Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 23 Aug 1917, p. 3

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Knitter: --Bright colored sretonne is ; perhaps the most popular material for though goods of all t | sorts from khaki to silk can be used. Cut a seven-inch circle of cardboard for the bottom and cover on both sides with plain sateen. Cut cretonne a yard and a quarter by 16 inches, seam up and join to the circle. Cover four or five-inch embroidery hoop with rib- bon and to this attach a band one and one-half inches wide by eight long, sewing the lower end of the band across the seam of the bag near the bottom. This bag is roomy and can be easily closed by gathering up the ---- tg. honey, jms, Yhick presetves, dried rk trond Bok fr sh as butter, cream, iL and ther table fats, lard, suet and other cooking fats and oils, salt pork and bacon. * In order that the meals may vary, patticularly of the energy-yield- ing foods, for persons engaged in dif- ferent pursuits necessitating different amounts of exercise. The heavier the served. 5 ; = boil | top and slipping throug the ring, and ~ en Bein. "Peal, coreleaer oR Rdy a Ee ee ape puf| Convenlently carried Dy sipping the Work the more food lo mecded, 13 a disadvantage in the| dried poached segs. potas hour before serving add pared. pota-| >51C Over the arm. It may be lined: 'Gy GRC. suggested, choose only a y {s the extra labor! cakes, hot biscuit, jelly, coffee or milk. toes. ~The meat may be returned to with plain sateen like the. bottom. nd haul these crops | Dinner: Pork, apple sauce, rice, boil: the kettle to be reheated. Serve the (X1AKL colored linen makes a service- shes an DS tne ro when field Work is| ed beans, boiled cabbage, fresh onions, {onion and beets in separate dishes.|"°® ME daily tare yoda Be Teorn bread, bread, caramel-custard fee | Place the meat in the center of a large; B.H.:--It is very difficult to remove | pois in groups-1 and 3.are less ex- silo is gaining in favor | cream, coffee or milk, Supper: Cold {platter and arrange the vegetables paint, but you might try turpentine, ,cive as a rule, than those in group . An acre of corn in| sliced pork, fried potatoes, baked attractively about it. Horse-radish | or benzine. 2, and "for this "and other reasons tle form of silage will provide succu- beans, cottage cheese, corn bread, sauce is made by soaking. one-half] B.B.:--The only safe and perman-|should be used fréely as the basis of lent roughage for several cows for a|biead, baked apples, whipped cream, |cupful of soft bread erutnbs in milk. | ent cure for superfluous hair is treat-|the diet, with sufficient amounts of season. During periods of drought, | tea or milk. Drain and mix with one-half cupful of | ment 'by electrolysis. This can be|foods from groups 2, 4 and 5 to round when both 'pastures and soiling crops| Immediately after breakfast put the | well-drained horse-radish. Whip one- {given only by an expert: - out the meals. Remember that" the fail, a silo filled with well-matured sil-| beans on to «cook and when parboiled | half cupful cream and fold in carefully | Housewife:--As you will notice in|materials used in cooking or 'served, age grown the year previous is most once, divide and prepare half for bak- the mi ure of bread crumbs and|the splendid course in Domestic|with foods (flour, eggs, milk, fat, valuable. 2 " 'ed beans and allow the remainder to|horse-ra¥ish. The greens should be| Science now appearing in the House- |sugar, etc.), add their food value to In planning a summer silo, the | cook with the pork until tender. Make! soaked and thoroughly washed ready | hold Department, there are five types | the diet. Remember, also, that it is farmer should keep in mind that its|cottage cheese. : | to cook in the evening. Boil pota-ior groups of foods: S not necessary to supply. all the types dimensions should be in relation tothe| Caramel-custard ice cream is made toes for breakfast the following morn-| 1 poids depended t ; 1] of food at every meal, ptoviding en- number of cows fed daily. As a|by combining three cups of milk, two|ing. Put breakfast cereal in fireless matter Re pm, pn. Cig ough of each is supplied in the course usual thing, under summer conditions, | eggs or four yolks, one and one-half | cooker before bedtime. regulating substancas, 'suck ag. oe of the day. For example, if the all. pasture" © gd a cow will consume about twenty |cupful sugar (one-half caramelized)| Breakfast: Fruit, cereal, bacon,| gq gyccylent Ie 8 rule (ods which are depended upon for 'should be made to meet different con- pounds of silage. Therefore, silage and making a steamed custard. When | eggs, fried rice, muffins, syrup, coffee 2. Food } . |nitrogen (meat, eggs, milk, etc.) are 'ditions and individual cows. Grain-fed | enough must be provided daily to pre- | this is cooled, add three. cupfuls cream | or milk. Dinner: Baked ham, gravy, h 000s depended upon for protein, | o © ohundance at breakfast and ows on pasture need not contain the| vent excessive surface fermentation. |and freeze. This may be made early | boiled potatoes, creamed peas, fried Fue as milk, eggs, meat and dried dinner, fit is not necessary to include 4 percentage of protein as for win-| On this basis, a summer silo for|in the morning and packed. apples, radishes, bread, lemon pie, iced | '¢8UMeS- them at supper or lunch, or if a per- iter feeding. = Pakture being an ap-| twenty cows should be eight feet in| The baked apples should be pre-|tea or milk. Supper: Cold sliced| 3. Foods depended upon for starch,|xon prefers a light breakfast he may proximately balanced ration, the grain| diameter; for thirty cows, fen feet; | pared during the morning. Extral ham, mustard, potato salad, buttered |such as cereal breakfast foods, flours, |jeave out the nitrogen-rich food and ration should have about the same|and for forty cows, twelve feet. "As | rice should be cooked and all that is|beets, pickles, bread, preserves, baked meals and foods made from them. perhaps some of the other foods in proportion of protein to other nutri-| eight feet is about the minimum dia-|left from dinner should be put into a| custard, tea or milk, = 4, Foods depended upon for sugat,|the morning and make up for it at the The following mixtures are| meter of a silo for best results, a sum. {pan and molded ready to slice for| At dinner time cook extra potatoes! such as sugar, molasses, syrups,inoon and evening meals. sug; for supplementing pasture mer silo is most applicable for twenty | breakfast. ; for the evening and breakfast the fol- a ut other roughage: or more COWS, Ot Put breakfast cereal in fireless lowing mormme- n Sook the beats sinks out of place, sometimes stick- -- n after supper. which may be reheated and buttered) ojo epos contain substances |in8 to the side of the shell on which ie : "P i IA is placed on the left side. We have| Breakfast: Fruit cereal, minced |for the evening meal. Prepare the > 08! ¢ h ing: v y /) a -- ras no hold up their milk, but|ham, scrambled eggs, creamed pota- | baked custard. deleterious to the health, it is ad- ie = in 1 oem lying tn ite dutent "Ui 7 they do the same with a hand milker, | toes, hot biscuit, jelly, coffee or milk.| At night, put breakfast cereal in|7AR'a8€0 to test their condition be- a still later stage in its deterio- 3 . + A +. | fore serving them as food. ration, the egg shows one or more dis- ha hine| Dinner ¢ ~ Boiled ~ dinner, horse-|fireless cooker. Mix and mold biscuit e g U Sh ln: the; management of the dairy os a ele She nt radish sauce, lettuce, corn bread, |for breakfast. Keep in thé refrigera- Eggs purchased at the average city uneuy dark spots, due to the growth it is very important that the UAul FOR oC can milk from 80 jelly, tapioca pudding, coffee or| tor over night. Bake as usual inthe] ET0jery. siete 8re in varying degrees ofa UnEus, In addition to an increas. be done at regular periods. Se sows in one and a half hours, do| milk. ~ Supper: Corned-beef hash, | morning. _|of freshness, from those guaranteed |ed air space, and the outline of the y at the same hour night and the strippi feed hi ves. and . een Se ------------ pe es------ to have been laid within twenty-four |¥olk is no longer definite. A decay- : n as nearly as possible. The Ho PRIN: ik £ . 4 5 frac) f ry strength of the city, partly to the in- hours to those which have been in|ed egg shows a greatly increased size 'more equally the" twenty-four "hours | take es m Io e Solara * | texference of Egypt A 37.5). + |the hands of farmers and merchants |of the air space, due to the shrinking re divided in which the milking is tor, ie. Washing. anc. care .0 ig =. . = 3.7. Capture of the king. Fourth--|for weeks and perhaps in cold stor-|of the shell contents, and a general "done twice, the more uniform wilk be outfit would not average more than Dr : Supplied from Jer. 52. 6, July, B. C.!age for months. ; running together of the white and antity and the quality of the | thirty minutes per day. ; , Za 4 A Ramine Compare Jer. 87. 21;| It is a simple matter to test theYolk, no central dark nucleus oytlining milk produced. ' 3 Individual records of each day's (274 we (38. 9. Men of war--The text seems ,o, of an egg by holding it in front |the yolk being visible. Do not expose calves to heat and milk and the amount of butter pro- i To a BER pgs of a lighted candle in a dark room.| Another method of testing an egg flies, but during extreme heat. keep duced will show up the questionable INTERNATIONAL LESSON should read: "And when the king and The eye should be shielded from the|to find out whether or not it is a them in a dark, coo™place until four animals. x ih AUGUST 26. all the men of war saw it, they fled| flame by a cardboard or other mate- | storage egg, and if so how long it has months old: al Wheat bran. and ground oats have " and left the city by night . . . | rial. In this a hole should be cut|probably been held, is to place it in a "Free access to water and salt is es- been ed to have ap- - -- Gate--Near the pool of Siloam. The slightly smaller than the egg, against |10 per cent. solution of salt at 70 de- sential for the best results in dairying. | proximately equal values in the dairy |y oogon IX. The Captivity of Judah-- expression "Between 'the two walls" which hole the egg should be placed |grees Fahrenheit. If, the egg is : trees Fatiol i ite clear. ~~ Arabah--The| Ie, i oe Ly which ens - SE hd jy 2 Kings 25. 1-21. Golden Toray Saltey Jericho Evidently | Where the light may penetrate and re. | absolutely fresh, it will sink. But if i the kin nd his companions broke veal the position of the yolk and of |it is old, it will not do so, even if it real omfory to the animals in hot|has usually been prohibitive, so- that Text--Ezek. 33. 11. BP a Dis Do open) olf tried! TE His or Chainer whim ses tlh oh = Tow dav. ald , weather. : : oats have been much less widely used | with the lesson text should be com-|to escape across the Jordan, but they|the larger end. If an electric light Spraying with some preparation to than bran. ared Jer. 39, 1-10; 52. 4-16. Kings | were ra near Jericho. Riblah | is available, or a bright gas fas a vy I the ee. ™ be det flies off cows is the price that| Silage helps the dairyman supply | tells nothing of Zedekiah, the last|__A city in the far north, in the Oro-/those are. of course. much more. ef on hwy hans » ly pe 'must be paid for a normal milk flow |his herd with succulence in winter as of Judah, except the events con-|ntes valley. Put out eyes--A-form| ge tive in showin oo" he coroiition of i ats upon the water. from now on. - Unchecked attacks | well as in summer. * It Helps to keep with the siege and fall of the!of punishment frequently "applied by g SLES rodueti - ity, Jer. 27, 28 suggests that he the Assyrians to rebellious vassals. the egg. = : : shy flee ay opel Sines ? = he cs healthy 0 BE he and involved in. treasonable ne- 8.12. Destruction of Jamie, | When an egg is fresh the air cham-| Spraying potatoes once with the : g s tiations as early as his fourth year, Burnt all the houses . . . brake ber is small and the yoke is visible in | Bordeaux mixture is not sufficient. 'We find that cows like our milking dairy prices are highest. ot hig deriey My resulted (com-|down the walls--The attempt was the middle of the shell. When an| Spraying should be kept up at inter- machine better than hand milking,| 'Inferior cows lower herd profits, but| oo Jer b1. 60). Finally he yielded made to blot out the city entirely.| egg is advanced in age, the air space vals of two weeks until the end of especially. young cows, says 8 writer | they ean be. detected. by individual |, the pressure of the pro-Egyptian| Captive--It would seem that the en-| jg increased in size, and the yolk] August. Nop Hes Former. Bo far_welmil and ler soos. Loy yee pasty X70, 1 sy ty. Nips bho "ral poplin: sl gh th rs - A of the city. Nin e rur 0) p 2 he £0 ly two cows that $ object mean small profits oF more . ten ac. erses 1, ege eh Th Hn Sl iin ir. Pon aver s - Bobby. "It will have to stay 'on the be ground all night, and a cat or a weasel : cha HE may catch it." twelve square fest of floor space In fhe "Chaldean empire, BE 4-502. | Cotnpate eraftemen and smiths," in . "Let's call Aunt Barbara," proposed Se : F Better, a siege-wall, even ngs 24. 16. 'ores! en with- " » § j Skim milk and grain can be fed to Lh r ntiaued for a year and out influence, and, therefore, not S/OVES Bluebell. "Shell pat itdnte a basket hv : much better advantage 1p hogs than{g half, due partly to the natural | dangerous. : aud take Jt] use where Dusty feeding floors or to mongrel dairy calves. ---- . ¥ - ' - qu iarters cause the cough Rape 'seeded at the last cultivation| - *Tis Quality Always Counts: practical knowledge, has the better "Story ob Ti Kiddies 1" | by That might jugs ton It" maid Bob. of the time. The : of corn will furnish abu h: nitro. The farmer has need to be the most of it, usually, and it is every man's called Aunt Barbara : : "It's brown and lon looking * whis- ; or flushed off with water every | genous feed fon hogs in fall. : ? al He must privilege to avail himself of the cur-| ar "Ing BW swept . fia The only way to improve the hog pragmatien 0! LSI men The rent. technical attainments of his Oh, Aunt Barbara," pleaded Bobby, | pered Bluebell. "I wonder if it's a oie s : i 5 ; ut everythi test. ere are hay "mayn't we stay out a little longer ? | quail." Take no chances with a sick Hog. |on the farm at the lowest cost is by fixed vafues on the farm. Some trade. . 1t isn't ve oh ou see, and we're |- Bobby shook his head. "No, quails Act quickly. Get a veterinarian or a|using pure-bred males on well select-| 7. ow. sive thin milk, and some Hol- |: ---------- ar oy : 4 EN a he lave aid phe » 4 rained man immediately. Use the led sows. hl Rg ) small quantities. One ton Fresh or Rotted Manure. Raving suck ua, playing tag gy e rolled Lo ol elephone or send to town at once.| . A pig that'has been stunted in the| silage may mot be half as good as Perhaps one of the most remark-f u,. 4'tne birds haven't gone to bed bed the clumsy little creature until it "Only prompt action will stop 'hog | early. stages of its. life should never| yy iho ton." One pure bred hen will able results. obtained in our experi-| i. ;q4ed Bluebell, | reached the grass that bordered the cholera losses. Every hog saved will is ae Blace 3a fhe breatiing Berd. lay 'twice as many eggs as another ments with fertilizers has been the |" yo pay birds are all'tucked in," | roadside. . It wriggled up on the grass win the war. =.=. He a Fudb ion i) int ct pure beg hen of oe sine Bame Siseovery. Sat, oe + Snary | answered Aunt Barbara, witha laugh. | and ont on 1 the foot o a ren, : quicker imal, al fifty v farm y " ', y " i" ; . hin these 'strenuous' times should| There ia often as muh 88 Ly rotted manure, applied at tho same! cu SOL Uore®hucun tose that might put it up fn lie reer sud tbe the mainstay in our efforts to in-| ualities of two lots of seed corn of rate, have given practically. equal; o "0 ciaire to bed, same as we do." | Bobby. -- crease meat supplies. ~ |the same variety. * ° ¥ yields. "The gxplanation for this i8| "yel)" said Aunt Barbara, smiling, | But, to the children's surprise, the EE ; "can not: take anything for not easy to find, since rotted .mantee, uy is certainly a beautiful evening; | little traveller did not wait for a ladder y must watch and weigh, [weight for Weight, E TIT sb *° you may have fifteen minutes more or for any help. Without any pause nail and measure and test. | It isa fortu- ably ¥icher i pat oe 1 we ov of it, if you like." {for thought it began to go straight up the hollow of the foot | nate thing that nearly all farmers are manure. It probably lies in the bet-| 0 vo) Aunt Barbara!" cried the tree trunk toward the leafy shel: Ie ge part uncenagious scientists They have. the for Smeaton of the' soil with Qesisy Bluebell, and off ran the children to ter above. : Detecting Stale Eggs. rem------------ Flash dent nin January, B. C. 587.|--Deserters in the course of the siege. TA e greatest king of Multitude--Perhaps better, artisans. iii Sieg ] Ne! the. Ww : "Look ! Look!" cried Bluebell ; brittle . : g m f their extra freedom. 3 x hoof {} 10V D; : EE in| the ; . i: EE any Oe an mused j but Bobby was already logking with and may 0 eo the soil affecting | Bluebell, as she skipped across the &ll his eyes. \ ] a on carly | 1a7Ee grassy triangle in front of the | With its tail for a prop and with a old house In which she and Bobby little lift to its wings the bird hitched a -t were spending the summer with Aunt &10ng its strange stairway. had better be Barbara. "They just fly into the trees tHe wings are yellowish under- They seldom and cuddle up on a branch, don't neath," remarked Bobby. "I'm going if kept over a third | they ?" ; . to get Aunt Barbara." , ' ah Spel . "Oh, 1 suppose so," answered Bob- "Aunt Barbara! Aunt Barbara!" i ent the regular feeds of the by. "But what's that out in' the road, he shouted at 'the side door. "There's éns with a wet, mash--fed crumbly. | Bluebéi 2" a bird here going upstairs all by it- 'eed all the chicks will clean up be-| "Where ? Oh, that funny thing bob- | self !"" going to roost, 'but none should | bing along by the edge of the grass 7" | Aunt Barbara hastened after Bobby. | bo left in the trough, for it will sour. returned Bluebell. "Why, why, it's a "It's a young flicker," she told the Chickens will do be --a--a sort of a big lttle bird, I children. "He knows how to take ed to 1 think 1? ©. 5; care of himself, doesn't he?" ©. ° "It 1s u bird," declared Bobby, "and | "And he goes upstairs to bed: wh it's pretty big, but I don't believe it {out having anyone call him," can fiy. e it's | ns . Bobby; laventog with a shy. : a i d ) 1 ii Pr 3 danger of act hurt. | its | "And now we'll go, t00,"" a li oes ad slipped ber hand 4 ond pig

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