Ontario Community Newspapers

Milverton Sun, 19 Jul 1917, p. 2

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

: 7 : “Pure and TIG SU ‘ORDER FROM YOUR You can keep the fine natural color in Raspberry Preserves IF YOU MAKE THEM WITH Lantic Su Long cooking fades raspberries, LANT: “AR which dissolves instantly on account of its TIC is the ” granulation. est sugar to use for all Ly e5 on socount of its purity and high sweetening pow is a pure cane sugar equally good for the lable, che general colne and for preserving. 10, 20 and 100-Ib. sacks; 2 and 5-Ib. cartons. ‘THESE FULL WEIGHT ORIGINAL PACKAGES PENS LABELS FREE—Send us a red ball trade- Hips cut ab a @ book of Atlantic Sugar Mee Limited Power Building, Montreal Uncolored” ug You can avoid this by using GROCER BY NAME IN 147 DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME. ond Lesson—Water, Water forms about three-fifths of the total weight of the human body, m this account it is a necessary sonettiaee of the blood stream. The solvent Brapertioa of water are well kn as a carrier throughout a ba aiiiseninctive participant in the process of digestion and elimination pee eeea, of the body i i re- warm interior to the cold exterior of | Mneral the body, and the water in it acts as a distributor of heat. The chemical processes of the body are carried on by the aid of water, and for this reason a a ge amount of it is necessary. quarts daily is the least amount that a healthy body can perform its dutie: This amount may be taken either plain or in bever- | 34; age. The presence of mineral deposits and. gases in water determines’ its Spe Where these substances of a pronounced nature, we have the reir nae water and effer- vescent wai ese waters have} a medici te sai lue and are very often prescribed by physicians for various devenuarnents of the sls ch, kid- Bev and live also order- ruse in a eliminntiae the undesir- coe ‘aeids and deposits from the body. Tested Recipes. Strawberry Jam—Hull apd wash berries, then drain and cover with su: Stir’ constantly to prevent burning. Fill into glasses'and, when cool, cover with mcekin Store in a cool, dry place: Use three-quarters ieee pound of sugar to pe pound. of ee Custard.—Line a pie tin with good pastry. Fill with stoned “and cooked cherries, well bd 8 Pour over them a custard m of milk, pinch of s al our. tablespoonfals: of. Bake ies sundernse ee until the custard is haar Chitose: —Cut ‘one pound of Place oie ee the custard around it and serve. Gooseberry Jelly—Two quarts of -;more than you think ea 0 food, keep it clean until use Its pea ee Uses. Water carry many infectious dlseates, ane for this reason, when the character and source are unknown, all ate used do drinking purposes should be bi To Sen the flat and insipid taste of boiled water, it may be beaten with an egg-beater or filled into bottles sy a space left for air atthe then shaken. ed water has the valuable ements removi cause of ‘iis 1¢ doula not be Nee < childre Do not use water from wells Crane ante! you know that Distill there is an epidemic o! drinking water. Drinking a gla; meal time stimulates 88 in water before the digestive aiden, it the will cause an ince in weight. inking a glass of water after meals will help the process of diges- ion digestion isjeomplete aS ter should be from AB to BE: deerees Farenheit,” 0. el of hot Water Aste 45 a/tonie if cae upon arising in the morning. gooseberries, two pints of water. Pre- pare the gooseberries and add the wa- ter. en place in a Preserving ket- ~|tle and bring to Cook until | ®! [very soft, then drain, using a ‘ely bag. Measure the juice and allow an equal measure of sugar. Now re- turn to the kettle ‘and boil for five minutes. Add the ee a ae. yor ee five minutes until ee heit is reached. yur ae * tenllioed glasses and store in the usual manner. When Food Is th i 0 to thi spoil for ne ie Ages handlin; When too much is served at s “meal. Uneaten portions are left on the plate and later thrown into the gar- yw the needs 0 ae to ch will want. When too much is prepared for a meal. Unserved portions are likely allowed to Spoil.) Many housekeepers do not Imow how to use leftover foods to make appetizing dishes. When burned or spoiled in cooking. Improperly prepared or poorly sea- soned food will be left on the table and probably wasted. food wisely and pare it carefully, When handled carelessly. lean , and be fad in all details of cooking and serv- ae lessens waste, and is a valuabl health measure as well, Watering Hanging Basket. Here is one way of watering a hang- ing basket. Take a small can and punch a hole in the bottom just large enough for water to drip through. Fill and place in hanging basket, and re- it every morning. In this w: there is no chance of the fern baskets drying out, as the water has a chance of slowly soaking into the earth in- stead of all running off as when it i: peared J ito baskets. < top This will Tada abats ‘at § air into the water if; had come to your locality, play sate boil all your|® When ashing edible is allowed to|™ d to be thrown into the garbage pail or # ete. Se age —(Gont’d.) * had by this time left the Liv- d entered Scott’s ple of the town, especially on Sunday afternoons. “You know,” went on the girl, “that it made no difference to me when peo- e that was choosing a didn’t think about it, I . But, Tom, is pleasure in such pla ees at Sunda; ey Sel an,” rate Pom, rather See “that if you sont to keep company with me I m religious lolly-pops.”” 'y flush mounted the girl’s cheek, one she continued to speal quietly. “Tom,” she ane me truly? thing. at the Thorn and nbetio Batter than you irakentok tinct nek rene tigi a coarse, vulgar girl, “You don’t care about me like you did,” he said angrily. “You are got- ting tired of me.” “If that were true I should not speak to you in this way,” and her voice became tr lou: ey ay am not going to throw away my life, Tom; there’y something ore eles thane—than SBve- “What?” he asked “Duty, God,” was the Tom again laughed uneasi Lister lived in a different for Mee Alice, but —but buts, Tom, if—if) you want me. ‘om, can’t you} see? You know that what I nay as right and—and— e saw her lips tears start t He knew) that his association ek the daughter! “Alice, do = lpre eee and his voice became “Tf I didn’t ane I tale ab you like this?” was her answer and he knew it. never speak to gain, heard a Polly Powell. again, when he coiee voice close to him say, Fellas you are “coming to- night, aren’t you? Tom are aes w a well-dressed young fellow close besides bi Burnford last Tom had been very friendly. was rather proud of this, because Lescol toe Hocking tor.0 Sérap of Paver” “Dearer Than Published “by Hodder & ‘Stoughton Limited, London and ‘Toronto and. Thistle, and who| bee feed on your) et “will you answer quiver; sav thel= dk Wa termal ‘A crisis had come into Tom’s life,| Won e;man;, but. young Harry Waterman was his sup- erior, both socially and from an edu- cational facturing because more mone: Waterman was a tall, handsome young Fellow, with a florid complexion and light-brown. hair. met fom at the Mechanics’ Institute for ignorant people ai Waterman professed to have travelled ad told Tom that ‘om had been a _w: e|ing pupil and thought what wonderful ie Gras ee t that you Water- man had evidently ee liking to him. ‘ou will come, won't you?” went on Waterman; “just the same lot, you kn 2Ny, think so,” said ‘Tom. “That's all right, then; we'll look out for you about seven.” ete are you going to-night?” “Only Dike Mr. Waterman,” replied Btw is “To a = Ugueoe subs Hove ae tie Ro ow, Alice, iW’s no use looking Tike that; you ean rt expect me to be a ninny.’ Besides, Wai terman’ 's a swell, he is the son of a squire “That is how you are going to spend your Suniag evening, then?” said the irl. * Certainly * replied Tom, He felt angry that Alice should interfere with m his pleasu; Besides, mem- bered that Waterman had once said t chai ‘ellow was a fool who eee a to interfere with is pleasures. g “"] ses _you have made your choice,” aid Alice. Look here, Alice,” said Tom sapeiys ead mied tee aoe ee ect me to behave like a Methody |parson, I get on, and sens: can help me; and—: in_ the girl's almost fae i a ate intivence Sa n-had 07 tb ry a pipe to| that ee fo be made out of it than by sticking to| § 7 | the cork, iy | seal, and’ the aasaere then placed | en.| ence between the “ Sravelet so ie tageay ager abot half the size of a pea, in the mi cates trays, and on the top upper- most layer of gravel are six layers o fine cloth. In the ‘ing room the milk is led i into a machine similar to bottlin; er, at going. ed bottler fills clear glass bottles, each of which holds an imperial pint; as these are filled, they are passed on to a woman, who corks them on to the! sealers, who first tie threads across! and then a leaden in racks—in box ferent vanmen, ade knows the number he requires. It is interesting to note the differ-} spree milk bot- t of England, milk is “sealed” with a small garabeatd dise placed in the mouth of thé bottle, which a dishon- man can easily s put there, by dif-| one of whom e ordinary English dates is ahs in Denmark. any’s vans which carry the ‘mile ‘0 the consumer are so con- structed that the milk-cans are lock- ed in the van, and can only be drawn through dust-proof taps. The men in charge of the vans cannot tamper with the milk at all. s milk are kept in another part of the v trays containing crushed ice. Where Cleanliness Is An Art. The gone of the Danish dairy is an art. is no super! ficial’ swilling sei rea pails. ee and st is are cleansed in the lowing manner. They are first rinsed ingle with powerful jet of gold wa: ter, then they are washed with hot Saeed gee iis sa Sattlder thee iat Gta ee | forced through which is injected upwards into each’ g rvere patties Vey come ae most carefully washed with hot water ds 0 with a revolving brus g water, and the outside is treated in the same manner*with a small hard brush, after which they are carefully rinsed with clean oold water in the filters feonst by dling ani sardine ese taps a skill-! ga ehicle in) of SST = - THE SCANDAL-MONGER. Gossips Are Mental Babies, Declares a Medical Authority. lass of human ee are more, are attacked and yet more gen- eal tolerated than gossips, — tho: | peo; who are habitually voreading scandal Pelee secretive pal ton, D.C., who des- one it in a recent issue of the Jour- of the American Medical Associa- to ae contention, Ts that earieln individual ae a nail-biting; that they are y juvenile feelings still and caniteaes aN only in weak mouths but in such despicable qualities of mind as scandal-mongering. The child seeks pleasure regardless of whether or not {t is good for him. As he grows |older he shakes off his harmful plea- sures and becomes strong. selecting pleasures that are not degenerative. Some individuals, however, do not emerge into this mature and self-con- trolled state and always harbour more or less of the infantile pleasures. Dr. White calls the failing for gossip the “ear libido. He says: “From the standpoint of Be usual social evaluation the type of thing good, but always to hear some- thing bad, and the worse the better. This’ is a somewhat less obvious pleasure-seeking devico than that of the person who is all attention gt the but of the ear libido silicate a destruc: ‘ive member of the community, and incidentally a very reba and un- his ear to aes to a low level type of curiosit; His ear has not been adequately Tite Ge as a part of a socially useful member of society and with a brush both in-| therefore is not used to further social- ly useful constructive ends. It re- instinctive, pleasure- How much better he ivity to listen by cing to lectures, readings or con- certs and thus socializing his trend by using it for bringing him into contact his fellows at socially useful aes ARE SAFETY PINS OLD OR NEW? Commonly Regarded as Modern They ‘Are Really Very Ancient. w should we get along without The men might as a AT camseaing ome nee” “nail the! Shout inh = ir ies pat cea at quite cnn Ul the fut not the women. And the babies “May ‘come: with: you?” asked| then steamed cantuve of; —they must have them, of course. sen tae Ot ane te ai| We are accustomed to think of the What depends," replied the gir; eg. Fahrenheit. ‘The flth| .rety pin as a modern invention, but | either you must be as you were ae z ee ile is aston-|+'is nothing of the kind. It was as IK eas oF wh ; yet. more cai : : Mae ant? ee land Bleantiness than ‘that shown. upon! {amuse 10 tne gnsiante Ramage De 'y) “You medn- good-bye for ever?” “Just” that,” she m, can’t you see! replied. good influence on you, and, Tom, why do_you break my heart?” ood. there was tose “been proud to associate rman, who was sendy we big imanitecynee TS - up PURE MILK SUPPLY OF DEN CLEANLINESS. OF THE DANISH DAIRY IS AN ART. a ee A Description of the System in Vogue in the Co-operative Dairies of Copenhagen. Denmark has attained a ee of which any nation might be proud— she ensures to her young children the Der ith the co-operative dairies, it sale lows that ideal conditions for milki must obtain practically aHbonshOBe mi essential utes so heavily to mortality as tent ed milk. Unfortunately this versal food is one of the best presa-| ing-grounds for good as well as for dangerous bacteria. Introduced into | the purest milk, bacteria increase en ormously—uncovered milk is al f liable to infection. Cleanly milking from the Danish point of view does not begin and end tl milkers, the pails, the sheds in which the cows are milked, even the: walls and the fidors; the transit of the miik are e Danis sh afantee for mi The Life History of the Milk-Can. The life history of the milk-can in Copenhagen is ‘interesting. stay with, the cows are = in Metgh airy dl cts of cold a1 are “the beasts aré examined by veterin-|j as surgeons twice a month; twice a MARK = always) bot year they are tested with tuberculin, | ing y cases tuberculosis of the surgeons no mals, they also inspect the conditions of the cow-sheds, the food, the milk pails, and report on the yield and quality of the milk of each ¢ rane cows are never med in the| > summ er they are milk- cenae elds; where canes tioned to carry the milk Imontiately i the wint x00! Pose. cially Seen they rest:ip an out- er receptacle filled with crus! a micro-« Sasi a keeps ay! yw-heat, aa not develop, and the sweet longer than three © Refrigeration and pa refrigerators, where, by the unlimited supply of ice it is cooled to 50/deg. Celsius. ‘The milk begins to arrive at hel premises of the company at Freder- isberg, 8 suburb of Copenhagen, at ©! consumptive milkman, or j|hands of a dairyman are no} de- | j. TY| fresh smell of the place, the | clean clothes\of ihe workers ee Ber, ice |} d salt, and i thie way the” milk] : ; e loses its co wl sire nots poe Cleantjneas of Ane, Workers. The ‘personal workers is no less insisted a shower baths are provided, and #l are expected to use them Bee morn- ing; their clothes are constantly cha nged, and if any infectious disease occurs in any of the workers it is e at once reporte: svorkeny are paid full wages while they are on the sick-list, and thus tempted concealment of the complaint. ext cleanliness of the}; e dug out of Etruscan tombs, aarteinly much older than the Roman Empire. is a thing hard to sealize, but buttons Half washed pails, the breath of the dirty, in Denmark hundreds of little children. To walk pps the airy and spa-} cious Se e the wet and shin- and alle and the lustre of well-serubbed clogs, give on of the purity of “the milk: that om ‘a ied Swe: Swimming is an Cos of ys much genuine fun. yn an ext ot day, thus equipped, they may frolic in the back-yard with the hose Whatever the ‘Techionable taflor may aljare a rela tively . modern. invention. Imagine what it would be to live in a‘buttonless epoch! “ The Etruscans inhabited Italy be-| forte the Romans first arrived in that ‘ed the safety pin. But the Romans ‘Geveloped it in a way much beyond anything we have thought of. Tt was fitted became a receptacle for a cor- a.‘ sage bouquet of nage A SONG OF THE TREES. Wind of the ‘prairie lands, Mighty and strong, Come, sway my mas boughs, Burdened with son, Rain from the clouds above, Down to earth hurled, Wash from my tiny leaves Dust of the world go Come, ob, ye birds of alr, With outstretched wing; In my protecting arms Nestle and:sing. = Man of ae ani Set Whom CEG: aie Stes toil G care, est in my shade, —Dora Sanders. For a waterproof kitchen floor ap- country. It may he that they invent-— in ex-| such an eX" yab, as it is called, is thal From The Middle West BETWEEN ONTARIO AND ‘BRE TISH COLUMBIA. =. Re] Items From Provinces Where Many Ontario Boys ond Girls Are Living. The National British Citizenship League of Moose Jaw, declares itself in favor of the adoption of a system of corte school r W. B. Forster, of Calgary, ee hase ae the Military Cross. was on the staff of the Bank ;merce for a numb The fifteenth convention of Canadian Zionists was held in Winnipeg the rst three days in July. At least 250 dedegtes were present, *& school children have had ing vacation for ten years now. | playgrounds open this year with a lot of new equipment Mrs. Alexander McKenzie, wife of Alexander the veteran Ss a native A provincial couneil on re- education has been appointed to work in junction with the Mi witha view of fitting disabled soldiers for employment. Major . Dawson, of Edmonton, who enlisted with the 66th, died of wounds in Fi Mrs. M. Sills,- of. Rosemead, Alta., died recently ae ibe: received in a runaway accid School auidiea katchewan schools league to kill gophers. ‘apt. C. S. Belcher, t H. Belcher, Winnipeg, who was Peake killed in action, won the Military Cross. “of the 980 Sas- have formed a STRANGE JAPANESE CRAB, A Remarkable Example of One of Natures Little Jokes. Nati is not ordinarily to be ac ruee of trying to be funny, but once a while she seems to indulge in a bit of humor on own account. Of this a very remarkable example is found in a sp ea of crab plentiful ‘i Japanese It bears on its back a Japanese ite It is, faa face ‘of a fierce warrior of old Japa The Japanese have a traaition to ac count for this curious phenomen the.shores of their alsaede eas were é mane beset by ferocious pirat ‘0 put a stop to tl Benner a feat of fighting tity was prepared, he most desperate kind with the pirate -fleet—the buccaneers being formidably organized. The pirates were defeated, their nips sunk; and, no quarier being istven, they were wiped out to the last { ‘That was the end of organized atkaey in those waters. So far, the story is historically ‘authentic. One is at liberty to believe 2 Pa @ B @ 5 ‘4 5 & in & battle enteral “he cdot crab [scat oe discredit the idea, they a fighting man on ack. more, the face, with, ite Diet fea- tures, is that of a drowned m A curious. point about ia: tain t it has a set of supplementary legs, by the help, of which, if it happens to be turned over, it can’run swiftly on its back. OXFORD TO-DAY. * ‘The lofty halls, the che. tranauil towers, ing in untroubled hours Held her high.court, serene in fame, Are lovely still, yet not the same, e novices in fluttering gown And in ie Schools he Doone rest. Ah, far away, ’neath foreign skies Ful nN ce a son of Oxford lies And whispers from his warrior grave, “J died to keep the f ith ‘you gave’ ‘y Van Dyke. Friendship is the best character can graduate from Lee you at a dog ard do Ge teach im to behave as well in his way as ea would do FS yours, it is your fault if he gets into mischief and does college about 9pm, Upon its arrival it’ is| say, the really well-dressed man of to-| ply cold paraffin oil with a soft rag. Seer oe subsequent analysis, | days wears khaki It will dry instantly. 7 tasted; its noted, = The milk is analysed both on the pre- ts and in ie chemical Maberatt ‘ory university, the director “of whieh publishes monthly. the result of s daily analysis. ilk and ordinary sweet milk are then placed in the cans (as they are) in large ice tanks, after being sempled and tested, there next morning, en See Gahaad offs. lute ANE youncle te which they-are to be taken round the town. The cream, after. being weighed and sampled, is filtered, and then bot- wi tions having been taken to se: its ess, is rain onthe milk \yield are eel own, | absolute. purity oe wholesom: ere are no Gee in te the} likewise pul throu; another filter, cattle are pegged oved | and bottl systema tically over f caatahe ata "the Filters. filfer consists of two enamelled The iron tanks placed at. different levels; in the bottom tank are three layers of 2 and 5 tb. Cartons— | 10, 20, 50 and aus Ib. Bags. “Let Redpath Sweetervit.” Canad) Sugar Refining Co, Limited, Montréal yr | the use nae the school playground dur- 5 ‘he Hudson's Bay trader, died at nee home 7 Ss

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy