cup sugar ;mall orange - - small tart apple cup chopped salted pea- )h SI its ' teaspoon salt lt cranberries through chopper, using the ; ee plate, afid mix with sugar. Cut the orange and e into quarters, remove s and put through chop- Combine all ingredients. ,e with poultry or meat, es about IVicups. read and cakes are deli s with peanut flavor — eanut butter drop COOKIES \<z cup peanut-butter 1 cup brown sugar 2 eggs, beaten 2 tablespoons rmlk 2i/, cups cake flour I teaspoon baking powder teaspoon ginger I>4 teaspoon cloves teaspoon cinnamon II teaspoon soda jl cup chopped dates or iraisms Crca,m peanut butter with idd eggs and ingredients to- Add fruit our order NOW for NETIC lANT ■IC GIANT HYBRID COB ears; deepest kernels; high ITIC GIANT red-seeded GRAIN SORGHUM—new produces larger yields. .fETIC GIANT "Sweet St RAGE SORGHUM—best fo ■ more tonnage with high sugai anf GENETIC GIA EXTRA YIEL BIGGER PROF Farmersville Eqpt. C R.D. 2, EPHRATA, New Holland EL 4-9: The SICO Company Gasolines Motor Oils • 100 PLUS • 5D KOOL MOTOR •SUPESD . • TROJAN heavy * MILE MASTER . * TROJAN FUEL OIL 24 HOUR OIL-BURNER SERVICE WILLIAMS OIL-O-MATIC u ' iC Plants Throughout Lancaster County * COLUMBIA * EPHRATA © 123331 and drop by teaspoons onto greased cookie sheet. Bake in a moderate oven (350 de grees) 10 minutes. Makes 4 dozen cookies. Without the fruit this cookie can be mol ded -with a cookie press and baked on a, cold ungreased cookfe sheet as above. PEANUT - BUTTER NUT BREAD Topping 2 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons brown sugar Peanuts 1 tablespoon water Batter 1 egg 1 cup brown sugar 2 tablespoons peanut but- ter ‘ 2 tablespoons melted bub ter 1 cup sour milk or butter milk 2 cups sifted enriched flour t-i teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon baking powder V> teaspoon salt For topping; spread butter on bottom of Joaf pan Cover evenly with sugar and pea nuts Sprinkle water over • MOUNT TOY • OXFORD • LANCASTER Home Office: Mount Joy Ph. OL3-3111 mixture. Cover with batter. To make batter- beat the egg. Add sugar gradually, beating It in. Stir in peanut butter and melted butter. Add milk. Sift together flour, soda, baking powder and salt. Add egg mixture, stir ring until well-blended. Bake in moderate oven 350 de grees for 1 hour. Makes one 1-pound loaf. * * EGG YOLKS ARE A GOOD SOURCE OF IRON FOR BABIES Baby’s first solid feed needs to contain iron, and egg yolks seem to be one good way to supply it. You can hard cook the eggs, then mash and mix the yolk with some of the formula. Or make a soft custard with one egg yolk and from ’A to Va cup of milk. One egg yolk will give a large share of the iron a child needs daily and also some thiamine and vitamin A. The egg white isn’t given to mfejnts because it may produce as allergy unless ev ery partic’e of the white is thoroughly cooked. Sieved meats and cereals especially prepared for in fant feeding will also supply some of the iron the baby needs each day These spec ial cereals usually haye iron added to them. Baby cereals with oatmeal in them provide much more thiamine than other cerea’s Usually the cereals are mixed with four to five vol umes of warm milk when PENT-A-CIN for truly effective Mastitis control Z.f r ''' v ' J '-'Tx -L.-T.yf, y.yzy;' ■ Born Into a Wonderful ity This baby will someday realize her good fortune and enjoy helping local progress—as every good citizen does. Help your community by banking at Use Our Convenient DRIVE-IN WINDOW One-half block from Penn Square on South Queen Street Rear of Main Bank. M ATIO '‘Serving Lancaster from Center Square since 1889” MILLERSVILLE BRANCH Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Maximum Insurance 810.000 ner depositor Tree Planting On Increase An all-time high of over 2 billion trees were planted in 1959 largely as a result of the tremenoous increase in planting on private lands, Secretary of Agriculture Ez ra Taft Benson announced. The Forest Service sum mary of reports from its field offices, State foresters and other Federal departments shows 2,118,471 acres were planted. One-third of the land plan ted, or about 700,000 acres, was cropland placed in the Conservation reserve pro gram under 10-year contracts Under the Conservation Re serve, farmers receive cost sharing he’p to place in con servation uses land voluntar ily retired from crop produc tion. During the past two years forest and wind bairrier tree planting has leaped from 1 million acres in 1957 to IVz million in 1958, and 2-1 mil lion in 1959. This compares to 497,507 acres planted in 1950 and 812,588 acres in 1955 Tree planting on privately owned land jumped from 1,- 326,370 acres in 1958 to 1,- 884,071 in 1959. Planting on (Turn to page 10) they are fed to the bnby Milk makes little contribu tion of iron but is most val- Effectiveness never before possible it now avail able with the broad-spectrum formulations of Rock land PENT-A-CIN mastitis products. Available in injectors, multi-injectors and tubes—to meet every mastitis need. Newest mastitis fighter is wonder working Neo-Pent-A-Cin, which treats all forms of mastitis without using Penicillin. Stock up at your dealers now. or write us. ROCKLAND 25 S. Queen Street— Swan Parking Lot Vine & S Queen Sts. Stoner Parking Lot S. W. Corner Vine & Queen Sts Ai BANK 302 N. GEORGE ST. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 5, 1960—9 FREE PARTING Plowing Meet Date, Place Announced Harrisburg, March 3—The State Plowing Contest and Conservation Field Day will be held August 10 at the Frank Bice farm, fiye miles west of Chambersburg, in Franklin County, David G. Unger, chairman of the State P owing Contest Committee and director of the State Soil Conservation Commission, announced today. Feature of the Conserva tion field day wi'l be a dem onstration of an alfalfa pel leting machine. Diversion terracts, a farm pond, open and tile drains will be instal led in a massive demonstra tion of conservation and wa ter control practices. Cooperating in staging of events will be the Frank lin County Soil Conservation District, Chambersburg Cha mber of Commerce, Agricul tural Extension Service, Soil Conservation Service, Agri cultura Conservation and Stabilization Committee, and farm machinery dea.ers , County plowing contests will be held throughout the summer with regional con tests planned if needed Both ’evel land and contour ev ents are schedu’ed for the state contest The nadonal plowing con test wi 1 be held this year in South Dakota come and appreciation possibilities. Frti af Panna. Ptrsonal Prnportj Taxes la tplnita si ctunisl. Lecal lamtmtnt (er Trusts, ■ndsr aaplleabls Pinna, law, la •plnlM sf ciuntil. Stud lor this FACT DOOK (ProspMM) Without obhfatioa gmwmimwmmmm I REYNOLDS & CO. 161 N. Duke Street LANCASTER, PA. I «AHt . . | anoirsn I aw r oj] w£mt l^agnavox COMIrLufE Hi-Fi STEREO In ma- ogany OKIY $149.50 Blip’s Audio Sates 2320 HOBSON ROAD. SMOKETOWN, PA. EXpress 3-7242 Open Tue. to Sat 95; Fri. 99; Closed Mondays
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers