Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Aug 1914, p. 12

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. PAGE TWELVE Ae---- J DUSTLESS--By 'and direct draft arnac opening damper wh ~~ M¢Clar dust damper en shaking all dust is carried up e smoke pipe. See the McClary dealer or write for booklet. Eo SOLD BY J. B. BUNT & CO. OUR TOBACCO With the "Roouter" on ft. i louder as he goes slong. pound. For chewing and erow) BE moking. AT A, MACLEAN'S, Ontario Street Live Lobster Dominion Fish Co. yverew HERE'S A BUSINESS POINTER BOATS IRR BER) hal 'DAVID HALL ~~ 66 Brock St. Phone 335. - Res. 856 PERRIN'S GONDOLA weeeg biscuit of most delectable flavor, short, and light as At other time, a feather. tea-time, or any it is sure to be a success. THE PERRIN "SAMPLER" PACKAGE will A box of delight you. delicious Apdey biscuits - send 10c. (coin or stamps) name for it. 0. S. Perrin & Company Limited A DAINTY GLOWING DRESSING wm MEN-WOMEN-BLOND -BRUNETTE B.V MARION CO BRIDCEBURG ONT om, BOOKLET I ------------ hb = Poisonous Matches In less than two years it will be unlawful to buy or to use poisonous white phosphorus matches Everybody should begin to use <7" THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1914. Lam -- THE CARE OF THE CHILD | | Article No. 4--The Runabout Baby. Babies from one to two and a halt years are called "'runabouts,'" be- cause at this age they begin to get on their feet and soon run about. The baby that has been well fed, has regular habits and plenty of fresh air gets well quickly and does not often get sick. The baby whose mother has not looked after these things will take a long time to get well, may be sick often and die. General Needs, "-- in general, they need the sane fresh air, good food and cleanliness as the litile baby. These older children begin to eat other food, and are able to do many things that the little baby could ne do. This chapter is to give general information for their care. The foundation of a child's life is laid by the time it is a year old. The second year is as important as the first. The baby is older and strong- er, but it needs just as much care to keep it well and strong..lo make ii ready for school when it is a little older. The Second Summer, -- There are no terrible second summers for the careful mother. The baby who is fed, clothed, bathed and housed properly all the year round will be able to stand its second summer as well oas its first. In the summer food is more likely to spoil, and this is the real cause 'of second summer troubles. mXira care is needed to seen tha: milk is kept fresh and sweet, and that no food is given which is not in perfect conditions. Disordered Stomach. -- For at- tacks of disordered stomach two teas poonsfuls of castor-oil should be gi ven immediately, and all food, solid and fluid, should be taken away, ex cept barleyv-water. The baby can go hungry for a day or two without barm. When the baby is improving it may gradually have some milk with the barley-water. The food may then ontain one-quarter milk and the rest barley-water. Each day a little more milk is added, until the baby is taking the regular food again Many a death and many an attack summer complaint is turned aside by the quick use of castor-oil, and by lessening the food, particularly cut ting out milk as soon as the child be comes ill. Food. -- At the age of one year new things may te "added to the baby's food. If it has had a dish of cereal each day since it was eight months old, it can now begin to tas- egg and orange, or prime Juice, and a little beef broth or dish gravy A Beries of Thirteen Articles of Interest, Appearing Each Saturday. (Article VI) to with butter or dish-gravy, bread and butter. As desert, tapioca or rice pudding, custard, junket or some of the following fruits (fresh or stew- ed); strawberries, grapes freed from the seeds, peaches, juice of oranges, and stewed apples. Supper--6 P.M. Bread and butter. Milk with soda or similar biscuit and a dish of cereal. Preparing Food. -- The cereals eaten at this age should be cooked for at least one hour. Vegetables must also be cooked until thoroughly soft. Potatoes should be baked or boiled until soft. The fireless cooker is used, these things should be cook- ed overnight. The fireless cooker is an excellent kind of stove for pre- paring food for children. It cooks vegetables and cereals perfectly There are many inexpensive fireless cookers on the market. They save many times their cost in labor and fuel. The baby may be given a little pure olive oil on 'baked potato in place of butter, during the winter months. It gives heat to the body, is very nutritious, and has a good effect on the bowels. Bad Habits of Eating.--If a child is allowed to sit at table with the st of the family, it should never be | given food from the table. A taste of the wrong kind of food may upset the child and make it ill. A child who has never been given things from the table will learn not to expect them If a child is hungry between meals, | offer dry bread or crackers. Eating | at regular times is a good habit. If] eating between meals is never begun, | it will not have to be stopped. Kat-| ing on the street or in cars is not | necessary .Childreén do what they are accustomed to do. If you give them | things to eat the first time they go out, they will expect them every | time. There need be no break in this| rule if the child is having meals at| the same time every day. | Sleep.--Runabout children need a. great deal of sleep. They should be! in bed at half-past six or seven o'-| lock every night, and should sleep with open windows. Up tO eighteen months children should Still take a nap in the morning and one in. the afternoon. After tliat, one nap is en- ough. Little i Ten Should never be kept out after their usual bedtime. | It is a poor plan to take little child- dren on long excursions that keep them from home until eight or nine o'clock in the evening or even later. The years of childhood are so few that parents can afford to give up a without fat. At fifteen months, a little baked potato may be given. In the tables given on page 19, indicat- ing a cheice of foods and meats, it is| not interded that the very day the! child becomes a year old ali of the ; things there mentioned should all be tried at once. For several weeks,!| the next juice. more egg and orange juice are grad- a teaspoonful of a whole egg and juice of an orange each day. It may take a few weeks until this point is reached. In same way, beef broth is to be added, a little taste at first, with more gra- dually until. a noontime meal made up of the broth with barley or farnia and dried bread or toast What the Child May Eat. -- The | things | following tables show the which a healthy child of the given may eat, and the time for meals Milk should always be brought to the boiling point and then rapidly ages bread crumbs dipped in a teaspoonful | well cared for, of the yolk of a soft-boiled egg are j given at breakfast one day, and on! orange | as when younger, If this agrees with the baby, | ually added, until the baby is taking | the | few pleasures until the child is old enough to enjoy them. Little babies become cross and: frethul if kept out after the usual bedtime. It makes nervous, pale children "WH¢' do not grow strong and are not as smart as others. When children get sick it of ten shows that they have not been Baths.--The runabout baby needs o0 be batlred every day just as much Dress, --Its clothes also need to be kept clean. As soon as possible afler it begins to be on its feet and has | been trained to .be clean, dress should be given up in favor of the colored rompers that can be uted by boys or girls. The colored clothes keep clean longer, and the rompers i5{ allow the child to walk or roll ai | on the floor without soiling the un- | derclothing. Rompers are not apt to catch in things and cause falls. | Underclothes that are of hea | cotton or that have wool in them should be worn summer and winter Lighter weight is needed, in summer A little wool which ws EDDY'S NON.POISONOUS "Sesquin Matches" And thus ensure safety in the home. cooled prevents colds 0p ed { fOge from sudden chilling of the { skin by taking up the perspiration One Year to Eighteen | The Bed.--The bed in. which the Months. 3 baby sleeps should be kept clean anc Tw . 4 \ be well aired every day. Managemen Breakfast -- 6 to 7 A.M.. Either | of the mother's time will give her the (1) A glass of milk with stale bread hours when the baby sleeps, for keep or (2) Oatmeal, arrowroot, wheaten ing bed and clothes clean and pre Diet From made into a = | Mid-summer Oxford Sale / Right now in the midst of the oxford season, we are offering big reductions on our complete lines Next season we will have new shoes to show you. Men's $5.00 Oxfords reduced to $3.79. | Small Sizes and Low Prices P $249 for a Pair of Oxfords if you can wear sized 1-2 or Sens $4, $4.50 Pumps and Oxfords reduced Children's Shoes 99c. Children's Fine Turned Sole 8li Yr vie to 5, regular $1.75 and $200. Clearing H we and Sand- 5 ) TILLY - HOME OF GOOD SHOES grits, hominy grits, ete, well-cooked porridge, or one of the numerous good uncooked foods on the market, with the milk mixture in use poured over it, or (3) A soft-boiled or poached egg with bread and a glass of milk. Dinner -- 12 to 1 P.M. Either (1) Bread moistened with dish-gravy, free from fat, beef tea or beef juice, and a glass of milk, or (2) Rice or grits moistened in ihe same way and a glass of milk, or (3) A soft-boiled egg and stale bread thinly buttered and a glass of milk. Rice, sago or tapioca pudding or junket, in small quantities as desert, may be given with any of these diets. .Sapper -- 5 to 6 P.M. Bread and milk, and cereals. Diet From Eighteen Months To Two Years. . Breakfast--7 A.M. Choice of (1) a salf-boiled egg with bread and but- ter and a glass of milk. (2) Porridge as deseribed in the previous list. i. Dinner--12 to 1 P.M. Choice of (1) Boiled rice or a baked potato, mashed and moistefied with dish- gravy or beef juice; a glass of milk. (2) Mutton or chicken broth with barley or rice in it. some bread and butter, and some rice pudding made with milk. (3) "A small portion of minced white meat of chicken or turkey; or ced rare roast beef, beefsteak, lamb or fish: bread and butter and a glass of milk. Supper.~--6 to 6 PM. (1) Bread and milk, or (2) Bread and butter, a glass of milk and a dish of cereal. * Diet From Two To Three Years. Broakfast--7 to 8 AM. Choice of (1) A small portion of oatmeal, ho- miny grits, wheaten grits, cornmeal or other cereal porridge with plenty of milk, bread and butter. (3) A soft-boiled egg, bread and butter an of-milk. ~ - Meal---11 A.M. Ether (1) glass of milk with bread and but- 2 or th a soda or other biscuit, pr (2) Bread and miilk. Chicken or breakfast | | paring food. Talking.--All babies do not begin to talk at the same age sney wil { begin to make sounds and attempt | speech from six months on. At the {age of a year many children can say a few words, but they are usually two years old before they use sen tences. Walking--The time of walking al | s0"has no rule. A child will wall when its legs are strong enough six to eight months a child that is well will begin to stiffen its legs on the mother's lap. At one year, or even much younger, it will sta alone and then begin to walk. It will teach itself as it feels it has strength Children especially ' heavy ones, should not be coaxed to walk if they make no attempts to do so themsel- vee, Forcing a child to walk wi Every Meal Brought Agony ButSince Taking "Little Digesters" He Can Eat Heartily From Osgoode Station, Ont., comes a story of five of suffering from In- digestion ihn ve years of doctoring in ittle Digest. ers' and acompletecure. Mr.R.H Ralph the is own story--thus : did not find a cure until 1 usin "Little Di » begun using | | | | | | enough to bear its weight, to be: 1 Governor Russel | Service (Commission, and trustee of { the New chief object of his client was to ob- us a total crop of hetween 50.000, 000 and 60,000,000 barrels, last census year the crop was 000,000 barrels. the record year for this country, of new orchards, will contribute that end. The erop will. probably be ninety percent. of a full : cause the bones of the legs, not hard and then we have the bow-legged child. The child who is ill from be- ing poorly fed, and has the disease known as "Rachitis," er "Rickets", will show it plaintly in its curved legs. Its soft bomes will not pe: walking at all, unit tne proper feed- ing brings increased strength. The doctor is the only one who can treat such a case. {To Be UAptinued Next Saturday.) PEA CROP FAILURE. Aphis Attacked it--Farmers and Canners Suffer. Grafton, July 31.-----In the vicinity of Grafton, Lakeport, and Wicklow farmers entered extensively this year into the growing of peas for the ¢an- ning factories. Last year large pro- fits were realized from this industry. This summer many farmers will hot get back the price of the seed from their entire crop At Wicklow the S24 ALLOW ME TO PRESENT \ MY BEST FRIEND EW.GILLETT CO™LTD. ORONTO. WINNIPEG. WONTREAL, crop of peas is drawn in the straw to a central farmers' barn, where the thrashing is carried, on, the green peas then being taken to the canner- ies. The #stimated loss to the far- mers in this section is said to _be nearly $10,000. The early peas were about 40 per cent, of a crop, and it is the late varieties that are proving a failure. About the first week in July they were attacked by the aphis, so that while the vines matured the pods did not, Unfortunately, the bulk of the crop grown in this section is said to have been of the late variet- The loss is a-heavy one, both to farmers and fo the cannery em- ployees ies CHARLES WARREN Newest United States Assistant Attorney General "HARRIS & EWING, A. Warren, of Warrenville, it really ought to be, because Charles War- ren of Boston, ushered in June into the galaxy of lawyers that constitute the official family of Attorney Gen- eral McReynolds is sui generis. He is a keen young lawyer with a prac- tice that is substantial: his father before him a Cleveland democrat, was like-wise a lawyer of distineti- on, and the family imprint is writ- ten all over the saered Bay State dockets, around the Hub at least. Warren was associated with the late and . before that with Moorefield Storey. He was chairman of the Massachusetts Civil England Conservatory of Music He's been president of the Keene Electric railway 'and the au- thor of a number of books. He is a Harvard man, and a clubman and has just joined the National Press club at Washington, along with al most all official Washington WANTED TO STOP GOSSIP. Son of Lord Redesdale Sued Sport- ing Times Editor. London, July 31.--The recent wedding of Fraulien von Siriedlan- der-Sulil, daughter of the German "coal king," and the Hon John Freeman Mitford, son of Lord Redes dale, which was followed after a few weeks of married life by the se- paration of the young couple; had an extraordinary sequel in the English courts yesterday, when an applica- tion was made for the granting of a criminal information" against the editor of the Sporting Times: The paper had published a para- graph suggesting that the separa- tion was due to the character of the husband. Mr. Mitford's counsel read letters from Mrs. Freeman Mitford to Lady Redesdale, written after the separa- tion in which the husband was re- ferred to affectionately. Counsel added that the application had been brought in order to stop the gossip which had been circulates particularly If Berlin. The court rejected the application, purely on technical grounds, the Lord Chief Justice saying that the [libél Was "peculiarly atrocious", but that the English courts made it a practice to refuse to grant any such applica- tions to persons not holding public office. Counsel for Mr. Freeman Mitford expressed sati&faction, saying the tain wide publicity in view of extent of the malevolent gossip. the An Apple Year. Sy racuse Post-Standard The best apple censas for 1911 gives tha 46, - It was 32,000,600 . in was 26,000,000 last vear. fourteen may prove to he In 1912. Wt Nineteen New York state, with its hundreds "Not only in New York -and in the s tnsnt west, world, ' the but in other the A Comfortable, Speedy and --DAVIS -- DAVIS -- DA "id ---- aka Well Equipped | LAUNCH FOR CHARTER Boat Builder A. C. KNAPP Boat Livery Ontario St. East, Kingston. S mn, - DAVIS -DAVIS--DAVIS DAVIS -DAVIS--DAVIS : BREAKDOWNS - Quickly Repaired 3 ; Quickly Repaired -- This is the season that vou require a motor boat ® and a good reliable engine. Get a DAVIS motor if you wish for satisfaction. Lo Your present engine may require some repairs. > Bring your boats to us and we will give you prompt & attention in repairing the boats and engines, Davis Dry Dock Company, 2 < Foot of* Wellington St. 5 ta DAVIS--DAVIS-DAVIS---DAVIS--DAVIS--DAVIS At Pt BAM IS MILD, PURE, APPETIZING Jyst the Beverage for the busy man: -- rests the nerves and ensures sound sleep. HK not sold in your neighborhood, write JOHN LABATT, LIMITED LONDON CANADA BD Special arrang shipment to ments for direct James McParland, Agent, 339-341 King St. East. nm Men's Low - Shoes We are going to clear out the remainder of our low shoes in Patent Leather, Tan Calf and and Gun Metal, sizes Gand 7. ! Regular $3.00, $3.50 & $400for . $2.00 'H. JENNINGS, t

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