—Lancaster Farming, Friday, March 9, 1956 6 For the Farm Wife and Family There are signs of spring in the air, but no one can tell what March may bring. Just the idea of the grass greening up, some touches of warmer temperatures, and plans for gardening all make one sure that winter’s gone, spring can’t be far away. Yet some times March offers some unpredictable, rugged weather. It’s planting time, and soon it will be gardening time As to the size of your garden, one suggests selecting plots of two sizes, then use the one you think ybu can best manage in the hot, humid days of summer. Mrs. Levi Martin, ’up at R 2 Ephrata, sends in several good recipes this week, and to her goes this week’s free one-year subscription to Lancaster Farm ing. Here’s what Mrs Martin writes; “Enclosed are a few good re cipes. I don’t like to miss any issue of your paper. PINEAPPLE SALAD One can pineapple Two oranges Ten marshmallows One cup chopped nuts Mix with Spring Specials Used New Idea Wagon * 2 Used New Holland Balers $450 u| 1 Case Wire Tie Baler Dearborn F tia i v w row crop NH Forave Harv w row crap AC 60 All Crop Harvester Mever Hav Conditioner AC WC Tractor Mower Several Trailer Plow I & 2 btms AC-CA Spinner Plow Used Transputers Manure Spreaders WC Tractors John Deere • B" Tractor John Deere “A” Tracior 2 Silver Kings 1 Farmall “M’. Wil=on 8 can milk cooler like new L. H. Brubaker 350 Strasburg Pike Ph. Lane. 3-7607 Strasburg OV 7-2305 Red Rose TC Feed "First aid in a feed bat 1 ” TC is the new "get well” feed that guards against diseasa /#» . at the first danger signs Contains increased levels of antibiotics and jrtr / vitamins to increase appetites yf FULL LINE OF POULTRY EQUIPMENT FEEDERS FOUNTAINS RROODERS WEST WILLOW | FARMERS ASSOCIATION | WEST WILLOW Pb. Lane. 4-5019 >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦« : Why Pay More? ■ GET THE BEST FOR LESS ! STORM DOORS $37,50 I '/A f Aluminum Combination • I l :~~\ jj 1 1-8 In Thick— D lor Length, ■ P.ano Hinge J| Complet ly Installed, $49.95 STORM WIND() VS- 3 Track & 2 Track ALUMINUM SIoEENo Kaiser Aluminum Shade Screens FREE ESTIMATES EASY ERMS Paul Cluck, E. Petersburg Roofing—Siding- -Spouting Storm Windows & Doors ■ ■ Free To Women... * One year charter subscrip tion to LANCASTER FARM ING to one housewiie eacn week who submits tne nest letter recipe . home making hint. Send your letter to LANCASTER FARMING, Quarry vine, ra- - DRESSING One-half cup sugar - Two tablespoons flour Two eggs Add this to hot pineapple juice. Cook until thick, then whip one cup cream, fold into mixture, pour over the items listed first. Turning from salads to cookies and salad again, here are some more recipes Mrs. Martin thinks are very good; FILLED. RAISIN COOKIES One-half eup Cnsco One cuip sugar 0 One egg One-half cup milk Three and one-half cups flour Four teaspoons baking powder - FILLING Cook raisins; make good and sweet Let cool. Make cookies, place on cookie sheet, place fill ing on one, then place another cookae on top. Press together. Bake. “These are very good, and F'on’t last long,” Mrs. Martin as sures us. * Jl * Now that summer’s coming, we’ve a recipe for potato salad. By the way, is Hot Potato Salad a popular dish out here? German cooking in St- Louis decreed Hot Potato Salad was much the thing *«r summertime. But here’s Mrs. Martin’s POTATO SALAD Peel potatoes, cut m small squares Add salt, cook soft, then cool Add salad dressing, much as you like, sugar to suit your taste, chopped hard-boiled eggs and a few grated carrots. Add some onion, chopped fane. Mix well and it is ready to eat. “Very good,” Mrs. Martin ad vises, “and I’m sure if you make ‘his once, you will make it again.” Made of Alcoa Aluminum See Our Display Stand any I Tues. Eve. at Root’s I Country Mkt, E. Petersbui# * (Many to Visit Philadelphia’s Flower Show Many frorg Lancaster County will attend the 29th annual Philadelphia Flower Show during the week of March 12 in the Commercial Museum, 34th Street below Spruce. The Show will open Monday at noon, until 10 p m-, and for the of the week from 9 a- m- to 10 p. tn. More than a million dollars' worth of flowers will be included in the exhibit, W- Atlee Burpee, Jr., show president, advises, and more than $75,000 will be award ed exhibitors. Backyards and window box plantings, formal gardens, wood land settings, sprang gardens, outdoor lounges, rock gardens, yard plantings, garden retreats, dooryard plantings, rare orchids, roses, carnations, palms, foliage plants, bulbs in flower and cut flower arrangements will be in cluded. - IC f Back in the cookie department, Mrs. Martin suggests you try some of her PEANUT BUTTER COOKIES One-half cup shortening One-half cup .peanut butter One-half cup white sugar One-half cup brown sugar One egg One-half teaspoon vanilla One-half teaspoon salt One-half teaspoon baking soda One cup flour Mix and drop on cookie sheet, press-flat with fork and bake at 310 degrees cfn buttered cookie sheet- Make 60 small cookies Speaking bf brown sugar, here’s a letter from a Lancaster reader “M- D.” I “For the farm wife and family: Can one of our practical farm women write m your most help ful paper how or where to keep brown sugar so it- won’t get lumpy or hard’” Any ideas’ If so, send them to Lancaster Farming, Quarryville, Pa. Down here in the office, they [suggest 1, place brown sugar m a'canniater set immediately after you open the box, or 2, if your brown sugar has become hard, place a whole, unpeeled apple m the cannister for a few days Keep covers on tight Mrs Violet Preston from Coatesville sends a nice letter and several recipes that will in terest readers of this page She is a former farm woman, and wants the paper sent to her daughter, Grace Chalfant at R 3 West Chester “Here is a good recipe for Lent,” she writes “I -make this one a lot for now I use fish in stead of cheese and spur cream too It makes a very good dish too. My daughter uses this a lot, for her children like it They do not like fish by itself, so I gave her this recipe. I was on the farm until eight years ago when I moved to the city, but I still love the farm I enjoy Lancaster Farming very much. I would go back to the farm if I could, but I work m the city now This recipe i= 25 years old, Mrs. Preston writes; MCE DINNER IN A DISH Four small onions, sliced thin One green pepper, chopped fine Three tablespoons butter or margarine Six ripe., peeled tomatoes. (You can use canned tomatoes) Two cups cooked nee One cup grated-cheese Two teaspoons sugar Dash of salt and pepper Dash of paprika One cup sour cream Two eggs well beaten Cook onions and green pepper slowly in butter or margarine (Lona Mac Dorman) Some doors have hearts, it seems to me, They open so invitingly;! You feel they are quite kind akin, To all the warmth you find within. Some doors, so weather-beaten, grey, Swing open in a listless way, As if they wish you had not come. Their stony silence leaves you dumb, Some classic-doors stand closed and barred, As if their beauty might be. marred If any sought admittance there. Save king or prince or millionaire. Oh, may mine by a friendly-door; 4 May all who cross the threshold o’er, Within, find sweet content and rest, And know each was a welcome guest. about five minutes until soft. XT' .■» Wrmi fx Grease a deep casserole, place * arm " Omen D the tomatoes on the bottom- Add P] an IVT 91 a layer of cooked rice, onions, 1 * luarUl 4L pepper and cheese. Dash with sugar, - salt, pepper and paprika. Repeat until all rice, onions and peppers and cheese are m the dish. Whip the sour cream. Add beaten eggs on top. Cover and bake at 350 degrees for 30 to 35 minutes, then remove cover and leave in oven until brown. K f From Reamstown somes this letter: • 1 Please send me Lancaster Fanning for one year. I’m en closing $l.OO for a charter sub scription, writes Mrs- Ella Lied- I read it first, then my husband takes it along to the barber shop he has just- a few doors from home. We both enjoy it. I clip all recipes and paste them in my recipe book, along with the household hints. - She includes a recipe for POTATO DOUGHNUTS Five large potatoes Two cups sugar One tablespoon butter or mar garine Three eggs Pour teaspoons baking powder One cup sweet milk Mash potatoes, add eggs and sugar, butter and baking powder, then .milk. Stir flour in last. Makes about three dozen dough nuts- Irma S Rombauer, author of one of the most famed cook books, “Joy of Cooking,” in col laboration with her daughter, Maricn Becker, has received a distinguished award from Wash ington University, St. Louis. Her citation as an alumni read “ .m recognition of out standing achievements and serv ices which have reflected honor upon the University ” She traveled abroad in her teen years, and an the early 1930 s compiled her first book of favor ite dishes. Now it has been pub- MAP.mn Vitamin Fup' la ment Your cattle and hojrneed DUTCH BELL for Dairy BETTER BEEF for .leer. end TRIPLE f'ICH for Ho*. We al.o have the famoua DAN PATCH HORSE POWOE* Manufactured by M .r-Gro ft Co. 12 i ancaster * AARON S. MARTIN DISTRIBUTOR R 1 - EAST EARL 1 H & NEW HOLLAND New and Good Used FARM MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS D. L. Diem & Sons iITITZ Ph. 6-2131 Doors Wyeth Meeting Members of the Society of Farm Women 6 will serve a dinner at .Wyeth Laboratories, Marietta. Wednesday noon, March 1 21. Mrs. Martin Hoffer will be in charge. On March 15, the group -will travel to Philadelphia to attend the Flower meeting at the home of Mrs. S A. Shaeffer, 434 South Market Street, Eliza bethtown, at 630 a m. Thirty seven plan to attend. Meeting recently in the home of Mrs. Milton Eberly, R 3 Eliza bethtown, the society made plans for these future events. Guest speaker was Mrs Mary Myers, Landisville, home economist of Pennsylvania Power and Light Co. 'lished -in several editions and translated in many languages Not oiften a 'cook book wins such distinguished recognition,. j t -fe “We received several sample copies of your Lancaster Farm ing and we Like it very much'. I’m enclosing a recipe,” writes Mrs. E. V. Lausch, R 1 Reinholds. (Continued on page nine) NEW-NEW-fJEW TUBELESS TSRE # Lancaster Co. Farm Bureau Dil'erville Road, Lancaster