10—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 6, 1958 For the Farm Wife and Family z /j cup boilmg water 1 cup sour milk or butter- i ulk 1 teaspoon soda in 1 table spoon vinegar cup cocoa cups flour 1 tablespoon vinilla mtiTkiiONMANYA IOPS^ Smith Corona WORLD’S FASTEST PORTABLE EASY TERMS 23 Models To Choose From L B. HERR &SON «The Poi table Typewriter Store'' 46-48 West King Street LANCASTER, PA. t SSSSSSSSSSSSSSmSmSSSmSSSSSSSSSSSSSS i I IT PAYS TO ! i ESTABLISH YOURSELF i I WITH A BANK | ; | Here’s Why: A bank is the center of financial information .... yours for the asking. A bank is a safe place to save. It's easy to make a deposit or a withdrawal. Paying by check gives you prestige and en ables you to handle your finances in an orderly manner. And a bank is a good place to borrow, al ways at reasonable rates. STOP IN. GET ACQUAINTED! Use Our Convenient DRIVE-IN WINDOW One-half block from Penn Square on South Queen Street Rear of Main Bank. ' Serving Lancaster from Center Square since 1889” MILLERSVILI.E BRANCH Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Maximum Insurance $lO,OOO per depositor q % Cream shortening, add su gar and eggs and beat well. Add water and mix. Add sour milk, then soda and vine gar. Sift cocoa and flour to gether and add. Flavor with vanilla. The mixture will be thin Bake at 350 degrees Crazy Choc, Cake Beatrice Schreiber R.D. 2 Quarryville 1 cup sugar Vz cup shortening Vz cup butter or sour milk 1 egg Vz cup hot water IVz cups flour 1 teaspoon baking powder Vz cup coca 1 scant teaspoon soda Place all ingredients in bowl. Mix well after all in gredients are added Bake in moderate oven at 350 de- _ . , , „During the month ended s ' _ , November 15, the index of Orange Kiss-Me Cake prices reC ei V ed by farmers, Emily Galhmore dropped .4 per cent accord ing to the USDA Crop Re porting Board. Main reasons given for the decline are lower puces for oranges, hogs, cotton, corn, and tobacco. These were par tially offset by higher prices for potatoes, apples, milk, and some fresh vegetables. The index of prices paid by farmers rose one-third of one per cent to 30 r, a new all-time high, mainly due to one per cent to 308, a new automobiles. l Thus, with the index of prices received off one point, and the index of prices paid up one point, the parity ra tio declined one point to 81, the lowest for 1958 and about Lloyd M. BURKHOLDER Chick Hatchery Red or While T .. Vantress Cross F 1 * - ’ White leghorns a. R-B Red Cross JB U. S. Approved Pulloium Clean CaU EE 3-0613 R. D. 1. EPHRATA. PA. 1 Mi. NE of Clay on Stevens Hd FREE PARKING ' 25 S. Queen Street- Swan Parking Lot —• Vine & S. Queen Sts. Stoner Parking Lot S. W. Corner Vine & Queen Sts. 302 N. GEORGE ST. Grind together the follow ing: 1 large orange (pulp and rind)-save juice for topping 1 cup seedless raisms Vs cup walnuts Sift together: 2 cups sifted flour - teasspoon so#ia 1 teasspoon salt 1 cup sugar Vs cup shortening % cup milk Beat for two minutes Then fold the orange-raisin mix ture into batter. Pour into well greased and lightly flour ed pans. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) 40 to 50 minutes. ~ Orange Nut Topping Drip y 2 cup orange juice over warm cake Combine the following and sprinkle over cake: Vs cup sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon v 4 cup chopped walnuts Decorate with orange slic es if desired. Parity Index Hits '5B Low he same as for the three pre edmg Novembers. Current Dividend OJq per Annum Paid On Savings ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $lO,OOO ro n . KFIRST FEDERAL 111 ® QJavings and/o an 4ii ASSOCIATION OP LANCATTM 25 North Duke St. *™F pw “ 7 ' 2818 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 don’t already have an insured savings account 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! Gilbert H. Hartley Emlen H. Zellers Treasurer Secretary Geo. L. Diehl James N. Esbenshade Asst. Treasurer Asst. Secretary Plains Research Leader Wins $l,OOO Award Chicago—The new Dean of Agriculture and Director of the Agricultural Experiment Station at South Dakota State College was selected by the American Society of An imal Production to receive a $l,OOO award from American Feed Manufacturers Association, as the outstanding research worker in animal science for 1958 Dr. Orville G. Bentley, until October 1, Professor m the Department of Animal Science at the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, was given the honor during the Socie ty’s Golden Jubilee Meeting at Hotel Sherman, Chicago, November 28, 29, 1958. Presentation of the award was made by W. E. Glennon, President of American Feed Manufacturers Association, at the Society’s Thursday evening banquet. Dr. Bentley’s original and basic research has made great contributions to the study of rumen digestion by cattle and sheep. His experi mental studies made great strides in the technique of using laboratory test tubes anl beakers (invitro) to arti fically create the digestive processes of animals. U.S. Red Meat Experts Drop 35 PC The Foreign Agricultural Service reports that for the third quarter of 1958, U. S. exports of red meat totaled 19,752,000 pounds. 35 per cent below the same period of 1957. From January through September of this year, red meat exports totaled 64,462, 000 pounds, down 58 per cent from the first nine months of 1957. US. exports of lard also declined from 387 million lbs. for the same months of this year, a 28 per cent drop Earthworms help improve soil structure. In addition they are an index of the plumbing or drainage condi tion of the soil. With this technique he proved that trace minerals, particularly cobalt, limited utilization of poor quality roughage by beef and sheep. He studied rumen micro flora’s synthesis of vitamin B 12 and utilization of non protein nitrogen. Probably his most far-reaching con tribution was the discovery that certain acids and vita min B-12 derived from parts of a good, balanced ' ration, _■ stimulate growth of cellulose digesting organisms in vitro. This finding will form a bas'c principle for more ef ficient formulation of rumi nant rations in the future. Dr. Bentley was born and raised o a ranch in South Dakota. He received his B.S. degree in Agriculture with a major in -.chemistry from South Dakota State College in 1942. Following service with the U. S. Army during World War 11, he earned his M. S. and Ph. D. degrees in biochemistry and nutrition from the University of Wis consin. Following graduation, he served as an Assistant Pro fessor, Associate Professor and Professor in the Depart ment of Animal Science at the Ohio Agricultural Ex periment Station. Dr. Bentley is the'eleventh member of the Socity of An imal Production to receive the AFMA award since 1948. fc Breeding y ! BS3ZSS ; |Ffom HubbarC| fr v V' \SjpS! ' fv WHITE I PROI Hubbard’a Kimbercbik K-137 to* proved its outstanding superiority u a white esc producer. Under the most difficult commercial condi tiona tba Hubbard Kimbercbik continue* to be the poultrymsn's profitable answer for top quality white The K-137 produce* egg* with an excellent firm albu men content...the land of egg* the consumer demands...not too large —not too small—but just right. Every trait of the K-137 points to profit. Large eg* size early mean* an early return on your flock in vestment High egg average per, year means more eggs and more profit The smaller body size means lower feed costs. You, too, will find the Kimbercbik K-187 produced by Hubbard the best all-around-bird you ever bad. Maks your next flock Hubbard Kimbercbik and cash in on this top whit* egg producer. HUBBARD PROFIT-BRED 800 STRAINS Mubb'ard farms emu Mcmheim Pike Lancaster, PA.