10—Lancaster Farming, Friday,. Nov. 29,-195.7 For t: Ifatm Wife and Family (Continued on page 10) ter when cool, Drop by teaspoons on baking sheet three inches apart Watch closely while baking. Remove from oven when golden brown. Let stand to cool somewhat but while still warm use sharp knife and remove from sheet. Remem ber they must be warm to remove from baking sheet. NUT FRUITIES Mrs. C. O. Nolt, Bird-in-Hand V s cup butter 2 tablespoons granulated sugar Va teaspoon vanilla Vi teaspoon salt I cup chopped nuts J/ 2 cup chopped dates 1 cup flour Vz cup confectioners’ sugar Cream the butter; add sugar, HEAR The Mennonlte Hour Each Sunday Lancaster WLAN 12:30 P. M. Norristown WNAR 8:00 A. M. Hanover WHVR 1:00 P. M. A H 8 A Gas Clothes Dryer Makes g | A Wonderful, Practical Gift | | FOR ONLY 2 CENTS - you can | | Keep your hands from getting chapped § | Dry a 9 pound load of clothes w i Prevent colds and-arthritis s rt y | * On sale at a low, low price. y 8 WARD BOTTLE GAS, EPHRATA | | Moore Farms Produce | | 6,000,000 Chicks Yearly \ From America’s Most \ f / | Popular Breeders | Vantress ■ Arbor Acres Cross ? | ■ / fr\Ji\ I £ V/dyl,LUi££ r~\SnC/~A < | \W | / ? Chas. Vantress Farms, Arbor Acres Farm, > Ga. Conn. ? n $ Hansen’s A Leghorn City p (H.L.C), Wash, Moore Farms* No. 58 I White Leghorn Strain Cross We hatch Leghorns every week in the year. I . I Write or call for prices and catalog I 780 Eden Rd. Lane. Ph. EX 3-3882 | vanilla, salt, nuts, dates and flour. Shape into half-inch balls. Flatten on greased baking Sheets. Bake 10 minutes in a moderate oven. While warm sprinkle quickly with confectioners’ sugar SALEM COOKIES Mrs. C. O. Nolt, Bird-in-Hand 1 pound brown sugar Vt pound butter 2 eggs 1 tablespoon lard 1 teaspoon soda Vz teaspoon nutmeg 4 cups flour Mix and let stand overnight. Roll real thin and sprinkle with nutmeg and bake . BUTTERSCOTCH COOKIES Mrs. C. O. Nolt, Bird-in-Hand 2 cups brown sugar 1 cup butter and lard 4 cups flour (scant) 2 eggs i teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon cream of tartar 1 cup nuts 1 cup dates, cut up 1 teaspoon vanilla Can be rolled or dropped. p/%| CMSSCMSS%\ /x H i SIXTY ( i HANSENS LEGHORN CITY S A new expression of an old lav- sketch of it and send it to: Farm Wife and onte album quilt. It uses small scraps from Family, Lancaster Farming, Quarryville, other quilts. Allow lor seams. To have F'a. (Copyright: Weekly Star Farmer) your favorite quilt pattern printed, make a Keep Poinseltias In Dark Room At Night you have a poinsettia that jou have saved from last Christ mas and you would like it to bughten your house again this winter, it is important that you understand its light require ments The poinsettia is a plant that develops its bloom when the days are short and the nights are long ‘Xloom” in the case of the pom settia is really just bnghtly-coloi ed leaves surrounding an mcon sp'cuous flower, but neither the flower nor the color will appear if light conditions are not right To help your poinsettia to bloom this winter, keep it in a room which you do not use at night. Even short periods of ex posure to night lights will inter fere with blooming. In effect, this lengthens the day and the plant continues to act as though it were summer. The shortened days of fall are a signal to this plant to prepare itself to bloom. Just how this mechanism works, no one under stands completely, but the vary ing effects of light and day lengths have been observed with many plants Scientists call this photopenodism. Once the plant has bloomed and you have brought it out into the night lights, the red leaves will begin to fall after a week or so and the plant will enter a rest period. A poinsettia also drops its leaves if its roots are congested. Foliage drop at this time of year may indicate that it needs to be leplanted in a larger pot. J i Keep Cattle Away From Stale Water Stagnant water within reach of dairy cattle can be the source of several disease problems, accord ing to extension dairy specialist Edward Oleskic of Rutgers Dni \eisity Trouble with mastitis, lepto spirosis, many filth diseases, and even nitrate poisoning, he says, has been traced to stagnant and” contaminated ponds and streams. Dairymen should drain or fence stale ponds so dairy cattle can not get to them. Hatcheries Produce 7 Pet. More Chicks During October of this year commercial hatcheries produced 132 991,000 chicks, up seven per cent from October 1956 and 44 per cent above average. For the first 10 months of the year, however, chick production totaled 1820,283,000 compared with 1,876,580,000, a decrease of three per cent from the same BY THE Savings added to your account here by the 10th of the month earn from the Ist—so it pays to save now! If you do not have an insured savings ac count here, why not open one right away?, A convenient amount will get you started. Good earnings paid on savings, here, help your account grow faster! Current Dividend 3% P er Annum. Accounts Insured to $lO,OOO FIRST FEDERAL! 'avingsandX OP LANCA 35 North Dnke Phon * EX 72 818 G ilbert H. Hartley, Treasurer Emlen H. Zellers, Secretary months of 1956. Broiler chicks accounted for 83 per cent of the October hatch this year an increase of nine per cent over October a year ago The number of heavy breed poults hatched in October totaled 373,000, compared with 396,000 m October 1956, a decrease of six per cent below October 1956. Only 169,000 light breed poults weie hatched this past October, a de crease of 48 per cent below Oc tober of last year. Paid On Savings - an