Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, June 10, 1961, Image 10

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    —Lancaster Farming. Saturday, June 10. 1361
10
Best Food Buys
Warm Weather Brings Food Colors
, Warmer weather brings ed fruit from the Indian Riv-
and variety to the er section of Florida. Lemons
produce " counters of local are showing improved quali
foodmarkets, observes Tom ty at unchanged market pric-
Piper, Penn-State Extension es. Limes are in short supply
Marketing Agent. Locally and prices are high. Small
grown strawberries are com- Valencia oranges from Calif
irw to market this week; this ornia are noted in good qual
c'oforful red delicacy will ap- ity and at reasonable prices,
pear beside early shipments j n addition to strawberries
of apricots, plums and Bing aiM j grapefruit, good buys in
cherries ~ from j California, f ru it> this week will include
peaches from Georgia and bananas, pineapples and wa
blueberries from the Carol- lormelons. Cantaloupe sup
inas - plies are increasing and low-
Grapefruit supplies „ are
ample and quality is good,
particularly ou the small siz-
• Oranges
(From page 9)
coanut '
1 orange, sectioned
Cream together butter,
shortening, sugav & orange
nnd Add eggs, one at a
time, beating well after each
addition Sift dry ingredients
together Beginning and end
ing with flour mixture, add
alternately to creamed mix
ture, with orange juice Turn
batter into 2 greased and
lined 9-mch round cake pans.
Bake in a moderate oven
(350 degrees) 5 minutes Cool
Fill layers with' > Orange Fil
ling and frost top and sides
with Seven-Minute Frosting
Sprinkle top and sides with
cocoanut Place orange sec
tions pmwheel fashion in
center of cake.
ORANGE FILLING
% cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
1 cup orange juice
2 egg yolks
2 tablespoons butter
Mix sugar and flour in a
saucepan. Add orange juice
and egg yolks Place over
medium heat and bring to a
boil, stirring constantly.
■Cook one minute. Add butter
and stir well. Cool before us
ing
er prices will be noted on
this item.
Cool, rainy weather of
recent weeks is now showing
results in the form of supply
shortages and higher prices
at vegetable counters. Flori
da supplies are running out
and poor growing conditions
has retarded crop maturity
(Turn to page 11)
Farm Women 6
Make Donation
Society of Farm Women
number six voted to donate
$5O to the Agriculture Cen
ter at the June 3 meeting
of the group
Meeting at the home of
the Misses Lela and Stella
Coble, the society heard Mrs
Norma DeLellis, associate
County Home Economics'
Agent speak on ways to im
prove household storage
Mrs Willis Hackman serv
ed as hostess along with the
Misses Coble Devotions were
in charge of Miss Leta Coble
Society number five and
number six have recently
visited the 258 guests at the
County Home and gave a
gift to each guest.
After an auction held by
the president, Mrs. Keener,
refreshments were served to
40 members and friends by
the hostesses.
BALE B2HIAS FAST WITHGQJ} THE LABOR!
Today there’s a new way to balc-that Jets one
man bale and load faster than a 2. or 3-man
team! The new system consists of o New Holland
Haylinef plus a simple, foolproof mechanism that
“airlifts” the bales into a trailing wagon.
It costs surprisingly little. In fact, the lowest
priced Hayhner—the new Compact Hayliner 65
with Tele-Flow feed-costs no more with Bale-
Thrower than many balers without automatic
wagon loading! You get the job done in half the
time—all by yourself! See us about a demonstra
tion today.
■
RAKES
Fiom New Holland—the advanced Model 56 Rolabar
Rake! Its cleaner raking action puts moie hay...
jnoie doliais... into the windrow. Sa\ es nuti ient-nch
leaves and blossoms, to cut feed supplement costs.
Check these big exclusives:
New offset wheels, "floating” basket give
cleaner, smoother laking; pi event tooth breakage.
100-acre lubrication makes lubricating a once
a-season job for many fauneis—instead of a daily one.*
Patented spring-loaded jack for fast, easy
bitching.
Patented tooth adjustment. Tines aie indi
vidually xeplaceable
Sco the “SG” here today ... test it on your faun
tomonow!
MAKE BALE HANDLING
New Holland's Model 131 Bale Carrier
Cuts Labor Costs 50%, to 75% ?
New Holland’s low-cost 131 Bale Carrier ends the
backbreaking job of manhandling bales for storage.
With the “131”, you alone can random-stack over
twice as much hay as you used to store in a day!
The “131” goes together easily. Start with the
base unit, then hook on 8-foot or 4-foot sections
to custom-fit your exact needs—all the way up to
a 98-foot carrier—in the barn, in a shed, or outside 1
COME IN and see New Holland’s amazing 131
Bale Cairier—TODAY!
Dry Your Crops Overnight
With New Holland's 750 Dryer!
End leaching and bleaching with a Model 750
Crop Dryer from New Holland! The “750”
boosts hay quality, cuts feed costs! Just flick a
switch, dial your heat, and let science dry your
hay or grain!
Dry air sweeps through New Holland’s Model
776 Crop Drying Wagon, picking up moisture
throughout the entire load. Hugged corrugated
sides are bolted for flexibility, are sectionedized
for convenience.
See its today for all the facts about New Hol
land’s 750 D/jer and 776 Drains Wagon.
This Model 750 Dryer also highly recommen
for drying tobacco, grain and ear corn
Below are listed a few Lancaster County farmers that are
New Holland Dryers to dry tobacco > grain and com
WALTER CASSEL J. MOWERY FREY CLARENCE K:
R. D., MANHEIM R. D.. WILLOW STREET H. D.. MAN
ELLIS MENTZER JOHN RANCK
B D« NEW HOLLAND R. D„ NEW HOLLAND
L. H. Brubaker D. L. Diem & Sons J.B.Hostettei
LANCASTER LITITZ MOUNT J'
Cope & Weaver A. B. C. Groff Kauffman
WILLOW STREET NEW HOLLAND MOUNTV:
DEALERS
C. W. Wiley & Son Arthur S. Young C
QUARRYVILLE KINZERS
ANYWHERE'
1 1,1 ■
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