st— Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 2,1978 Home on the Range (Continued from Page 57) SWEDISH CHRISTMAS COOKIES % cup brown sugar % cup molasses 1 teaspoon ginger 2 teaspoons cinnamon 1 teaspoon cloves % teaspoon baking soda % cup butter legg 5 cups flour, approximate granulated sugar for topping Heat butter and molasses to boiling point. Add baking soda and pour over butter in large mixing bowl. Stir until butter melts. Add egg and sifted flour, enough to make a stiff, workable dough. Divide dough into small, flat por tions, about six inches in diameter, % of an mch thick. Wrap each portion in waxed paper until ready to use. Roll out on lightly floured board or pastry cloth. Dough may be chilled before rolling if necessary. Cut with cookie cutters and bake on greased baking sheet at 325 Degrees F. for eight to ten minutes. Note; The cookies are best rolled very thin. They may be sprinkled with sugar before baking or decorated after with white icing made from one cup confectioners sugar and one egg white. SPICE PEAR BARS 2 cups all purpose flour ‘ 1 cup quick cooking rolled oats 1 cup flaked coconut 1 cup packed brown sugar 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 cup butter 4 medium pears, peeled, cored, and chopped, (2 cups) % cup chopped nuts % cup granulated sugar Vt teaspoon ground cinnamon V* teaspoon ground ginger 3 tablespoons butter In bowl stir togethr flour, oats, coconut, brown sugar, baking soda, and V* teaspoon salt; cut in one cup butter until mixture is crumbly. Pat half of the mixture into a greased 15% x 10% x 2 inch pan. Cover with pears. Combine nuts, granulated sugar, and spices; sprinkle over fruit. Dot with three tablespoons butter. Pat remaining oat mixture over all. Bake at 375 Degrees F. for 45 to 60 minutes. Cut into bars while still warm. Makes four dozen. QWhy are Huskee Bill general purpose buildings so popular? They are versatile and economical Plus we offer you a A wide range of options multiple colors big wide doors, high eaves stress rated lumber skilled crews and Hudsec-Bilt reliability If you need a machine storage building, hay shelter, animal shelter or repair shop, you’ve got it in the 'Huskee-Bilt General Purpose Building. You’ll be surprised at the low square footage price ft t mervin miller 7 keener road LITITZ, PA 17543 PHONE: (717) 626-5204 ALSO ask about Thrive Center Environmental our Total Animal Confine mcnt Systems i" 11^ ■■■■■■l ■■■■■ mobA O NUTRITIOUS wilderness. Does anyone hear? Or care? The voices are those of young farm families, struggling to grasp hold of a way of life, watching as that chance slips from their fingertips and is lost in the wilderness. The wilderness? It’s a jungle of sky-high land prices, fast-growing machinery costs, interest rates with a stranglehold that threatens to choke the existence of agriculture credit. I listened to the voices of frustrated young fanners, pleading for help in finding a way through the financial jungle maze during a Young CLICK'S \ ROOFING & SPOUTING Handler & Installer Of BAKED ENAMEL TIN ROOFS Colors: Turquoise, Red, Olive Green, Rust, Brown, White and Piain. Sizes: 5 ft. up to 36 ft. All in one. Also cut to exact length. SAMUEL B. CLICK R.D l.Kmzer, Pa PH: (717)442-4921 Call in Morning Before 6:30 and Evenings after 6 00 P M No Sunday Calls rzM I Chambersburg, Pa. ->7201 jOLLENBEROER Ph0ne 717 264 9688 CONCRETE "H” TYPE FEED BUNKS 3V2 ”-J , — n - ’ '——— \~j ” 1 r* 28 ~ "’ ~~ " Approximate weight 4000 lbs Featuring : String enough to support • Steel Reinforced a ro °f ar| d fesder • Movable for future expansion • No corners to retain spoiled feed INSTALLATION OF BUNKS We have the necessary equipment to handle and install these heavy bunks. „ Customer shall make roadway to feed lot passable for our delivery truck. , f spt Grandpa paid $2OO an acr recently by the Baltin; re for land and probably District of the nationwide thought he’d been taken -Farm Credit system. Today, a buyer counts bis Farm Credit includes the blessings if the price stops a* Production Credit 12,000 Association and the Federal Grandpa paid $lOO for a Land Bank Association, a milk cow. Today, you self-supporting agriculture might get a decent grade credit cooperation, owned Holstein - not a purebred and operated by the farmer- with registry - for $l,OOO members which it serves. Grandpa' had a tractor Although ' the federal too. Ii probably cost him government loaned seed money in 1916 to get Farm Credit off and running, those funds have, been paid back for ten years. Today, we obtain opr lending funds through the money markets of the world. And, you know what shape our dollar is in on the world market. And, it’s going to cost each one of us more just to plant and harvest the food supply. These young farmers aren’t asking for a handout. For public assistance. For a tax-free grant. All they seek is the chance to borrow capital, to raise their families on the land, to prove themselves. Maybe a hundred acres of productive ground, with s barn and a house on it. Th° beginnings of a herd of in come-sustaining hvestocr. Enough basic machinery 10 plow, plant and gather. $2,000. Today, you won’t touch a new one for $20,000. . Grandpa’s prices ar* gone. Grandpa’s financing' methods have got to go, too. We must have dependable “borrow power”, available when needed, at reasonable rates and payback times. Understanding and knowledgeable agriculture lenders and financing boards were never needed more than they are right' now, whether they be through the Farm Credit system or through commercial banking. Many young farmers need Farm Credit to survive. Without the support of those same young people, in a few years, Farm Credit won’t survive. After all, isn’t that what cooperatives are all about? have a nice weekend... *1