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Baby To Look:

Baby To Look In summary, the baby to look is more likely to get the food he needs if the adult fulfills the following conditions: Gives him affection as well as food, relaxes and enjoys the baby to look while she is feeding him. Watches the baby to look rather than the clock. Although a three-hour, and later a four-hour, schedule of feedings is satisfactory for many babies, the schedule should be changed if it does not seem to fit a particular baby to look. If he wakes up at 4 A.M. it is best to feed him then, before he cries hard and long, and gradually to let him work out a Flexible schedule that seems best for him and not too hard on the rest of th " family.

Mother¬hood not only gives satisfactions; it also demands sacrifices—considerable drudgery is often involved. The mother cannot expect to have the freedom she knew before she had a baby to look to care for. Yet she should not go to the extreme of devoting herself exclusively to the baby to look. It is better for the expectant mother to take a realistic view in advance than to be completely disillusioned after the baby to look is born.

See Also Follow The Baby:

Progress is being made in community education in child develop¬ment. Most effective is the community health program concerned with all phases of development—physical, menial, and emotional—with lectures, pamphlets, and seminars reaching the persons most concerned with child care and education—parents, doctors, nurses, and teachers. An important part of such a program is an excellent series of loose-leaf bulletins con¬taining sound, simple, eminently practical suggestions organized chronolog¬ically to follow the baby's growth. By reading these bulletins while still in the hospital, the mother acquires sound information and attitudes before assuming the full responsibility of caring for the baby and the household.

They can bump around quite a bit without damage. Continual admonitions to be careful may check their emerging desire for independence and overemphasize their vulnerability in a dangerous world. Of course, there are situations in which a heedless little child might be seriously injured. To prevent these serious injuries the mother should never leave the inexperienced baby alone, except in a crib with raised sides, in a baby pen, or in some other place from which he cannot fall. One mother thought her four-month-old baby was safe on the bed because he had not yet learned to creep or crawl.


On The Other Hand See Takes Baby Rabbits:

Sometimes pet takes baby rabbits, baby guinea pigs, and gophers. If pet takes nothing but other snakes, return it to its native habitat; feeding in captivity too difficult. Water—Use large, flat container; place in center of cage. Range: Eastern Kentucky and Tennessee, and North Carolina to Florida, Gulf states as far west as southeastern Louisiana Description: Small, brilliantly marked with red, black, and yellow rings; red rings do not cross belly; head small and pointed; snout red; back of head black. These are smallest of king snakes, attaining average length of 15 inches. (This snake closely resembles the dangerously poisonous coral snake.

In the wild, rat snakes feed on rats, mice, and other small rodents, nesting birds, young gophers and rabbits, young chicks, chicken eggs; sometimes on tree frogs, insects, and other snakes; are con¬strictors. Give rats, mice, baby chicks; young of rabbits when pos¬sible; as much other native food as possible. Water—Use flat con¬tainer; place in center of cage.

 

 

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