Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Mar 1926, p. 18

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Toh AB WY SER Lh EE "| the heart of the Rocky Mountains he many types ol te NIN Fr i 2 THE DAILY BRITISH | RUMANIAN PREMIER OUT D0 0 E By 3 a ty EA tain elk. rom a num 'ASPER National Park, Alberta, in| ' The pi inted above show At the upper right is seen a Wa four of the mary . gi A ghd F. t! enjoys not only the reputation of being 'the world's st national . asper National Park. but also of ng one of hriving in Up the tree, and none too about . is bruin whose black and brown increased to almost sanctuary afforded them not exceeding 150 these animals have 1,000 and the in Jasper world's largest game sanctuaries. : In Juss inch of its ge area re t 400 square miles Jasper Pal av to animals and birds all the protection that the rigor of the law and the ingenuit man can provide, : this wise policy of protection conservation are ap- parent. Every I the number of animals within the Park is increasing and Col. Maynard Rogers, Superinten- dent, states in his most recent report that animals and birds are now to be in the park that never before inhabited this type of country. As isters and brothers inhabit the park to the number of well over 2,000. The black fellows are great friends of the visitors to Jasper Park and are to be seen frequently about hotel, on the golf course and on the trails. For a sugar lump or some other dainty they will agree to a photo- graph and they remain good humored as as ithey are not pressed. le circle are two mountain goats. These animals inhabit the most inac- cessible spots on the mountains und you can get near them only if you possess a pair of strong binoculars or a sturdy poie_of let anil. 4 cisar bead. There examples he cites the presence of large mbers d goats in the Park. au moose prairie chicken. rr low [that milk to stand in the sun or A Hi. . n the kitchen for any length of tim: ™ y v7 } E BABY'S MILK ja l4rge increase in the number of | Sgt bette ett tet ttantnag | DACLETIA Will follow. Milk should "on . | be piaced immediately in a refriger- BY emer, bo Public Health Service | ator and kept quite cold. Milk for It is the duty of every mother tothe baby should always be pasteur- know the source of the milk which | {zed in the. feeding bottle. she givés. her child as well as the | A simple, home-made pasteyrizer process through which the milk has 'may be build by taking a wire bas- been put before it reaches the con- ket that will hold the six or seven sumer. | bottles used for twenty-four hours. [This basket containing the bottles | should be placed in a tin bucket fill- ed with cold water to a point a little !above the level of the milk in the] bottles, which should not be full. This water should be heated and Milk should by preference be pur- chased from a reputable dealer sell- fog milk from a tuberculin tested herd and an inspected dairy. Certi- fled milk is best and the extra charge for it is more than compensated by Park is said to have saved them from eh tinetion, A Dasiiseliat snd that gia p which was taken by the Photogragh apher of the Canadian National Railways is the best of a wapiti he has ever seen. n the bottom panel is a herd of moun- tain . Like the goat these animald live in high altitudes and are dif- ficult of approach. More than 10,000 e their home in Jasper Park and because they have learned to have no fear of man in that territory, the camera huntér has a better chance of getting a "shot" at them there than in almost any other spot on the continent. ame water, or if you have a good ther- mometer the bottles may be placed a large double boiler and the temperature of the water kept be-| tween 140 to 150 degrees Fahren- heit for thirty minutes. After milk has been pasteurized in this way it | should immediately be placed in the | ice chest, the temperature of which | should not be warmer than 50 de- grees Fahrenheit. When the milk is once prepared the bottles should not be opened un- til it is given to the baby and it is | very important that pasteurized milk | should be kept cold until it is used. | Before feeding the baby the milk! should be warmed to blood heat by! who has just n premiership the assurance of its cleanliness and | purity. : After the milk arrives at your house it should be properly cared for. No matter how good the milk allowed to Boil for five minutes. It i hould then be set to one side for warm water" 'ten minutes more after which cold' perature of the milk by putting the water should be allowed to run into| nipple in your own mouth. the bucket until the milk is cooled! few drops fall on the back of your putting the bottle in a vessel of Do not test the tem- Let a may be which you receive, if you al- [to the temperature of the running | hand, A A AAs wt. Sorin, faces suit by his morganatic wife, (Madama Zizi. One person out of 138 in Nevada is a full-time studentiof the State Uni- versity. HIG GOBLINS OF THE ST. LAWRENCE lk tales and nds still cling to the shores of e St. Lawrence, that first highway into the unknown |! continent of North America. Legends in which are mingled bits of Indian superstition, French customs and religious beliefs. In the time of the early explorers, those brave men who dreamed dreams which led them on and over the bright waters, past dark islands, purple hills and shining cliffs, until they settled in Canadas, these legends were reverenced. Now, however, while large Canadian Pacific steamships crowded with tourists ply up And down the St. Lawrence, the legends are no longer regarded except #s quaint fairy tales with somewhat of a religious flavour not'to be disregarded or ridiculed, but to be enjoyed as reminiscent of the olden days when saints and demons assumed mortal forms. Katherine Hale, in an artistic little book issued by the Canadian Pacific Railway recently, ably depicts many of these stories. One of ghe most familiar of these French Canadian legends is that of Loup-Garou, evidently derived from the German A BIKTHDAY PARTY. Was Given For Maurice Donaldson of Findlay Station. Find'ey Station, March 11.--Th Ladies' Ail met at the home of Mrs James Thomson's, on ss hursday af ternoon. There was a good attend ance. After the business meeting : social hour was spent, after whicl the hostess, and Mrs. Russell Ben nett and Mre. Wilfred Bennett ser ved lunc Prayer service was held at wii gprs on Tuesday night Miss S rown was operated ofi for appendicitis in Kingston General Hospital, on Tuesday. She is getting along nicely. John Curtis is visiting his uncle, John Highland, Kingston Mills. Mrs, ilobert Donaldson had a birthday party for her son, Maurice. A number of his young friends en- joyed the afternoon on Monday with him, pleased that he was able to be up and around after his long ser- ious illness, having pneumonia twice ~ AAA iN. sii PIERRE HENRI NOWEL, WHO VISITED QUEBEC IN 1660 | werewolf or the Irish banshee. Loup- Garou typifies the French Canadian's reverence for thingd spiritual and his SOR this winter. James 10, Zion, were Jilllam Wiison's. Greenless and ------en , Sydenham Cheese Factory. Sydenham. March 12 Tha nat rons of Sydenham cneese and butter ry he 2s ad Anu st oa : the evening of March 8th in the own hall. The secretary's report of he season from April 1st to Nov. 0th was: Total number of pou f milk 1,321,909, pounds of cheese, 20,112, pounds of milk per Ib of | receipts $24,961.21. lhe average selling price per pound | The price | "heese, 11.00, for cheese 20.78 cwt. er 1b for butter fat $48.61; the a erage test 0346. average price $ 6S per cwt for milk. There was 1910 Ibs. of whey butter made amounting to $708.16, one-half of which was paid the patrons, making the aver- | age price per ewt. for milk paid pat- rons, $1.71. The factory has been running all winter. recent visitors at | & LOUP-GAROU belief in supernatural in Joachim Crete, a miller of Bea was not really a bad maa, but he did jeer at church collections and failed to try to convert his hired man merely because he was such a good partner at checkers. On Christmas night they played, instead of going to church. They even, in & mood of defiance, the mill going, as if it wale an ordipaty night. Suddenly crack! and the i stopped working. Then the lantern went oat, and the two men were left in trembling darkness! After that the hired man tumbled down stairs, and the miller began to drink fast and furiously! Presently he heard a deep moaning, and turned to see a bu dog about to attack him. Th miller knew it was Loup-Gar he fell on his knees praying for giveness. But he lunged at the with a reaping hook, and wound him. That was the saving of the hired man, for according to the legend, if you have been turned into the form of a wolf or dog because of evil deeds, only a bloody wound can restore you. Loup-Garow is ohe of many such legends. | Washing it Down. "8ir,"" said the astonished landlad |to a guest who had passed his cu {for the seventh time, "you must b) {very fond of coffee." "Yés, madam, I am." he replied should never have drunk mach water to get a little." Qualified. Manager---You want a position sardine packer, eh? : Applicant--Yes, sir, Manager--Had any 'experience? Applicant--Yes, sir. Two years a street car conductor. There are three miles of «grt trees bordering the driveway ol | tomac Park, in Washington. Massachusetts, in 1912, was th first state to enact a minimum wag law for women workers. | Wash rags of paper coated wi dried soap are a new invention fi the household. Tr a ¥

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