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Warm Milk In Clean: FOOD: When first taken from mother give warm milk in clean saucer 4-5 times daily. After a few days, add stale bread to warm milk. In week or so, give a little cooked cereal with milk. Occasion-ajly give small amount of finely chopped, cooked meat; never give raw meat to a kitten. Place all food in containers used only for pet; wash containers daily; keep food containers separate from household's dishes and wash separately. Water—Essential; must be clean, fresh, and available at all times.
HOUSING: Line small, strong cardboard box with plenty of soft, warm cloths; protect pet from chilling at night.
FOOD: Give milk warmed to body temperature, using medicine dropper; feed every hour if pet is very young. As pet develops, feed by teaspoon; lengthen time between feedings, and add stale bread soaked in warm milk. When gnawing teeth come through, add stale bread or dry, butterless toast to milk diet. Later add a little bird and melon seed.See Also Milk And Lamb:Towards the end of the cooking time take out a J pint of the lamb stock
from the pan. Make the sauce with the butter or
margarine, flour, milk and lamb stock. Stir until
thickened then add a little more milk or stock if a
slightly thinner sauce is desired. Add seasoning, the
capers and some of the vinegar from the jar of capers.
Split the skin of lamb and insert a cut clove of garlic in this. One clove gives a very delicate flavour— two a more definite one.
Spread a sprig of fresh rosemary over the lamb or chop the leaves from a sprig very finely and sprinkle over the lamb during roasting.
On The Other Hand See Output Of Milk:An index for the increase in the dairy herd is the output of milk—1.7 million gallons in 1946 and 2.5 million gallons in 1963-1967. An¬nual milk yields per cow increased in the same period from about 550 gallons to 803 gallons. Simultaneously the output of beef and veal rose from 537,000 tons to 919,000 tons.
Power Output.—The power output of a pulsed radar is expressed in terms of both its peak value and its average value. Since the length of the transmitted pulses generally is ex¬tremely short as compared with the period be¬tween pulses, peak power output is many times a? large as average output. Because range capability depends in part on the power output of the radar. |
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