Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 30, 1956, Image 9

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    For Farm
Women ...
(Continued from page eight)
egg, vanilla and salt Brag to a
boil, let boil a few minutes un
til a little thick. Set aside to
cool.
Crumbs <»
Two cups flour
One cup brown sugar
One-half cup- lard
One teaspoon baking soda
One teaspoon cream of tartar
Pinch of salt
Mix like pie dough. Pour
cooled juice in unbaked pie
crust Sprinkle crumbs on top.
Bake m slow oven 350 degrees.
If oven is too hot, the juice will
boil out. This makes four small
pies or three large ones.
Salad time is coming up soon,
and when the gardens grow,
there jvill be salad greens
aplenty. Meanwhile, from Honey
Brook comes another recipe, for
CELERY AND APPLE SALAD
One package each of lime
and lemon Jello
Dissolve
One medium stalk celery cut
in small pieces
Eight or ten apples, peeled
and diced
One-haM cup nutmeats
Add apples and celery and
nuts to Jello, let set until firm,
unmold on lettuce.
Back to the meat line,
here are some easy foreign
recipes from the American
Meat Institute:
* fi
The seasons coming up
will be busy. How about
sending along menus you
choose for quick meals,
household hints that will
make work easier when it’s
gardening time, or why not
share your tips on flower
and vegetable gardening?
Send them along to Lancaster
Farming, Women’s Page, Quar
ryville- We’ll appreciate it.
That’s about it for now until
next week and we’ll
See you then
The President has called for
moderation an'd patience toward
the South on the segregation
issue, but “with a determination
to make progress.”
s'” PLANT YOUR SAVINGS'":
5 WHERE MONEY GROWS ■
2“ Per Cent Interest Paid on J|
_ Savings Deposits. Ml
M B
2]/' P»»r Cent Interest Paid on one year ■
' Certificates of Deposit. •
S The First National Bank ■
■ STRASBURG, PA. DEPOSITS INSURED J
QmaUty mmtttf*ctmring is the by*
word of every John Deere factory.
Beginning with incoming ship
ments of only the higbest-grade
materials, each manufactured part
... every finished implement is in
apccted thoroughly by skilled
LANDIS BROS.
Latest Improved Farming Equipment
1305 Manheim Pike Phone 3*3906
P, O. Box 484 Lancaster, Pennsylvania
THE SIGN OP FARM EQUIPMENT
CHAPEL OF THE ANGEL: A symbol of Easter inorn, when
the stone was rolled away from the tomb and Christ arose from
the dead, is the Chapel of the Angel, through which you pass to
enter the Tomb of Christ in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
in Old Jerusalem. The tiny Chapel of the Angel, lit by fifteen
hanging lamps, contains a large stone, said to be the one rolled
away by the angel whose “countenance was like lightning, and
his raiment white as snow.” (Matthew 28:2-4) From this small
chapel you stoop to enter the inner Tomb marked by a simple
marble slab. An oblong shaped stone structure, standing directly
beneath the Great Dome of the church, houses the two shrines.
Six candles, as tall as the shrine itself, stand guard outside the
Entrance door and above it eight candles burn. The principal re
ligious ceremonies and processions of Holy Week in Old Jerusalem
center about this Tomb, the holiest shrine of Christendom, in the
Bible Land of Jordan.
Farm Women 12
Meet April 28,
No. 3 Guests
Ram Women Society 12 met
in regular session at the home of
Mrs Estelle Mowrer, Highville,
with Mrs. Frances Elsen- co
hostess The president, Mrs
Olive Sigman, was in charge The
Scripture was read from John
20 1-20 by Mrs Fanny Mae
Witmer, who hed charge
of devotions, followed by all
workmen to assure its meeting n>
act John Deere quality standards.
That’s whr farmers everywhere
are loud in their praise for the de
pendability . . . the quality con
struction of John Deere Farm
Equipment. Sec us for information.
Church of Holy Sepulchre
V'"'"
members praying the Lord’s
Prayer and pledging allegiance
to the Flag
Roll call found 28 membeis
and three visitors present There
were cards of thanks read from
recipients of donations and flo
wers and caids to the sick Sarah
Husson gave a report from the
Needle Work Guild Members
xeceived pieces of matenal to
be hemmed for the Guild. The
President reported 1,195 cancer
dressings and 11 shirts made in
1955 and 1956 so far
The April meeting will be m
the Creswell School on the 28th
Society 12 will enteitam Society
3 Five dollars was given to the
Cancer Society and $5 00 to the
Crippled Childen's Society
The bus trip to Philadelphia
to see “Cinerama Holiday” was
planned and paid foi The group
attended March 29 The speaker
was Mis Esther Haines, a tea
cher at the Paiadise Elementary
School, who spoke on “Parents
and Children ” The talk was
very interesting and gave much
to think about—both our duty
to the child and to the teachei
Farm Women 23
Visit County
Home April 19
Members of the Society of
Farm Women 23 will visit the
Lancaster County Home Thurs
day, April 19, to distribute cup
cakes and ice cream.
Meeting Thursday, March 22,
at the home of Mrs Charles
Frey, Conestoga, the society
mjde final arrangements for
the society’s Easter banquet
March 31 at Hostetter’s Banquet
Hall, Mount Joy, where they
will entertain their husbands at
a ham dinner Mrs. Paul Funk
was hostess at the most recent
meeting
Twenty-five baskets were
made for the Elizabethtown Crip
pled Children’s Hospital, with
Humpty-Dumpty eggs as the
center of attraction.
The next meeting of the Soci
ety will be April 24 at the home
of Mrs Roy Funk, when a book
review will highlight the pro
gram.
Lancaster Farming, Friday, March 30, 1956
Farm Women 15
Make Donation
To Two Agencies
Society of Farm Women No.
15 held the March meeting at
the home of Mrs Warren Smith,
Upper Oxford Township Mrs
Tom Halladay, Miss Sara Holmes
and Mrs John Ogden were as
sistant hostesses
Mrs Robert Weicksel, presi
dent, conducted the meeting,
with Mrs Ogden in charge of
Devotions Roll call was ans
wered by giving names of in
teresting places to dine
The treasurer reported all
bills paid and $7 sent to the
American Red Cross. $l5 to the
Cancer Society and $l5 to the
Crippled Children’s Bureau
Ways and Means committee
announced that it would have a
food stand at the sale at the
Ferree farm on April 3 Pro
ceeds will go to the Welfare
Fund ol the Society.
Mis James T Hastings gave
a report oft the trip to the
flower show on Wednesday,
March 14. Thirty-three mem
bers, friends and relatives at
tended the exhibition.
Harry Sloat, Associate County
Agent, Extension Service,
SACRED EASTER CONCERT
Memorial Methodist Choir
QUARRYVILLE
Sunday, April 1, 1956
7:45 P. M. S^'T.l.
Aquamatic : •*
PUSHBUTTON WASHER f
new. ..color-
Sealed-Action
pushbutton dryer matched
porcelain
WOODLAND
BROWN
/ SUNBURST \
I YELLOW I
NOW AS /?.QQ
iinu as 9
A WEEK
OTHER HOTPOINT
Dishwashers
Freezers
Ranges
Groffs Hardware
NEW HOLLAND Phone 4-0851
showed a colored film on “Vege
tables You Should Know,” for
one’s garden. The pictures
showed methods of gardening A
question-and-answer period fol
lowed.
The next meeting will he held
on April 19 at the Union Pres
byterian Church, when the So
ciety will entertain societies 17
and 20 at 2 p m
The Smith home is an old
farm house, over a hundred
years old It is of frame con
traction, except for the end of
the room now used as a living
room, which is of buck, three
feet thick This holds the fire
place. heating ovens and deep
ovens for baking
The family has modernized
the home recently, completely
icdecorating the interior, with
new paint paper and refinished
floors
Lancaster WLAN 12 30 P M.
Norristown WNAR 800 A M.
Hanover WHVR 1 00 P M
Meadow Green and Woodland Bi own,
or Classic white
colortones
WASH AND DRY AIL FARRICS,
FULL OR PARTIAL LOADS,
Pushbutton selection of wosh, rinse, and
drying temperatures!
Automatic timing of both washing and
drying . .as you choosel
Porcelain protection ogoinst danger of
rust and corrost^l
S. RAILROAD AVE.
HEAR
The Mennonite Hour
Each Sunday
automatically!
APPLIANCES
Waste Disposals
Refrigerators
Water Heaters
9