Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 17, 1984, Image 66

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    B26—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 17,1984
MARCH IS NATIONAL
NUTRITION MONTH
Do you have the midwinter
blahs about exercise?
Do all your meals seem the
same?
—Do you wonder about the
effect of what you eat on your
health?
Do you feel helpless to resist
temptation when you enter a
supermarket?
—Do you need some moral
support to control your weight?
Well, the Penn State Extension
Service can help you revitalize
your attitude toward food, exercise
and grocery shopping. Your Ex
tension office has a Family Health
Calendar available for the month
of March that gives you a nutrition
or health tip to trunk about each
day. It’s perfect to post on the
refrigerator door for the whole
family to read. These tips en
courage you to
Sale limit
adjusted
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Effective Feb. 28, the
USDA began ad
justment of the dollar
value of meat and
poultry products that
retailers can sell to
hotels, restaurants and
similar nonhousehold
consumers without
being subject to federal
inspection.
“The limit on a
retailer’s annual sales
to institutional con
sumers will decrease
from ?30,200 to $28,800
for meat, while poultry
will increase from
$23,100 to $25,500,” said
Donald L. Houston,
administrator of
USDA’s Food Safety
and Inspection Service.
Under federal law,
retail meat and poultry
merchants are exempt
from federal inspection
if their total dollar sales
and the percentage of
those sales to in
stitutional customers do
not exceed these limits.
Each year, the retail
sales limit is
automatically adjusted
if the consumer price
index fluctuates at least
$5OO, upward or
downward, for meat and
poultry products. The
percentage of meat and
poultry sales to
“nonhousehold” in
stitutional customers
may not exceed 25
percent of a retailer’s
total annual sales.
Houston said data
published by the U.S.
Department of Labor’s
Bureau of Labor
Statistics for 1983 in
dicate a price decrease
of 4.7 percent in meat
products and an in
crease of 10.2 percent in
poultry products. The
price for meat products
decreased about $1,400
and the price for poultry
products increase • by
$2,400.
*VAV.VA\TO
Ladies
Have You
Heard?
By Doris Thomas
Lancaster Extension
Home Economist
Keep the load on your feet
(your body) fit.
—To avoid overeating and
maintain your weight.
—To eat sensibly because
sensible eating promotes good
health.
March has been declared
National Nutrition Month by the
American Dietetic Association for
several years now. March ushers
in Spring, a season of renewal. So it
is a good time to review our per
sonal food shopping, eating and
exercise habits. You will want to
reinforce good food and health
habits and replace bad ones. This
calendar can help you do that.
Each week of the month the
calendar promotes one major
theme. The first week the daily tips
all encourage you to include fiber
rich foods in your diet. Dietary
fiber plays an important role in
keeping you “regular” and in your
general intestinal health. Good
food sources are whole grams,
if
UWW Tt« IWiKt I
dual
wheels
SUPER
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Price
18.4x30 $650 . . $l3O . . $520 . . (12J-Bolts)
18.4x34 . . . $620 . . $l3O . . $490 . . (12J-Bolts)
18.4x38 . . $630 . . $l4O . . $490 . . (12J-Bolts)
20.8x38 ... $790 .. $l9O .. $6OO .. (i6J-Boits)
20.8x34 . . . $7BO . . $l7O . . $6lO . . (ISJ-Bolts)
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legumes, nuts, vegetables and
fruits. This variety of sources
should allow you to choose high
fiber foods and appeal to you and
your family.
The effect of your food choice on
your health is stressed the second
week. Most people know that the
amount of fat you eat affects the
health of your heart. But did you
know that the amount of calcium
you eat now may affect your
chances of having bone fractures
when you are older? Dietary
calcium intake affects the course
of Osteoporosis, a disease of old
age that is especially a problem for
older women. So the advice for
March 13, 1984 suggests that you
“Drink milk now. Prevent broken
hips later.”
Tips on cutting calories are
presented the third week. These
can be used by people who want to
maintain their present weight as
well as those who wish to lose some
extra pounds. For example, how
itiany of you remember that nature
provides “a diet soda?” It contains
minerals, is calorie free and is
necessary for life. You guessed it -
the diet soda is water. However the
best thing about it may be that it
does not leave you hooked on a
“sweet” taste, the downfall for
many overeaters. So “Drink
water, nature’s diet soda” on
March 20,1984 and start a habit.
The last week’s tips address food
shopping and food preparation, one
of the first steps in anyone’s path to
good health. Reading labels can
help you set a healthful table. It’s
Discount You Pay
one of several defenses against
impulse buying in the super
market.
This calendar’s tips encourage
you to practice moderation in the
amounts of food you eat and at the
same time enjoy a wide variety of
foods in your diet. We hope it will
help you and your family along the
road to good health.
Contact your local Extension
Office for a free copy.
DRAPERIES
DON’T LAST.FOREVER
Spring seems to be the time
when you take a hard look at
draperies. Do you clean them?
Launder them? Replace them?
Lined draperies usually have a
life span of about five years,
unhned ones ones four years and
sheers three years.
Even this timetable is subject to
revision. The drapery’s life
depends on the fabric used in
construction, and exposure to
sunlight, humidity and oxidation
(fumes from furnaces, ovens and
automobile exhausts).
4-H Horse Club
Fan-mounters 4-H Horse Club
members visited the Sterling
Brook Farms Trauma Center
recently. The club toured the
facilities. They saw X-rays of a
four-month old colt with a broken
h.nH fptwi< and learned how
BACKHOE
TIRES
14 9x24, 8 ply *215.00
16 9x24, 8 ply ‘230.00
17 5Lx24,8 ply *240.00
16 9x28, 8 ply *260.00
18 4x28,10 ply *350.00
WAGON
TIRES
1 9 sixisBPiy
j] *44.00 12 sLxl6 14 Ply
I 111x15 8 Ply *85.00
J *47.00 16 5x16 110 Ply
12 51x15 10 Ply *160.00
*74.00
Sgec^i-
‘5.00 DISCOUNT
This Month!
400-12
400 15
500 15
550-16, 4 ply
550-16, 6 ply
600-16, 4 ply
600 16, 6 ply
650-16, 6 ply
75L 15.6 ply
750-16,6 ply
750-16, 8 ply
750-18,6 ply
9 51-15,6 ply
9 SL-15, 8 ply
1000-16,6 ply
111x15, 8 ply
1100-16, 8 ply
14L-16 1.8 ply
Monthly
Deliveries
Available in NJ 1
* We Install Within 100
Miles Of Lancaster
& Harrisburg
Delivery & Installation Each WeeK In
• Sunbury • Williamsport • Lewistown
• Center Hall • State College
« Reading « Allentown « Pottstown
MUMMAU S TIRE
Mt. Joy, Pa. 717-653-2075
PA. TOLL FREE 1-800222-1729
Proper care is another im
portant factor in prolonging the
draperies’ life and apperance. If
possible, rotate drapery panels
from one side of the window to the
other to equalize sun damage.
Regular cleaning also stretches
the life span of the fabric because
embedded soil causes fiber
deterioration.
Don’t let draperies touch the
glass, blow against screens or
become wet during rainstorms or
through winter water con
densation. The fabric may
watermark and the stain not be
noticed until spring cleaning. By
that time, the stain cannot be
removed. Draperies that are
allowed to blow against a screen
can become ruined, if the fabric
catches on sharp screening or
becomes caught in sliding doors.
When you buy new draperies or
replace old ones, choose preshrunk
fabrics and ones that are as
resistant as possible to sun-fading.
Draperies are often a major in
vestment in home's; protect your
investment through proper care.
broken legs are surgically
repaired. Finally, the club saw a
colt in a cast after six months of
treatment. Their next meeting will
be held at the Community House in
Fairmount.
700 15,6 ply *65.00 > JfjL
750-15,6 ply *68.00 f if* a
10-16 5, 6 ply *BO.OO I lydj
12-16 5. 8 ply'll 5.00 Vs 3
TRACTOR TIRES
Armstrong
WE GO THE EXTRA MILE
MUST SELL FOR CASH
*82.00
>95.00
*113.00
*140.00
*135.00
*120.00
*125.00
*165.00
*155.00
*191.15
‘185.00
‘170.00
*158.00
*224.00
*220.72
*250.00
‘275.00
*364.12
*495.00
‘450.00
*289.00
*325.00
*224.00
*262.00
*173.00
*140.00
*220.00
*700.00
*660.00
9 5x24, 4 ply
11 2x24, 4 ply
11 2x28,4 ply
11 2x38
11 2x36
12 4x24
12 4x28, 4 ply
12 4x38
13 6x28,6 ply
13 6x38,6 ply
13 9x36, 6 ply
14 9x26, 6 ply
14 9x28,4 ply
14 9x38,6 ply
15 5x38, 6 ply
16 9x34, 6 ply
*22.00
*24.00
*31.00
*33.00
*36.00
*37.00
*41.00
*42.00
*50.00
*50.00
*54.00
*64.00
‘55.00
*60.00
16 9x38, 6 ply
18 4x38,8 ply
20 8x38,8 ply
20 8x34,6 ply
18 4x34, 6 ply
18 4x34 8 ply
16 9x30, 6 ply
18 4x30,6 ply
14 9x28, 6 ply
13.6x28, 4 ply
*BO.OO
*75.00
*llO.OO
*160.00
16 9x28.6 ply
24 5x32. 10 ply
23 1x34,8 ply
* Above tires are original equipment
type, Federal Tax is included in
above price
IF YOUR SIZE IS NOT LISTED
CALL US FOR SPECIAL PRICE'
LOADER TIRES
• We Ship UPS