduced or
+increased, simplified or elaborated, in accordance
+with the preference and powers of the
+owners of the dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>Other articles, hardly less essential, have
+to be considered. Take the question of
+draperies, for instance.</p>
+
+<p>Within the past few years the fashion has
+grown of having two and sometimes three
+pairs of curtains for each window—inner
+hangings of lace or some similar fabric, outer
+draperies of rich and heavy goods, and frequently
+these will be supplemented by sash-curtains
+close against the pane, to say nothing
+of one or two shades to the window.</p>
+
+<p>This may answer for the woman who is at
+a loss what to do with her money and can
+devise no better use to make of it than a
+multiplication of her possessions, but the custom
+is not one the young housekeeper need
+feel it incumbent upon her to follow. One
+shade of a neutral tint at each window of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
+living-rooms, a pair of curtains of some material
+which can be readily washed, are all
+that she requires. For the principal rooms
+a good Madras, a pretty scrim, a pleasing
+though inexpensive lace (all fabrics which will
+look well after careful washing) will meet
+every necessity and present an attractive
+appearance.</p>
+
+<p>In the chambers two shades may be demanded
+by those who wish to have a dark
+room for sleeping, but short white curtains
+of wash-goods, or sash-curtains, are sufficient
+here, and something of the same sort,
+but possibly a little better in quality, can
+be procured for the dining-room. As a rule
+plain, straight curtains, without ruffles, are
+not only more easily laundered, but look better
+after they are done up than those pranked
+out with frills.</p>
+
+<p>When ornaments are to be considered one
+generally makes the best of what one has.
+The newly settled couple may be thankful if
+they have not been burdened with pictures
+and bric-à-brac which not only do not
+please their personal taste, but refuse to
+harmonize with one another or with anything
+else. In some cases one can only make the
+best of conditions, and after endeavoring to
+arrange the unwelcome gifts to the best<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
+advantage and scattering them over the
+house so as to dispel the curse to as many
+different quarters as possible, resign oneself
+to endurance until such time as the presents
+can be removed, one at a time.</p>
+
+<p>Those fortunate persons who can buy their
+own luxuries will recall the Oriental proverb:
+“If thou hast but two loaves of bread, sell
+one and buy jacinths for the soul!” What
+form the jacinths may take will be determined
+by individual preference. One will
+find more joy and uplift in really fine pictures
+than in anything else; another will
+concentrate upon books and magazines; another
+will turn from both of these and
+toward music. It makes little difference
+which way the window is opened into the
+Infinite. The vital point is that such an
+outlet must be provided if soul and spirit
+are to be nourished and grow as well as body
+and physical strength.</p>
+
+<p>However much the importance of such
+plenishing as this may impress either the man
+or the woman, the latter would be profoundly
+lacking if she did not display a keen interest
+in other essentials of her new home. The
+pictures, the books, the other arts, may rejoice
+and help her, but she would be wanting
+in femininity if she failed to select her table<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
+and bed linen with almost as much thought
+as she would expend upon her “jacinths.”</p>
+
+<p>Even with unlimited means, it is not wise
+to buy more linen than can be used in a small
+household. Plenty there should be, but not
+a large stock which will lie aside and yellow
+from lack of service. Three or four dinner-cloths,
+each with its accompaniment of a
+dozen napkins, will be ample for her average
+needs, especially if she uses a centerpiece
+and doilies on the bare table for breakfast
+and lunch. In her purchasing she should
+avoid the fringed articles; these wear badly
+and are difficult to do up well. Fruit-plate
+doilies to place under finger-bowls, fish-cloths,
+centerpieces, tray-cloths, sideboard
+and dresser covers, tea and carving cloths,
+and other ornamental as well as useful linens
+will probably be given to her by relatives or
+friends, or she may pick them up from time
+to time as she has need for them or the chance
+to purchase them advantageously. As her
+table-cloths and larger pieces begin to wear
+out she can usually cut from them squares
+which will serve to lay under hot baked potatoes
+in the dish, to wrap about rolls or
+other hot bread, to use for fish-cloths.</p>
+
+<p>A dozen each of dish and china towels she
+should have, and the same number of heavier<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
+towels for kitchen use, as well as three roller-towels.
+But the napery in this line she should
+keep under her own hand, if she has hired
+service in her kitchen and pantry, and give
+the towels out a few at a time in order to
+save her linen as well as to inculcate habits
+of care.</p>
+
+<p>When bed-linen is to be considered, the
+housekeeper should follow the same line as
+that she has laid down in her purchase of
+table-linen. The ornamental may be selected
+as suits her fancy, but there are certain
+must-haves in the plainer articles. Six
+pairs of cotton sheets are none too many, and
+pillow-slips to go with them. If she and
+her family cherish a weakness for linen
+pillow-slips, some of these may be provided
+in place of so many pairs of the cotton cases.
+For three beds three or four spreads should
+be procured, so as to allow of change, and
+these spreads should be of the kind which
+wash easily and look well afterward. Mattress-covers
+are also essential, as are blankets
+and extra coverings. Silk or lace counterpanes
+cannot be reckoned among must-haves,
+any more than can like dressings for the
+bureau, but may be supplied at will.</p>
+
+<p>At least two or three dozen fine towels
+must be included in the list of essentials,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>
+half a dozen good firm bath-towels, and
+wash-cloths at discretion, as well as a dozen
+heavier towels for the use of domestics.
+Guest-towels, bath-sheets, bath-mats, and the
+like are luxuries which may be accumulated
+after the necessities are attained.</p>
+
+<p>When the housekeeper is filling out her list
+of household linens and cottons she must not
+overlook dusters, floor-cloths, mop-cloths,
+dish-cloths, or mops—I hope she uses the
+latter!—and other similar requirements. In
+this advanced day there are new articles in
+this line which present themselves constantly
+and which the housekeeper must decide for
+herself to be luxuries or necessities.</p>
+
+<p>For supplying the china-closet a fixed rule
+is almost impossible. The best plan is for
+the housekeeper to make out for herself what
+her family will need and then to consult an
+intelligent clerk in a good china-shop. Sometimes
+it is cheaper to buy a whole set of china
+than to select from “open stock” the pieces
+that are absolutely required. Soup, dinner,
+dessert plates; plates for lunch and for breakfast,
+for afternoon tea, for salad, for entrées;
+service plates; meat and vegetable dishes in
+china or silver, can all be purchased in a
+charming variety and at a reasonable price.
+The same is true of glassware. Many gifts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
+will fit in well here, and the stock of silver
+is pretty sure to be received from the family
+or friends.</p>
+
+<p>In the kitchen matters are different. Few
+persons present culinary plenishing, and it
+almost always devolves upon the housekeeper
+to select it for herself. While she may have
+developed needs in certain explicit directions,
+there are a few rules which can be laid down
+for her general guidance, certain articles
+which it is safe to declare essentials. Such
+are the following:</p>
+
+<table>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Two 1-quart saucepans</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One biscuit-pan</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One 2-quart saucepan</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One set muffin-tins</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One 5-quart saucepan</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Three bread-tins</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One 3-quart double boiler</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Three pie-plates</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One 2-quart double boiler</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One 2-quart pitcher</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Two baking-pans for meat<br> <i>or</i> one plain baking-pan<br> and one covered roaster</td>
+ <td class="tdlpt">Two jelly-molds</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One large frying-pan</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One pudding-mold</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One small frying-pan</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One steamer</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One colander</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One teakettle</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One graduated quart measure</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One teapot</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One graduated half-pint cup</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One coffee-pot</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One meat-broiler</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Fireless cooker</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One fish or oyster broiler</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Chopping bowl and knife</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Three jelly-cake tins</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Meat chopper or grinder</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">One large cake-tin</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Soapstone griddle</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Cake-turner</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Bread bowl and board</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Rolling-pin</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Board for cutting meat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Board for cutting bread</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Meat-saw</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Bread-knife</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Bread-box</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Cake-box</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Butter-paddles</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Potato-beetle</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Egg-beater</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Scales</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Lemon-squeezer</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdlt">Meat-fork</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">One large crockery mixing-bowl</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Two small crockery mixing-bowls</td>
+ <td class="tdlpt">One platter</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Two pudding-dishes</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Set of skewers</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Cheese or vegetable grater</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Nutmeg-grater</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Vegetable-press</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Soup-strainer</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Coffee or tea strainer</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Coffee-mill</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Corkscrew</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Pair of scissors</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Can-opener</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Small vegetable-knives</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Mixing-spoons</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Flour-dredger</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Salt-shaker</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Cake-cutters</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Split spoon</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Skimmer</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Ice-pick</td>
+ <td class="tdlp"></td></tr>
+
+
+
+</table>
+
+
+<p class="large">Other no less important articles are as
+follows:</p>
+
+<table>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Two dish-pans</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">A garbage-pail with cover</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Sink-brush</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Soap-shaker</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Wire dish-cloth</td>
+ <td class="tdlp">Oil-can</td></tr>
+
+
+</table>
+
+<p>
+Brooms, dust-pans, whisk brooms, carpet-sweeper, etc.<br>
+</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c3">III</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">THE TABLE</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE judicious purchase and use of food
+is the chief economical possibility of
+housekeeping.</p>
+
+<p>The rent is an incompressible item. Every
+month that immutable charge presents itself.
+It cannot be cut down. The only way to reduce
+it is by changing the dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>Fuel may be used with a discretion which
+lessens outlay, but in cold weather the house
+must be kept comfortable, even though the
+coal bills mount high. When certain repairs
+are due they have to be made or the rooms
+become unbearably shabby. Only in the domain
+of food is it feasible to apply a wise
+judgment in buying, a cultivated skill in cooking
+which induces cheap selections to be as
+savory in taste, as nutritious in qualities, as
+those which cost far more.</p>
+
+<p>Such ability in marketing and preparation
+does not come by nature. It must be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>
+studied and worked for, but it is worth the
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>At the first glimpse nothing seems simpler
+than for the young housekeeper to sally forth
+to a good market, make her selections, order
+them cut off and sent home, and pay for
+them—or have them charged! (Usually it is
+fatally easy to open a charge account!) The
+same notion prevails as to buying groceries.
+If a good shop is chosen, there is apparently
+no trouble about the transaction.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly there need be no difficulties if the
+family purse is so well filled that a little more
+or less expenditure is of no real importance.
+But few are the homes in which this state of
+affairs exists and most of us find it desirable,
+if not actually essential, to study the comparative
+prices of staples in different shops
+and localities, to learn if there is an advantage
+in making some purchases at one shop and
+some at another, instead of giving all the
+family custom to one merchant.</p>
+
+<p>Earlier reference has been made to the proportion
+of the income which is to go for rent.
+Positive assertions as to how much shall be
+spent on the food of the family are far less
+easy to make, and the degree of definiteness
+with which they are uttered is hampered by
+the constant changes in the price of food.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span></p>
+
+<p>Not more than ten years ago a liberal
+allowance for the food of an adult was from
+three dollars to three dollars and a half a
+week. This covered only the price of the
+commodities and did not allow for the fuel
+used in preparation, service, etc. To-day
+this expenditure would be totally inadequate
+for the same order of nourishment it would
+have included a decade back. At that time
+a breakfast consisting of fruit, cereal, bacon,
+fish or eggs, bread, coffee or tea; a luncheon
+comprising a solid dish of meat, fish, eggs,
+or cheese, one or two vegetables, or a hot
+bread, a simple sweet, and tea or cocoa; a
+dinner of soup, a meat, two vegetables, a
+salad, crackers and cheese, or a good sweet,
+and coffee—could all have been secured in the
+family at a little over three dollars a head,
+when there were three or more to be fed.
+From four and a half to five dollars per capita
+would be required at the present time for a
+similar provision.</p>
+
+<p>The rise in prices may have altered the
+sums of our estimates; it has not lessened
+the necessity for a study of the proportion of
+the family means which must go for nutriment.
+This must be determined by the heads
+of the house in conclave. The harder part of
+the work devolves upon the woman, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
+must devise economies and carry them into
+effect, both in marketing and in cooking.</p>
+
+<p>The inexperienced housekeeper should try
+to gain a few lessons in the best methods of
+purchasing. Sometimes a brief attendance at
+a cooking-school is of aid; or she may be able
+to join a class for learning how to market—such
+classes exist and are most helpful—or
+she may gain counsel from some older and
+more experienced housewife, or by conning
+books on these topics. In this day there is
+no excuse for even a beginner making the
+mistakes which have supplied material for
+many of the hackneyed jokes at the expense
+of young matrons.</p>
+
+<p>Important as is the practical and personal
+lesson in knowing how to market wisely,
+much can be gained from manuals on the
+subject. Some of these furnish cuts and
+charts of the various animals, with descriptions
+of the portions and of the uses to which
+each may be put. Instructions as to the
+periods of the year when certain articles are
+at their best are also supplied. Prices can be
+learned from the market reports published
+in the daily papers and much is to be acquired
+by going from one shop to another.
+After a little the housekeeper will become
+acquainted with the appearance of meat and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
+be able to judge for herself if it looks fresh
+and good. She can likewise observe how the
+shops are kept and in which certain obvious
+sanitary arrangements are complied with.
+She will not need much tuition to inform her
+that she should turn aside from shops where
+the food is not guarded from flies and dust,
+where strict cleanliness does not prevail in
+the salesmen and the appurtenances, and the
+objects on sale are not handled with proper
+care.</p>
+
+<p>A few points it may be well to emphasize
+for the benefit of the beginner. The fat of
+meat should be white and clean, the lean a
+clear red, the joints of poultry must break
+easily and the skin look smooth and healthful.
+When a fowl is yellow, bony, and hairy it is
+bound to be old and tough. The gills of fish
+should be fresh and the eyes bright.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot speak too strongly against the
+growing habit of marketing by telephone.
+Not only is the housekeeper who follows this
+custom at the mercy of her marketman, who
+can put off on her any cut which has been
+rejected by the wiser housewives who have
+come in person to do their trading; he is
+subjected to the pleasing temptation to cut
+off more than she has ordered or charge her
+for a heavier piece than he sends home.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
+
+<p>The woman who goes to market gains other
+advantages beyond those of seeing for herself
+the appearance and the size of the piece she
+orders and has cut off while she stands by
+and superintends the process. She also has
+offered to her chances for bargains she would
+never get if she marketed by telephone.
+Often there will be a change in the market or
+in the weather that will bring down the cost
+of articles which are usually high-priced, and
+the woman who does her own marketing is
+the one to benefit by this as well as by suggestions
+which introduce variety into her
+bill of fare.</p>
+
+<p>This same variety is to be studied by the
+sensible housekeeper, not only on account of
+the gratification it gives her to set a pleasing
+provision before her family, but also because
+of the genuine good that is gained by avoiding
+a monotony which fails to encourage the
+appetite. Moreover, saving is aided by this
+diversity, since cheap dishes can be slipped
+into the commissary without awakening the
+suspicions of the eaters that economy is being
+practised at their expense.</p>
+
+<p>Among the rational details to be observed
+in buying meat is that of insisting that all
+“trimmings” shall be sent home. When a
+roast of beef or a breast of lamb or a shoulder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
+of mutton or veal is boned and rolled, the
+bones should never be left at the market for
+the butcher to sell over again, but sent with
+the meat that they may be used as a foundation
+for soup or gravy stock. The giblets
+and feet of poultry should also be demanded.
+When chops are “Frenched” or a steak cut
+into seemliness, none of the scraps should be
+considered unworthy of saving. All have
+their place in the stock-pot or as stew-meat.</p>
+
+<p>Too large a piece of meat should not be
+bought by the woman with a small family.
+Meat merchants have a way of discouraging
+the purchase of the smaller roasts on the plea
+that they dry out in cooking. If they do it
+is because the work is not properly done. It
+is quite possible to make a small roast toothsome
+and tender instead of dry and hard if
+the housekeeper will cook it in the right way
+and with due care.</p>
+
+<p>Steak and chops, the frequent resource of
+the woman with a small family, are expensive
+luxuries. She is wise if she learns how to
+cook the cheaper cuts in a sufficiently attractive
+fashion to make her family contented
+with these instead of leaving them longing for
+the higher-priced portions.</p>
+
+<p>A “run” upon any one kind of food should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
+be avoided as much as having fixed days for
+specific viands. Fish on Friday one may take
+as a matter of course, but there is no real
+reason why one should have roast beef every
+Sunday or a boiled dinner on Saturday night.
+I know it is the plaint of the majority of
+housewives that it is most difficult to secure
+variety in the meat dishes, but this trouble
+should not exist in a family where practically
+all sorts of meat can be eaten. In one household
+such as I know, where veal and pork are
+both taboo, and fish can be eaten by only one
+person, the choice is narrowed down a good
+deal. Even then, however, with a knowledge
+of how to prepare savory stews, minces,
+hashes, scallops, croquettes, fritters, meat-pies,
+stuffed peppers, tomatoes and peppers
+with a meat filling, as well as roast, boiled,
+broiled, braised, and fried meat dishes,
+there should be no wail over the trials of
+the housekeeper in changing her menus
+frequently.</p>
+
+<p>No time can be considered wasted which
+is bestowed on the study of how to cook cheap
+meat well. Always it should be recollected
+that many of the so-called cheap cuts really
+contain a greater amount of nutriment than
+the choicer selections. As I have said on
+various occasions, the housekeeper must be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
+prepared to pay a price for excellence of food,
+and if she cannot pay this in hard cash she
+must supply the equivalent in careful cookery
+and wise seasoning. A knowledge of the uses
+of curry powder, anchovy, and other condiments
+in changing and modifying the tastes
+of familiar foods, a willingness to give the
+time to slow and long cooking which will
+bring out the best flavor of the meat, an
+acquaintance with the manifold ways in
+which left-overs of food can be utilized in
+pleasing combinations, are among the
+branches which a housekeeper of small
+means finds well worth her study.</p>
+
+<p>Reference has been made to the help a
+fireless cooker is to the woman who keeps
+house well. It is a saving of time, fuel, labor,
+and food values. By its assistance the housekeeper
+can prepare her meal hours ahead of
+time and go about other pursuits in the calm
+certainty that when she is ready for her
+dinner it will be ready for her, and as good
+as if she had simmered over the kitchen fire
+all the afternoon, using up her fuel and herself.
+There are several varieties of these
+cookers, all of them on practically the same
+plan, and it will pay a woman to look about
+her to find which kind suits her best. For
+soups, stews, cereals, they are unequaled, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
+for making jams, preserves, or anything else
+which demands a long period of deliberate
+cooking.</p>
+
+<p>Special attention has been given to the
+purchase of meat, but there is almost equal
+judgment to be shown in buying groceries.
+Here there is a chance for the inexperienced
+marketer to be imposed upon. Certain fixed
+principles she should follow.</p>
+
+<p>The first of these is that it is, as a rule,
+unwise to buy in bulk. That is, there is little
+gained in a small family by laying in large
+supplies at a time. A barrel of flour is likely
+to be musty and weevily before it can be
+used; corn meal in large quantities develops
+vermin; so do cereals purchased by a number
+of packages or pounds at a time. Care
+should be taken to select an honest grocer or
+to know enough of prices not to be overcharged,
+and then to order supplies as they
+are needed.</p>
+
+<p>Buying in bulk means more than this: it
+also refers to getting the “loose” crackers,
+cereals, and the like, instead of those inclosed
+in cartons. The latter is always the better
+plan, and care should be taken to select a
+good variety that is put up by manufacturers
+whose names are a guarantee of the excellence
+of the products. Until one has investigated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
+the matter one has no idea of how many cheap
+and poor materials are foisted off upon a
+guileless public, bearing the stamp of unknown
+makers, with the assurance that they
+are “just as good” as like articles put up by
+well-known houses.</p>
+
+<p>This fiction is especially prevalent about
+canned goods. When these are first-class
+they are admirable, and fortunately there are
+daily increasing numbers of fine and trustworthy
+establishments who can fruits, vegetables,
+meat, fish, etc., in conditions which
+assure the complete protection of the consumer.
+Yet there are still in existence small
+and unscrupulous concerns whose output is
+cheap and poor if not actually dangerous to
+health, and these should be boycotted by all
+housekeepers.</p>
+
+<p>Care should be exercised in buying fresh
+vegetables and fruits. In most of our large
+cities the laws as to protecting these against
+dust and dirt are being enforced more vigorously
+with every year, and here, too, the
+housewife can help to bring about a better
+state of affairs by insisting upon purchasing
+only such articles as have been properly cared
+for. Vegetables which are to be cooked before
+eating may not suffer so much by being exposed
+to dust, but salads and berries and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
+other fruits or vegetables which are eaten
+raw are a menace when they have been suffered
+to lie and wilt in a current of air laden
+with dust and disease germs.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c4">IV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">CONCERNING HOUSEHOLD ACCOUNTS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">O</span>NE of the first items of business to be
+considered by a newly married couple,
+or a pair who are about to begin housekeeping,
+is the division of the income between the
+husband and wife.</p>
+
+<p>This does not imply that their interests are
+to be opposed or that they are to have absolutely
+separate purses. It does mean that
+there must be a clear understanding on both
+sides of what the expenditure is to be for
+certain purposes and that the funds for food,
+domestic service, and other strictly housekeeping
+outlay should be in the hands of the
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>This point has been much debated and the
+pros and cons on both sides exploited. Some
+men argue that the possession of ready money
+will lead the wife to extravagance, that it is
+far better to have all articles charged and
+the bills paid by the husband, that women<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
+do not understand household accounts or
+bookkeeping. Enough foolish and shallow
+women exist to lend a trifling force to this
+position. But the general and growing view
+is that the housekeeper upon whom is laid
+the responsibility of purveying for an establishment
+rises to the emergency, that she does
+better work and makes wiser purchases when
+she is trusted with an allowance for such expenses,
+that an exhaustive knowledge of
+double-entry bookkeeping is not demanded
+for simple domestic accounts, that even the
+immature and untrained wife gains knowledge
+by experience and competence by errors made
+and corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Certain disbursements seem naturally to
+devolve upon the man of the house. That he
+should pay the rent, defray outside or general
+repairs, perhaps meet the coal bill, appears
+a matter of course. But it is unquestionably
+the province of the wife to buy provisions and
+pay for them, either in cash or by weekly or
+monthly accounts. Charges for work done in
+the house, the replacement of cooking utensils,
+household linen and the like, the bills
+for gas and electric light, all should be within
+her control, to be settled by her as they fall
+due, after she has examined them and convinced
+herself that they are correct.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span></p>
+
+<p>If other arrangement is made than this,
+it should be after careful consideration and
+unbiased discussion of the advantages and
+demerits of the system. As a general thing
+such a division as that just suggested proves
+the best.</p>
+
+<p>Exactly what proportion of the income
+shall be placed in the hands of the wife is
+a matter which must be decided by individual
+circumstances. Estimate has already been
+made as to the allowance to be given to food,
+and it can readily be seen that this must be
+determined by the character and size of the
+family as well as by the conditions surrounding
+them. The household of a farmer or of
+one who commands a garden and dairy can
+be kept on a much smaller pecuniary expenditure
+for actual food than is possible
+in the home of a dweller in the city, who
+must buy and pay for every particle of food
+which comes into the house. The sum disbursed
+may amount to the same thing in the
+long run, since the cost of keeping up the
+garden plot or caring for the cattle must be
+met by the man of the house, but he will
+not need to give as much cash into his wife’s
+hands as will be required in other circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>However the amount may be apportioned,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
+whatever may be the charges laid upon the
+wife and those assumed by the husband, the
+necessity of strict and accurate household
+accounts should be insisted upon. I am not
+advocating any special system. I have known
+excellent outlines of domestic expenses which
+simply darkened counsel with words for some
+housekeepers and rendered the business of
+following their outlay confusion worse confounded.
+Sometimes a woman with little
+more than a common-school education and an
+ordinary working knowledge of arithmetic
+can keep her accounts with a conciseness and
+cleanness many a trained bookkeeper might
+envy. If a housekeeper has a system which
+proves satisfactory it is a mistake for her to
+try to change it for one which may be more
+scientific but is less useful.</p>
+
+<p>Merely as a suggested guide I would advise
+the beginner to provide herself with two
+books, one small and cheap, to be slipped into
+the pocket when going to market, the other
+larger and of better quality. In the first
+one, to which is attached a pencil, is to be
+set down every purchase and its cost, as soon
+as made. The memory should never be
+trusted in these matters, but each outlay—no
+matter how small, if it be nothing more
+than a car-fare or a three-cent bunch of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
+parsley—entered immediately. Then these
+items are to be transferred in ink to the
+larger book as soon as possible after the
+housekeeper’s return to the home. It is fatal
+to accuracy and to really helpful bookkeeping
+to let the accounts accumulate before they
+are written down and balanced.</p>
+
+<p>Still keeping along the most elementary
+principles of household accounts, let me counsel
+that on the left-hand page be written the
+amount of money in hand, while the sums
+expended and the items for which they are
+paid out are set down on the opposite page.
+The two pages may be balanced each day or
+as the bottom of each page is reached, as best
+suits the housekeeper. The one immutable
+rule is that the sum which the written balance
+shows ought to be in her purse should
+absolutely be there. This may sound like
+the very primer of household expenses, but
+no woman who has ever gone through the
+anguish of trying to determine what has become
+of the stray dime her figures show
+should be in her possession, or of discovering
+how she happens to have a quarter more than
+her ciphering proves to belong to her, will
+ever make light of the endeavor to square her
+accounts and her cash balance. Such struggles
+are avoided by the consistent practice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
+of noting down each payment as soon as
+made.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly the most important decision the
+young housekeeper has to make in beginning
+her domestic bookkeeping is how she shall
+pay for her purchases. Shall it be cash or
+credit? And if the latter, how often shall
+bills be paid?</p>
+
+<p>From the standpoint of wise economy it is
+safe to state that the strictly cash habit is
+probably the most economical method to
+follow. The old saying of “pay as you go, and
+if you can’t pay don’t go!” is put into practical
+effect. Foolish as it may be, the fact
+remains that we all feel a certain reluctance
+to part with actual cash which lays a detaining
+grasp upon us when we might be tempted
+to “plunge” if the charge were not to be
+presented until the end of the week or month.
+The housekeeper thinks more than once before
+she buys the more expensive cut of
+meat, the higher-priced fruits or vegetables
+than her purse shows she ought to purchase.
+And there is undoubtedly a comfort beyond
+words in the knowledge that no vexing bills
+are coming in after the food has been consumed
+and forgotten. When feasible, there
+are countless advantages in paying cash for
+everything which is brought into the house<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
+and leaving to credit only such items as cannot
+well be met except periodically—such as fuel,
+light, wages, and in some cases milk and ice.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the charge system has
+something to its account. It is much more
+convenient, in the first place. When one is
+in a hurry to finish her marketing and get on
+to something else the nuisance of having to
+wait for change is vexatious. Sometimes the
+article desired is not in stock and must be
+ordered. One hesitates to pay for it before
+it is certain that it can be obtained. Again,
+the telephone marketing or commanding of
+groceries, disadvantageous as it is, must sometimes
+be followed because of illness or inclement
+weather, and then the habit of paying
+cash is a bother. Moreover, there is little
+doubt that the charge customer usually receives
+a meed of consideration often refused
+the cash payer. It is also a genuine inconvenience
+to pay cash for milk and for ice and
+for certain other commodities, such as butter
+and eggs supplied by special dealers.</p>
+
+<p>I have not touched upon the possibility
+that ready money may be lacking, as is
+sometimes the case with the man on a salary
+and still more with the one who does piecework
+and is not paid on a fixed day. Often
+the need for paying “real money” amounts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
+to a hardship, not because the purchaser is
+not solvent, but because his remuneration is
+slow in arriving. At such periods the charge
+account partakes of the nature of a sheet-anchor.
+And yet there are strong arguments
+against it.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it is useless to lay stress on the
+disadvantages of the charge account, and
+yet I would feel I was in error if I did not
+speak a word of warning against the fatal
+facility attending on credit arrangements. It
+is altogether too easy to have an article
+charged, forgetting that a day of reckoning
+can only be postponed at the best. The
+housekeeper who for good and sufficient reasons
+decides to pay by check periodically
+should lay down for herself certain fixed rules.</p>
+
+<p>One of the chief of these is to have short
+accounts. A grocer’s or a butcher’s bill should
+be presented weekly and paid punctually.
+When the bill comes in it should be gone over
+carefully and the items on it checked up, to
+be sure, in the first place, that every article
+charged has been delivered; in the second
+place, that the charge set against it is that
+which was stated when the purchase was
+made. It is a common occurrence to find
+an increase of from one to five cents on several
+entries on a bill. The error may be due to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
+the bookkeeper’s mistake or to the dealer’s
+dishonesty. In either event the blunder
+should be called to the merchant’s attention
+and corrected. He will respect the housekeeper
+none the less because he learns she is
+on the alert for possible discrepancies.</p>
+
+<p>Another principle to be followed is that
+the marketer should not be led into making
+foolish or extravagant purchases because they
+are to be charged. In the majority of cases
+it is a mistake for the small housekeeper to
+buy in quantity, since the cash saved by the
+transaction is offset by the waste of the
+material, either by spoiling or because of
+extravagant use. Yet when the purchase can
+be charged it is easy to yield to the temptation
+toward what seems at the first glance
+like an economy.</p>
+
+<p>Again, the possession of the charge account
+should not be permitted to lead the housekeeper
+into the habit of vicarious marketing—either
+by telephone or by messenger or by
+ordering through an employee of the concern
+she patronizes. Other mistakes may also be
+made, but these are probably the most frequent
+and those into which the woman who
+is not on her guard against pitfalls in the
+domestic path is likely to slip.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that it is not feasible to state<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
+here a fixed sum to which the housekeeper
+must limit her outlay for food. Her best
+plan for arriving at an approximate estimate
+is by a process of averages. A single day or
+even a single week cannot furnish a standard
+any more than can a single meal. The wisest
+method is by the aid of strict system to keep
+track of her expenditures and then study how the
+economy of one time offsets the liberality
+of another.</p>
+
+<p>To illustrate: when the holiday season is
+at hand expenses are bound to increase.
+The cost of the Thanksgiving or the Christmas
+turkey and pies cannot be appreciably
+reduced. But it is possible to make a science
+of economical purchasing and catering—this,
+too, without stinting the family or feeding
+them poorly—so that the burden of high-priced
+food may not hopelessly swamp the income.</p>
+
+<p>A like principle may be followed on other
+occasions. If company must be entertained,
+if a family feast must be observed, prudent
+marketing and skilful cookery may delude
+the household into an ignorance of the fact
+that money is being saved to carry the housekeeper
+over the time of increased bills.
+Constant thought and consideration are required
+for this, but to the lover of housekeeping
+the occupation after a while becomes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
+almost like a game in which she pits her wits
+against the cost of living and glories when
+she comes out ahead.</p>
+
+<p>Here is an enterprise in which the habit
+of going to market for oneself and the custom
+of keeping strict account of disbursements
+both help the worker. She can pick up at a
+bargain a cut of meat, a selection of fish, a
+choice of vegetables or of fruit, or an occasion
+in canned goods which will at once bring
+down her average and permit her to lay
+aside a little toward the next heavy pull upon
+her purse. This is especially likely to be the
+case in the period of preserving, pickling, and
+similar pursuits, when often a happy “find”
+in fruit will help to lighten the unavoidable
+weight of conserving of any sort.</p>
+
+<p>The wise student of housekeeping need not
+let her family recognize the alternation of a
+feast and a fast at the table. When they
+eat a larded lamb’s liver, they will not suspect
+an economy; when they rejoice in filleted
+sole they will have no idea that the cheapness
+of flounders is responsible for their
+treat, any more than they guess that a delectable
+trifle which redeems a rather simple
+dinner is made from the remains of stale
+cake, the left-overs of a couple of jars of jam,
+and a simple custard.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span></p>
+
+<p>Some of the so-called economies do not
+economize. A bread-pudding which requires
+eggs, milk, sugar, butter, and raisins to the
+value of fifteen or twenty cents to use up
+three cents’ worth of stale bread can by no
+stretch of the imagination be regarded as a
+saving. Better make toast of the bread,
+save it for stuffing, or dry it and keep it for
+crumbs to serve in frying. But there are
+genuine economies galore, and the woman
+who makes a science of them will lay up for
+herself a series of agreeable sensations when
+she balances her housekeeping accounts at
+the end of the month.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c5">V</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">THE HOUSE IN ORDER</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">P</span>UTTING the house in order is one thing.</p>
+
+<p>Keeping it in order is quite another.</p>
+
+<p>Once upon a time there was a theory that
+every house, no matter how well kept, how
+frequently swept and scrubbed, must be torn
+up by the roots twice a year, for the spring
+and fall cleaning. At those dreadful periods
+mere men fled from before the devastating
+broom and scrubbing-brush wielded by the
+woman of the family. Even when they stole
+home in the evening to the slim meal which
+was all the worn-out housekeeper could provide,
+the halls and stairs were likely to be
+blocked by pails of suds, by furniture or rolls
+of carpet <i>en route</i>.</p>
+
+<p>To the aged survivors of that epoch the
+phrase “housecleaning-time” is still enough
+to provoke a shudder. I have heard the assertion
+made that it lasted at least six weeks,
+although all seem to be agreed that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
+spring visitation was more severe than that
+of the autumn.</p>
+
+<p>Even in this day and generation there are
+found certain authorities to declare that a
+house cannot be kept so clean that it does
+not once in so often require a thorough going-over.
+In a way there is an element of truth
+in their claim. In every home there are nooks
+and corners not in constant use, and therefore
+not regularly cleaned; store-closets,
+trunk-rooms, cupboards or drawers reserved
+for extra bedding, clothing, furnishings, into
+whose closed confines dust mysteriously seeps,
+wherein moth and other vermin make their
+breeding-places.</p>
+
+<p>At least once a year—and better, twice in
+a twelvemonth—these “glory-holes” should
+be emptied, the contents looked over, beaten
+or dusted, the floors, walls, shelves, etc.,
+wiped off carefully. This is the time to give
+away or throw away treasured possessions no
+longer of use to their owners and which may
+be of service elsewhere; to rearrange such
+articles as escape banishment; to put aside
+for the next season the summer or winter
+clothing, hangings, and the like which are
+not needed at the moment. So long as dirt
+and dust continue to exist and to work
+themselves into the most jealously guarded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
+precincts, so long must the housekeeper bestow
+at least a semi-annual inspection on her
+reserves and their quarters.</p>
+
+<p>She fails signally to understand her business,
+however, if she permits an accumulation
+of dirt with the comforting conviction that
+it will all be removed in the spring and fall
+clearance. More and more we understand the
+importance of purity to health, and with this
+comprehension we have grown to perceive
+that the best method of retaining high cleanliness
+is by never allowing the dirt to get the
+better of us. A little brushing and sweeping
+and cleaning here and there as it is needed,
+a more attentive treatment once a week,
+will keep the house clean without making
+the labor a burden.</p>
+
+<p>The system which should be the housekeeper’s
+most valued ally in the effort after
+efficiency comes into play here. By the time
+she is fairly settled in her new home she
+should have evolved a routine which, so far
+from being an irksome groove, will be rather
+a track on which the domestic wheels revolve
+without undue friction and the consequent
+wear and tear.</p>
+
+<p>Take into consideration first the round of
+the day as it has to do with keeping the house
+in order. When the maid or the housekeeper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
+herself comes down in the morning
+to start the breakfast, either by making a
+fire with wood or coal, or by lighting the
+oil or gas flame, or turning the key that sets
+the electric current to work, she should open
+the windows to let in fresh air and the light
+which reveals the dusty or the untidy corners.</p>
+
+<p>While the kettle is boiling or the cereal
+simmering she may have to set the table, or
+if this has been done the night before and
+a light cloth thrown over it to protect from
+the dust, the dust-pan and broom may be
+called into service or the carpet-sweeper
+run over the places which demand attention.
+The fortunate woman who has a vacuum-cleaner,
+either one of the hand variety or the
+larger style which connects with the electric
+current supplying the house, has work simplified
+and time saved, as well as strength
+conserved.</p>
+
+<p>In those homes where an early and rather
+hasty breakfast is obligatory for the sake of
+the commuter or the business man who must
+get to his office promptly, or the children
+who must be off to school, it is better to
+have done what superficial tidying was possible
+the night before and to let the sweeping
+and dusting go until after the morning meal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
+is despatched and the workers on their way.
+If a system is followed which obliges the
+readers of books and newspapers to put them
+in their place before going to bed, which
+insists that toys, tools, and clothing shall
+not be left lying about for some one besides
+the scatterers to put away the next morning,
+there need be no confusion encompassing the
+breakfast-table. A few moments should have
+been snatched for dusting the more conspicuous
+portions of the dining-room furniture, and
+distress of digestion should never be induced
+by the presence of dirt or disorder in the
+surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>When the housekeeper has the home to
+herself, has disposed of the details of dish-washing,
+bed-making, etc., has planned for
+her meals and made out the list for her marketing,
+she should turn her attention to the
+removal of the “matter out of place,” as
+dirt has been gracefully termed. The living-room
+will probably require her first efforts
+after she has reduced the dining-room to the
+proper condition of shining tidiness.</p>
+
+<p>I have referred to the vacuum-cleaner. I
+wish I could put one into the hands of every
+housekeeper! Several kinds are on the market
+and I carry no brief for any special make,
+but I know there is more than one good<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
+variety. The woman of slender means can
+use one of the hand-machines, which, while
+perhaps more tiresome to work than the
+cleaner run by electricity, will yet make
+much less call upon the strength than the
+ordinary broom and do the work much more
+effectively. Not the least of the advantages
+of the vacuum-cleaner is a merit it possesses
+in common with the ordinary carpet-sweeper—that
+it does not scatter dust as well as
+gather it up.</p>
+
+<p>More than this, the vacuum-cleaner enables
+the worker to remove the dust from
+draperies without taking them down, to
+clean walls by a less arduous means than
+going over them with a cloth-wrapped brush
+or broom. Decidedly, one of the best investments
+a housekeeper can make is a good
+vacuum-cleaner; and she will find that it
+soon pays for itself in the amount of time and
+toil it saves. The work it takes a woman
+hours to accomplish is done by the vacuum-cleaner
+in a fraction of the time she would
+bestow on cleansing by the old methods,
+and more than one housekeeper has found
+that she saved the wages of an extra helper
+by the purchase of a vacuum-cleaner that
+she could handle herself.</p>
+
+<p>When such a cleaner is out of the question,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
+a substitute for minor work in this line is
+a carpet-sweeper. True, it cannot go into
+corners and its accomplishment must be supplemented
+by a dust-pan and broom, but
+even so, it saves much stooping and struggle
+to the housekeeper. A trustworthy variety
+should be selected; it should be emptied
+regularly and kept in perfect working order.
+With this there should be provided what is
+known as a dustless mop—there are several
+makes of these—to use on the bare floors
+after the rugs have been treated by the
+sweeper.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of course everything of this
+sort, as well as the use of a broom which
+raises dust, should be concluded before the
+housekeeper attacks the furniture with the
+brush for the upholstered pieces, a flannelette
+or cheese-cloth duster for the hardwood, or
+one of the so-called oiled dusters. Of these,
+too, a good choice is offered at house-furnishing
+establishments. While the cleaning goes
+on the windows should be open, but not in
+such a way as to blow the dust, and the
+doors into the other part of the house should
+be kept closed. The old method, still practised
+by untrained maids or by housekeepers
+whose zeal is in excess of their knowledge,
+of cleaning two or three rooms at once and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
+driving the dust from one room to another
+should be entirely out of date in these sanitary
+days.</p>
+
+<p>The same sort of surface-cleaning should
+be followed throughout the house, in halls
+and chambers, as well as in the down-stairs
+rooms. Even in the tidiest household dust
+is likely to gather from day to day, and if
+neglected twenty-four hours its presence is
+unpleasantly conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p>This superficial care answers excellently
+for part of the time, but it is not sufficient
+without a more thorough attack at least once
+a week. The housekeeper need not follow
+the modes of her mother and grandmother
+and have the whole house swept from top
+to bottom on one day of the week, unless
+she finds, after study of ways and means,
+that this simplifies living for her. A better
+plan is to have one room or two done a day,
+so that the labor is lightened by being spread
+out through the week.</p>
+
+<p>The same method should be followed in
+each room that is to be cleaned. The smaller
+ornaments should be wiped and laid away,
+either in the bureau drawer or on some large
+piece of furniture which cannot be moved
+but may have its surface and the objects
+put on it covered with a sweeping-sheet.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
+Lighter articles, such as chairs and small
+tables, should be dusted and then carried
+from the room. The postponement of the
+dusting until they are brought back after the
+room has been swept means a fresh scattering
+of the dust about the clean chamber.</p>
+
+<p>Sweeping-sheets, made of cotton cloth
+bound with red, that they may not be confused
+with the regulation bed-linen, should
+be at hand to lay over such large pieces as
+cannot be removed. The sweeping should be
+done from the sides of the room toward the
+center, recollecting always to have at least
+one window opened and all doors closed.
+When the dust is all in one compact heap it
+should be taken up in the dust-pan, transferred
+at once to a newspaper, this rolled up
+tight and put aside to be carried down to
+the furnace or the ash-can. After the dust
+has settled the walls can be gone over with
+a cloth or with a broom about which has
+been wrapped a duster, or a hair brush with
+a long handle, such as comes for this purpose.</p>
+
+<p>The above method can be followed in a
+room with a carpeted floor or with a large
+rug fastened down. When small loose rugs
+are used they may be swept first, then rolled
+up and carried from the room, after which
+the bare floor is dusted or wiped off with oil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
+or rubbed with one of the good waxing
+preparations which the popularity of the
+hardwood floor has brought into the market.
+In a house supplied with a vacuum-cleaner
+the floor and the rugs can both be cleansed
+without the labor of carrying out the latter,
+and the upholstered furniture will not need
+the offices of the small brush in removing
+the dust from folds and tufts.</p>
+
+<p>Water should not be used on a hardwood
+floor. It may be wiped off with a cloth dipped
+in crude oil and turpentine mingled in equal
+parts, and the mixture must be well rubbed
+in. In default of this, kerosene may be employed,
+observing moderation in the quantity
+of the oil applied. Too much of any
+kind of dressing makes an unpleasant odor
+which lingers persistently.</p>
+
+<p>It may be said, by the way, that when
+oilcloth is washed the cloth should be wrung
+out nearly dry. If the water gets under the
+oilcloth this will rot.</p>
+
+<p>When windows are to be washed the dust
+and dirt from the frames should be removed
+before the glass is touched. If not, the panes
+will be streaked. Warm water should be
+used, and no soap; this would make the
+glass cloudy. A little borax or ammonia may
+be added to the water, and in cold weather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
+alcohol should be mixed with the water to
+prevent this from freezing on the cloth.</p>
+
+<p>In scouring paint the soap or other preparation
+should be applied on a flannel or the
+paint will be scratched. Hardwood finishings,
+such as door-posts, window-frames, and
+the like, should have the same sort of oiling
+as is used for the floors.</p>
+
+<p>If the silver which is in daily family service
+is always washed as it should be after each
+meal there is no reason why it should become
+dull and dingy and require a weekly scouring.
+Scalding-hot water is an essential; the silver
+should be rinsed off in hot suds, dropped into
+the almost boiling clean water, fished out
+quickly, a piece or two at a time, and dried
+immediately. No draining of silver or glass
+should ever be allowed, no matter what compromises
+are permitted in this line with china
+and crockery.</p>
+
+<p>Close to the worker’s hand should stand
+a few helps toward keeping her silver and
+glass bright and shining. A bottle of household
+ammonia or a box of borax is one of her
+best aids. Also she should have a little
+coarse salt with which to take egg stains
+from silver, and a cake or box of good silver
+polish in case some of the pieces look less
+brilliant than they should. A chamois-skin<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
+to give a final polish is also a desideratum.
+If silver has been laid away and become dull
+so that a general scouring is demanded, it
+is well for the housekeeper to have one of
+the patented devices by which silver can be
+cleansed by an immersion in a bath of soda
+and salt contained in an aluminum pan.
+Again, there are several good articles of this
+kind for sale at reasonable prices.</p>
+
+<p>The daily equipment for dish-washing
+should consist of two dish-pans for the
+housekeeper who does not possess a butler’s-pantry
+sink with running water. In
+one of these pans the silver and china
+should be rinsed free of all grease before
+they are put into the clean hot suds of
+the other pan. The glasses should be
+washed in the clear water before soap has
+been added; next come the silver pieces,
+and these, like the glasses, should be wiped
+dry as soon as they are taken out.</p>
+
+<p>The ideal method is to dry the china in the
+same way, but if it is perfectly clean when
+taken from the suds, the pieces ranged in a
+rack and boiling water poured over them,
+they will usually dry evenly and show no
+marks or streaks. This method undoubtedly
+saves much time and bother. A dish-mop
+is better for use in washing dishes than a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
+dish-cloth, since it keeps the hands from the
+hot water, but should be scalded after each
+service and boiled once a day. The towels
+should be washed and boiled with equal
+regularity.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c6">VI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">HYGIENE AND PLUMBING</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">S</span>OME of the apparently minor details of
+housekeeping really possess more importance
+than those which seem to bulk larger.</p>
+
+<p>Consider drains, for instance. In this day
+it is taken for granted that no one buys or
+rents a house without being assured that the
+plumbing is in perfect order, as well as having
+been of the best quality in the beginning. I
+say that this is taken for granted, and yet I
+feel I should modify this statement, recollecting
+homes in which I have been a guest where
+the plumbing is obsolete and neglected to a
+degree which would be dangerous with even
+the most up-to-date fittings. When such
+carelessness exists relative to the old-fashioned
+closed plumbing with the cheapest and
+least scientific of traps and stop-cocks, one
+gains a rather alarming notion of the hazards
+to which householders recklessly subject their
+families.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span></p>
+
+<p>Let me state here that the absence of evil
+odor is no proof that drains and traps are in
+excellent order. The deadly sewer-gas is
+practically without smell, and persons can be
+badly poisoned by it with no warning on the
+part of their olfactory nerves. There are
+tests which will demonstrate the presence of
+noxious vapors, but these must be made by
+sanitary engineers or specialists in this line.
+Unless the dweller in any home is positively
+assured that the drains, plumbing, etc., are
+in perfect condition there should be no delay
+in making such tests and in proving the good
+or evil state of the house-fittings.</p>
+
+<p>This is not sufficient, however. The drains
+must be kept clear, not only for such a simple
+hygienic reason as the desire to guard
+against disease, but also because a greasy or
+dirty pipe soon means a choked pipe, and
+this in turn brings the inconvenience of a
+sink which cannot be used, of a backed-up
+overflow of waste water, with the possible
+accompaniment of injured floor-coverings,
+walls, and ceilings.</p>
+
+<p>The expert may be required to decide as to
+the perfection of drains. The veriest beginner
+in housekeeping needs little education to
+know how to keep them free. In the first
+place she should see that nothing is thrown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
+down a waste-pipe but the things it is meant
+to carry off. When wads of paper, broken
+pasteboard boxes, rolls of hair-combings, and
+similar refuse are flung into the mouth of even
+a wide and generous waste-pipe there is pretty
+sure to be trouble sooner or later. When
+grease and particles of food, tea-leaves, coffee-grounds,
+and collections of dust are dumped
+into a sink, or a corresponding amount of
+debris is permitted to try to make its way
+through the pipe running from the wash-basin,
+no one but the person guilty of such
+gross carelessness may be to blame, but the
+whole household is likely to suffer for the
+offense.</p>
+
+<p>In view of the fact that most persons are
+heedless, the housekeeper should protect herself
+and others against risks. One of the
+simplest helps to this is the use of washing-soda—a
+chemical which is absolutely ruinous
+to clothing when used as a detergent in
+laundry-work, but is admirable for cutting
+grease or fat which has accumulated in waste-pipes
+and for eating away other foreign particles
+which have gathered there. I hasten
+to add that it will not disintegrate strands
+of hair or bone buttons—both of which are
+often found by plumbers in the joints of
+choked pipes they have been called in to open!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span></p>
+
+<p>Another aid to keeping the pipes clean and
+free is household ammonia. This does not
+need to be poured clear into the pipes, but
+when it has been employed in rinsing greasy
+dishes or in cleansing the sink, or in brightening
+glass or silver, the hot water to which it
+has been added is of distinct benefit to the
+waste-pipes. It may be suggested, by the
+way, that one of the best methods for using
+the washing-soda is to lay a good-sized lump
+of it over the drain-pipe from the sink so that
+the water which goes down carries particles
+of the soda with it on their cleansing errand.</p>
+
+<p>Either ammonia or a solution of washing-soda
+should be used in rinsing out the set-tubs
+after laundry-work has been done.
+When one thinks of the human waste from
+the skin which adheres to the clothing and is
+washed off from it in these tubs, there is a
+degree of foulness in the notion of letting the
+tubs pass with no more cleansing than the
+rinsing they get from the second or third
+water through which the clothes are passed.</p>
+
+<p>Other cleansing preparations come which
+are perhaps less severe in their effect on the
+hands than the common washing-soda. Many
+of those on the market are known to be
+excellent by the proof they have given housekeepers.
+The names of several of these will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
+at once suggest themselves to any one who
+keeps up with the times in the line of domestic
+helps. Whatever the chosen cleaning medium
+may be, a bottle or box of it should always
+stand in the bath-room, not only for rinsing
+out pipes and keeping them clear, but also
+for preserving the purity of basin and tub
+and toilet-bowl.</p>
+
+<p>I have often been impressed by the carelessness
+of housekeepers in this detail, especially
+in homes where there are several children.
+Evidently these have never been
+taught the niceties of rinsing out the tub
+after bathing, or the basin after washing the
+hands. Around each vessel runs a high-tide
+mark of soap or dirt, the mere sight of
+which is enough to deter the observer from
+using bowl or bath. The touch of the hand
+to the inside of either will almost always discover
+a sediment or accretion of grease or
+dirt or both. This accumulation is readily
+removed by a soap-rubbed cloth or by one
+dipped in ammonia or other detersive. Such
+care may seem a trifling detail, but it is one
+which should never be neglected.</p>
+
+<p>In connection with this a word does not
+come amiss as to the superior attractiveness
+of nickel bath-room fittings, or of those of the
+kitchen or butler’s pantry, when they are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
+kept bright and clean, over those which are
+suffered to lapse into dinginess. When the
+nickel coating is hopelessly scoured off it is
+not a serious matter to have the fittings done
+over and made to look like new.</p>
+
+<p>The whole care of the bath-room deserves
+more attention than it usually receives.
+Soiled towels and wet wash-cloths should not
+be flung down here and there, or stray medicine-bottles
+and medicine-boxes left in untidy
+rows on the shelves. The medicine-cabinet
+should be kept in order; the towels
+and wash-cloths folded neatly and hung up
+after using; clean towels in plenty in readiness
+for the chance guest; the soap-dish should
+be scoured scrupulously as often as once
+a day. Of course it takes time to do these
+little things, but their presence or absence
+marks the difference between the good and
+the careless housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p>Washing-soda has another use beyond that
+of keeping drain-pipes clear. A solution of
+it is excellent for washing out the ice-box or
+refrigerator. This process should take place
+at least once a week. When this is said it
+is not meant that the ice-box should not be
+cleared out oftener than that. A new piece
+of ice should not go into it if there is a possibility
+of bits of food of any sort having been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
+left in the corners or cracks of the ice-chamber.
+Daily inspection of the contents of the
+refrigerator will make sure that all food in
+it is keeping well and is sweet and fresh.</p>
+
+<p>In most well-made refrigerators of the day
+the shelves are so built that they can be
+slipped in and out. By this plan they can be
+scrubbed clean and the sides of the refrigerator
+can also be scoured off, as would not be
+feasible with non-detachable shelves. After
+it has been made clean a few pieces of charcoal
+should be laid in the corners. This will
+keep the place sweet by absorbing the odors
+from food, and every few days the fragments
+of charcoal should be thrown out and new
+ones put in their place.</p>
+
+<p>Even with this care the ice-box will sometimes
+get a close smell; at such times a
+small shovel should be made nearly red-hot, a
+little ground coffee sprinkled upon it, and this
+put into the refrigerator for a few minutes.
+It should be understood by every housekeeper
+that butter, milk, and cream should never be
+kept near strong-smelling articles of food.
+They absorb the odors and taste of the items
+they have been with.</p>
+
+<p>Milk is usually kept in open dishes or
+pans for those who wish to get the full good
+of the cream which rises to the surface, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
+nothing else except other milk products or
+perhaps fresh eggs should be permitted near
+it.</p>
+
+<p>When highly flavored foods of any sort
+must be kept in a refrigerator they should
+either be closely covered—which is not always
+possible or desirable—or put in a chamber by
+themselves. Butter should not be suffered
+to remain in the wooden boxes or plates on
+which it is often sent home; lettuce and
+greens should either be washed before they
+are put away or wrapped in clean paper.
+Lettuce is best rinsed and then done up in a
+clean cloth before it is laid near the ice.</p>
+
+<p>When canned goods of any sort are opened
+they should at once be turned from the tin.
+They will keep indefinitely in the can while
+this is sealed, but as soon as the air gets at the
+contents a chemical change is wrought by the
+contact of the fluid and the tin and the food
+soon becomes affected and a positive menace
+to health. The housekeeper should always
+have in her stock a number of small bowls
+or dishes into which to turn the fruit, vegetables,
+etc., which have been sent home to
+her in a can.</p>
+
+<p>A wire meat-safe is an important item to
+have in the pantry, when there is room for
+such a convenience. Lacking this space, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
+dweller in flats achieves a compromise by a
+box built outside of her kitchen window, covered
+on top with oilcloth or other water-proof
+material, that the contents may be kept dry.
+According to the exposure of the window to
+the sun, the sides of the box may either be
+of wire netting or solid wood. In length the
+box matches the width of the window and is
+usually high enough to allow of two shelves.
+In this improvised outdoor pantry can be
+kept in cool weather many articles which
+would otherwise crowd the refrigerator unduly
+and would perhaps wither or spoil in the
+warm kitchen or pantry.</p>
+
+<p>Every convenience she can lay her hands
+on the housekeeper is within her rights in
+securing. When it is worth while it pays for
+itself in sparing her busy hands and feet,
+in easing the tire of her overworked back.
+On her floor she should have linoleum, as it
+is easier to keep clean than the bare boards,
+more sanitary and more convenient than rugs.</p>
+
+<p>The study of how to arrange her kitchen
+so as to save herself steps is one of the first
+things the new housekeeper should undertake.
+The table should stand near the sink and not
+too far from the stove; the utensils most frequently
+in service should be hung on a row
+of hooks close at hand or be ranged on a couple<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
+of shelves above the table. Here, too,
+should be such articles of seasoning, etc.,
+as are in constant demand—the salt-box, the
+pepper-cruet, the vinegar-bottle, the flour-dredger,
+and the like. The bread-box and
+bread-board should be near the table on
+which the loaf is to be sliced; the bread-knife
+should be close by.</p>
+
+<p>One of the greatest conveniences for a
+kitchen is that piece of furniture called a
+kitchen cabinet, which unites the functions
+of a dresser, a receptacle for provisions, a
+table or shelf at which to make bread and
+roll pastry, and various other qualities that
+must be known to be appreciated fully.
+These cabinets come in different sizes, styles,
+and finish, and are easily made by the clever
+home carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>The fireless cooker must not pass unnoticed,
+whether this be of the home-made hay-box
+kind or of the more elaborate variety
+containing plates to heat for cooking the contents
+of the vessels of the cooker. Whichever
+make is selected, the cooker itself is one
+of the most potent aids the housekeeper can
+have as a saver of time, of fuel, of labor, and
+of fatigue. By its assistance the meal virtually
+cooks itself, once it has been started in
+the right way. Food prepared in the fireless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
+cooker preserves its flavor as it cannot do
+if cooked in the oven or on top of the stove,
+and there is far less waste of the material of
+each article than if it were suffered to go off
+in steam and aroma.</p>
+
+<p>The most popular fuel of the day is undoubtedly
+gas, since the cost of electric equipment
+puts it beyond the reach of most housekeepers
+of moderate means. Yet there are
+many parts of the country where all cookery
+must be done by coal or even by wood, and
+where the only solace of the worker is that she
+has the comfort of the heat in winter and the
+benefits of slow cooking at all times.</p>
+
+<p>For housekeepers who must buy their coal
+it is well to know that the most advantageous
+mixture for the average-sized range is a mixture
+of egg-coal and nut-coal, in the proportion
+of equal parts of the red ash and the
+white ash. The latter burns more slowly
+than the former, while this gives a stronger
+fire and makes fewer cinders.</p>
+
+<p>A fresh fire need not be made more than
+once a week if the housekeeper is careful to
+rake out the ashes at bedtime, put on fresh
+coal, open the draughts for ten or fifteen
+minutes or until the new coal is fairly kindled,
+then close the draughts and leave the
+upper door of the stove open. In the morning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
+the draughts have only to be opened
+after the upper door has been closed and a
+little fresh coal put on as soon as the fire
+has begun to be red. Not until this has begun
+to burn well should a further small supply of
+coal be added. This mode is much more
+economical of fuel and work than making a
+fresh fire every day.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c7">VII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">THE HOME WITHOUT A SERVANT</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE housekeeper who undertakes to run
+her establishment without a servant is
+beset by certain disadvantages. When she
+has had a bad night, is suffering from indisposition
+of any kind, or wishes to undertake
+some piece of work, such as dressmaking, for
+which she desires to have her time free, it
+is inconvenient to feel that without her personal
+effort no part of the business of the
+house will be done, that all responsibility as
+well as all performance falls upon her.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, great are the comforts
+of the woman who has no one but herself to
+do her work. These should be considered,
+since an enormously large proportion of
+American housekeepers employ no regular
+servant and many others call in assistance
+only for such toil as washing and ironing and
+heavy cleaning.</p>
+
+<p>The woman who does not keep a maid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
+can run her kitchen to suit herself and have
+things done as she prefers. She need not be
+constantly worried because the cook neglects
+to line the garbage-pail with a newspaper or
+to put on the cover, persistently leaves the
+refrigerator open in hot weather and will not
+save left-overs. The mistress knows that the
+dishes are washed by an approved method,
+since she does it herself, and this position
+also enables her to have the utensils and general
+plenishing of the kitchen and pantry in
+the order she likes.</p>
+
+<p>The same freedom obtains in other parts of
+the house. There is no uncertainty as to
+whether towels and napkins are used in the
+prescribed routine; no doubt if the beds are
+properly aired and made, the corners of the
+rooms swept and the top shelves dusted,
+sanitary precautions observed as to drains
+and similar niceties of care followed. The
+woman who does her own work can be sure
+of an attention to details which she could
+not compel from a hireling except at the
+cost of close watchfulness and more or less
+nagging.</p>
+
+<p>More than this, the economies to be compassed
+in a house where no maid is kept far
+exceed the mere outlay for food which is required
+to supply an extra person. No one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
+but the mistress of the home will watch for
+small leaks, and, having bought judiciously,
+will take pains that the saving thus practised
+is not lost by careless use of materials. She
+will plan her meals so as to utilize remnants,
+will see that the trifle which seems of no importance
+is put aside to combine with another
+apparently negligible quantity, will guard
+worn-out household linens for other services
+than the rag-bag, will watch for the first
+breaks in table-cloth or napkins and stop
+them with a wise stitch or two. Through it
+all she will possess the delightful sense of
+having her home to herself, of knowing there
+is not a nook or a corner of it where she does
+not reign supreme, and that her theories are
+put into practice from the top of the house
+to the bottom.</p>
+
+<p>Such delightful sensations as these are of
+course out of the question for the woman who
+undertakes housekeeping without a good
+working knowledge of how to conduct it.
+The theories to which reference has been
+made may be the best of their kind, but unless
+they are backed by the ability to do the
+things they describe there is likely to be trouble.
+Still, the woman who has more book
+instruction in the line of housekeeping than
+actual experience can learn by doing and in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
+time reach a point where her independence
+is a joy to her. The best aid she can have
+in this endeavor is system, the habit of doing
+each task at a certain hour and in a certain
+way, and she need not consider the time
+wasted she bestows on planning out her
+routine so as to make it at once easy and
+efficient.</p>
+
+<p>In a city apartment or a small house fitted
+with the latest improvements the way is
+much simplified. If one can have a fire by
+striking a match and turning on the gas-stove,
+is supplied with hot water by a means
+outside her own kitchen, has milk, ice, meat,
+and other provisions brought to the door of
+her pantry, and no responsibility as to getting
+rid of ashes or garbage, she may feel that
+her lines have fallen in pleasant places.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally, a woman who lives in these
+conditions must direct her work in a very
+different way from that incumbent upon the
+dweller in a village or on a farm, who must
+build and keep in her own fires for cooking
+and heating, warm every drop of hot water
+that is used—often perhaps having to draw
+or pump it first—fill the lamps by which the
+house is lighted, and do all the many other
+duties which are performed for the dweller
+in a city flat and taken by her for granted.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
+Yet as much efficiency, as delightful a life,
+exist in these conditions as can be found in
+a home where the work is reduced to a minimum.
+The housekeeper who must put up
+with inconveniences will generally find that
+they are offset by benefits which go far to
+counterbalance the drawbacks.</p>
+
+<p>If the city housekeeper with all modern
+improvements at her command requires system
+in her work, it is even more necessary for
+the one who must do without such aids.
+At the same time she must secure every help
+she can. When she can get one of the gasolene-stoves
+which, if properly managed, are
+hardly second to a gas-range in excellence,
+or, if lacking one of these, she can secure a
+good oil-stove with an oven; if she can provide
+herself with an oil hot-water-back or
+heater which will warm the water for cooking
+and bathing; if she purchases all such aids
+as fireless cookers, steamers, hand vacuum-cleaners,
+and other up-to-date appliances,
+she will simplify her labor and at the same
+time preserve the youth and strength that
+would be devoured by the adherence to
+the methods of her grandmother in a day
+when twentieth-century living is taken for
+granted on even the remote rural free-delivery
+route.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span></p>
+
+<p>In addition to this she should study the
+art of sparing herself in other ways, even
+of shirking when it is wise. By this advice
+there is no implication that she should be
+careless of work that should be done or
+perform it in the wrong way. But often
+duties can be postponed with no harm to
+anything except the housekeeper’s supersensitive
+conscientiousness, just as there
+are times when it is even wiser to leave
+the room unswept or undusted than to
+wear oneself down to absolute fatigue and
+the fretfulness or irritability such weariness
+connotes.</p>
+
+<p>One of the first rules for the home-worker
+to lay down for herself is that no positive
+moral superiority is displayed by standing
+at one’s occupations. There is no reason
+except a custom better broken than preserved
+why a woman should not have a high
+stool or chair on which to sit while washing
+and drying dishes, while preparing vegetables,
+beating eggs, creaming butter or flour, and
+performing other such tasks, as well as while
+ironing small pieces. The stool or chair
+should also be accompanied by a hassock or
+footstool on which to rest the feet. The fact
+that some of the old type of housekeepers
+will call the practice lazy does not in the least<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
+affect the common sense of the suggestion
+and the habit.</p>
+
+<p>Another means for rendering kitchen work
+agreeable is to have the right sort of utensils
+with which to accomplish it. I have spoken
+of some of the conveniences already. Certain
+of them are high-priced, but many of the
+aids to easy and pleasant cookery are inexpensive.
+To have plenty of bowls and spoons,
+the right kind of measuring-cups, pans, and
+pudding-dishes, is as essential in its way as
+the purchase of a bread or cake mixer or a
+washing-machine. Too often housekeepers
+put up with the poor outfits they have and
+let a mistaken economy prevent their securing
+the right kind of tools. Nothing worth having
+is gained by washing dishes in a rusty
+and battered pan, drying them on ragged
+towels, any more than by serving your puddings
+in a chipped bake-dish or measuring
+ingredients in a leaky cup. This is not real
+economy; it is either slovenliness or sloth.
+When a woman does her own work she can
+surely trust herself to take care of the articles
+she uses, and she should not stint herself in
+buying those she needs.</p>
+
+<p>Also she should dress for the part of maid-of-all-work
+when she is filling that rôle.
+Tightly fitting waists and long skirts should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
+never be worn, and wash frocks are the best,
+since the material not only does not harbor
+odors of cooking as does a woolen fabric, but
+the garment can be washed when it is soiled.</p>
+
+<p>A shirtwaist and short skirt or a one-piece
+frock is the best uniform, and always there
+should be a large and comprehensive apron
+with a high bib and shoulder-straps. In
+addition to this it is well to have a couple of
+aprons supplied with sleeves, which can be
+slipped on over an afternoon frock when
+getting dinner ready or when washing up
+afterward. All the aprons should be long
+enough to come down well to the hem of the
+gown and should be of some pretty goods,
+such as gingham or percale, or one of the
+crinkly fabrics which do not need to be ironed
+after washing. There is no reason why a
+woman who does her own work should not
+look attractive while she is at the process.
+Above all, she should abjure curl-papers, kid
+curlers, and similar atrocities both while at
+her duties and when presiding at the breakfast-table
+for a family which should surely
+take away with them an agreeable mental
+picture of the mistress of the house. If these
+adjuncts are actually necessary to render the
+wearer presentable later in the day, she should
+at least conceal them under a pretty boudoir<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
+cap. Such a cap is advisable not only on account
+of the appearance, but as a protection
+to the hair from smoke and steam.</p>
+
+<p>After the morning meal is over the housekeeper
+may either put her dishes to soak in
+hot water, leave her beds to air, and go out
+to do her marketing, or she may decide to
+postpone the purchasing until later in the
+day and despatch her household duties before
+she leaves the house. Often it seems wiser
+to go to market late in the morning, or even
+in the afternoon, and thus have the best part
+of the forenoon unbroken for domestic occupations.
+The systematic housekeeper can
+usually plan her meals so that this plan can
+be followed without inconvenience.</p>
+
+<p>In the well-kept flat there is not very much
+to do when there are only two in the family.
+With so few in the house articles do not get
+out of place to any marked extent, and when
+the windows have been opened in the chambers
+and living-room while breakfast was
+going on there is little to hinder the housekeeper
+from devoting only a short time to
+pushing furniture back into place, running a
+carpet-sweeper over the floor, and doing necessary
+dusting. A bed or two must be made,
+the bath-room put in order, the dishes washed,
+and the dining-room and kitchen set to rights;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
+but in the apartment where the woman does
+her own work there will be no accumulation
+of other persons’ dirt to be removed.</p>
+
+<p>When a whole house is occupied there is
+more to be done. Halls and stairs must be
+brushed, perhaps front steps swept, stoves
+looked after in winter, and flies beaten out
+and rooms shaded in summer. Other duties
+will present themselves if there is more than
+a single floor to be kept in order—a floor on
+which are found kitchen, pantry, and dining-room
+as well as chambers and bath-room.</p>
+
+<p>Whether it be an apartment or a whole
+house, the same order of work should be followed.
+The morning should be the time applied
+to turning off any heavy or disagreeable
+work which has to be done. Cleaning, sweeping,
+dusting, making ready of vegetables for
+dinner, preparing the pudding or other dessert
+which is to be cooked later in the day,
+should always be planned for the early hours
+of the day. This is the time when the energies
+are at their best and freshest, and it is
+also the period when interruptions are least
+likely. In the afternoon one cannot be secure
+against callers or other demands upon leisure—to
+say nothing of the comfort one feels in
+knowing that the unpleasing portions of the
+day’s toil are done and over with!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span></p>
+
+<p>The young housekeeper who becomes absorbed
+in her new occupation sometimes slips
+into the fault of yielding herself to it too
+unreservedly. When a woman really loves
+the work of cooking and planning, of keeping
+her house in exquisite order and contriving
+to make supply and demand meet one another,
+she is in danger of becoming given over
+to it. Her husband is not likely to be able
+to understand her attitude, and although he
+may enjoy a well-kept home, he will probably
+feel he desires something more in his wife
+than a domestic devotee.</p>
+
+<p>Against the danger of drifting into this
+position the young housekeeper should be on
+the alert. No one else is as much interested
+as is she in the business of running her particular
+home, and the sooner she appreciates
+this the better for her and the more agreeable
+for every one else. At first she will possibly
+wish to talk of little else, but after the
+very earliest novelty has worn off she should
+wake up to the perception that there are
+other things in the world besides her home.
+She should see that she must keep herself in
+good mental condition as well as keep her
+house; that the time is not wasted that she
+spends in reading, in wise recreation, especially
+in permitting herself a little rest each<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
+afternoon which will help preserve her freshness
+and vigor and put her into condition to
+make life pleasant for her husband when he
+comes home at night.</p>
+
+<p>For this is as important a point as any other
+in housekeeping. Even a man who loves his
+home wearies of finding a worn-out wife at
+dinner every evening, and of being confined
+for subjects of conversation to the round of
+the happenings connected with the butcher,
+the baker, and the grocer. He likes a lively,
+fresh wife awaiting him; he enjoys being entertained
+after the hard toil of the day; he
+is pleased when she is glad to go with him
+for a little outing or a mild dissipation. To
+be in readiness for this is an object the housekeeper
+should have in view through the work
+of the day, and she should resolutely cut out
+any additional labor which will interfere with
+her making the dwelling a home as well as a
+mere place to live in.</p>
+
+<p>As a practical illustration of this let me
+commend the habit of letting the dinner-dishes
+wait to be washed until the next morning
+when there is something on hand with
+which this work would clash. While it is
+undoubtedly agreeable to go to bed with the
+pleasant sensation that there are no “hangovers”
+in the way of undischarged duties, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
+is often wiser to postpone a task than to perform
+it at the cost of hurry and flurry. The
+dishes may be put in a pan with hot water
+and a little washing-powder, and left until
+after breakfast the next day, when they may
+be washed without haste or nervousness.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c8">VIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">IN THE LAUNDRY</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">W</span>HETHER or not a housekeeper expects
+to do her own washing and ironing,
+she should know in every detail how it is to
+be done. The occasion may not arise for her
+to put her hands into the wash-tub or to
+wield a flat-iron, but she should understand
+the operations and know how to correct intelligently
+the errors of her laundress.</p>
+
+<p>There has been a good deal said of the burden
+of laundry-work, and yet I have known
+many women who preferred undertaking it
+themselves to trusting it to the charge of an
+ignorant or untrained washerwoman. This
+is sometimes the only variety that can be
+secured in the country or in small places, but
+the laundry, which is the resource so often
+of dwellers in the city, is frequently far more
+injurious to clothing than the treatment of
+the poorest laundress. In such circumstances
+or when economy seems necessary the housekeeper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
+who has the ability to do up the clothing
+of her family and the bed and table linen
+possesses a power which means not only
+comfort, but saving of wear and tear as well
+as of money.</p>
+
+<p>In the effort to provide the A-B-C of laundry-work
+a beginning must be made with directions
+for sorting and preparing the clothes
+for washing.</p>
+
+<p>The first step is to separate towels and
+bed-linen from starched white garments and
+place them in different piles, with flannels and
+stockings in a third gathering. This should
+be done on the evening preceding wash-day,
+as the labor is much lessened by putting the
+clothes into soak overnight. The method—or
+lack of method—of the careless laundress
+is to throw those garments to be submitted
+to this preliminary treatment into a tub of
+warm water to which has been added some
+washing-powder or detersive and leave them
+thus all night.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of this the clothing should be
+looked over carefully, dipping the worst-soiled
+portions into warm water and rubbing the
+spots well with laundry soap. Each garment
+should then be rolled up with the soaped side
+inward, and all the rolls thus made packed
+down into a tub of lukewarm water to which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
+has been added a small quantity of borax,
+household ammonia, or other equally good
+and harmless detersive.</p>
+
+<p>Just here it is well to make a slight digression
+on this subject. I have already spoken
+of the injurious effects of washing-soda in
+laundry-work. It cuts and perforates the
+linen on which it is used, but it is so potent
+in taking out dirt that I have known laundresses
+to bring it with them in their pockets
+when its use was forbidden by a housekeeper.
+Washing-soda is possibly the most destructive
+of these agencies, but there are others
+on the market, sold as patented preparations,
+which are hardly less harmful. Of a number
+of them it is true that they are helpful if
+used in moderation. The trouble is that the
+unskilled worker is likely to imagine that
+where a little is good much would be better,
+and to apply the powder or fluid with a
+liberality that has disastrous results.</p>
+
+<p>Even when borax or ammonia—probably
+the least deleterious of all detersives—is used,
+it should be in small quantities when the
+clothing is to be left with it for any length of
+time. Therefore there should be very little
+put in the tub in which the raiment is to be
+soaked.</p>
+
+<p>Woolens, cotton and wool, or silk and wool,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
+colored clothes, and stockings are not given
+this soaking, but left to one side until the
+next morning.</p>
+
+<p>When the actual washing begins flannels
+should have the first attention. They should
+be given especial care, since upon this depends
+their coming from the wash smooth
+and soft instead of thickened and rough.
+Soap should not be rubbed upon them unless
+there are badly soiled spots, and then these
+should be soaped without applying soap to
+the rest of the garment. A little ammonia
+should be added to the water in which they
+are washed, and this should be lukewarm
+and made into suds by the addition of
+shaved soap before the flannels are put in.
+They should not be rubbed on the board
+but between the hands, with frequent dipping
+up and down in the water until they look
+clean.</p>
+
+<p>The flannels are then squeezed between the
+hands until as much water as possible is gone
+from them, when they are thrown for rinsing
+into water of the same temperature as
+that from which they were taken. This is
+essential. Water which is either colder or
+hotter will thicken and shrink the flannels.
+After a thorough rinsing they are again
+wrung out and hung to dry at once, in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
+shade, if an outdoor drying-place is used.
+They look better if they are ironed while
+still slightly damp. When both colored and
+white flannels are to be washed the latter
+should come second, that specks of lint from
+them may not disfigure the colored articles.</p>
+
+<p>The second water from the flannels will
+answer very well for the first washing of the
+other clothes. It is not necessary to practise
+this economy in a flat furnished with hot
+water from the cellar, but the fact is worth
+recalling when the supply of warm water is
+insufficient.</p>
+
+<p>Too many pieces should not be put into
+the tub at once, as the clothes cannot be
+washed properly if crowded together, and
+plenty of water is demanded to get them
+clean. The water should be warm and the
+clothes which have been soaked overnight
+will require little rubbing on the board in
+order to make them clean. It may be mentioned
+that clothing which is worn long
+enough to become badly soiled will need an
+amount of hard rubbing which will wear it
+out much sooner than garments that have
+been thrown into the wash before they are
+very dirty.</p>
+
+<p>The boiler, half full of cold water, should
+be at hand. Colored clothes are never boiled,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
+and they may be washed separately if this
+seems more convenient. After the soiled
+spots on the white clothes have been well
+soaped the pieces should be dropped into the
+boiler. The addition of a tablespoonful of
+kerosene to the water is beneficial. The
+boiler should be put on the stove and the
+water brought to a boil, stirring the clothes
+up from the bottom with a clothes-stick from
+time to time. The boiling should not continue
+long, but the clothes be removed as
+soon as the water has fairly boiled. Too
+long on the fire yellows the clothing.</p>
+
+<p>Clean hot water should be at hand and
+into this each article should be dropped as
+it comes from the boiler. Careful rinsing is
+one of the secrets of having clothes a good
+color after washing. Each piece should be
+turned inside out to rinse it sufficiently.
+The garments to be blued should be transferred
+from the rinsing water to cold water
+to which a few drops of bluing have been
+added. Judgment must be used in this addition
+or the clothing will be too blue. A favorite
+trick of careless laundresses is to save
+themselves the scrubbing which would make
+the garments clean, and cover their fault
+by making them very blue.</p>
+
+<p>After the bluing the unstarched pieces may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
+be wrung and hung out to dry. The other
+pieces must be starched as will be directed
+a little further on.</p>
+
+<p>The rinsing water in which the clothes were
+dipped after coming from the boiler will
+serve for the first washing of the colored
+garments. As these need no bluing, such of
+them as do not require starching may be
+rinsed and hung out at once to dry. Those
+that must be stiffened may be dipped into
+the starch, wrung out, well shaken, and dried.</p>
+
+<p>For boiled starch, a half-cupful of the dry
+starch is needed in proportion to a quart of
+boiling water. The starch is made to a paste
+with cold water, the boiling water poured
+upon it, and the mixture stirred over the fire
+until it is clear and smooth. Some laundresses
+insist upon boiling the starch an hour,
+but good results may be gained with the
+preparation made as just directed. This
+starch is of the right consistency for shirts,
+aprons, etc., but it must be thinned to use
+for either table-linen or for delicate underwear
+until it is little thicker than single
+cream. If shirt bosoms or cuffs or the cuffs of
+shirtwaists are to be stiffened, raw starch
+must be added to the boiled. Raw starch is
+prepared by moistening a handful of the
+raw starch to a paste with a little cold water,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
+increasing the water until a quart of it has
+been used, and stirring it with a piece of
+fine white soap.</p>
+
+<p>The pieces which have already been passed
+through the boiled starch may be dipped
+into the raw starch for additional stiffening,
+after the first starch has dried in them.
+They are well moistened in the raw starch,
+rolled up and left for half an hour or so, and
+ironed while damp. The quantity for which
+direction has just been made is rather large
+for a small family, but the proportions may
+be used in smaller measure.</p>
+
+<p>Cheap soap and starch should never be employed;
+they are an extravagance in the end.
+The soap should be bought, in a small family,
+about a dozen cakes at a time and dried.
+One cake is enough for a small wash, unless
+left floating in the tub after its use is over.</p>
+
+<p>All stains should be looked to before
+the clothes are washed at all. Fruit and
+wine stains, like those from coffee and tea,
+may be taken out by stretching the spotted
+part over a basin and pouring boiling water
+through the fabric. The process should be
+repeated several times or until the stain is
+gone. Soap will often “set” a spot which
+would come out if washed in clear water.
+Fruit stains, rust stains—such as iron-mold—and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
+sometimes ink stains may be removed by
+wetting the spots with lemon-juice, sprinkling
+salt upon this, and laying the article in the
+sun. The operation must be done more than
+once before the spot will come out entirely.
+The same treatment will sometimes obliterate
+mildew stains, but if these prove obstinate,
+boiling in buttermilk the article marked will
+perhaps take them out. Turpentine will remove
+paint stains, and oil marks must be
+washed with cold water and a good white
+soap. Grass stains are sometimes taken out
+by rubbing with butter and then washing
+this out. All spots or stains are far harder
+to get rid of after they have once been put
+through the regular wash.</p>
+
+<p>Fine pieces of linen like doilies, centerpieces,
+embroidered and lace-trimmed handkerchiefs,
+or very delicate lingerie underwear
+should never be washed with the ordinary
+clothing unless the housekeeper gives her
+special attention to them. They should
+under no circumstances be rubbed on the
+wash-board, but rubbed between the hands
+in a good suds made of warm water and a fine
+white soap, and rinsed very carefully. If
+they are to be stiffened at all the starch
+water through which they are passed should
+be no heavier than milk. While still warm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>
+such articles should be pressed on the wrong
+side; and if embroidered, a thick woolen cloth
+must be laid under the ironing-sheet. By this
+method the work on the article stands out well.</p>
+
+<p>A little experience with ironing is worth
+more than instruction. When the clothes
+have been well sprinkled and folded, the work
+done evenly, and each piece rolled up tightly
+when dampened, a strong arm and steady,
+smooth strokes will give good results; but
+practice is needed to make the work entirely
+satisfactory. Experience will tell when the
+iron is the right heat. For starched clothes
+a greater heat is needed than for flannels;
+the iron must be tried on a piece of paper to
+make sure it is not too hot. Each piece
+pressed should be ironed until dry to make a
+smooth finish. Table and bed linen should be
+ironed lengthwise. Always the irons should
+be well wiped off before using, and when not
+in service they should stand on end on a
+shelf. Never should they be left on the range
+when not in use; this roughens the surface.</p>
+
+<p>The electric iron is a great aid, but this
+must be used with care or it will be short-circuited
+and burned out. Always the power
+must be turned off when the iron is laid
+aside for even a few minutes.</p>
+
+<p>No advice as to laundry-work would be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
+complete that did not speak a word relative
+to mending. The woman who does her own
+work will be on the alert for breaks or thin
+places in any article and will lay pieces thus
+damaged to one side as they are pressed.
+As a matter of course it is well to make repairs
+before the washing is done, when this is
+possible, but many garments are far pleasanter
+to mend after laundering than before.
+Stockings do not gain enough harm by being
+washed before darning to offset the unpleasantness
+of having to mend them while they
+are still soiled.</p>
+
+<p>When possible, fine articles which have to
+be darned or carefully mended with a patch
+or by piecing are best repaired before they
+are ironed. After they have been washed
+they can be put aside until the housekeeper
+has time to mend them properly, and they
+can then have an iron run over them and
+the mended spot smoothed.</p>
+
+<p>The life of fine table-linen can be prolonged
+indefinitely by attention to the first break in
+the hemstitching, the first wear of a thread
+in the fabric, the first hole in lace. After
+the material once begins to go, even long and
+careful mending will scarcely save it, but
+watchfulness for the earliest symptoms of
+wear will postpone the evil day.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c9">IX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">WHEN COMPANY COMES</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">E</span>LABORATE entertaining should not be
+undertaken by a young couple of moderate
+means. Hospitality should be a matter
+of course, but never on a scale that makes it
+a burden to carry out at the time or to pay
+for afterward.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the best and in many respects the
+most agreeable form of hospitality is that
+which calls in the occasional guest to an informal
+meal—a sort of improvised party.
+The husband asks a crony to dine on a certain
+night, the wife invites a friend to meet
+him. Little change is made in the family
+meal—perhaps a salad added as well as a
+sweet, or more unusual items ordered, or a
+special dessert prepared, but nothing which
+would bring the repast into the line of a
+dinner-party. There is no state and ceremony
+and everything is pleasant and jolly.
+Such little dinners are among the most charming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
+forms of entertainment that can be
+achieved by young people of moderate means.
+When it seems well to widen the circle of
+invited guests, all to be done is to increase
+the provision made without departing from
+the simplicity which is one of the features of
+this kind of entertaining.</p>
+
+<p>In the properly regulated home, where the
+observances of polite society are followed as
+much when the family is alone as when there
+is company, guests have no terrors. When
+the unexpected visitor arrives the table is
+found spread for two in the same style that
+it would be for ten. The napery is fresh and
+well laundered; the silver, glass, and china
+are shining—clean and arranged in correct
+order—the knife at the right of the plate with
+the soup or bouillon spoon, the fork at the
+left with the napkin; the bread-and-butter
+plate, with its slice of bread or roll and the
+butter-ball, near the fork, to correspond with
+the water-glass on the other side.</p>
+
+<p>In such a home the maid is taught to
+follow the orderly sequence of courses, changing
+the plates and crumbing the table with
+as much pains for one as for half a dozen.
+Little by little she becomes accustomed to
+the routine, so that when a more formal entertainment
+is planned her work seems to her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
+merely an amplification of that to which she
+has grown wonted.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time a warning should be uttered
+to the housekeeper of small ménage
+against attempting to ape the hospitality of
+those whose incomes far exceed her own.
+Pretense is always absurd, and the woman
+who undertakes to imitate the style of the
+wealthy and fashionable hostess only renders
+herself ridiculous without in the least impressing
+those with whom she is striving to
+compete. Such entertaining strains her income
+and is in reality far inferior to the little
+parties she might give that would possess a
+merit all their own.</p>
+
+<p>The hostess who aspires to give dinners
+should make them small, in the first place.
+Six is an excellent number—four besides the
+man and woman of the house—and it is
+rarely safe for the beginner to have more
+than eight all told, unless she is prepared to
+hire extra service. Fully as much attention
+should be bestowed upon the selection of
+the guests as upon the items of the bill of
+fare. Friends may be unexceptionable taken
+alone or in their own environment who do
+not mix with those from another circle, and
+in these conditions even the most delightful
+develop unexpected powers of boring and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
+being bored. To get the right persons together
+at a dinner and to seat them in the
+proper combinations requires a good deal of
+social skill, and for this reason it is better for
+the tyro in entertaining to start with small
+parties and only work up to the larger affairs
+as she becomes more accustomed to exercising
+general hospitality.</p>
+
+<p>Experiments in food should never be tried
+on company. Only those articles should be
+served which the maid has proved her ability
+to prepare perfectly and to serve correctly.
+When innovations are to be presented it
+should be in the privacy of the family circle.
+A dinner that is confined to a few courses
+should be remarkable rather for their excellence
+than for their unusual character or for
+their costliness. I have known housekeepers
+who won themselves a reputation for their
+dinners when the items of these were of
+the simplest character, but were beautifully
+cooked and served with a touch of unusualness
+which redeemed them from the commonplace.</p>
+
+<p>Again let me warn the hostess against
+attempting too much on such occasions. In
+any establishment not supplied with a corps
+of trained servants a great deal of the work
+of even the quietest dinner falls upon the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
+hostess. To her it comes to see that the
+table is set, the many small and fussy details
+looked after; generally she must give the
+final touches of seasoning or blending to soup,
+sauces, and salad-dressing. It is no wonder
+if sometimes she comes to the table too tired
+either to enjoy the food or to lead the talk
+of the board and play the part so important
+for a hostess who desires to have her guests
+enjoy their evening.</p>
+
+<p>Such fatigue is not necessary if the rules I
+have laid down are followed. If, for example,
+the cook can make an unapproachable tomato
+or oyster bisque; if she can roast a leg
+of lamb so that it will melt in the mouth,
+prepare candied sweet-potatoes to tempt an
+epicure, and spinach with the knack of a
+French chef; if there is some special sweet
+dish for which she has made herself famous,
+whether this be a prune soufflé with whipped
+cream, or a frozen mousse or ice—then let
+the hostess confine herself to these items for
+her company dinners until her maid has
+acquired further accomplishments. What difference
+does it make if precisely the same
+dinner was served to a knot of friends last
+week? The guests are different this time,
+even if the dishes are unchanged, and these
+are good enough to stand repetition though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
+they appear half a dozen times in succession!</p>
+
+<p>In a neighborhood where dinner is usually
+served in the middle of the day and the period
+for social festivity is in the evening, supper
+may take the place of dinner and be no less
+attractive. When this is the case, I would
+advise the hostess to adopt some specialty
+and stick to it, with only a few variations.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, I know one housekeeper who
+was transplanted from the South to another
+section of the country, and who there became
+famous for the meals she served from
+her mother’s cook-book. Fried chicken with
+cream gravy, Southern sweet-potatoes, beaten
+biscuit, Sally Lunn, waffles, fried oysters,
+batter-bread, syllabubs, were among the dainties
+she offered her appreciative guests. Not
+that she had all these at one time, but she
+rang the changes on them, to the delectation
+of the company.</p>
+
+<p>Another woman I know who was born and
+raised in New England made a success much
+farther south than this by feasting her friends
+on such delicacies as genuine baked beans,
+cooked in a bean-pot (she made the fireless
+cooker take the place of the ancient brick
+oven), Boston brown bread—she called it
+“rye ’n’ Injun”—fried pork with cream gravy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
+even creamed codfish and boiled potatoes,
+made to taste as no one had ever before
+dreamed such things could taste. Of course
+doughnuts and coffee were included in her
+menus, and pumpkin-pies and other dishes of
+that sort. It was amusing and, in a way,
+pathetic to see the joy of the exiles from New
+England before whom were placed the viands
+they had been used to in the long-ago.</p>
+
+<p>The simplicity of the provision should not
+be made an excuse for departing from the
+orthodox methods of service. A supper such
+as I have described can be served with as
+much daintiness as a formal dinner, and the
+courses should follow one another in as orderly
+a style.</p>
+
+<p>As strict in the lines of its etiquette as a
+dinner is the lunch, where usually women are
+the only guests. Such a meal as this may
+also be limited in its items. It may begin
+with bouillon or soup in cups and, without
+pausing for an entrée, may go directly on to
+a solid course, such as chicken in some form,
+chops, cutlets, and the like, with a vegetable
+or two; this be followed by a salad with
+crackers and cheese, and the meal wind up
+with a sweet of light character, and coffee.
+When one has a well-enough trained maid
+to introduce such an entrée as oyster pâtés,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
+crab meat <i>au gratin</i>, eggs <i>à la Bénédictine</i>,
+or something of the kind, and can reconcile
+the extra cost to her economical conscience,
+the guests will probably enjoy the additional
+provision, but no hostess can feel she is
+guilty of social stinginess if she omits these
+features and follows the simpler lines.</p>
+
+<p>The same caution may be given here as
+with the dinner—to introduce no novelties
+for the first time. Use the family as an experiment
+station before presenting the new
+dishes or the untried fashion of serving them
+to outsiders.</p>
+
+<p>Like the luncheon is the breakfast-party,
+with this difference—that men are frequently
+invited to the latter, while they are seldom
+at the formal luncheon. For such a breakfast,
+to be served at twelve-thirty or one,
+the first item may be fruit; the soup may be
+omitted and the meat course, consisting of
+some such dish as broiled or fried chicken,
+chops or steak or fish, should be accompanied
+by a good hot bread as well as by potatoes
+daintily cooked; and coffee in large cups may
+be served the same time. A sweet to wind up
+a meal like this is rather out of place unless it
+takes the form of waffles or griddle-cakes of a
+delicate variety with maple syrup or honey.
+Sometimes the breakfast concludes as it began,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
+with fruit, although of a different kind from
+that with which the meal opened. When
+oranges or grapefruit prelude the repast,
+grapes, etc., may end it.</p>
+
+<p>All these affairs I have mentioned are for
+a small number. The afternoon tea is the
+best method of entertaining guests on a
+larger scale, and with a minimum of expense.</p>
+
+<p>I do not need to go here into the details
+of sending out cards for such an affair.
+Whether the tea be a single one, given for the
+amiable purpose of wiping out social obligations,
+or as a means of introducing a visitor
+to the local friends of the hostess; or a series
+of three or four afternoons, the method followed
+is the same and the guest who comes
+expects nothing beyond a light refreshment.
+At the more elaborate affairs of this sort
+coffee or chocolate may be served as well as
+tea, or a bowl of punch offered. The edible
+provisions are always practically the same
+and cover a range of sandwiches of different
+kinds—piquant, solid, and sweet—varied by
+toast buttered plain or sprinkled with cinnamon,
+hot scones, small buttered biscuit
+and similar cates, followed by cakes of various
+kinds, plain or fancy, and in some cases
+bonbons and salted nuts. The last are not
+really necessary.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span></p>
+
+<p>At such a tea as this, if it comprise more
+than a few intimates, the maid is usually in
+attendance to open the door, direct the
+guests to the drawing-room, bring hot tea or
+hot water when needed, remove soiled cups
+and perhaps pass the food. In the latter
+service the hostess may have the aid of her
+friends, who usually appreciate the honor of
+being asked to “pour” or to help act as
+hostesses in introducing new-comers, looking
+after the comfort of strangers and making
+sure that no one is neglected in the distribution
+of refreshments.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far reference has been made to hospitality
+exercised in the home where a maid
+is kept. Far more numerous are those establishments
+in which no regular service is
+employed. Even in these one’s friends may
+be entertained as delightfully, if not as formally,
+as in the houses supplied with hired
+domestics.</p>
+
+<p>The regulation dinner is practically out of
+the question, and it is wiser not to attempt it.
+But merry informal suppers, luncheons, and
+breakfasts can be compassed and often these
+are greater successes than those parties given
+under the supervision of a staff of trained
+servants. The main point to be guarded
+against is the attempt at anything which cannot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
+be put through well. As soon as struggle
+is made to do the impossible the effort
+becomes not only a burden to the host and
+hostess, but a sort of nightmare to the guests.
+Better have a roast-oyster party in the
+kitchen, where selected members of the company
+do the cooking over the gas-stove, while
+others take upon themselves the responsibility
+of serving the eaters, and the whole
+affair is a jolly picnic, than to endeavor to
+manage a stately function with insufficient
+aid and appurtenances.</p>
+
+<p>The same sort of informality may mark
+the afternoon-tea party in the home where no
+maid is kept. All the making ready can be
+done in advance, the sandwiches cut and
+piled, the cakes arranged, the china and tea
+equipage set out, so that nothing is needed
+but to start the kettle to boiling and make
+the tea when it is needed. A friend will preside
+at the tea-table, other friends will look
+after other details and leave the hostess free
+to welcome and entertain her guests. Such
+a party as this is one of the pleasantest, least
+costly, and generally satisfactory ways of
+gathering one’s friends about one for a social
+hour or two.</p>
+
+<p>The hostess of small means and no maid
+should concentrate upon some such line of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
+entertaining as this and stick to it. She
+should aspire to become known for her merry
+afternoon teas, her pleasant Sunday-night
+suppers, her gay and informal after-theater
+spreads, where the chafing-dish is the principal
+feature and where her guests are so well
+amused that they think far less of the simple
+food put before them than they do of the
+good-fellowship they have enjoyed. Formal
+entertaining may have to be foregone, but
+the substitutes she offers are more genuinely
+satisfactory both to the guests who share
+them and to the host and hostess who have
+to pay for them!</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c10">X</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="c large sp">THE CHILD IN THE HOUSE</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">W</span>ITH the introduction of a baby into an
+establishment the whole general management
+of the place is changed.</p>
+
+<p>That is to say, it is changed for a while.
+A serious mistake is made when even so important
+an event as the arrival of a new member
+of the family is permitted to cause a permanent
+alteration in the conduct of the home.
+The most devoted of husbands and fathers
+will yield his position as first-and-foremost
+for a while to the latest advent; will take
+it for granted that his wife shall be absorbed
+in the needs of the baby, shall have no conversation
+but that which deals with its joys
+and woes, its accidents and accomplishments;
+but eventually any man worth a row of pins
+will recollect that after all he was a human
+being, a husband, and a householder before
+he was a parent, and will claim a few of the
+rights coming to him in those capacities.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
+
+<p>The prospective mother who grasps this
+truth and puts it into practical service after
+the baby comes is much more likely to make
+a success of her wifehood and matronhood
+than the one who is all mother and nothing
+else. If the child is well and is properly
+trained there is no reason why it should not
+be a satisfactory member of society and a joy
+to the household and to all about it instead
+of a nuisance to every one except its most
+devoted parent.</p>
+
+<p>A great deal more of the comfort of the
+child and its future good habits is settled
+within the first month of its life than is
+suspected by those who have had little to do
+with the care of babies. If it is started with
+regular habits of eating and sleeping, is from
+the beginning accustomed to lie in its cradle
+or crib instead of being held in the arms
+constantly and lifted and rocked at its first
+whimper, it takes such treatment for granted
+and forms no habit of making demands for
+that which is difficult for the attendant
+always to supply and does no good to the
+child to receive.</p>
+
+<p>With a delicate or sickly babe the same
+strict rules cannot be enforced as with a
+healthy infant, and yet even a puny child
+is better off if kept to a steady regimen than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
+if fed, taken up, and put down at uncertain
+intervals, and allowed to accumulate a crop
+of irregular fashions of eating and sleeping.
+Sometimes the struggle to implant a sense of
+law and order is a difficult undertaking when
+the ill health of the child or the carelessness
+of the first nurse has brought it into bad
+ways, but persistence in the effort is worth
+while for the sake of the comfort success is
+bound to bring later to all concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The periods of feeding are determined by
+the doctor, to begin with, and the space between
+them is gradually widened as the child
+grows older. The system which should be
+the guide of the housekeeper in her home has
+as large a field of usefulness applied to children
+as anywhere else. The baby should be
+washed and dressed at a regular hour; the
+time for its meals and its outing should be
+invariable; the hour for undressing it, washing
+it, and making it ready for bed should
+never vary except in cases of rare exigency.
+If it is a healthy child it will fall naturally
+into the habit of taking a morning nap after
+the bath and the meal, of waking at a certain
+time, and then of lying comfortably in the
+bed or on a couch or in its carriage with no
+wails to be lifted and walked with. Modern
+medical science has declared that the less<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
+handling a little baby receives the better for
+it, and that for some months its growth
+should be in most respects as much like that
+of a vegetable as possible.</p>
+
+<p>As the child gets older and begins to use
+its limbs it will be good for it to be exercised
+rather more, but nature is a pretty safe guide
+to follow in this respect. The baby who is
+well and normal is not slow to show its growth
+and progress, and it is far wiser for the parent
+to be led by these than to attempt to hurry
+development either of body or of mind. The
+child will assert itself soon enough, and so
+decidedly as to leave no room for doubt as
+to its proclivities.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly it may sound a trifle absurd to say
+that from the first the child should have the
+habit of obedience implanted, yet this is no
+absurdity, but a serious and important fact.
+At an astonishingly early age the infant endeavors
+to pit its small will against that of its
+seniors, and the initial step in revolt is
+promptly followed by others unless the attempt
+is checked at once.</p>
+
+<p>Neither time nor place is sufficient here to
+go into the reasons why the training of a
+child in obedience, even at the cost of suffering
+and punishment, is not the exercise over
+the weak of the tyranny of the strong, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
+the display of superior wisdom for the benefit
+of the inexperienced. It is enough to remind
+those who think that a child should be allowed
+to grow up naturally, unrestrained by rule
+and severity, when severity is required to
+enforce discipline, that all through life the
+human being must conform to constituted
+authority as exemplified in the laws of health,
+of the state, of teachers and employers, of
+morality, of religion. In view of this the
+sooner the child learns to defer to those in
+whose charge it is the better for it later on,
+the less cruel the lessons life holds in store
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from this there can be no doubt that
+the well-trained child is actually happier than
+the one with no law but its own whim. Also
+it is much pleasanter company than the self-willed,
+undisciplined infant who follows its
+own sweet will regardless of the comfort or
+preference of others.</p>
+
+<p>The same kind of regimen established for a
+child in babyhood should be pursued when
+it grows older and begins to share more
+actively in the life of the household. The
+mistaken custom of permitting a child to
+keep the same hours, eat the same diet, and
+follow practically the same life as its elders
+cannot be sufficiently condemned. The habit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
+of going to bed early after a light meal, of
+having the heaviest repast in the middle of
+the day, of partaking of such food as is particularly
+suited to the needs of a growing
+child, of being debarred rich and indigestible
+articles of diet, of having postponed until
+more advanced years exciting amusements
+and pursuits instead of being hurried into
+them while hardly out of infancy, should all
+be enforced. A child is not a miniature man
+or woman, but an immature human being
+who must develop naturally, as plants grow,
+and is wronged by being forced into premature
+bloom or fruition, mentally or emotionally
+as much as physically.</p>
+
+<p>The child’s food should be carefully considered
+by the mother and she should not
+regard the time wasted she bestows in studying
+food values and devising the best sort of
+diet for the nursery. Not until the first
+teeth begin to come should starchy food of
+any sort be given, and then with caution.
+Until the saliva flows freely to help digest
+starch, bread in any form, crackers, etc.,
+should be withheld. As the child reaches
+the stage where solid food is allowed this
+should continue to be simple in character.
+A child does not have the longing for variety
+common to more sophisticated palates.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span></p>
+
+<p>For the breakfast of the child of two or
+more years of age a cereal, well cooked, with
+plenty of milk, should be given. Sugar should
+not accompany it. When sweet is desirable,
+as it often is, it should be taken in some other
+way than as an adjunct to a regular article of
+diet. With the cereal and milk the child
+seldom needs anything more, but if the consumption
+of the porridge is not sufficient, a
+soft-boiled egg or a poached egg may be
+supplied, with a little toast. Milk should
+be the drink.</p>
+
+<p>In the middle of the morning a supplementary
+meal may be taken, and this may
+consist of a piece of bread and butter and a
+glass of milk. Whole-wheat bread is better
+than that made from the bolted flour. When
+there is a tendency to constipation Graham
+bread is good.</p>
+
+<p>At noon the substantial provision of the
+day is to be served and a cup of soup may
+begin the dinner, followed by a very small
+piece of steak or chop cut up fine, or by an
+egg, if one has not been taken at breakfast,
+a baked potato, well mashed, with butter or
+cream and salt upon it. Rice is also excellent
+when served with plenty of good butter. A
+plain sweet, like stewed fruit, a milk pudding,
+one of rice, of arrowroot, tapioca, or a custard,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
+will answer. Milk may again be drunk unless
+the child has eaten a meat soup or broth
+and meat besides.</p>
+
+<p>Generally the little one who has taken so
+substantial a meal as this at noon will need
+nothing more until supper-time, when bread
+and milk, crackers and milk, or something
+of the sort may be provided; or bread and a
+good plain jam or stewed fruit, like prunes
+or apple-sauce, with a glass of milk. After
+this comes the child’s bed-time, and it should
+be put to sleep in a quiet room, alone, with
+the door open if symptoms of nervousness
+declare themselves, but without a nurse or
+other attendant. This may sound hard-hearted,
+but the child who is accustomed to
+such solitude from infancy will not feel it
+an infliction, and the saving of inconvenience
+to the parents in the habit of going to sleep
+unattended is incalculable.</p>
+
+<p>The good manners of the child should receive
+early consideration. The habit of courtesy
+implanted in infancy gives a finish of
+manner in later life that no surface polish
+can impart. It is as easy for a little boy and
+girl to be taught to rise when elders come into
+the room, to take their turn at the table, to
+handle a knife, fork, and spoon properly, to
+eat in a decent fashion, to say, “Thank you,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
+“If you please,” and the like, and to show
+the thoughtfulness for the feelings and comfort
+of others which is the foundation of all
+good breeding, as it is to let the youngsters
+grow up as they will and hammer superficial
+manners into them when they are older.
+The good old rule that “children should be
+seen and not heard” is sadly in need of a
+revival in many homes, and parents cannot
+wonder at the unpopularity of their offspring
+when they reflect upon the disagreeable qualities
+these often possess.</p>
+
+<p>All this does not mean that children should
+constantly be snubbed and repressed until
+individuality and initiative are crushed out
+of them. In most children these characteristics
+are strong and triumphant. But a certain
+measure of deference to elders should be
+inculcated—a respect which will prevent a
+child from interrupting the conversation of
+his seniors, a regard for the conventions
+which, after all, have more to do with peace
+and amity in the family than many of us
+are willing to admit.</p>
+
+<p>As the child grows older and begins school
+and kindergarten, other children will be associated
+with him, and from them he will learn
+many things it would never occur to his
+parents to teach him. Sometimes it seems<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
+as though the least that children acquire at
+school is their regular lessons. These become
+almost a side issue. The influence of the
+strange boy or girl often carries more weight
+with a child than all the precepts of father,
+mother, and teacher. Part of this effect is
+transitory, but much of it sticks through life;
+and while the children are little more than
+babies it becomes incumbent upon the parents—by
+which is usually meant the mother—to
+strengthen the bond between herself and
+her child so that she may the more effectually
+offset the outside forces that sway him.</p>
+
+<p>The sooner the mother recognizes that this
+is her lifelong “job” and a most important
+one, the better for all concerned. The mere
+animal care of the child any competent nurse
+could bestow, and sometimes it seems as if
+the charge of a specialist who understood
+the ins and outs of dietetics and was able
+to study the child’s constitution impersonally
+might perhaps be better than the attention
+received from the average parent. With regard
+to the question of instruction in book
+learning there is little doubt that a well-qualified
+teacher is far more capable than the
+most devoted father or mother. All such
+duties as these can be delegated to those who
+are trained and paid for the work.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span></p>
+
+<p>When it comes to the companionship, however,
+it is another matter. Here is something
+only the mother can give. It is “up to her”
+to study the ins and outs of her child’s
+nature; to know where and how to bring
+pressure in order to counterbalance another
+influence; to make herself so one with him
+that he turns to her instinctively, with complete
+confidence in her ability to meet his
+need; to be so close in his intimacy that she
+grasps his thoughts almost before they are
+formulated; to persuade him unconsciously
+to rely upon her judgment, her companionship,
+her understanding to an extent that
+will hold him in temptation and move him
+to range himself on the side of right against
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>Of course it is not always easy. The
+mother does not resign her own individuality
+by the mere fact of motherhood; she does
+not lay aside her special interests when she
+takes up those of her child. Yet if she lets
+him suspect that anything comes ahead of
+his well-being in her heart she makes a fatal
+mistake; she starts the rift between them
+which may widen into a chasm not to be
+bridged by all her agony and tears.</p>
+
+<p>It may sometimes be hard to yield up
+one’s own will and preference in this way,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
+and yet the mother gets her pay as she goes
+along, and her labor brings its reward in a
+fashion unequaled in any other vocation in
+the universe. Nothing in the whole world
+pays so well as being a mother!</p>
+
+
+<p class="c large sp">THE END
+</p>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+
+<p class="c">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
+
+<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.</p>
+
+<p>Perceived typographical errors have been changed.</p>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75560 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75560 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75560)