West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Aug 1920, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Montreat. thoit mus TWO® Her= Ont. $# o oammmmuege~~~â€" S . es rT_Rr wie * (fn a pirrbts __ Ef ( Summer Care of Sheep are %W?AMRIDGI-‘. TinES £abric thing contributes more to of sheep raising than a safe system of handling the flock e summer months. If the healthy and furnished with of feed best adapted to ouri arms they will keen in good lition, the lam‘* _ vill make ns, the wool ». ake good nd they will pay 1 profits. ny good farmer can succeed ep during the fall, winter # months. Then the chief avra housin@ and feed.ng. but Cord or m m T) SGeme as Their Name ne D n gasoâ€" tomers usuaiy inc ndard greatly; sometimes << CoffmreSonte DiA | selâ€" nless good wape ewes feeding experiments. JL 183 YMW ""/ portant that both the ewes and hmb“ have plenty of good feed during the late summer and early autumn. ml ewes will breed more regularly if they are in good condition at mating time, and the lambs will make better gains when fed a grain ration during thol late fail and early winter. Pasmtei crops make cheaper gains than grain feeds, consequently every effort should be made to bring the ewes and lambs through the pasture season in good C condition oat ny | Th W tassel which will c the horse‘s legs. ught fir less than Where the prospe Buy formalin heat for smut g butter day np:.e A lirect to private cusâ€" ncreases the profit es more than doubles Fort is not necessarâ€" e one l now for treating seedâ€" It is very imâ€" is not well known, ssary to drum up the butter ought asis, and not the akeepers already butter can be : creamery butter. ctive customer is ; it is often a good nd of butter as a e trades is & viver. and J Chariot Race: Each team is grouped in pairs. The players in each pair stand with locked arms, f{acihg in the same direction. At the signal "go" the first couple runs forward across a goal line, some fifty or sixty feet \ahead. return across the starting line and to the rear of the column which has moved up one space toward the | starting line. Having returned, they | slap the pair ahead of them, who in F TL TW in the alnl and to the rear of the COMMIAHM IMMOT lhas moved up one space toward tho‘ | starting line. Having returned, they'i | slap the pair ahead of them, who in ; |turn slap the next. When the .lapt, | reaches the first pair, they start, and | iso on, until the original last pair; | crosses the returning line. k ‘ \ _ Hop Relay: The two teams arrange | themselves in single lines, all facing a | goal thirty or forty feet from the \front. At a signal, the first player | hops, on hs right foot, across the ‘| goal line, changes to the left foot and || returns across the starting line to the \rear of the column. As he crosses the starting line he tags No. 2, who f m Lage* Q. 5e 9 0 Good Games for the Picnic. rear of the column. As he crosses the starting line he tags No. 2, who is now No. 1, and this player hops off, on his left foot crosses the goal-‘)ine, changes to hisright foot and returns, ' L ks wro o EL L 014. icliions iess Pab ie td tagging No. 3 as he passes. No. '3\‘ starts off on the right foot, and so on. The race ends when the last player| of either team, returning from thel goal line, crosses the starting line. | Duck on the Rock may be played with soft cord balls, beanâ€"bags, old\ tennis balls or canners‘ tins, one of | each player, except for him who is| "it." The "duck," a large canners‘| tin or old tin pail, is stood upon» & | stump or rock. Players back of a| line drawn at a certain distance, say twontyâ€"five or thirty feet, attempt to A Prayer for Pardon, Psaim 51: 1â€"17.) Golden Textâ€"Psalim 51: 2. '! 1â€"4. Have Mercy. It is only in God‘s; gracious loving kindness that he has hope. God‘s kindness has been known through past experience. His tender mercies have been abundant and maniâ€" fold in the experience of His people. It is according to that kindness and those mercies that he now hopes and prays forgiveness may be granted. The first words might be rendered, "Be gracious unto me." He cas‘ts hin‘\- a10% P uie C Bs Snactar y esn o B erict old L self on the divine grace As tle: only power which can set him right." Blot out, wash, cleanse, are the words which he uses for the forgiveness which he seeks from God. As debt is w.ped away or blotted out, as ‘(‘;‘a{"- io ul, 45 l WeeescOE P00 . OM ECC AODIC To oo ons o CcA which he seeks from God. As debt is w.ped away or blotted out, as garâ€" ments are washed clean from filth, as leprosy is healed and cleansed from | the bodi', so would he be pardoned and ; made clean. His penitence is sincere and dce‘p. and he makes confession. I acknowledge my transgressions, he says, and my sin is ever before me. Moreover, in the searching light of, his consciousness of the divine Presâ€" ence he sees h.s sin before all else in its relation to God. Against thee, thee only, he confesses, have I sinned. For he is made to feel very deeply and really that a sin against his felâ€" low man is a sin against God. Comâ€" pare 2 Sam. 11: 27; 12: 9. Therefore God is justified in condemning men |for all sins against the common laws of humanity, whether they be sins of |lust, or of crueity, or of violence, or of traud. C ue C t L Gâ€"6. Shapen in Iniquity. The poet : ; confesses that his sin is not simply & ): wrong act, a transgression. It is someâ€"| thing deeF-rootaed in a corrupt nature,‘ in an evil heart. Far from being an . excuse for sin, this seems to him to| make it all the worse, and therefore the remedy for sin must also go deep,| and heal and cleanse the whole nature. 79. Purge Me With Hyssop. Hysâ€" sop is a fragrant herb, "a kind of wild marjoram with an aromatic flavor,| possessing straight, â€" slender, leafy| [staiks with small heads, growing §0, that a bunch could readily be broken | off and used for sprinkling." It was| used at the ])a«ssover for dipping in| \the sacrificial blood and sprinkl’mgl with it the lintel and side posts of the C f %\ % (Z / \| @Pouliny?> sut _1 1, ths ametimit of prqfitab‘e“‘ Cecilia was the lirst heavy breeds> to demo: profitableness could be e quite a number of years never once came near I‘ s the first hen of the is to demonstrate that s could be extended over ber of years. While she came near equaling her distance, say t, attempt to ck by throwâ€" â€" QUCn, . Last Couple Out: Couples arrange themselves facing the odd number | player, "it," who stands with his back | to the head cf the line. At the cal i“Last couple out," from the odd playâ€" \er at the head of the line, the last | couple run forward, one on cither side ‘ of the line, and attempt to join hands | in front of this odd player who is | catcher. _ If one of the players is ,| caught before joining hands with his | partner, he and his catcher form a / couple and take their places at the ‘ head of the line which moves back to 2 mi_ â€" 2atahar accommodate accommouale . MPUM BBR Pm P should stand ten feet from the head of the line. He must not turn his head to see when the players are coming, nor may he chase them until they have crossed the line on which he stands. * & _1 mt ts ‘s _2 Hoate SLANLGS. hn C 4t mk £J CC Over the Top Relay: This is a h\{:ly hon‘x‘r: i contest 'I;gl:me for a:zq:;x:sbe::f : xtz; only,obeâ€" ers. e game s handball. Or, if preferred, two be::- n«;mé!ll: bags may be used instead. Opposing o awicog teams of equal numbers are lined “fi (2) Om in rows alongside of eac}\ othet, ; i imer ‘ facing in the same direction. At the (1} C\; signal to start, player No. l_pn;seg'beef y eg the ball up and back over .hlS ca |and.thicl | to player No. 2, who passes it in turr(; k "or | to 3, from whom it goes to 4, an \ 1. Be | so on, witil it is received by t.hg lfxst‘ grhsy on | player vho carries it as spg_edlly afiv (2) So | possible to the head of the line. A \ iJ Ve ,| players h:.v'n}g:t mt;‘\f:: d}:)ewr;t:&os s:;;;‘ is eighté |\to accommodate him, | : :i‘ bal as did ‘player No. 1. ‘\Yhen rf-‘:‘lg gsez .| ceived by the last player, it is again ds returned, and so on until player I\o.l 7 D; â€"\1 has his or‘ginal place at th'e head | o. Han .‘ of the line. The team complet_mg‘ the‘ p. 'keé f :".:'(uit first, wins. â€"If the bal‘l is cn‘o!)-;.lul:l ”n' >\ ned, it must be put in action agal.nipusuA g; c| by "‘m‘ nlaver who "lost" it. Tl}lsi ;’va P :U»-"n‘:x is wr}: exciting and never fm‘.srni \_(4) LHay Ne ES MCSE S E> 0 El of knowing that God!ilelps and delivers| , him and that be may be sustained by a free spirit, that is a spir.t willing â€"and ready to do what is right, doing |right freely and spontaneously and not| © through fear or by compulsion. { 11â€"17. _ Bloodguiltiness. . David'-‘ wcrime was equivalent to murder, and | ; the prayer of verso 14 seems approâ€" priate on his lips. Evidently he beâ€"|, ‘ lieves that forgiveness of such a crime ;‘ is consistent with God‘s righteousness, i or rather that righteousness is mantâ€" ‘{ested in the forgiveness of one who | : ‘‘ sincerely repents. Therefore he will‘] » fu‘a’.se God, and that he may praisel + Him more perfectly he prays for the ‘| open mouth and ready speech. | â€"\ _Thou Desirest Not Sacrifice, Comâ€" *‘ pare 40: 6; Isa. 1; 11â€"17; Amos 5 21â€"24. e ‘Sacrifice, like other forms of worship, ". may be acceptable to God if it expressâ€" ; es real love, obedience and devotion. \But as a mere form it is empty and * menningleas. Only the sincere peniâ€" !tence of a broken spivit, the pain o£| t‘ a broken and a contrite heart, can| 2| make the sinner‘s prayer acceptable â€"| or pleasing to God. e.! Thomas Carlyle wrote of David‘s n‘ sin and repentance, AS reflected in 0| Psalms 32, 51 and elsewhere, as folâ€" e|lows: "David‘s life and history, &3 o,| written for us in those Psaims of his,| e.| I consider to be the truest emblem\ sâ€"| ever given us of a man‘s moral proâ€" 14| gress and warfare here below. All r,| earnest souls will ever discern in it (y| the faithful struggle of an earnest so | human soul towards what is good and n | best. Struggle often baffiedâ€"sore, as| baffiedâ€"driven as into entire wreck; in‘ yet a struggle never ended ever with ig| tears, repentance, trq'e unconquerable 1 purpose, } first year‘s laying, she has proved to‘ be profitable for seven straight years,| and at this writing lays an egg every other day. From the tests made to date, it would seem to be more wise to keep hens until four years old than to sacâ€" rifice them at twoâ€"that is, taken as a flock. However, trapnesting should bel iadopted so that it may be known just when a hen ceases to be profitable, and then she should be gotten rid of, {regardless of her age. ‘l The poultryman who adopts a sysâ€" |tem by which he is able to pick out |\his profitable hens, is the man who | makes the most money out of the \least number of fowls. i in the wife‘s face come from just getting or neglecting to help h |bit now and then. â€" There is no Defter 1 day than by helping Wit Take your boy wilh yOU W Let the little fellow know Proper sports and proper joys. Be a comrade of the boys; Take them swimming now and then, Let them learn the ways of men. ith some chore (Exod. 12: the leper "in (Lev. 14: 1 yerun anew." ti TORONTO 2: 22), and for "in the day of his : 1â€"7), and other| ions (Heb. 9: 19).| fore, as the post‘s The â€"catcher er way to start the ing the farm wife Too many wrinkles t forâ€" her a gravy on dry bread. Or » (3) Softâ€"boiled or poached egg. And‘ (4) Vegetables, same as from twelve to eighteen months, beets, rutabagas, turnips and plain stewed tomatoes may be added. And \ (5) Glass of milk, And (6) Dessertâ€"Apple sauce, baked apâ€" ple, blanc mange, cornstarch, custard, | junket, stewed prunes or plain rice | pudding. | . Supper, 5.80 p.m.: | â€"(1) Wellâ€"cooked cereal with milk. And Diet Two to Three Years. ‘ Three meals a day. No food beâ€" tween meals. Breakfast, 7.30 a.m.! (1) Juice of one sweet orange or pulp of six stewed prunes or stewed â€"YOUR BABY (3) Softâ€"boiled or poached egg wiWnt . CS stale bread. or toast. And * 'g;“e me (4) Glass of milk. et. Dinner, 12 to 1 pm.: T“th{ (1) Broth or soup made of vegeâ€" my ‘; tables, chicken, beef or mutton and o yl thickened with peas or rice. . And ‘b":e"; (2) White meat of chicken, lamb| i: t;‘° tan‘ rava raast beef or steak or boiled | :n:m" »r baked apple. And (2) Wellâ€"cooked cereal with milk, (2) Beef juice, two ounces o ;Supper, 5.30 p.m.: (1) Milk with sts and butter. Or _ _ (2) Cereal milk. (2) Glass of milk. Or (3) Dry breud at_\fi milk Three meals a dayâ€"at 7, 12.30 and 5.30. No food between meals. Water frequently. is s o2 C are c ) cabiectn n _ Milk should be diet. f UIOE Cerealâ€"Must be cooked three or more hours. Oatmeal should be given several times a week. Breadâ€"Dry, aweiback and toast. Soupsâ€"Beef broth with vermicell, beef tea, chicken broth with rice, milk soups and vegetable soups. Meatâ€"Beef should be generally rare and should be given not more than once a day. Roast beef, lamb chops, broiled tenderloin, . minced. White meat of chicken well cooked 1 Bsc tus EWCB C Buusis Dessertsâ€"Dauce Or DAF custard, junket, orange prunes, rice pudding, ta; syrup on bread. YounÂ¥ \better off without candy, of strictly pure candy 1 and minced,. Boiled or b1 fish. Crisp bacon. Eggs, or poached. wC l «o Hanle w Or poatET: Vegetablesâ€"All vegetables should be thoroughly cooked and mashed. Asâ€" paragus tips, string beans, carrots, tomatocs, stewed celery, steamed rice, puree of Bermuda chions stewed soft. with milk, peas, baked or mashed poâ€"| tatoes and spinach. Macaroni or spaghetti in milk may be added. ‘ Dessertsâ€"Sauce or baked apple, cup custard, junket, orange juice, stewed prunes, rice pudding, tapioca, jelly or ‘syrup on bread. Young children are better off without candy, but one piece of strictly pure candy may be given "* T9A af three after a meal. Ripe a child of three & bananas if baked casionally., Torbidden Foods. | Meatsâ€"All fried meats, corned beef,| dried beef, brains, kidney, liver, sweetbreads, duck, fa.n_xe, goose, ham, pork, sausage, meat stews and dressâ€". ings from roasted meats. ' Vegetablesâ€"Fried vegetables of all varieties. Cabbage, green corn, CUâ€" cumbers, pickle, all raw articles such as raw celery, raw onions and olives. Bread and Cakeâ€"Griddle cakes, ""%t bread, rolls, sweet cakes, also bread or cake with dried fruits or sweet Lfrosting. Desserts =Store candy, nuts, pastry, pie, preserves, salads, tarts. ‘ Cerealsâ€"The readyâ€"toâ€"serve or dry | navsals should not be given to nny‘ â€"Cerealsâ€"The cergals should child under f (2e. xz â€" Testhing. | *« & At birth, e4ch tiny tooth lies partlys SBod lend embedded in a cavity in the jawhone,| year should surrounded with and covered by thei after hayir soft tissues of the gum.. As baby| the rest of grows, the teeth grow also and if baby | wireworms, Wit th milk and glass of stale bread or toast hould be generally| be given not more . Roast beef, lnmbl tenderloin, . minced. chicken well cooked| iled or broiled fresh n. Eggs, soft boiled the main article of may , or dish coth lies partly; Sod lend to be used for corn next in the jawhone,| year shopld be plowed immediate!y covered by thel after haying, end cultivated deeply um, _ As baby| the rest of the summer to reduce the be given 0C with is healthy they are ready to eut through the gums at the sixth or seventh month. Following is the normal time of Upper Jaw. 1. Middle cutting tooth, eight to‘ twelve months. % 2. Next cutting tooth, eight to twelve months. ‘ 3. Canine or "eye," eighteen to twentyâ€"{our. months. f 4. First molar (grinder), fif/teen months 8 Tecthing is a normai proC@S® af"" very seldom makes the baby ill. If baby is sick, or has {ever or looee bâ€"wels, do not attribute it to teething, [Do not give him a rubber ring or A patent article on which to bite and cut his teeth, for they are seldom clean. A clean, smooth, silver teaâ€" ‘spoon makes a good toy and at the i same time is safe for him to bite. ‘Keep the fingers and any unclean |article out of baby‘s mouth. Tooth brushâ€"The health of the secâ€"| ond teeth depends much upon the care: given the first set. As soon as they‘ make their appearance, baby‘s teeth should be cleaned each day with a soft cloth or brush.. When he is old enough the child should be taught the daily use of the toothbrush. If he is given a goodâ€"tasting dentifrice or tooth paste he will enjoy keeping his teeth clean. The first teeth are necessary to hold the proper shape of the jaw until the second teeth are ready to break through. For that reason they shou‘ld not be neglected. At the first sign of decaying teeth the child should be taken to a dentist. The first set of teeth is replaced Dy| the permanent teeth beginning with| the sixth year. The sixth year molar| may be recognized as the sixth tooth, counting from the midline of the jaw in front toward the back. Because this tooth comes through at the time the child is losing its temporary teeth| his tooth is often mistsken for one| of them and is allowed to remain unâ€"| treated and to decay. It is especially desirable that a child should be taken ;to a dentist at this tixxig because the| sixâ€"year molar is one of the most imâ€"| ‘fiolr& i 5: iEf the teeth. E t sometimes happens that the first | teeth &?e £o g‘m tfii they do not fall | out, but remain in the jaws and crowd | back the second teeth, making them ‘lcomo in misshapen and | irregular. | Irregular teeth and jaw may be remâ€" edied when a child is young. 1| Beautiful teeth are the right of 1 every person. Sound teeth are necesâ€" 1 sary to good health. { In any modern city it will be found | that many of the most prominent peoâ€" ple come from the country, and the great majority are descended from parents or grandparents who lived in | the country. 3p w« S'econd molar (grinder), twentyâ€" Cull the Farm Flock. mty of these first or i each jaw. As a help the baby teeth, recall is many teeth in the ore are fingers on two a baby has as Mmany a normal process and fi h irreguiar.| (1) It gives strengt" "‘b‘ "’”k the balioonâ€"like cells of Fo are composed, by keepit right of| gistended. are‘necess| (2) It serves as food hydrogen and oxygen, rilt an Lo en as is an .{m'“im 1 be found’ many plant materiais. rinent 9°°'1 clements make up abou y, and the: of the dry weight of pl 24 \¢20y.| 90 per cent, of the gree It came at Christmasâ€"a Rainy Boxâ€"addressed to the mother olot;’o energetic children who were blessed with the full quota of initiative usuâ€" ally attributed to wholesome, happy children of from five to ten years of age and who were frequently in disâ€" grace owing to misapplied energy. [ On the outside of the box was writâ€" ten the words, To be opened on the FIRST RAINY DAY." For a time the interest of the family was centred in the desire for a raging storm so that there might be no quesâ€" tion about the moral right to open Mother‘s strange gift. At last the day came when there could be no quesâ€" tion as to the weather conditions and the box was opened with joyous cereâ€" | mony.. Six neatly wrapped parcels came to light when the cover was reâ€" | moved, each one sealed and numbered. A card was also enclosed upen which was written the statement. "Parcel No. 1 to be used on the FIRST RAINY DAY, No. 2 on the SECOND RAINY DAY, etc., the B0X with the rest of the parcels to be put away safely until needed." Upon opening the parcels on sucâ€" gessive rainy days, the children disâ€" covered that each contained simple inexpensive things but in each in stance materials which furnished op portunity for self expression, whict | would give legitimate outlet for stor edâ€"u; In the first parcelâ€"two pairs of blunt scissors; a pad of coarse paper; a dozen pictures selécted from magaâ€" zines or newspapers, to be used as cutâ€"outs; in this way sugresting a source of unlimited material. In successive parcelsâ€"two tubes of paste and a package of papers of varâ€" ied shapes and colors. _ No. 3. Two clay pipes and a small and animals. No. 6. Two metalâ€"tipped string and two boxes of large glass bea difering in form and color. Many other suggestive play m terials could be included in such a bo always keeping in mind the numb of children in the family, their r« pective .ages and natural interes i Any mother would welcome such a g as she plans occupation for a ©< ‘vnlescent child, or as she looks ahe to the summer vacation. Better s ‘the children might do the eollect of their materials and either make gift of a Rainy Day Box to some it friend or make on in the winte§ ti and not open it until the long s THE RAINY DAY mer vacation has errived. Chi might be able to assemble #u( Mystery Box from their own material if it is not possible to s it in any other way. It‘s worth t1 Since the war a problem which ha been worrying agriculturists all ove the country is that of keeping th boy and the girl on the farm. All th literature that I have seen on the sul ject shows quite plainly that no pas rcea has been discovered to meet th difficulty in connection with the ex dus of the boys and girls from t} farms. I think that hon. gentlems will all agree that we C# at least go a long way towards sol ing the problem by adopting bett ’fnrm methods; by making the hon more attractive; by keeping bett | livestock; by making more profit « |\ the farm, which will make possib O" PM play a very keep the you by rendering cont out of House 0 | _ _(3) Welep dissolves plantâ€"focs in the soil and carries it into the plant. I also _di:i_ri_but.es the elaborate maâ€" tqjun in the plant to the parts where they are used. i (4) By evaporation the plant 1% protected somewbat against the temp» lontnm high enough to cause injury to its delicate tissues, Make Life on the Farm Appealing. Functions of Water in Plant Growth. ry A pound of pla conducive to happiness ent; by making condit for the farmer‘s wife; ; by doing everything we Iife on the farm ApPDPeA serves as food. Its elem: and oxygen, are separi i, in‘g gru‘hvp: 9! mes; l% dfl ‘axi}gor, w s an ial constituen nt 'in:{e.:m Water ar« make up about 50 per € y weight of plants, and â€" ?t of ?. green weight. Veter dissolves plantâ€"foo C3 Aiae it ints tha n Gois, C AQ)C lissolves plan‘ tries it into th tes the elabor that we can way towards solvâ€" by adopting better making the home by keeping better ing more profit on will make possible conditions such as to happiness and makine conditions ells of which keeping the wax cray 11 ture 50 per cent. ts. and over nd form to suC re elements envarated h ons and nts ter of J 3 Ne *A <ylth <ybh

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy