February, 1S80. THE WEST SHORE. PLAYING AT HOUSKKKKl'INO. The Boston correspondent at the Worcester gives an sccount of a " Kitchen Harden," esUblishel for the benefit of poor girls at tho North Knd, which wo aro snro will bo read with interest. She says: i 1,tchen harden' was lirat established in New ork city by Miss Huntingdon, an active workor in the mission to the poor. She I " no spent hours of tliought by da and night trying to devise somo means by whicl ine uruugery ot tho toiling children might be lightened, and they come to like the work that uiuu ,le(, tnem Wltn weariness nn,i ,i,KIt ino prooiem lor her was how to teach the mass ui niWN to put courago into their drudgery. A kindergarten solved the problem for her Instead of blocks and balls and colored paper there should ho brooms and dust pans ami little v ,am' nteaol of lessons in geoinotry, there should be object lessons in household work, given on the Kroebel method, with music and songs. She tried her plan with such success, that she prepared a book with the iiiusio, the lessons and tho household catechism that the children learn, to bo used as a text book by other teachers. She called her school a 'Kitchen Garden, 'and her plan has already been adopted by 13 of the New York churches for their mission schools. Last summer a Boston lady established schools here, at her own oxienso, and they are now in excellent condition at the Children's Mission and at the North Knd Mission. "A visit to one of them is very interesting and amusing. Tho class that I saw wan of 24 little colored children, tho eldest In or II per haps, and won the youngest quite capable of helping a good deal at home. They had four teachers one who played the piano or organ, one who led tho singing, the priucipal teacher who gave the instruction, and an assistant who was learning the art of teaching. Tho lirst lesson was bed-making. On the long tables, with 12 children at each, were tov l.,u,i, about two feot long, each with a mattress, two sheets, two blankets, one spread, n holster, two pillows, with pillow and shoot shams. The children marched in to gay musio, and More they began their lesson they sang together the bed-making song: When you wake in tho morning, At tho flay dawning, Throw oft tho Intddhig at lot It all sir; Thon lhako ll tho pillows, In wavua anil In billows, Anil loavo thorn Mar windows, It tho day la quite fair. r'nr boils mailo In a hurry, A trot and a wurry, Aro always unhoalthfiil and musty, 'tla mru; Hut loft fnralrlnir, I'alns taking anil caring, And nno must sleep awootly, to kimw 11 ii pure. Tho rules fur hod-making, If ever forsaking, You Hat to tho carelowand hurry them through, They'll soon grow so matUal, No hard and an flatted. You'd wished you had listened and kept thorn iiille new. "The beds are already made, and tho lirst thing the children do is to prepare them fur sleeping. Working together and keeping time to music, they take off the pillows and shams, turn back the spread, turn down the other clothes, and make the bed ready for its occu pant Then they take oir the clothes, putting them on two chairs to air, turn the mattreas over and round, and make the bed seientilically. The rules are to make it urivf, mwirr and mnoulh, and they are taught how to do this. The child ren are not allowed to take a lesson unless or until their heads, face and hands are perfectly clean, and this rule has been so thoroughly en forced, that the little bed-cloth, s. which have been in use since June, are still unsoiled and look as if they had just been dune up. The questions and explanations take some time, aud make a variety in the lesson. " Then came washing lesson. Kach child got her toy tub in which was a bag of clothe, table and body linen, ooarte towels, anil colored 45 stockings, a wash-lioard and a lag of clothes pins. No water is used ; hut the clothes aro carefully sorted, the line ones washed, or apiiar ently washed without tho board, then tho ooarsor ones, and so to tho end, the proper twist ill hand-wringing being insisted upon ; Thon thi eWhes see nivi,.nrl.. 1 , V'.. A sweeping lesson is conducted in the same inoroiign way, each child having a broom, a brush, a feather duster, a cloth, a dust pan and small broom. Of oourso there ia no limit to the lessons that can lie given in this way. Miss I! I ... I I. I .i . . ...... awiia a uuuk una nio songs ami music lol those I have mentioned, for writ in.' t.alihiu nn.l folding table linen, for dish-washing, ami for oiuiinj lessens in molding hotter pats, biscuits etc., anil lor rolling out cookies. Tho kitchen garden is intended to ho a sort of probatory . , ... swtwi, iitting iio pupils lor a oooh ing school, or other advanced course of house hold education. " There is nothing in our present methods of education to foster domestic life or household employment. lo shirk work, go to school, am .am mroiign a scries ot out-tloor excitements n louim to no the daily routino of a majority of children, way down to those whose out door employment is only rough street play; and this kitchen garden seems to bo a way to load them io imcruavs at nomo, to wanting things in order, and to a willingness to help put and keen them mure cannor, no a child in the world w In I 1. I.L . 1 1 hits mis. witu a mm in artislio satiatuctlon at tho doll's bed which sho hss, with her own hands, made so suuare ami aniooth and jority of tho childrou are eager to try the same k K grown-up ned at home. At any rste, the classes are a plensaut sight, and tho phut is M ... I. .....II O fAHM Li kk. On a recent Similar avmlnw aha Kuv. Washington Gladden had a talk with tho hoys ol Spniigheld, Mass. lly way of prepare uon no sent out a circular to IX) of t in NMUptottOttl business moll, inuuirinu about their I ... xt .i . .. T .. ... noun a uiiriiig ine ursi years oi their lives. Mo received US answers, and of thoso 74 replied that they had had tho trainih" of farm life. ThsM could not be a more ImiHifiil indication of Ik prosperity of the country than an assurance that 7-1 out of SS boys in a community worn training for the farm lint. It is a hard life; but it is an independent lifo, it i favorablo to religious Kionm .ui. i ciniivaiion oi i iirinlisn graces. Corporations fail, maniifactiirini heroines dull storekeepers ceaxt to do business, and the hum of thu factory is stilled; stocks go down and hanking houses close; but throughout all tl panic and disaster the earth yields it fruits to tho frugal and industrious laborer, There is a narrow tendency maiiifcatcd by those engaged in professional life to underrate the imKrtaiics of life ou a farm; it is considered a half alive ami dead sort of exiatenee; but what can be dcador than tho imecuuioua, hard-worked clerkships m the city, with exacting duties and little or no time for leisure or recreation? Tho hope of tho country, next to religion, lies in its small farms, and consequently in bringing up ine rising gem ration to work llie farm. Ilring up your cnntirop wiiu jusi hlcss ol the mile, pendonce, the resources, the utility of life on the farm. Farm lifo means hard work, but there is always time for rest and recreation, such as is afforded by uo other occupation. Hahitahy Khiuiha. -It is a popular error to think that the more a man oats tho fatter and stronger ho will become. To believe that the more hours children study the faster they learu. To coin In. le that if exercise is good, the more violent the more good is done. To imagine that whatever remedy causa on to fuel immediately I" Iter ii good for the iyitem, without regard to the ulterior effect. " Mv wife," remarked a prominent maiiufaca turer, "never attends auctions. Hho went once, and seeing a friend at the opposite side of tlw room, nodded politely, whereupon the auctioneer knocked down a patent cradle, aud aikcd her where sho wished it delivered. ' CUYING OVBB Sl'Il.T MI1.K. There aro lome iieople so unfortunately en. stituted that they cannot aa eaaily appreciate the blessings that belong to them as thoae which thev have missed. ., ,,. .,-. II.. groaning over somethtug lost, or donied, or wasted, to the disparagement of tho goods the gods havo provided. If a dish is broken or garment rent, instead of quietly making the best of it, sinao no amount of chafing or crying will restore any injured aitiolo to it pristine glory, they recur again and again to tho disas ter, till ouo might suppose nothing lua than a convulsion of nature would demand tuoh a hue and ory, A stolen purso is a text nn whioh in Unlit changes may be rung among this clatii and one might beliovu that the loss of a night's leep ofliild lie readily roairod by weeping and gnashing of teeth, while the lamentations of Jeremiah are weak cnmiiarod to the bewailing they make over a ruined enterprise or a lleklo lover. With all their howling, they only suc ceed in publishing their misfortunes to a world that thinks no bettor of them for suffering fail uroi, and in annoying their friends, without mending their estate or recovering tho lover. "We have gains for all our losses," .ays the verse, but surely the gain is not to be seeured by making ourselves and everybody about us miserable on account of our miahapai the on who bears with fortitude calamities which, great or small, are beyond her control, wins whatever advantage there is to lie derived from tl,..m and makoa adversities, no less than prosperity, minister to hor development. If our friend disappoint ns, bemoaning will not recompense us; if "youth, the dream departs," deploring it will only hasten the ravages of time) if moths corrupt our furs, fretting will not aut aa an sx terminator; though the early frost kills our favorite roots, "for violets dead, the ..,.,.. showers can ne'er make grow again." iiiiiougn wo are well aware that erying over spilt milk is but so much wasted time and energy, yet many of us prsetioe it with a total disregard ii consequences, which would lie hernio If used n a more unselfish cause. In thai maanwhila. thoro is a sort of hnpoloa pleaaurn in sorrowing over the spilt milk, which, however bin or sour it may have seemed whet: our, become all that milk ahnulil be the instant it leaves oar grasp. " Hltiasings brighten as they tak their flight," and sometime it is only wheu we have lost a thing that we grow capable of estimating its value, and discover how neeossary it was to our well being. It IS co d comfort, tiorhan but one which wu aro apt to hug, to reflect with bitterness upon what a different aannet thn world would wear for us if onrtaln pails of milk w wot ol hail not miscarried; if Angelina hail married old lloldpill, instead of a country nar. 0B if Aunt (loodeiiough hail remembered us in her will, instead of the Keejce Islanders; if the lover of our youth had proposed in person, instead of trusting tender avowals to the mar. cies of tho postman. Warm tWlliim, If vou are aut to faal . bill v Iress warmly at home. A wadded coat will ena ble the chilly man to ait and work anywhir in doors, aud so will an extra suit of thin llauoel worn during tho whole of th aotivo day. Ju lat anyone who doubts what wa say try th very simple expedient, wheu tho I, illness be cornea unbearable, of putting on his dresing- gown over hi ordinary clothing, aud in lira minutes he will l perfectly oomfortebl aud rsuvly for work, while h will not suffer aa ho (alleles h will, vi hen be UO out of doors. Til popular notion upon that subject 1 a mr do. fusion. You are nut strsngthnd for outdoor work by shivering indoors, but rather weak ened; habitual warmth, if not too great, bsing one of the bet preservative of constitution! strength. Always try to remain moderately and haaJthfully warm.