—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 22,1978 48 Quick ’n’ Easy i 9 302i0y 2 -i8y 2 Sy w S< ,L^ 7124 Badenna bedspread and cafe curtams-charming way to dress up a child s room Easy embroi dery Pattern 7124 transfer of one large motif 6 flower garlands easy directions All lightness All ease No complications Requires nothing of you but that you enjoy wear mg it Note slit buttoned shoul ders above draped neck Printed Pattern 9302 Half Sizes 104 12 *'2 144 164 184 Size 144 (bust 37) takes 24 yards 60 inch fabric In poplin pique linen wool tins is IF The casual cardigan thats tops in fashion for summer Double the impact with the matching visor cap Printed Pattern 9184 Misses Sizes 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 Size 12 (bust 34) jacket 2 5/8 yds 45 m hat 5/8 $1 50 for each pattern Add3sd for each pattern for first-class airmail handling Send to QUICK and EASY PATTERNS 170 232 W 18 St New York NY 10011 Fashions to Sew 754 1971 Needlecraft Catalof 75( Designer Collection 75( ..liner umeuiun Petal Quilts $1.50 Thrifty Crafty Flowers 1 50 Stuff V Puff Quilts 1 25 Stitch 'n' Patch Quilts 1 25 Book of 16 Quilts #1 75c Museum Quilt Book #2 75t 15 Quilts for Today #3 754 Book of 16 Jiffy Rugs 754 Add 25c each book for postage handling The \@Ml Line Long Famous for Dependable Performance ” r '7^ - I > Models I 5& 48 I Precision Bill f 4000 10 000 Bu /Hr , I SEE US FOR YOUR BUCKET ELEVA TOR NEEDS 11 etowdiA, W A. J a I Wt GRAIN EQUIPMENT INC Box 216 RD 12, 17406 c / 5 m av; y 911 8- NEW #-(717) 755-2868 [h Notebook t ♦ During the several years that I’ve been writing this column, I have met some very nice people. Even though I live in a rather isolated area with only a rural route as an address, some folks have managed to fmd me They have come with a horse and wagon and a bunch of children, they’ve come by boat and they’ve come in a Lincoln. Sometimes they tell me that they, too, enjoy a beautiful sunset at the end of a busy day or believe in some wilderness areas for wildlife on the farm. Other times they express an in terest in where we have vacationed or even ask how some garden crop is grown. One man exchanged a jar of his own honey for a peck of my artichokes. It’s been a pleasure to get to know people from other countries and visit in their homes. This past week I was really surprised to have an Amish family stop in and bring with them a couple from Connecticut. The woman wanted to meet me as she reads Lancaster Farming newspaper regularly. Of the many letters that I’ve received, only one stands out as a “nasty one”. This particular lady chastised me for allowing a 24 net 1000 Bu /Hr Ida’s boy to trap muskrats in a marshy section of our field, where a new highway pours water unto it. She felt that no animals should ever be trapped. And if the town boy needed money, she suggested that we should give him a 30b on the farm “tending our cows”. It is too bad that she doesn’t have a sweet corn patch, 90 per cent devoured by raccoons the night before the morning she intended to pick and freeze it; then she too would be ready to trap some animals Usually, however, my readers and 1 share similar ideas, ways of life and hobbies Bu /Hr Ida Risser