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Port Perry Star, 3 Mar 1927, p. 2

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BRUSH AND WIPE THE UDDER. Beford each milking go over the |i udder and flanks with a stiff brush, follow with a damp cloth, or wash if 557k HI iEecE £ : 7 2 § | on the Canadian . Farmers in this country, he said, had a distinct of producers, he pointed out, which-allowed the grower to hold Here, as oh later occasions, the ee 2 wipe oa oo Sorwasd bY experience rather y a princ It is not likely that the Samaritan mission was premediated. part of 1925 were abnormally high account of the seamen's strike in Aue- about through force of circumstances! tralia and New Zealand. Supplies under the all-wise direction of God, i from these countries were held back In the passage from 2 Corinthians we |in 1925 and rushed forward in 1926 have a fine statement of the motives 1; inf - which compelled Christians every-, ecoma on the 1926 prices was the prolonged where to am rs of | Christ wherever opportunity offered. | his product, grade it, and feed it to the market gradually had saved farmers probably ten cents a pound this year, Spring Management of Bees. | Following are some pointers given by Mr. C. B. Gooderham, Dominion Apiarist, in Bulletin No. 74 of the Do- minion Dept. of Agriculture. Cellar-wintered bees should not be! USE CLEAN MILKING METHODS. i~ Clean, dry hands are necessary in the production of clean milk. Milk of the best grade never touches the hand. Remove the niilk from the stable as soon as possible, Use the covered milk pall, it will keep out a large part of the falling dust particles. KEEP MILK FROM SEDIMENT. Sediment is due to a variely of I. THE CHRISTIAN 1S EVERYWHERE AN AMBASSADOR FOR CHRIST, Acts 8:4-8. V. 4. The apostles, 'scattered from Jerusalem, were like' burning brands which ignited other souls wherever they were blown by the gales of perse- cution, As we see by Acts 11:19-21; some of the missionaries traveled as far as Antioch V. 5. The Samaritans formed a sep- arate religious society from the Jews, and were regarded by the Jews as strike in Britain: Dr. Ruddick points out that there ifs, however, 'one very encouraging / feature in the present situation of the {cheese industry. Canadian cheese now | commands a higher price on the Brit- | ish market than does that of our chief competitor, New Zealand. Since 1928, when grading was com- menced in Canada this premium on Canadian cheese has ben increasing causes, dirty flanks and udders, un- clean milkers, dusty and dirty stables, open top pails, etc. Use the greatest oare ini straining. Wire strainers alone or with cheesecloth will not re- move fine foreign matter. Cotton or flannel are the most satisfactory ma- terials for use in removing foreign matter from milk. Burn the strainer cloth or else clean, boil for five min- utes and expose to the sun before us- ing again. Q00L QUICKLY TO LOWEST TEMPERATURE Oooling should be done promptly after milking. Use ice in the cooling water, not in the can, get the temper. ature down to 66 degrees as soon as you can. Don't guess at the bemper- ature; keep a thermometer handy. TAKE CARE OF THE MILK. Milk omoe cooled should be kept at a low temperature until delivered. Protect it from heat, dust and freez- ing, poor delivery methods may mean! an unsatisfactory product at the de- lvery point. Cover the cans. CLEAN AND STERILIZE. The milk pails, cans and strainer should first be thoroughly rinsed and | scrubbed, then scalded with boiling, water, inverted and exposed to the sun. All utensils should be thorough- ly dry as soon as possible after wash- ing,--such practice will aid in pre- venting the development of bacteria. BACTERIA. Milk sours because , of bacterial; growth and growth of such is made possible by temperatures above 55 bo, 60 degrees. Keep the temperature down and the bacteria can not increase to a serious extent. Disease produc-' ing bacteria sometimes found in milk! * may come from the cow, the milker,' or the water supply. Keep the stables clean, keep the, cows clean, test the cows, watch the, milkers, and all who may have to do with the product of your dairy. Nobody wants or will knowingly | buy unclean milk. Public confidence | can only be gained by supplying the milk-consuming public with a quality product. rr fi tbs Have ono system of feeding, but tet that system have as great a variety as possible. To be continually chang- ing the bill of fare hurts rather than benefits egg production. moved before pollen and nectar are semi-heathen. They acknowledged the! % of a cent, being over $1 + . : : ut he - en! vel ? available. The right time is when the |law of Moses, but did not accept |our total output. The iricreased prem- | cleaning clothes. Water almost boiling | i i ium f heese is can be used if you have a dish mop. nized 1h he ice af Jorufiom, cam chan th drop In Brice pcan 48 Wh a, band, 1 un drainer aves ae pnb when there is no sink. A la means that we can more than hold our ping pan is placed under the first willows show pollen or when out- door wintered bees start bringing in new supplies. Shelter from cold winds is desirable. Remove either in the evenings or early in the morning or on a dull day. Close the entrances when moving bees from cellar and when the filling is re- moved reduce the entrances to two inches. Colonies may be examined on a warm day when the bees are flying freely. To those having less than fifteen or twenty pounds of stores feed sugar syrup or combs of honey saved from the previous year. Don't equalize storés unlese the aplary is free from disease and never feed honey from an unknown source. A good beekeeper seldom has to do any feeding in spring, sufficient hav- ing been done in the fall, Unite colonies that are queenless or have drome-producing queens to col- onies having fertile queens. Replace failing queens at once. Weak queen-right colonies may be saved by placing them over strong colonies with a queen-excluder bhe- tween for a: few weeks, or may be strengthened by adding package bees. Defer first examination until after a few days of favorable weather con- ditions and nectar is coming in freely. Outdoor wintered bees can be exam- ined while still in their cases. Bees need large quantities of water in the spring. To prevent them hav- ing to go long distances for it supply the water in some sheltered. spot in the apiary. At the second examination, which will not be necessary for 2 or 3 weeks | if the weather does ndt warm up rap- idly and new nectar and pollen are not abundant, watch for brood dis- eases, | a fl mk + A New Kind of Biscuits. When making toast take a loaf of bread, cut the crust off about half an inch thick and use the erumb for your toast. Out the crust into fingers about two inches wide, dip each one into a pe mug of cold water, lay them on a bak- ing tin and put them in a fairly warm oven until they are dry and' crisp. These are a good substitute for bis- cuits to eat with cheese. { Paul, "Is the all-constraining motive." | neighbor, Mrs. J. B. Thompson, start- year by year until in 1926 it averaged | other books of the Old Testament. centralized in the temple at Jerusalem the Samaritans had a Separate ne-} tuary on Mount Gerizim. It was there- fore in a strange atmosphere that Philip the Evangelist found himself own in competition with the world. tain natural advantages in the manu- suggestion that his people must give | up Gerizim for Jerusalem. Neverthe- less, when Philip, following the in- stinet of his own heart, gathered some Samaritans jogether and spoke to melo a CSL them of Jesus, he found his audience immediate! -susceptible to the new| My Loafing Tractor Pays. truths. For now it was no Jonge: a; I've often read and been told that question > leaving Qerisin Tor Jory | the more I a my tractor the better lem, but of turning from ; ' , to God, and they listened eagerly. Jovestment k a. " Son t believe it. Vs, 6-8. The impression wrought by | MY tractor is here for the peak times. Philip's words was deepened by the | can work it half the night, and do extraordinary evidence, which his sometimes, That catches up with the position is not unassailable, and those engaged in the industry must continue every effort to maintain our lead, of it they used to in the all-horse days. But s0 long as I can use horses to deeds afforded, of the power of God work and things 'seldom suffer HES ones are attached to tie: waber bi : Very hot water may be used and the| This is my conclusion: that I should being with him. The same phenomena es had characterized Jesus' ministry | in Galilee repeated themselves in Sa- | maria, Deriented Jersans, Whee ge, ranged condition was attributed to | 3 mons, were restored to sanity. Suf- {nd little of that. W ferers from nervous and other disord-| I don't haul manure with my trac- ers obtained relief. Cripples were set or and let the horses look at me, nor was thrilled by a sense of divine power , There being at work among them. . It was for a Plain thar Cod (ad set ie seal On haven't soen that time yet.--E. R. . ea IL WHY THE CHRISTIAN IS AN AMBAS- : SADOR FOR CHRIST, 2 Cor. 5:14-20. Why Wash for Chicks? V. 14. The passage in 2 Corinthians! Iam too lazy to do my own laundry, to which' we now turn, forms a fitting | much less doing washing every fondant to the prece part of the, baby chicks. I just or lesson. Ib reveals the nature of the more thicknesses of old newspapers ' inward principle whieh compelled the | yn der the hovers. - That .serves' the apostles an. evan, i preach wherever they oa them. | ame purpose end you can throw the selves. 'The love of Christ," says Newspapers away afterwards; My | V. 156. How does the love of Christ ed the idea in this neighborhood and; become a motive for Preaching to ve all find it works very, well, as it _¥ use," answers a lo, "we ith 1 understand it thus, "One died for al, the floor waym and keeps Hh cnr | and by that death for all ¢laims for ; hi f allowing the cli'cks | himself the life of every man." All =o Say not ing otal Swing he olen. lives, all souls, belong to Christ the | keep up w «events of the-day! | crucified. No one is any longer en-| --A. B. ' titled to himself as his own. V. 18. uently we must no keep egg 5 longer look on a Jew as a privileg lating the laying qualities of each hen, rSon, or on a Samaritan as ui arding all poor layers, ior the flesh." that. ioc as hat Tg| all un : "after ' is,-as wha . J is by nature, for Christ has given a (Qualified fowls, heat new value; a new worth, a new signifi : cance to every soul of man.' We must Those who not even think of Christ purely in|®n ert in breeding. - MUTT AND JEFF--By Bud Fisher. _ v JULIUS, THe . ResemBLANCE Berween Ls 4] 'Ss Really REMARKABLE! RIGHTO, JEFF! WE'RE Twins = 'AND AS MUCH "| Alike AS Two PEAS IN A eS - : he OULDN'T TELL WHICH = : THe ONLY: ,000 on | dish-washing are just as good for. Dr. Ruddick holds that . | to collect the rinse water. § F Ruddick holds that we. have cer this water prevents streaks which after leaving Jerusalem. No Samar- +! someti on dishes that dry it 1a te the |Tacture of cheese which constitute a mes. appear San Would jor a moment iglerste 2 | handicap for any competitor, but our | themselves, studies have been made with dish tow. | els to determine how sanita: are. : towel should be washed and dried out- | Biven to spare it from the itinerant doors after being used once. Even then ragman. It wasa wonderful catalogue, doa job I let the tractor stand inside, dishes aro scalded and dried in the It costs nothing, except depreciation |®*™e tub. especiall gay for for cleaning the tines of forks. washing by planning the i reference to the dishes. For {I concentrate my baking. be use time and again without wash- records, tabu~ ground E 1 ing place for undesirable or, Clean dishes are stacked in ers, scalded and allowed to dry. g : : 3 When the, hose : selected my seed from be sed for Jack of running yaler the 'racks in front of the corner store-- i are t n 8 pan of warm 'and they frequently grew and produc- soapsuds. The soap or flakes used in {od crops, but the pleasure was only momentary. The grocer was tap- ping on the case with his pencil, ng not to take too long reading i rge drip-| But what are we going to do with team from thousands of good dollars are anntally wasted on these who read but. don't remit. Is it right for the florist and nurseryman to furnish me with pleas- THE DISHCLOTH MENACE. ure and contribute to my education In the home economics departments! gratis? I don't think eo, and perhaps leading agricultural coll 'T am not alone in this opinion. Tneny hg apr a ogee Recently I sent to England for a . I paid for it. I found my- > they oo respecting it Strict orders were The results indicate that a dish, contains organisms which are both 4n description and. illustwation, spread over the dishes in drying. Elec- | but not more #o than many I have re- trically equipped homes may install ceived gratis, Seived = ig me something her dryer. The ! respect 1t as I do the books in Sigh was 1g dyes ow YY library--those not borrowed, pay for catalogues. If everybody paid tested 3 bet! th id oy Wi ter ones, i c- 1 our ed various dish washing aids tions in them. Think it over, nursery- a necessity. Some of it con. | MeN and seedsmen.--E., F. Kelsey, ° d Pin I Sell Feathers for: oney. Selling feathers is the way 1 make pin money. The feathers from my 35 bring me a cheque for at least six , or over $100 a town wool is on their feet. The whole community do I haul hay or plant corn with it. [tains soap and with other kinds this y be a time when it will pay | must be added. Steel wool is fine for lew days to do that, but I|keeping aluminum in condition and for removing food which adheres to any kind of pan. A long, [like a soft brush for cleansing silver, | , narrow brush is y the engraved portions, and I decrease the amount of my dish- lan cooking in example, By doing this the same bowl may it first rain came the water, rushing over the log, washed out a hole large enough to accommodate a flock* of sixty or more. With wire netting I fenced off a two-acre pen around the water. I bought twenty-five: more geese, making thirty-five in all, and started into business, £ i } = «mire. Wi didn't. So r get. I want her to be like Joy, wha hag otking but happy oT * "Oh, Pm sorry," 'I apologized, "I 'shouldn't have spoken." I felt I had caused the heart ofthe little mother to Zemenhar , and, no doubt, she, too, t > drainer the catalog problem? Hundreds of |nceded to forge "Oh;sthat's all right," and she smil- ed. "But tell the mothers and fathers to try and give their children happy memories. It means so much!" ee No Longer Hewers of Stone, The world used to think of farmers simply as hewers of stone and drawers of water. Now it looks upon them as the architects of the world's destiny. The time was when the world want- ed the farmers to fight its battles for it. Now it sees that dying is not the best thing the farmers can do for hu- manity. To,live is better. So the world no longer shouts its commands to the farmers, expecting them to make haste to obey. It now says, "Lean down your lips.and tell ine the great thoughts you are think- ing out there among the trees and flowers, igds the oom and the wheat row, J its ur own lofty Riving." X Po! y Now the world goes to the. farmers for its b; st. men and women, say-.. now, I'm helping her to for. yn a Why? Because the world has at last found cut what the farmers can do, what they are doing and what they. will do to make men better, happier: and more truly successiul.--Farmer. Vincent, 4 pe Have You Tried This? Whipped cream will go further if id white of an egg is added to it ber lore no I Bore blag. Ore white to half a. t I average a (Pint of cream is a good proportion. pound thers from every three wa Mc = < = asily sells for a dollar Our water "except tionally hard and: | Almost yellow with iro

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