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Durham Review (1897), 4 Dec 1930, p. 6

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to a# other lards during the past century is culy 100 years old. He is the desâ€" cerdant of the good St. Nlchohn.-vho was; the giftâ€"bearer for the little Dutch children originally, and was borrowed in turn by the Belgians, French, Span 1th and English as the patron saint at Ch;istmas. . But St, Nicholas was not the jolly. old telow wo know, with Slo‘;h and pelvdser and jincling bells, "Nicholas, and I serve my King," he ropeated. "Caesar?" asked a curlouns mother, "Nay, not Caesar, but the newâ€"born King of Love." And so came the first St. Nicholas aÂ¥ Christmastide, . The Santa. Clzins that all Canadian chiidren know and who travelled into The nest morning, instead of pleadâ€" ing poverty as he had intended, Nichâ€" olas was the first in the line of taxâ€" payers waiting to make his declaraâ€" tion. The collectors marveled that one drossed so poorly should pay so richly. _ Straight from tax paying, Nicholas went to the placo of merâ€" chandise whore shildren congregated. With arms filled and doukey laden, he fared forth to the poorer places and there dispansed his gifts. Ha was soon the center of a throng of happy children. In answer to a question, he said: "I am Nicholas of Armeon." ‘ "Hail, St. Nicholas," burst upon the A tiny hand stretched out toward Nicholas as though in benediction, and from outside came the faint echo: "On earth peace, to mon good will." fumbling in his robe Nicholas drew forth a gold pieco and laid it among the other gifts. 1 When the Christ Child lay in the manger beside Mary and gifts woere being offered unto Him, Nicholas, aroused from his sleep, jotned the givrers through curiosity. Then grip ped by some compelling force, he knelt by the side of Mary, now holding her Babe. Looking at those two, Mother and Babe Divins, grim shackâ€" les fell from the heart of Nicholas of Armeon, "My King‘ My King!" hevcried, "erer wl 1 servd Theo, and Thee St. Nicholas of Armeon was a misor, rich in lands and flocks and herds. He eame to Bethichem dressed as a beg gar, that he might avold paying the full taxes demanded by the officers of Caesar. As ho objected to paying for a room at the inn, he was sleeping in the stable beside his donkey when there came to the stable Joseph and Mary, the Mothor of Jesus. The custom of placing lights on the tre is goenerally attributed to Martin Lnther, who, on walking homs one Christmas Eve, was filled with awe at the beauty of the stars. Going home he tried to describe it to his wite by placing some lighted candles in the branches of the Christmas tree, sayâ€" Ing: "This is like the Christmas sky,"* The tree at first w giftâ€"bearer, but was ; â€"â€"the tree itself of ( and majesty, and the mortality. "Take this for your Christmas tree, and each year, when the feast day arâ€" rives, set it up in your homes and with jJoy and song celebrate the birthday of Christ." A Christmas tree as part of the holiâ€" day observance originated at the time of the conversion of the Gorman tribes, when‘St. Boniface came, one Christmas Day about 1,200 years ago, upon a pagan group gathered under the great "Thunder Oak," about to sacrifice a little boy to their god, Thor. All eyes were fixed upon a priest in white robes who held a great hammer poised over the head of the child. When it was about to fall, St. Boniface satrode up to the priest, stayed his hand, and cried out to the people to cease their false worship He told them the story of the birth of the Child at Bethlichem, and felling a small fir tree, gave it to them, saying: It was not until the rgign of the Christian emperor, Constantine, in the fourth century, that the observance of Christmas became an established cusâ€" tom, since the early Christians conâ€" sidered the observrance of birthdays a pagan custom. The exchange of Christmas gifts has come gradually, a beautiful, unselfish custom in comâ€" memoration of the greatest gift of all time to the worldâ€"the*Christ Child. The giving of gifts also has a religiâ€" ous significance grounded on the act of the Persian Magi in laying gold, frankincense and myrrh before the Babe in the manger. By EKlizabeth Palmer Theer is no holiday in the whole year around which so many traditions and legends cluster as Christmas. But, while Christmas, St. Nicholas, Santa Claus, are happily discussed for weeks by every child in Christendom, and while every family is anticipating the Christmas tree, the hanging of stockâ€" ings, decorations or holly and greenâ€" ary, putting a candle in the window and burning a Yule log, few children know the origin of these customs. . ‘The smallest child knows that Christmas is celebrated as the birthâ€" day of Christ. Yet thore is no histortâ€" eal record that December 25 was the actual date of the birth of Christ. Hisâ€" Sorians and astronomers agree that it was about the tims of the winter solâ€" stice, when the days were the shortest in the yeoarâ€"near December 21. The early Christmas celebratlons were not confined to one day. There was re jJoicing from December 16 to January 6, The latter date is now known as Twelfthâ€"night. xBA s vas not used as a purely symbolical Christ‘s grandeur green of His imâ€" Bir Arthur Rostron (right), noted oye to his chief oficer, Capt. Bissett after 45â€"years Servite. Wonderful powers and properties were attributed to â€"the mistletoe, and when paganism passed, the early Christians clung to many of the pagan ideas about the plant. _ There was good luck in mistletoo, so at Christâ€" Theâ€" mistletoo is a parasite which grows not only on oaks, but is found on pecan, hickory, locust, osage, sas safras, persimmon, ash, and various fruit trees, notably apple, cherry and pear trees. But it prefers the oak trees, and the superstitious and mysâ€" terious Druids, the priests of the paâ€" gans of the British Isles and the lands on the south side of the English Chan-i nel, got the idea that the mistleto® was the soul of the oak and that, as it had lost its follage, it was an imâ€" mortal thing and was a symbol of everlasting life. Holly has been popular for decoraâ€" tions since the time of the Druids. It is regarded as the special tree of the fairies, but there is a superstition that it is unlucky to take holly into the house before Christmas. The cradles of Italian children are often decorated with holly to ward off evil. The faces of babies in India and Persia are sometimes washed in a liquid in which: holly bark has been soaked, as a charm against wicked spirits. _ The use of holly at Christmas is thought to bring good luck to the house in which it is used. It is told that once upon a time St. Nicholas wanted to help a poor but proud nobleman, and climbing to the roof of the man‘s home dropped some coins down the chimney. The coins happened to light in the man‘s stockâ€" ings, which he had hung by the fire place to dry. The gift was considered by the nobleman to be of supernaâ€" tural origin, and, naturally, others took up the custom of hanging stockâ€" ings by the fireplace. From this, supâ€" posedly, developed the tradition t\hat Santa Claus comes down the chimney to bring his gifts to the inmates of the' house. In this poem Santa Claus was for the first time introduced to the childâ€" ren of America with the form and the features and the characteristics by which he is known toâ€"day. Here for | the first time they were told exactly ,how he looked and what kind ot ‘i chap he was: "His eyesâ€"how they twinkled; bis dimples, how merry! ~ His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry! His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow And the beard of his chin was as white as the snow. Since then every child has been able to picture in his mind the jolly old fellow who comes clattering over the roof with his eight tiny reindeer, scatâ€" tering joy and gladness and gifts. Though the author of the poem gave his life to books and learning and litâ€" erary work, he is remembered only by the lines which gave us Santa Claus. Moore was born July 5, 1779, in a big white house above the Hudson, then situated in a suburb known as Chelsea, now in the neighborhood ‘of Greenwich Village. There he spent his childhood, married, and raised a large family of children. All around the neighborhood were scattered the farms of the déscendants of the early Dutch Settlers, and as a boy young Moore became familiar with the leâ€" gend of $t. Nicholas, which he transâ€" formed into the American Santa Claus. He called the poem the "Visit of St. Nicholas," but its lovers changed it to " ‘Twas the Night Before Christâ€" mas,‘"* but a dignified gentloman who travelâ€" od in state, on a white horse and with a black servant. It was the poem ‘"‘Twas the Night Betore Christmas" that gave Canadian children the Santa Claus we know toâ€" day. This famous poem, which has been printed and reprinted the world over with every recurring Christmas, has become one of the most fam{liar and bestâ€"loved poems in the language. It was written by Clement Clarke Moore for his two daughters, and first read to them on the evening of Deâ€" cember 23, 1822. A year later it was published i2 the Troy (N.Y.) Sentinel, and has since become immortal. Commodore Says ind properties mistletoe, and d, the early y of the pagan et;mmodofozaf‘ Cuz/xi:.'d flcet. bids good: , on bridge of Berengaria as ho retires Birder ~cs n Osaka, Japanâ€"Hon, Mrs. â€" Victor Bruce, British motorist and aviator, arrived here on Nov. 2ist after a lone flight from London, which she left September 25. She was welcomed by Japaness and‘ British residents and was given a banquet. Newspapers hers lauded her dogged flight across two continâ€" ents to Japan, commonting that she was thefirst woman to attempt the‘ dangerous journey. leenothernes." cesstieuynes British Woman Flier cor, Those who would welcome Him and long for His coming, set a lighted candie in the window to guidse Him on His way." "On every Christmas Eve the little Christâ€"Child _ wanders all over the world, bearing on His shoulders a bundle of evergreons. Through city streets and country roads, up and down hills, to the proudest castle and lowliest hovel, through cold and stormi and sleet and ice, the Holy Child travels to be welcomed or rejected at ‘ the door at which He pleads for sueâ€" Still another legend is responsible for the custom ~of placing a thick, lighted candle in the window Christâ€" mas Eve, which is supposed to be lighted at dusk and to remain through the night: : The Yule log was nearly always an ash log, because a legend avers that it was before an ash fire that the Holy Babe was, first washed and dressed by His mother. . P e on mt | hang a branch of mistletoe over the front door as a sign of good luck and welcome. â€" People entering under it exchanged kisses with the host and his family, and in this way kissing: and the mistletoe becameo associated. “ The Scandinavians used to kindle great fires in honor of their god, Thor.] In some parts of old England, bringâ€" ing in the Yule log was the principal ceremony of Ohristmas Eve. The custom was for the serfs to bring in a load of wood with them' when they came for the Christmas! feast, which was to last as long as it j took to "burn away a wet wheel"â€"a section of green wood. Naturally the "wet wheel"would not be a thin slice, but a log. In later times the cereâ€"| mony was attached to the bringing ln’ of the log. It was drawn into the halli by the servants and each member of | the family in turn, sitting down on the; log, sang a Yule song and drank a glass of als. The log was then cast into the fire with prayers for the safeâ€" ty of the house and the happiness otl; its inmates until next Yuletide. Part : of the Yule log was preserved to lightt , the log of next year. 3 "Goodbye‘ mas our Duke of Gloucester as Abyssinian throne (left) a Reaches Osaka, Japan northern ancestors would ster as he appeared at (left) and Earl of Airlie TORONTO British Royalty at Abyssiman Coronation to ‘employ a candy thermometer in making fondantsâ€"successfully. Apple sherbet or mint ice served in red apple shells‘ from which the pulp‘ has ‘been renmtoved, is a dessert Stuffed Fruits Uso dried prunes, "apricots, figs, or dates. Steam 15 minutes. Make an inciston in each piece of fruit with a sharpâ€"pointed paring knife. Stuft with fondant and cover with a nut ‘meat. Roll in sugar. If not to be eaten immediately wrap in oiled paper and pack in tins. The fruits improve in flavor if allowed to stand a few weeks. Pinecapple fondant is fine to use in stufling theso fruits. Pineapple Fondant 2 cups sugar, 4 cup water, 4 lbs. _crushed pineapple. Putsugar and water in pan and stir until dissolved. Cook to 256 degrees . without stirâ€" ring, keeping sides of pan washed down with a soft cloth moistened in cool water and tied over the tines of a silver fork. Add .crushed pineapâ€" ple, drained from the syrup and cook to 240 deg. F., which is just beyond the soft ball stage, Turn on a platter wet with cold water. When . cool, work with a spatula or knife, . Use this fondant as,the centers Lor bonâ€" bor‘s, roil the pieces in nuts or stuff in dried fruits. It is almost essential to ‘émploy a candv‘ Fharmamatar in _ Beat 1 egg, and add one cup oysters and their liguid, 23 cup cracker crumbs, 14 teaspoon salt and a little pepper. Butter a pie plate and turn mixture into this. Sprinkle with 1â€"3 cup cracker crumbs, dot with butter and bake until crumbs are crisp and brown. & Serve hot with cranberry sauce, Celery and olives also make a pleasing accompaniment for this fesâ€" tive dish. spoonfuls flour. Bake in a slow oven for 15 minutes; then increase the heat and bake in a moderate over one hour. Apple Salad Mix together 1 cup shredded cabbage, 1 cup apple, cut in strips, 4 cup each raisings and nutmeats and sufficient salad. dressing to moisten Serve in cabbage shells or in red apples, holâ€" lowed out to make cup. Garnish with fnely cut strips of apple with red skin left on. m What are some of the recently born dishes? Well, here are a fow creaâ€" tions that have been tried with much success: ! When December appears on the calendar, everyone thinks Of someâ€" thing good to eat. . Winter‘s invigoratâ€" ing air produces hearty appetites, The spirit of hospitality which always is stimulated by the approach of the winter holidays, gives every woman the desire to entertain her friends, ‘ New recipes are born and christenâ€" ed every day in Canadian households.l It is this adventuring with food com-l binations that makes for progress in cooking. _ Without experiments 1nl kitchens, cookery would be in a fixed‘ state. No vaftiety would be found in meals, Festive Dishes For Holidays recent corunation of Ras Tafari at Addis Ababa, with heir apparent to (right) in procession to throme. Cranberry Pudding Baked Oysters mdew Gsr"t : "u hy aa., _ . _ "" *V°°6, the T * .hlillvlytutotimbmt;u "A .sparkling solitaire will usually ~mor is Droper to beings Elfted ! catch. your, swoetio‘s .aye." <o f reakan _â€"_2aas. ’ 1 1b. maple sugar (2%4 cups), % cup water, 1 ths. light corn syrup, % cup thin cream, 23 cup nut meats. Let maple sugar and liquids stand toâ€" gether until sugar is dissolved, cook to 236 F., a soft ball, stirring to keep the maple sugar from curdling the milk. Set saucepan into basin of cold‘ water, and when lukewarm, beat until creamy, add nuts. Beat just as loug as possible, then turn into oiled tin and cut into squares, j «1 u4 ¢ 2 cups sugar, 14 cup white corn ’syrup. & cup water, 1â€"8 tsp. salit, 1 ths. vinegar, Cook to 260 F., without stirring, but wiping sides of saucepan to prevent crystallization. Pour hot syrup slowly into stiffly beaten whites of two eggs. Sit in a low chair, pour with left hand, and beat with right hand, using large bow! and wire whip. Add % teaspoonful each lemon and almond extract. When quite thick, drop by spoonfuls on heavily wared papor, and serve. If to be kept, pour into square buttered tin, mark lnto’ squares. Baked Fudge 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 12 cup flour, 1â€"3 cup butter, 4 squares chocolate, 14 cup nut meats, 1 tsp. vanilla. Break nut meats into pieces and crisp in oven. Melt chocolate and butter in double boiler, add sugar and eggs beaten light, then flour mixed with nuts. Add vanilla. Pour into greased tin % inch thick and bake at 350 > until a toothpick comes clean. Do not have the oven hot as you would for cookies, since the fudgo must be soft, not crisp. Cut into squares with shaer knife while warm. Christmas isn‘t Christmas unless there‘s candy for the kiddies. The grownâ€"ups too, come in for their share. Perhaps if it is homemade, it will be a bit more inviting and unusual. You can make up any of the following reâ€" cipes now and they will be just right for the 25th if wrapped in wax paper. Coffee Fondant 3 cups sugar, 1 cup water, 1 ths. white corn syrup, 3 ozs. coffee, pulâ€" verized. Tie coffee loosely in cheeseâ€" cloth, and cook with fondant to 241F., without stirring, but wiping the sides of the saucepan Four onto cold platâ€"| ter, and when lukewarm, beat with butter paddle. Then knead well. Mold into shape with butternuts, or press into a buttered tin, frost with boiled frosting and sprinkle with nuts, then| cut into squares. ’ While the cranberry season is on, don‘t neglect to can some sauce and make some jelly for other occasions. This acid berry combines well with summer menus. If you are plauning on serving wild fowl, be sure to make the dressing rich in fat to relieve the natural dryâ€" ness of the meat. for those who must resist the temptaâ€" tion of pies and puddings 3 8X Maple Fudge Divinity udge ut + ° CCZR VL on puteâ€"discussion and force: §%: Teffeon qy c3 20y s i s M Toronto. â€" The future of aviation does not lie in lghterâ€"thanâ€"air craft, Captain Stafford Lusk told members of the Canadian Progress Club at their recent luntheon here. Rather, he said, it lHes in ships like the great German plane, the DOX. Captain Lusk endeavored â€" to imâ€" press the safety of fiying. . Aviation, he declared, is past the day of av. perimentation, Flying Ships Are Bi Sea. It is dlrectl-y au;'n' of Otranto from the heel « lan boot. The despatch added that great numâ€" bers were injured in the collapse of numerous houses, with heavy material losses in Messaplik, Palase, Terkooi and Derml. ] The entire population of Telgac was made homeless. The Valona district of Albania is a mountainous region in the Southern part of the country along the Adriatic rivedalinds ty tb Antem / Viennaâ€"A â€" Government® despatch from Tirama reported that a violent earthquake on Nov. 21ist had caused 30 deaths in the Albanian dist"ict of Va‘ona. | L ame . . _ Wrmmms ses There are two ways of ending a di toâ€"discnaalan a.2 a _ " Quake i Eggs, cereals, meats and fish help, but the protective foods do actually protect aainst the chills and ills of winter. _ ‘Cod liver oll is a protector; being rich in vitamin D, the summer sunshine vitamin, and vitamin _ A which is found in butter and milk, The rules of right eating, a recent New York State department of health radio broadcast tells, are comparaâ€" tively simple. _ Daily diet should be constructed around the soâ€"called proâ€" tective foods, pure milk, fruits, *and especially green leafy vegetables. If these necessary â€" and comparaâ€" tively inexpensive foodds form the basis of diet natural appetite vm] likely take care of other bodily needs. Every child should drink one quart, every adult at least one pint of pure milkâ€"the nearlyâ€"perfect foodâ€"every day. _ Fruits such as oranges, lemons, berries, . peaches, apples, and green vegetables as lettuce, spinach, celery, cabbage kale, beet greens and turâ€" nip greens are ood. ; A Few Hints on How to Be Healthy Though Hiberâ€" nating Not by bread alone doth man live but by a wellâ€"balanced diet he may best protect himself against the rigâ€" ors of winter. Winter‘s Here Nowâ€" | Keep Your Health Damage done to the little village, reach $600,000 officials agreed. ETD UTDTUETUTNE E ©20°000 P DIODIUIINUS. ' n Rehabilitation '”wn surted. with nl'j & t'l;ll:xe'e:o;hf::::: :::l-:,‘::;;:::; :" :1262 t:::rl);:":‘ii:t::,;.‘ organization 4u l President Hoover to consider ho;d:io Doctors, treating injured in Oklahoâ€"| nation can :.u"‘:“ nu::..:tb; t ‘:‘_ ma City. hospitals, announced eight‘ "'"""EM:M”" l.ludin 1,000.906 more. of the injured may die. More"ooo'ooo eamiren, 1g0 x: £8,000. than 40 still are being treated. Funâ€" 4°%Mcients. y HLL aro! arrangements had not been comâ€" esc A" pleted except for the four Camel Creek Stom‘g Appl“ students who were killed when the | e little rural school was destroyed by / For WInte!' U‘e the wind. ‘They=wi1ll be buried a« their school house. El y ie 8 eve VR For the first time since a cyclone struck the village at noon Nov. 20, killing 24, injuring more than 100 and wrecking 100 homes and business esâ€" tablishments, order was restored in the settlementgof 2,000 inhabltant,s.} Rehabilitation _ was started with alâ€" most every charitable organization in the state lending aid. | 24 Were Killed In Oklahoma Suburb, and Over 100 Injured Oklahoma City â€" Residents of the storm wrecked village of Bethany near here have started to rebuild thelr‘ crushed homes and bury their dead Some time ago a number of cases were reported from Europe, officials of the Agricultural Department beâ€" came alarmed and put a ban on birds subject to such an ailment. Since that, however, the disease seems to have disappeared.. A circular informâ€" ing customs collectors of the removal of the ban went forward recently. . Tornado Ravaged Village Rebuilds Ottawaâ€"Love birds may now De imported into Canada. So also may parrots, parrakeets, cockatoos, maâ€" saws, lories and lorikeets. . The ban placed on their . importation some months ago has been removed. Love birds, as might be expected from their name, sometimes make people sick. ‘The same is the case with parrots and the other pets menâ€" tioned above. ‘They are subject to a disease termed psittacosis and they are likely to give it to humans. . ‘The mortality is very high among humans‘ who contract it. I Takes 30 Lives ong the Adriatic cross the Strait heel of the Italâ€" " _ _ 5 100 " 6. nrriaid, . h strapping fourâ€"yearâ€"old stud, whid has sired 150 pups in his life time, is ~, . valued alone at $5,000. m O Pm EVY Toronto.â€"One hundred three black and silver fo at more than $250,000, or $1,700 apiece, were shoy Royal Winter Fair here, from Prince Edward Isi.. " . [ â€"Vne hundred and forty. three black and silver foxes, valued at more than $250,000, or more tham $1,700 apiece, were shown at the Royal Winter Fair here, travelling from Prince Edward Island in an exâ€" press car, Ontctthollflllk,}'. strapping fourâ€"vearola 2i.a" .. $ Father gâ€"fiofi,; L2 0.2 00 COB C manp NPAE , Ottawaâ€"Fal} plowing was not se good this year as last. A crop reâ€" port issued recently by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics states: "For all Canada the proportion of land inâ€" tended for next year‘s crops that had been plowed at ~»tober 31, 1930, is estimated at 36 per cent., as comâ€" pared with 46 per cent, in 1929 and 29 per cent. in 1928. By Provinces, the proportions for 1930 are as follows, with "the . corresponding figures for 1929 within brackets : P#nco Edward Island, 60 (75); Nova Sceotia, 32 (48); New Brunswick, 72 (58); Quebec, 74 (78); Ontario, 60 (58); Manitoba, 60 (84) ; Saskatchewan, 21 (19); Alberta, 8, (43); Brittsh Columbia, 43 (4$)." "‘ All bruised fruit, or scabby fruit, | | should be discarded and only perfect | ly sound specimens utilized. If these ‘are wrapped in oiled tissue or in orâ€" dinary tissue paper, keeping is greatâ€" ly facilitated. Storing in bushel boxes is preferable to large containers and these should be kept in a cellar where the temperature does not go much above 40 deg. F., and does not fall below freezing. ‘The average cement cellar, with a heating plant, is not satâ€" isfactory for apple storage. ‘The best | type of cellar is an ordinary dirt floor cellar without any artificial heat. In ’luCh a cellar both temperature and moisture conditions are generally satâ€" 'lsfactory for good keeping. in the event of a cement cellar being the only available place, it would be wise to cover the floor with several inches of sawdust, which should be kept welt dampened down to provide the necesâ€" sary humidity. Such a procedure, acâ€" companied by wrapping and a tomperaâ€" ture ‘of from 40 to 45 deg. F., should result in satisfactory storage condiâ€" tions.â€"Issued by M. B. Davis, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa. Only Sound Specimens Should Be Utilized for this Purpose Apples to be kept for use during the winter mouths should be carefully selected for that purpose. Early maâ€" turing sorts like Wealthy and Gravenâ€" stein can hardly be kept past Christâ€" mas, so that later keeping varieties, like MciIntosh, Northern Spy, Russet and Baldwin, should be selected for this purpose. "They didn‘t have to dodge speed nor overcome handicaps of congestion, ‘There were no automob‘les or elevatâ€" ors, A doorâ€"knob was the most intriâ€" cate mechanism that the babies of 1900 had to master." Dabney said, was a simple thing comâ€" pared to the complex business of beâ€" ing a child toâ€"day. of manners." "We must educate him positively through celebrating his successes. In brief, if a twoâ€"yearâ€"old learns to call his shots well in transferring food from plate to palate, the family cheerâ€" section must get itno action promptly. A few days of cheering may develop and extreme interest in the accuracy ' Washington.â€"The White House conâ€" ference on child health and protesâ€" | tion convened here recently to com | sider the case of the modern baby, iborn and reared in a period greatly | dissimilar to that of the "decade of "A decade ago we tried to make the child conform to adult standard, but the whole idea at present is to get a line on the child‘s attitude and them guide it, . _ sw CE M C ary and kindergarten education at the Urited States Office of Education. "Instead of placing attention on unmâ€" desirable things, we place it in the constructive realm of using fully the elementary drive to do. waanld EPRR ENE C T era of speed, small apartments and traffic signals. \ "Our attitude today is to remove the ‘don‘t‘," explained Dr Mary Dab ney Davis, specialist in nursery, primâ€" ’ L B age ue w ts don‘ts." ‘The 1930 child, in the opinion of these experts, must be taught to think and act independently in a changing Lt w Nx CC# Shown at Winter Fair Fall plowing was not se year as last. A crop reâ€" recently by the Dominion Statistics states: "For all © proportion of land inâ€" next year‘s crops that had i4 Lal To s rials to water, soapy 1 mel is water, t "Wha Hs move @MD Iy sheep infort ers asks .*‘Well. whe‘s the » Flannel a have shrunk stored to th m damp clot shredded . brand, and a little be rial in thi between t! bath conta & little ol: tablespoon| water). the Ing, to dry. The mels w can be ner:â€" 88 bes musel out of «o noi exerci Sunsi Anto it ; wash y precion â€"not t Shade : shady h eate ev your ov top, th« the bas ing air Bleep v winter, you m\ Jo w ©ut No w One of character BHusking for a de wkin cha; ms one «i ears clea regular i baskets 1 gray thr« the last q seled ha has his drawn be husking that cou! ing. fall to y got all tiv hc simple, f0, soon be a; tion on th, stimulated the autop parliament M sun Reo Oh hars} of m chine decas ®ars of field toughest pa this last aut help of a g which is no with a leat} back of tha Re indispe the dry Â¥ice Farmers To X€ then pr Frate Washing How to its, Gay aft ar of the bi intervals er into the w reats of snc geese gone nts of the [ the Spart r will disa is hard, «c cidedly red ps and the n AS aAble i autumn i good 1 nothing YM C1 omin ke dâ€"whi ith «t corn ms w nevi hu red the aft di

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