PAGESIX DALLAS, POST, DALLAS, PA., Taf Es FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1930 —Brooklyn- Calvin A. Fisher, Correspondent Phone Dallas 300 pret | . Entertained >i Mr. and Mrs. William F. Cairl, Cem- | ~ etery street, entertained the following relatives and friends over the week-| end: Mr. and Mrs. William Loges and | ~ son, William and Miss Florence Black- | more of Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. * William Cairl, Jr., and son, Clayton, of Forty Fort; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cairl and ehildren, Eleanor, Junior and Graydon, Calvin A. Fisher, Betty Schmassman and Viola Schmassman. Sunday afternoon they all motored to the mountains where they viewed the beautiful fall scenery. Enjoying Vacation Mr. and Mrs. Harry Garrahan mot- ored to Jamison City Sunday. Monday they left for Seaside Heights, N. J, - where Mr. Garrahan will spend his vacation. Have you read the Classifieds this week? Turn to page eight. Eliminating Milk In Raising The Calves Prepared Meals Are Now Being Sub- stituted With Good Success After the First Few Weeks. ; good cows, em,” is ‘Po get raise an expression often heard among dairymen. That being true, the next question is how to raise them. In my preceding article T showed that calves can be successfully raised on skim milk and that if the proper method of feeding was used, the skim milk fed cow would compete with her sister who ran, with the mother as a calf, in every particular. It is estimated about half of every hundred dairy calves come from COWS where the milk is sold as whole milk. The problem therefore is how to raise the calves with the minimum amount of milk. When you consider that a calf will consume around fifty gallons of whole milk a month, you can soon figure out what it costs to board that calf for the first six months, or until ~ weaning time. The nation has been absorbed for years in various experiments to find a substitute for milk in calf raising. - Improvements are being made right along. Both the commercial and the home-made calf-meals are now quite satisfactorily used. The problem of course is to produce a food that is easily digestible ,that has a chemical content similar to milk, and the nec- essary vitamines and proteins. Some of the materials commonly used are ground yellow corn, middlings, oat flakes or ground oats, linseed meal and skim milk powder. The mixtures are. prepared with water or milk and fed in the shape of warm gruels. The proportion is about one part of meal to nine parts of wat- er. The feeding schedule for a calf under this method would be about as follows: One pound of gpuel daily, with the milk during the third week, and then gradually increase the gruel and cut down on the milk. The milk can be eliminated entirely at the end of 45 days and by that time the gruel will be running about 12 to 15 pounds a day. The gruel diet may be elimin- ated at the end of four months if de- sired as by this time the calf will be eating hay and grain. A mixture recommended = by the Wisconsin Experiment station consists of four parts-of ground yellow corn, three parts of ground oats, two parts of wheat bran and one part of linseed | oil-meal. This is fed -in connection with skim milk—very light at first and gradually increase. Another method of feeding with a ~ minimum amount of milk is to give the calf a good start on milk, and then jump immediately to grains and roughage. Many .experiments have been trird, to find out just when the change over should take place and how. ‘For instance some breeders recom- mend feeding - whole milk: for three weeks, and skim milk for five weeks, before going into the grain and hay diet. That is a pretty short period fn my opinion ,although a raiser of Holsteins tells me he has fed 170 lbs. of whole milk and around 700 pounds of skim milk during the first two months, and switched to grain and roughage with success. In all cases changes in feed should be made grad- ually. There are those who believe that no substitute for whole milk is pract- icable. Therefore they start with whole milk and gradually dilute it with water. One proportion recom- mended is three parts of whole milk to one part of water, after the first month, to be continued until the calf is eating a sufficient quantity of grain ~ and hay. The success of this plan rests upon the ability of the herd own- er to get the calves started early on grain and hay, and then see that they eat it in equal amounts. Powdered skim milk is also used for feeding calves. It is dissolved in warm water and fed immediately. Tt may be alternated with skim milk on farms where the supply of skim milk varies. The powdered milk keeps well and is easy to handle. The cost of powdered milk to equal 100 pounds of skim milk is about half what you can sell an equal amount of whole milk for. One pound of pow- dered milk to nine pounds of water, at a temperature of 100 degrees Fahren- heit is about right. Another substitute for milk is whey, from the cheese factory. The whey needs to-be sterilized as in a ferment- ed condition it is bad for the calf, un- les of course the cheese is made on the farm and the whey fed at once. Start at thé end of the third week and gradually switch the diet from whole milk to whey. At the end of six weeks the whole milk can be dispens- ed with altogether and grain and hay substituted. Calves should néver be allowed to becoming poor. This will stunt their growth and retard normal develop- ment. They should have good feed, good care, good attention, good oncdition and growing every minute. Legume hays are bétter than timothy because of the minerals they contain for making bone and muscle. kept in | Alfalfa and clover hay must be fed carefully, as they are laxative. O—— HINTS FOR THE HOME School Lunches A housewife who has to put up three lunches every morning for three children insists that this is the very hardest thing about keeping house. It seems to her as if housework would be a pleasure were it not for those lunches. Doubtless the thing that makes them hardest is that they, must be prepared in the early morning when there us- ually is enough to do simply in prepar- ing the breakfast. To be sure, some housewives simplify the task by put- ting them up the night before, insist- ing that if the sandwiches are wrap- ped in waxed paper and placed in the refrigerator they will the next: day. Even though you do not actually make the sandwiches the night before you may very easily get some of the things ready. tI is well to get into the habit when you first go down to prepare breakfast to take as much butter as you think you will need for the sandwiches and set it out so that it will be warm enough to spread eas- ily when you want it. Bread should be freshly cut, buttered and filled at once and then wrapped securely in waxed paper. * CC o% Egg Is Helpful A wide variety of sandwiches may be made from egg.. One of the easi- be quite fresh] est is made by letting the eggs boil very hard ,then peeling and cutting up fine and then spreading on buttered slices of bread. fried egg sandwich. Egg with may- onnaise is delicious. Waxed paper is so'inexpensive that | you ‘have little reason not to be fairly generous with it. It is a good plan to place each sandwich in a separate piece of waxed paper and other things| like cake and deviled eggs, should likewise have their individual piece of | waxed paper. | BE a { Use Containers | The young business girl, who carries | a mid-day snack to save the cost of] buying luncheon at a restaurant or) cafeteria, usually wants to have her lunch package well disguised and as small ass possible. Fortunately most | | school children have no such prejudic-| es and there is no reason why you should not provide a lunch box that is| large enough to hold a variety of good things in convenient containers. To protect the luncheon and to keep the| things from crushing it is a good plan | to line the box or basket with a sub- | stantial cotton or linen lunch napkin, providing a paper napkin or-two every | day for actual use. Then as part of] your packing equipment you should buy some waxed paper cups with closely fitting pasteboard tops in which tures, custard, cut-up fruit, ding or something of the sort. weather such as jellied tomato or bouillon or included rice-pud- In cold jellied fruit deserts—may be containers are used. Without much trouble one may con- trive always to have some addition to Some people like a lollypop |en yolks of six eggs. Cook in a double I to put soft foods ,such as salad mix- |x even gelatine preparations— > in the lunch when these tightly closed |X the school luncheon in the way of a surprise. This ‘may consist of a few candles wrapped in a piece of waxed paper, a few salted or shelled nuts, a some milk chocolate or even an unexpected five-cent piece with a little note to explain that it is to be spent for some specially liked candy or‘baker’s cake on the way home from | school. Always if possible the school lunch- eon should contain some sort of fruit— an apple, a banana, an orange, & mear, or a bunch of grapes. * Be Chocolate Cream Grate three squares of bitter choc- olate and mix with two cups of cream, half a cup of sugar, and the well-beat- boiler until smooé6th and thick, stirring | constantly, then add a package cf wel | atine which has been soaked and dis- | solved. Take from the fire and when! cool, but not set, fold in a cup of cream which has been whipped solid. | Add a few «drops of vanilla. Mould, chill and serve with whipped cream. | REE FE FF PRE PE PA PP PPE ERE - “Say It With Flowers” Through J.K. EVANS “Florist 141 E. Main St. Phone Nanticoke 233 NANTICOKE. PA. Is Best Expressed with Modern GREETING CARDS Our selections this season far surpass previous show- ings, both in artistic de- sign and modern color treatment. Scores of sam- ples from which to choose. 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