10 —Lancaster Farming, Friday, September 12, 1958 or t Farm Wife and Family (Continued from page nine) GREEN TOMATO PIE 3 cups green tomatoes, sliced J 2 cup brown sugar J -2 cup molasses Vz cup water 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon cinnamon 4 teaspoon nutmeg Pastry for 2 (9-inch) crusts Sbce tomatoes in thin rings Do not pare. Cover with boiling water and let stand for 10 minu tes Dram Put tomato slices in unbaked pastry shell. Combine sugar, flour and spices Add molasses and water. Pour mixture over tomatoes Cov gr with a top crust Bake at 425 degrees for 15 minutes reduce temperature to 375 degrees and continue to bake 30 minutes Makes 1 (9-inch) pie. GREEN TOMATO MINCEMEAT PIE 1 peck tomatoes 1 quart sliced apples, fresh or dried Salt 1 pound suet chopped Cinnamon nutmeg and cloves pounds brown sugar - 3 lemons = Wash tomatoes Cut in small pieces Sprinkle with salt. Let stand overnight. Drain Add suf ficient water to prevent sticking. Cook 30 minutes stirring frequent ly Add lemon juice, grated rind tf one lemon and white of one lemon cut in small pieces Add ap ples, suet, raisins and sugar Add spites to taste ad a few grains of salt Simmer slowly, stirring fre quently, until tomatoes and ap ples are tender and flavors are blended Pack in freshly steriliz ed jars. Seal Bake in a double mist pic Another quick bread which is Printed Pattern '\ \\ \\ « \\ \\ \\ a cd SIZES U 9296 10-13 " Iry Printed Pattern 92<>G Misses’ Sues 10. 12, U, 16, 18 Size 16 takes 37* jarcls 35 inch fabric. Send FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern —add 5 cents for <ach pattein ifyou wish Ist class mailing. Send to 170 Newspaper Pattern Dept, 232 West 18th St, New York 11, N Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. O nice for a luncheon is this Nut Bread. Served with a fruit salad and cottage cheese, it makes the perfect luncheon platter. 3 cups sifted all-purpose flour Vz teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon soda 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 cup brown sugar, firmly packed 1 cup coarsely chopped aval nuts 1 egg 2 tablespoons molasses l\z cups buttermilk | DEAD ANIMALS f | REMOVED PROMPTLY | g Will Pay Full Value = = For Dead Animals g = Dealers in Bones, Tallow =f = and Hides = 1 FRY’S RENDERING I | WORKS | g Prop., John Fry g | 2114 Bollinger RD. | g Lancaster = = Ph EX 2 4515 if No Answer = g Phone EX 7-0472 g liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinimif) “Also Bail Bond Service” BUHRMANS CONVENIENT ONE PRICE PARKING LOTS IN LANCASTER Opposite Brunswick Hotel Opposite Post Office Chestnut & Queen Streets West Chestnut Street Next to Western Auto A New Weber Hotel East Kin g Street Norman A. Buhrman, 228 N. Duke St. “Also Bail Bond Service” iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The SHAVER HH I G H HEN-HOUSED PRODUCTION Shaver Starcross layers averaged 289 eggs per bird housed at four separate test locations 2000 miles apart jyj GOOD EGG SlZE—Eggs leghorns averaged 26 2 ounces per dozen 5/ GRAM—The Shaver Poultry Breeding Farm, Ltd of Galt, Ontario, maintains a constant testing program, supervised by three of the continents top geneticists, and involving 108 strain crosses, conducted at four widely separated locations in Canada and two in the States The results of each cross are evaluated on their performance at all locations. =niiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii NUT BREAD GREIDER LEGHORN FARMS, INC. laid by Shaver Starcross OUTSTANDING BREEDING PRO- 3 tablespoons melted butter Silt together the flour, salt, soda and baking powder. Add sugar and walnuts Beat egg until thick and lemon-colored, add mo lasses and buttermilk Combine with first mixture along with melted butter. Stir only to blend ingredients Do not beat. This will be very thick. Spoon the mix ture in a well-buttered loaf bread pan, 9x5x3 inches, making slight hollow m center. Let stand 20 minutes before baking Bake in a moderate oven C 350 degrees! for about 60 minutes or until a wooden pick thrust into the centei comes out clean Turn out of pan onto wire rack to cool. Don’t let it bother you it the loaf cracks acioss the top during the baking. Most all of them do. This bread may be served warm or cold. To slice thinly for sand wich making, it is better to have it a day old. NOTE. One-half to three fourths cups chopped figs, dates cr raisins may be added along with the nuts. CLOUDY JELLY If the jel ly you made is cloudy, it may be that your poured the jelly mix- PEARS FOR EVERYONE H.L. SHANK kes iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiViiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii)iiiiiiiiiiiinii)iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii)inii)iiiin)iiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)iiiimmi)Wiii| . . . an achievement of Canada’s great breeding farm i - '' i x ' Ji over Farm Women 20 To Sponsor Contestant At a recent meeting of Society of Farm Women 20 at the home of Mrs Chester Trout, Oxford, RJD, it was voted to sponsor one of the contestants in the So lanco High School Teenagers Club Contest this Fall. The Society will assist at the Quarryville Fair September 17 to 19 by manning the outdoor food stands. In place of a program at this meetings, members toured the Octoraro Water Works at Spring Grove Next meeting will be held at 1-45 pm, Thursday, Oct. 2, in the home of Mrs. Forest Rein hart, Jr., Artville. Mrs William Crawford, Jr., will be the assist ant hostess. ture into glasses too slowly. Other causes for cloudy jelly are im properly strained juice, mixture allowed to stand before pounng into glasses, and jelly set too fast usually the result of using fruit too green Bartlett|Pears WHOLESALE and RETAIL! Open; Evenings—Closed: Sunday CALL AT THE presents STARCROSS 2 88 1 + Write or Phone Mt. Jon OL 3-2455 Greider Leghorn Farms, Inc. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiinih Illllilll "Attention, Please!" We Are Happy To Announce Another Very Fine Crop Of NEW DANVILLE PIKE Phone Lancaster R. D. #6 EX 2-6022 MT, JOY, R. 1, PA. Nancy Kern To Leave Post Sept. 30 Miss Nancy L Kern, Associate Extension Home Economist, an nounced this week she will leave the post Tuesday, September 30. In a letter to members of the Lancaster County Agricultural Extension Association Executive Committee, Miss Kern announced her resignation The Home Econ omist informed the Committee she would be assuming “a new and different job—that of a house wife”. Also in her letter Miss Kern expressed her thanks for the kindness and help of “every one, including 4-H members, lead ers, and extension personnel ” “Although I did not want to leave the County before the com pletion of 4-H work, records, and reports,” she concluded, “I am anxious to start my new job” Before coming to Lancaster, Miss Kern was Assistant Home Economist in Lebanon County LANCASTER FARMING CLASSIFIED ADS PAY Phone STterling 6-2132 LOW MOR TALITY Laying house mortality for a period of 12 months at four locations was only 1 67%, or over 98 hens remaining out of every 100 pullets housed. I* EXCEPTIONAL FEED yH CONVERSION Shaver Starcross layers produced a dozen eggs for each 3 83 pounds of feed consumed, or 4 pound less than the average of the other strain-crosses and hy brids tested. * SHAVER
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