Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, May 23, 1958, Image 10

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    10—Lancaster Farming, Friday, May 23, 1958
For t
Farm Wife and
Varied Program
For Animal
Women’s Meeting
Lancaster County homemakeis
nil! be among the seveial bund
led Pennsylvania women planning
to attend the sixth annual Exten
sion Homemakers’ Week at the
Pennsylvania State University
June 16 to 19 are the dates for
this event, open to all inteiested
homemakers.
For Farm Wives
(Continued from page 9)
Drink a glass of cold water mix
ed with two tablespoons lemon
jiuce on arising Makes getting up
much easier
A few diops of lemon juice
sonnkled over freshly cut truit
keeps fpuit from turning daik
<Uniost anj hot buttered vege
table tastes better with a squeeze
ot lemon mixed in Especially
good with green beans, spinach
asparagus
Lemon juice is a mild bleaching
igent Its veiy effective in keep
ing white vegetables white
Lemon juice is a tastj salt sub
stitute ,in low-sodium diets
Well be looking for your let
ters and recipes telling us how
you use saffron
For Better Corn
or Grass Silage
PREMIER
SILAGE TREE!
Yes—here is the one-low-cost solu
tion of jour silage problem. Makes
no difference whether its corn or
grass—just add a dash of Premier
Silage 'lreet as «ilage is blown into
the silo and vou 11 preserve its fresh
flavor . . . you II keep out offensive
odors . . . vou 11 keep in all the
good vitamins. Premier Silage
“TREETED ’ roughage crops for
winter feeding smell sweet and
your herd will relish the special
added flavor.
Premier Silase Treet al-o helps
make poor quality hay palatable.
Get the Facts
Send lodjv for free descriptive
literature and prices on Premier
Silage Trect. Don’t pass up th«
advantages of feeding “TREETED 1 *
Eilage, Act now. and put extra dol«
lar» in the hank with the money
jou save on Feed Bills.
.AOCAL REPRESENTATIVE
R. S. Hess
Lititz MA 62314
Roy S. Spangler
Columbia MU 685.99
Theoilore Lehman
Lancaster EX 44929
A Product of
HMSPEKNgiDE & THOMPSON, INC
o
Family
The three-day program features
special interest groups, talks, a
banquet, fun night, chicken bar
becue, vesper service, and tours.
There will be time for homemak
ers to exchange ideas among
themselves and for them to have
fun together
Thirty-two different interest
groups offer homemakers a vari
ety of topics in the subject-mat
tei areas of food and nutrition,
clothing, home management and
home furnishings, child develop
ment and family life To balance
their program, women may
choose from a number of other
topics, such as landscaping the
home grounds, care of house
plants, oil painting, and jewelry
makmg Each woman can parti
cipate m four diffeient groups of
her own choice
An illustrated talk on the Al
lies Schweitzer hospital in Afri
ca will be a feature of the Tues
day evening program George A
Creitz, First United Church of
Christ, Easton, will be the speak
er
Speaker at the banquet Wed
nesday evening will be George W
Womlow. director of the Dela
ware Agricultural and Home
Economics Extension Service.
Women interested in attending
Homemakers’ Week may obtain
details, on registration, interest
groups, and cost from Mrs Ruth
K Kreibich, Agricultural Exten
sion Office, Post Office Building,
Lancaster Pa
A FREE
A GAS INSTALLATION
J limited time^only
Suburban Atlantic States Gas Co.
P.O. Box 1267, Lane., Pa. Phone: TWinoaks 8-3371
nillllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllllll!!.
v Honegger Chix Are Money Makers!
They Are Bred To Give You Top Profits
This Should Be A Good Poultry Year
Last year at this time there were 85,000,000 |
lbs. of frozen eggs on hand. This year there |
are only 50,000,000 lbs. available.|
I WHY?
i 2,
Last year there were 1,000,000 cases of shell |
eggs in storage. This year only 100,000 |
cases are in storage. |
I 3
There are 32,000,000 less layers on farms |
now than for the yearly average number |
for the past 10 years. |
| ORDER YOUR HONEGGER CHIX FOR |
| MAY AND JUNE DELIVERY TODAY. |
| CHICK PRICES FOR MAY AND JUNE |
I CHICKS HAVE BEEN REDUCED. I
U S.D.A. reports as of April 11, 1958
—— l Windle’s Hatchery |
CochranvilJc, Pa. |
Tiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.’iiiiimiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiE
Cereal Chemists Study Role
Starch Plays in Bread Staling
The mam reason bread becomes i enzyme that is not readily de
stale and hard is that jts starch stroyed by heat and remains ac
crystallizes, say U S Department tive in the baked loaf,
ol Agriculture scientists, who are This enzyme causes a break
cooperating with baking-industry down of starch into smaller mole
chemists in research on bread cules, thus tending to keep bread
staling. soft as it ages As the quantity of
Loss of mosture by the starch bacter-rnl umyiQse was increased,
to other components in bread ap- be bread showed lass tendency
pears to be both a contributing to become stale “
cause of staling and a result of *-ray examination showed that
the formation of starch ciystais "*ile breads baked with the add
,„.f ed enzyme became stale much
more slowly, starch crystals forra-
Stale loaves returned to bakers e(1 Just as rapidly as i n breads
by retail stores amount to about aked wlthout the enzyme. The
5 per cfent of total bread output scientlsts conclude that the enz-
No one knows how much consum yme does not break up aU the
eis lose through bread going stale, s j arc jj crystals but acts to weaken
but here too the loss is probably crystalline network structure
al » e that develops within the bread.
Research by Agricultural Re- thus making it less rigid,
search Service scientists of the
Northern Utilization Research
and Development Divson, Peoria,
I 111, and work by the American
Institute of Baking under a re
search contract supervised by the
Division, suggests two posible ap
pioaches to the problem of stop
ping bread staling. One is to pre
vent some of the starch from
crystallizing The other is to use
a heat-stable enzyme or other
agent capable of breaking up the
network of starch crystals as it
foims
Experiments show that the
starch in bread crystallizes as the
bread ages, causng undesirable
firmness of the loaf. As it crystal
lizes, starch loses some of its
ability to hold moisture. Also, as
bread loses moisture, its texture
becomes harsher So far no meth
od has been developed to stop
the formation of starch crystals in
bread.
In the second approach, breads
were baked using varying
amounts of bastenal amylose, an
Lf 3-5941
Farm Calendar
May 23
Paradise Community 4-H Club
- 8 pm at Fire Hall.
May 26
4-H Livestock Demonstration
Try outs Farm Bureau Cooper
ative.
Elm-Penryn 4-H Club 8 p.m.
at Penryn Fire Hall.
May 27
Extension executive committee
Bpm at Farm Bureau. Reports
of all program projection commit
tees will be heard.
Manor Community 4-H Club
8 p m. at the home of Abram Bar
ley, R 1 Washington Boro.
May 28
Adult program planning meet
ing 1 30 p m. at Farm Bureau.
Farm & Home Electric demon
stration try-outs 8 p.m. at
PP&L Bldg, Lancaster.
May 29
Garden Spot 4-H Club 8 p.m.
at the home of Harry Houser, R 2
Willow Street
Swine Producers Directors
neetmg Bpm at SPABC,
Route 230, Lancaster.
Tobacco Tour.
May 30
Memorial Day.
h
DALLAS, PA. QUARRYVILI E. PA.
Frank Richards
Misses First
Angus Meeting
For the first time in more than
11 years, Frank Richards missed
an official board meeting ol the
American Angus Association, ac
cording to Elliott Brown, prcsi
dent of the national organization.
Richard, executive secretary, is
recovering from a heart attack m
the Missouri Methodist Hospital,
St Joseph, Mo.
His physician, Dr. L H Fuson,
who is an Angus breeder near St.
Joseph, said that Richards is an
excellent patient and should be
out of the hospital in two or
three weeks] Then he’ll have to
“take it easy” for a couple of
months although during this
time he will me able to lesume
various office responsibilities
In the meantime, President
Brown states, “Busienss contin
ues as usaul, bt Angus folks will
miss seeing Mr Richards at some
ol their functions for a few more
weeks ”
Brown pointed out that Angus
business has shown important
gains during the first half of the
1958 fiscal„year. Registrations of
purebred calves numbered 108,-
735 This is a gam of seven per
over the same six month period
in 19 7 Greatest increases were
noted in transfers of registeied
cattle to new owners and new
memberships. Transfers totaled
95,912, a 16 per cent gain, and
junior members reached 298, a
13 per cent upturn compared
with the first half of 1957
The market for registered bulls
and commercial females continu
es strong, unusually so m the
West and South.
Snavely’s Farm Service
New Holland EL 4-221
w|)ouiH(wt \
WORKS WONDERS
citiltc
, TOO
Whether you’re on a
mountain climber’s lifeline
or a telephone pai ly line
:ooperalion makes for success.
On a party line, lor instance,
(thing makes service better or
faster than a little neighborly
comtesy anil t ooperation.
By hanging up thi receiver
carefully, uMng the line %haiuiglv,
an<l giving up the line
immediately in an enn igeiuy
cviiyonegci In Hi i -a i vice
COMMON V7EALTH
TELEPHONE
CHAIN SAW
SERVICE CENTER
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mi luihny >ou
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