HAPPY BIRTHDAY, ICE CREAM CONE! The next time you see someone licking a cool, deli cious mound of ico cream cuddled in a crunchy cone, you might give a aigh for those departed souls who lived before they yummy, tummy-tempting treat was invented. The ice cream cone cele brates its 70th birthday this year. For it was in 1904 that Atnerica, which had already given the world the telephone, the airplane, the cotton gin and the loganberry, came up with the ice cream cone. It happened, most accounts agree, at the St. Louis World's Fair. Thereafter, de MH-30 THE DEPENDABLE I TOBACCO SUCKER INHIBITOR n A ■Wffimi Also Royal MH-30 FOR MORE DETAILS CONTACT US PLEASE NOTE OUR NEW PHONE NUMBER 717-299-2571 t *—~ GY Tox-o-Wix GRAIN DRYER I WILL DRY CORN FOR PENNIES PER BUSHEL. 19/ TOX-O- WIK®CONTINUOUS RECIRCULATING GRAIN DRYERS WORLDS LARGEST SELLING RECIRCULATING BATCH GRAIN DRYERS BECAUSE - Price is Lower MODELS AVAILABLE - Costs Less to operate 270 - 250 BUS. - Easier to operate 270 - 350 BUS. - Dries more efficiently 270 - 500 BUS. - Will dry 50 per cent moisture down to 12-15 per cent moisture ON DISPLAY AT SHENK FARM SERVICE I RD4, Lititz, Pa. Phone 626-4355 * toils vary. On* voraion ha* a nameless conceaalonaira hawking a flat, awcet cake which he baked on a griddle before his customers' eyes. ’ During a lull, he rolled one of his stilbwarm cakes into a cornucopia shape. But what could be put in the corn ucopia? The vendor in the next stall was selling ice cream. He leaned over and begged a dollop for the open end of his creation and the ice cream cone was born. Unfortunately, according to this story, neither man saw that it was a great day in gastronomic history. But two other Fair employees were Your Best Investment r"’ BIRTHPLACE OF THE ICE CREAM CONE....A view of the St. Louis fair in 1904. taken with the idea After the fair closed they went to Cincinnati where they began to experiment with baking cones They used a small hand oven and turned out hand-rolled sweet sugar cones and the pressed or molded type. Their products found a ready market and before long cones appeared in other cities Automation got into the act in 1910 That was when Frederick A Bruckmann of Portland, Oregon, invented a machine that turned out 3,000 cones an hour He sold ma chine rights and territories to businessmen in vanous parts of the country and a new industry was launched Nabisco, Inc. entered the cone business in 1928 by buying the McLaren Con solidated Cone Corporation Founded by Alexander McLaren, who early had ob tained the rights to the Bruckmann machine for cer tain eastern territories, the company had a number of plants around the country. One of the main features of the McLaren cones was the nesting nng of extra thick ness around the outside of the cone near the top This per mitted the cones to be packed KING CONE...Woman em ployee packs 'em in. FOR PALACE OR PALATE ...Ice cream cones can tempt a lad to dream. one inside the other for ship ment, without the disastrous percentage of breakage which plagued the industry in its early years. Nabisco manufactures three basic types of cones; waffle cups, which come in assorted colors and fla vors, waffle cones and sugar cones. One Nabisco plant, for example, bakes over 300 million cones a year. The biggest switch in Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 10.1974 talcs hat been from regular size conet to be ditpcnted in stores to cups for home use. Mom’s kitchen it be coming a do-it-yourself ice cream parlor. Probably nobody knows the exact date on which to say "Happy Birthday” to the ice cream cone, but wittingly or not. millions of cones will be raised to the lips in celebra tion this year. Since the most recent fig ure shows the United States consuming 786 million gallons of ice cream annually, what if it all were dispensed in single dip cones? It would come to about 194 cones eaten each year by every man, woman and child Of course, not all ice cream is consumed this way, but isn't it a delicious thought in this cone-prone world? 15