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Midmorning Milk:

Midmorning Milk Practical activities—real jobs that have to be done, routine jobs, or jobs requiring initiative—are another kind of experience children need. Primary children take responsibility for the midmorning milk, for plants and pets in their classroom or at home, for making jelly or jam from fruit they have picked.

Practical activities—real jobs that have to be done, routine jobs, or jobs requiring initiative—are another kind of experience children need. Primary children take responsibility for the midmorning milk, for plants and pets in their classroom or at home, for making jelly or jam from fruit they have picked.

See Also Add The Milk:

The dairy industry in the U.S. was alarmed over the threat that the "filled" and "imitation" milks posed to the fluid, fresh milk market. These new products made significant inroads in the milk market in 1967 and in some states, such as Arizona, took over as much as 5% of the fluid milk sales. Filled milk was made from skim milk or skim milk solids reconstituted with vegetable fat rather than milk fat. The imitation milks on the U.S. market had sodium caseinate as a base, together with vegetable fat and a particular flavoring agent. The ingredient costs permitted these products to be retailed at eight to ten cents per gallon cheaper than fresh milk.

Cheese is made from ripened milk curds and if made from full cream milk will contain most of the food properties of the milk. Although there are really only three categories of cheese (soft, hard pressed and blue), variations in the process of making it produce over 2,000 different kinds. The main variables are the type of milk used and the conditions under which the source animal was fed. In add the milkition, the methods of maturing the cheese greatly affect it [5],


On The Other Hand See Cluster Milk Snakes:

Reproduction: Oviparous; 6-24 eggs deposited June-August in piles of sawdust, manure, rubbish heaps, under logs, boards, in loose soil, and in sand; sometimes eggs adhere in a cluster milk snakes Milk snakes are usually not hardy in captivity. The majority of them refuse to take food and are also secretive in habit. They should not be killed as they are of great economic value.

In the wild, milk and king snakes feed on mice and other small rodents, birds, lizards, and other snakes. Scarlet king snakes also feed on insects and fish. Give native food to scarlet king (see Part III). Give other milk and king snakes native food; also give earth¬worms; in addition, they may take freshly killed rats and mice dropped in cage. Water—Use small, flat container; place in center of cage.

 

 

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