Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, January 31, 1981, Image 95

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    q\ Looking for
§ THE UNUSUAL?
Find It
Ml In Ilii
% CLASSIFIEDS.
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burn wood the
modern way l
New you can enjoy more
comfort with less work than
ever thought possible with
wood 1 Get a revolutionary
new
J
thermostatically controlled
down draft wood heater
Fuel toads will last at least
12 hours even in the coldest
weather in an Ashely'
Ashley owners from all over
the continent happily report
savings of up to 75%
g-ag
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Enjoy constant controlled
heat around the clock No
more waking up to a cold
house
nrfrr.uii.ia.mriff.mi
FULL LINE OF NEW
AND USED
FURNITURE
FISHER’S
FURNITURE
Bart PA 17503
Lancaster County
(Rt 896 in Georgetown)
Business Hours
Mon T ues Wed
and Sat 8 to 5
Thurs and Fn Bto 8
Cheese favorites
(Continued trom Hage C 6)
CHEESE-STEAK CASSEROLE
11/2 pound round steak
1/4 cup flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 packet onion soup
1/8 teaspoon pepper .
1 packet onion soup
4 ounce can mushrooms
1 cup water
1/2 cup buttermilk
4 ounces Swiss cheese
Cut meat mto 1/2 mch strips Place meat m 8 inch
baking dish Sprinkle flour, salt and pepper. Mix and coat
meat. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 mmutes.Remove from
oven Stir in onion soup, mushrooms and water Cover and
bake 1 1/2 hours. Set oven at 450 degrees. Pour 1/2 cup
buttermilk over top and 1 layer of Swiss cheese. Drop
biscuits on top. Sprinkle remaining cheese that’s been
shredded on top. Bake 15-18 minutes more.
Barbara Russell, Pine Bush, NY
Mom, I don’t feel too
good ”
“Do I have to go to school
today’”
And how often has that
lament echoed through your
house during the early
momxng muddle of getting
the family off for another
day?
Call it whatever you like
the “bug”, the “flu,” a
• ‘virus’ ’ or just your plain old
garden-vanety common cold
or upset tummy Any one, or
any combination, of the
“midwinter malaise’’
symptoms is a legitimate
excuse for a youngster to
claim a sick day oc
casionally.
I’m firmly convinced that
to a school-age child, an
occasional sick day - at least
when he’s not feeling too
miserable - is a necessary
and vital security blanket in
which a youngster can wrap
himself, enveloped in the
cozy warmth of undivided
parental concern.
At our house, a sick day
represents lolling around
from breakfast to bedtime in
pajamas and robe’ stretched
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 31,1981—€7
On being
a farm wife
-And other
hazards
Joyce Bupp
out on the couch with an
appropriately pale face, and
snuggling down m the pat
chwork blankej or the soft
afghan of crazy colors.
Then the pleas begin.
“Mom, I’ll take a cup of
tea now.”
“Mom, can you get me the
TV magazine 7”
“Mom, can you find me a
pencil 7”
“Mom, can I have a glass
of juice?”
“Mom, do you have time to
play a game 7”
“Mom, come and look at
Tigger and Fuzzface ”
(These two spoiled
housecats dehght in curling
under the blanket with any
patient claiming the sofa )
Etc., and so forth it goes,
unless Mom takes cover at
the bam or hides between
the washer and dryer
downstairs in the basement
and folds laundry
You can safely guess at
how much work ole’ Mom
gets accomplished on one of
these days.
After a recent seige with
assorted “bugs,” I searched
through my wife-mother
contract, scanning the fine
print with a magnifying
glass.
Sure enough, there it was:
“Care of temporarily ailing
children and husbands is to
be rendered un
complainingly upon
demand.”
At the bottom of the
contract was a footnote:
“Wife-mothers are
prohibited from taking ill.
Claims to sick-time care
shall be disregarded.”
We knew that all along,
didn’t we ?
Tuesday, February 3
Lancaster Society 27 meets
with hostess Mim Miller
for a work night
Wednesday, February 4
York Society 1 meets with
Amy Miller for reading of
by-laws.
Thursday, February 5
Lancaster 17 meets with
Ruth Graver, hostess, to
hear a talk by a doctor on
heart problems
Saturday, February 7
Lancaster Society 6 meets at
the home of Mrs. Martin
Spangler to hear brief
reports of the state
convention and talk by
Norma Stemhart
Lancaster Society 1 meets
for an evening of crafts
with Mary Alice Fyock.