M-Lancaater fuming. Saturday, Oacambar 5,1987 On being g* a farm mH ■*■ m/Km -And other hazards Joyce Bnpp My life passed before my eyes. That statement is often used to describe those mental split seconds of reaction to a near-miss of some potential fatality. Recovering vic tims of automobile accidents, heart attacks, plane crashes, and falls from high places frequently repot early-life flashback incidents. A family public sale. I’ve decided, though far less traumatic, creates a similar effect Last week, my life passed before my eyes-accompanied by die sing-song chant of a local auc tioneer. Pieces of our family his tory neatly lined the edges of the yard where we four kids played endless round of croquet and bad minton, squashed Mom’s peonies sliding into third base, and squabbled over inconsequendals in the manner of all siblings. Actually, it was more a house cleaning than anything else, a rid ding of excess miscellaneous items for which my folks have no use in their next house. Gone away to a new life, for instance, is the old, tall, wooden wardrobe through which I fre quently sorted as a teenager. That wardrobe agonized with me many times over what would be appro priate few my wearing to various memorable events. Another tall storage unit, lined up near the third-base peony bush, was also sorted through periodical ly during my early childhood. It was a white kitchen cabinet, its shelves woe then known to house such delicacies as the jar of forbid den maraschino cherries. Only the cabinet and I knew of the occasion al niching of the forbidden fruit I ■ £k think. Up for bids was the old walk behind garden tractor with which my dad spent so many hours. It chugged along for many miles in its lifetime, working rows for pota toes, cultivating string beans, turn ing, smoothing, and readying soil for the vegetable and flower seed lings Mom started at a wide sun splashed window on our enclosed back porch. A wooden, flatbed wheelbarrow evoked mixed emotions. Overrid ing the pleasant memories of an occasional ride on the wheelbar row was the recollection of its more familiar loads: bags of pota toes we had to help pick up to be stored for the winter in the ground cellar. How I disliked that job! In fact, at about age 11, 1 equated picking potatoes with slave labor. “Child abuse” was an unknown term then, or I probably would have labeled it that. One item which held no mem ory at all for me-I didn’t even know what it was-brought laugh ing groans from my sister, five years my elder. The large, clear glass, jug-like container, she explained, was a fuel supply tank for a kerosene stove once used in our household. One of her childhood chores was to fill the container with kerosene. When filled, the glass had to be flipped upside down, and the spring-loaded fuel release mechanism on the top inserted into the appropriate spot to drip the fuel to the stove. She remembered with a grimace that it was impossible to flip the full container of kerosene and nnce attach it to the stove without the smelly, oily kerosene getting all over her hands. Lucky for me, the stove disappeared before I came of kerosene-responsible age. I offered to buy the thing for her -just for old times* sake. She declined. Likewise, the farmer offered to buy for me a batch of faintly famil iar paint-by-number masteipieces, which he figured would tremend ously amuse our offspring. I declined. And I neglected to check if the footprints from the cat walk ing across the wet oil paints still remained. As bits and pieces of our early life dispersed throughout a gray, wet, bone-chilling morning, it became obvious that a stack of yes terday’s memories was accumulat ing near a pair of very familiar male persons. Heads together in studied concentration, they plotted new uses for a collection of motors, pipe, wire and other mis cellaneous gimme-a-dollar items intended for transformation in the How To Buy A Microwave YORK Is a microwave oven or microwave cookware on your holiday shopping list. If so, attend the class ‘Tips on Buying a Micro wave and Accessories” on Decem ber 3,7:00-9:00 p.m. at the Exten sion Meeting Room, 112 Pleasant Acres Road, York. The cost is $5.00. You’ll get shopping points to help you make the best decision, machinery shop to farm-type gadgetry recycling. Not only did I see my life flash ing by my eyes. Some of it came along home to haunt me. learn how a microwave works and different features to examine. You’ll also see some of the acces sories and cookware available and learn to select just the right cook ware for your needs. Advance registration must be made. Call the Penn State Cooperative Extension Service at 757-9657 to register.