Bl6—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 21,1984 Make NEWARK, Del. - Families make a special effort to spend time together over the holidays, but by January they may drift off into their own directions. Instead of letting that happen, resolve that your family will grow closer and warmer throughout 1984, suggests University of Delaware Extension Home Economist Debbie Amsden. Set aside a regular time each week for family activities, she says. These can be as simple and inexpensive as playing card or board games, working jigsaw puzzles, making crafts, or playing musical instruments. Makeshift instruments and kazoos can be just as much fun as pianos and violins. All these activities will help children develop skills and con fidence as well as family feeling. Wuuer weather offers many possibilities for family fun, Am sden says. If everyone bundles up, skating, sledding, and playing in the snow provide plenty of healthy exercise. Then go inside for an oldfashioned taffy pull. A basic cookbook will explain how it’s done. Reading, watching a television special, looking at family pictures or home movies, and listening to music are activities family members of all ages can enjoy. By sharing the experience, everyone has a common subject to discuss. Discussion helps children form opinions, sort out issues that concern them, and leam that parents can listen. Children whose parents spend time with them feel good about their parents and themselves, the home economist says. To a child, the words, “I love you” may mean less than a practical example of Don't Reach for the Vitamins LANCASTER If you have read any of the articles on diet and cancer prominent in the media lately, you may be tempted to invest heavily in vitamins. But the best way to combat any possible natural dietary carcinogens is to eat a large variety of foods, especially green leafy and yellow vegetables, says Greta C. Vairo, Extension home economist. Several foods have natural ingredients that might promote cancer. But many other foods contain anticarcinogens vitamins and minerals such as carotene, vitamin C, vitamin E and selenium that help our bodies defend themselves against dietary carcinogens. “Many people don’t eat enough fruits and vegetables and don’t obtain adequate variety in their diets,” Vairo says. To ensure that your diet provides you with an ample supply of natural an ticarcinogens, eat two or three servings each week of green leafy or yellow vegetables (for carotene): eat and drink citrus fruits and juices (to provide vitamin C); be certain that your diet contains at least one source of nonhydrogenated vegetable oil each day (for vitamin E). Include whole grain products and legumes in your diet too. Mrs. Vairo stresses that megadoses of vitamins and minerals are unnecessary and, in the cases of vitamin A, vitamin C, and selenium, can cause unhealthful side effects. Simply eating a variety of foods with natural anticarcinogens will offset the natural carcinogens in other 1984 a Family Year that love, such as a parent who families spend tune together, takes tune to play catch or go on Amsden says, and thus develop an family outings. attitude of support and com- The strongest, healthiest mitment to one another. “It’s Officially Winter!” It’s January the traditional month of all day football games, snow and the Farm Show. And what a tradition the Farm Show is all sixty eight years of existence. Many of us generally only think of traditions as those things that happen at holidays. But this is not necessarily so. Traditions are important to our families as they are something like a string that ties us to our family past and links us to our future. The Farm Show was always one of our family traditions. We even had a day off from school to go. M|y childhood memories recall such Farm Show traditions as collecting yardsticks, spending hours following Dad through the machinery exhibits, eating a hoagie and cider for lunch in the big arena, and admiring the large Belgian horses. The past several years I’ve been able to see the Farm Show from the other side of the fence! I spent the weekend prior to Farm Show entering clothing exhibits, assisting judges and setting up displays and the following weekend closing up exhibits. Regardless, the excitement of the Farm Show still remains for me and it seems to affect farm and city folk alike With all the excitement of Farm Show coming to a close many of you may be facing what appears to be a long winter ahead, or maybe you are experiencing the post holiday blues. Does it seem to you like the only thing to look forward to is the Fourth of July 9 One cure for winter doldrums is A Happy Home Recipe 4 cups love 5 spoons hope 2 cups loyalty 2 spoons tenderness 3 cups forgiveness 4 quarts faith 1 cup friendship 1 barrel laughter Take love and loyalty and mix it thoroughly with faith. Blend it with tenderness, kindness and understanding. Add friendship and hope. Sprinkle abundantly with laughter. Bake it with sunshine and serve daily with generous helpings. foods you eat Our bodies have evolved ways of handling many natural carcinogens in our food supply. To avoid some dietary car cinogens, use polyunsaturated fats in moderation, avoid rancid fats and do not eat highly charred meats To keep fats from becoming rancid, store them according to package directions, and buy only the quantities you need for a few weeks at a time. | By Michelle S. Rodgers Lancaster Extension Home Economist to start some non-holiday winter traditions. Think about some things that you could look forward to and enjoy together as a family. My favorite winter family tradition is baking doughnuts. When the first big snow arrived and school was cancelled, everyone in the family joined forces for the creating of luscious yeast glazed and sugar doughnuts. It was no wonder that we all looked forward to a big snow. It is these kinds of family traditions that just might brighten the winter months ahead. Here are some ideas to get you started; - a family board game night - put together a large jigsaw puzzle - ice skate or build a snow family - have a picnic supper indoors -a story night; everyone tells one story - show slides of summer vacations or growing up - visit an elderly relative or friend - have an icicle hunt for the biggest, smallest and fattest icicle - winter treasure hunt; make a trail in the snow with a surprise at the end of the footprints - make a pizza pan size chocolate chip cookie or make a winter stew The Farm Show tradition has come to an end for this year and with it we store many happy memories of this and other years. What other memories will your family recall from winter 1984’ Keep the family spirit alive and the family unit intact by planning at lease one new tradition to try this winter. 4-H Banquet Scheduled GERMANSVILLE - The Lehigh County 4-H Swine, Beef and Sheep Clubs will meet for an awards banquet Jan. 28 at the Ger mansville Fire Hall at 6:30 p.m. 4-H ' See your nearest HOLLAND Dealer for Dependable Equipment and Dependable Service: Alexandria, PA Clapper Farm Equipment Star Route 814 669 4465 Annville, PA BHM Farm Equipment Inc RD 1 717 867 2211 Beavertown, PA B&R Farm Equipment, Inc RD 1, Box 217 A 717 658 7024 Carlisle, PA Paul Shovers, Inc 35 East Willow Street 717 243 2686 Chambersburg, PA Clugston Implement, Inc RD 1 717 263 4103 Davidsburg, PA George N Gross, Inc R D 2, Dover, 717 292 1673 Elizabethtown, PA Messick Farm Rt 283 Rheem'sExit 717 367-1319 Everett, PA C Paul Ford & Son RD 1 814 652 2051 Gettysburg. PA Ymghng Implements RD 9 717 359-4848 Greencastle, PA Meyers Implement's Inc 400 N Antrim Way P 0 Box 97 717 597 2176 Halifax, PA Sweigard Bros R D 3, Box 13 717 896-3414 Hambun Shartlesville Farm Service R D 1, Box 170 215 488-1025 Honey Brook, PA Dependable Motor Co East Mam Street 215-273 3131 215 273 3737 Grove, PA Hone: Norman D Clark & Son, Inc Honey Grove, PA 717 3682 Hughesville, PA Farnsworth Farm Supplies, Inc 103 Cemetery Street Lancaster, PA L FI Brubaker, Inc 350 Strasburg Pike 717 397 5179 Lebanon, PA Keller Bros Tractor Co RD 7, Box 405 717 949 6501 Lititz, PA Roy A Brubaker 700 Woodcrest Av 717 626 7766 Loysville, PA PaulShovers Inc Loysville, PA 717 789 3117 Lynnport, PA KermitK Kistler, Inc Lynnport. PA 215 298 2011 Martmsburg, PA Forshey’s, Inc 110 Forshey St 814 793 3791 Mill Hall. PA Paul A Dotterer 717 726 3471 New Flolland, PA ABC Groff, Inc 110 South Railroad 717 354 4191 !w Park. PA M&R Equipment Inc P O Box 16 717 993 2511 Oley, PA C J Wonsidler Bros R D 2 215 987 6257 Pitman. PA Marlin W Schreffler Pitman, PA 717-648 1120 Pleasant Gai i, PA Brooks Ford Tractor W College Ave 814 359-2751 Quakertown, PA C J Wonsidler Bros RD 1 215 536 1935 Quarryville, PA C E Wiley & Son, Inc 101 South Lime Street 717 786 2895 Rmgtown, PA Ringtown Farm Equipment Ringtown, PA 717 889 3184 Silverdale, PA I G Sales Box 149 215 257 5135 Tamaqua, PA Charles S Snyder, Inc R D 3 717 386 5945 Troy. PA The Warner Co “For You The Farmer" Troy, PA 717 297 2141 West Chester, PA MS Yearsley&Son 114 116 East Market Street 215 696-2990 West Grove, PA S G Lewis & Son, Inc R D 2, Box 65 215 869 2214 Churchville, MD Walter G Coale, Inc 2849 53 Churchville Rd 301 734 7722 Risii Sun, MD Ag Ind Equipment Co , Inc 1207 Telegraph Rd 301 398 6132 301 658 5568 215 869 3542 Washington. NJ Frank Rymon & Sons 201 689 1464 Woodstown, NJ Owen Supply Co Broad Street & East Avenue 609 769 0308