. Home and health; a household manual containing two thousand recipes and helpful suggestions on the building and care of the home in harmony with sanitory laws .. . and a police; well-ordered ideas make good logic; well-ordered words makegood writing; well-ordered imaginations and emotions makegood poetry; well-ordered facts make science. Disorder,on the other hand, makes nothing at all, but unmakes every-thing. Stones in disorder produce ruins; an ill-orderedsocial condition is in decline, revolution, and anarchy; ill-ordered ideas are absurdity; ill-ordered words are neithersense nor gramma
. Home and health; a household manual containing two thousand recipes and helpful suggestions on the building and care of the home in harmony with sanitory laws .. . and a police; well-ordered ideas make good logic; well-ordered words makegood writing; well-ordered imaginations and emotions makegood poetry; well-ordered facts make science. Disorder,on the other hand, makes nothing at all, but unmakes every-thing. Stones in disorder produce ruins; an ill-orderedsocial condition is in decline, revolution, and anarchy; ill-ordered ideas are absurdity; ill-ordered words are neithersense nor grammar; ill-ordered imaginations and emotionsare madness; ill-ordered facts are chaos.—Professor Blackie Order is the sanity of the mind, the health of thebody, the peace of the city, the security of the state. Order is heavens first law—a glorious in those pure and beauteous isles of light,That come and go, as circling fulfilTheir high behest. Nor less on earth discernedMid rocks sffow-clad, or wastes of herbless all climes, beneath all varying skies,Fixing for e en the smallest flower that bloomsIts place of growth. —Milton. DUST The battle with dust is a constant warfare. The airis never wholly free from it. In a room where one maybe quite unconscious of its presence, it may be clearlyseen by darkening the room and allowing a ray of lightto penetrate the darkness through a small opening. Dustgenerally contains bacteria, and yeast, and mold spores,which do not grow and multiply while the dust is dryand at rest; but when the dust is stirred up and sentfloating through the house, the germs find warm, moistlodging-places, where they develop rapidly and do harm. As the housewife becomes intelligent regarding the dan-gers to which the inmates of the home are exposed bywrong methods of handling dust, she will learn a scoreof better ways to prevent its accumulation, and to gatherit up and dispose of it in sanitary ways. Dust or ashes should never be
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