Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, December 15, 1990, Image 55

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    Have You
P7M Heard?
Holiday Stain
Removal Tips
In the excitement of the holi
days there’s bound to be a spilled
liquid or a dripping candle that
needs attention immediately.
Check your basic stain removal
kit. Do you have clean absorbent
materials, a sponge, oxygen
bleach such as Snowy or Chlorox
11, chlorine bleach such as Chlor
ox or Purex, dry-cleaning fluid
such as Carbona, enzyme pre
soak, white vinegar, rubbing alco
hol and liquid detergent such as
Wisk?
The key to stain removal is
immediate treatment. When com
pany is present and a spill occurs,
use paper towels to absorb as
much of the liquid as possible.
Soak a sponge in cool water and
TBPCnOMbSMJ I
of Citrus Florida Fruit,
Fish, Oysters and Shrimp \
Melvin R. Petersheim I <
375 Old Dam Rd.
Christiana, PA i!
1 mile east of Nickel Mine \ \
Dec. 21 7-7; Dec. 22 7-4 *
. . . ■ ■■-** t
..... ..v.r;.<kA... '■■■‘4 ••
r 7 • i' gy:??m
B&B
SPRAT PAINTING
Spray
On 10 Years
» h Experience in:
ms Barns, Roofs, Fences,
Houses, Exterior, interior &
Repointing, Masonry Restoration,
Aerial Ladder Spray Painting
•
RD 1, Blrd-In-Hand, PA 17505
answering (7i7) 354-5561
SERVICE x * '
f/A
GOOD FOOD OUTLET STORES
See Our Original
Kinds Of Nuts,
i,f g® s '®E-slsA#
W *V
,C r - /*>, y
Processors Of Syrups, Molasses,
Cooking Oil. Funnel Cake Mix
ft Shoofly Pie Mizes
(With or Without Syrup)
Good Food Outlets
Located At
L&S SWEETENERS
388 E. Main St., Leola, PA 17540
717-656-3486 1-800-633-2676
GOOD FOOD OUTLET
Located At Good Food, Inc.
W. Main St.. Box 160, Honey Brook. PA 19344
218-273-3776 1-800-327-4406
WE UPS DAILY—
By Doris Thomas
Lancaster Extension
Home Economist! /
use it to remove further traces of
the spill. Later, you can get down
to the business of final stain
removal.
Test any stain remover on a cor
ner of fabric first to see how it
reacts. Treat spots from the back
of the fabric. Place the spot down
on paper towels so that the stain
will come off the fabric instead of
going through it After treatment,
regular laundering will usually
remove the last traces of the stain.
Here are some special methods
for treating the most common
holiday stains.
Fruit stain, including cranber
ries - sponge immediately with
cool water. Rub liquid detergent
into stain, and rinse. Launder with
detergent and bleach that is safe
Line Of Golden Barrel Products Plus All
Beans, Candies, Etc. At Reduced Prices
If your local store
does not have it,
CALL OR WRITE
FOR FREE
BROCHURE
& PRICES
Give
The
Golden
Barrel
Gift
Box
Only
*14.95
Each
for fabric being treated.
Tea and coffee - soak in cold
water. Rub in liquid detergent
Allow to stand for 10 minutes.
Rinse. If greasy stain remains
from cream or milk, sponge with
dry cleaning fluid or apply pre
wash soil and stain remover.
Candle wax - rub with ice cube
to harden. Scrape off excess with
dull knife. Place stain between
paper towel and press with a warm
iron. Sponge with dry-cleaning
fluid if necessary.
Alcoholic beverages - Sponge
with cool water. If stain remains,
soak IS minutes in a solution of
lukewarm water, detergent and a
small amount of white vinegar.
Gravy or meat juice - Use
enzyme presoak as directed. Or,
soak in cool water, rub liquid
detergent into stain and rinse.
Ice cream - Rub detergent into
stain. Rinse. Sponge with dry
cleaning fluid or apply a prewash
soil-and-stain remover. If stain
remains, add a few drops of
household ammonia.
Soda - Treat as soon as possi
ble. Sponge with cool water. If
stain remains, sponge with a solu
tion of lukewarm water, detergent,
and a small amount of white vine
gar.
* CORN SYRUP
* PANCAKE SYRUP
* PURE MAPLE SYRUP
* SORGHUM SYRUP
* TABIE SYRUP
* COCONUT OIL
* CORN OIL * HONEY
* COTTONSEED OIL * PEANUT BUTTER
* PEANUT OIL * FUNNEL CAKE MIX
* SOYBEAN OIL * SHOOFLY PIE MIXES
* 100 LB. BAG GRANULATED SUGAR
(Shipping Available)
★ BAKING
MOLASSES
■k BARBADOS
MOLASSES
* BLACK STRAP
MOLASSES
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 15, 1990-815
Should Services Be Integrated?
UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre
Co.) “Social service systems
are often too specialized for rural
areas,” says Dr. Allan Brawley,
director of the Social Work Prog
ram at Penn State. “Frequently,
the result is duplication of effort
and waste of human and financial
resources.”
The Penn State Social Work
Program has embarked on a new
program tided “Human Service
Delivery in Rural Counties of
Pennsylvania: Barriers to Integra
tion and Implications for Legisla
tive Action.”
The project directors, staff and
Penn State students are helping an
expert panel of county commis
sioners, social service agency
directors and citizens study how
rual counties in Pennsylvania pro
vide social services to a range of
families, children, the elderly and
others.
The panel will then identify
obstacles to effective service and
will develop appropriate rural ser
vice delivery models.
“Existing systems of public
and voluntary social services are
rarely designed for rural set
tings,” says Martinez-Brawley.
“For example, most social ser
vices are funded and targeted for
specific problems such as child
abuse or neglect, mental illness
and homelessness. This causes a
high degree of specialization,
which is often inappropriate for
rural areas and results in a frag
SOYBEAN ROASTING ON
YOUR FARM
Don't Waste It - Roast It!
This Little Piggy Went To Market, ~ h-i]
This Little Piggy Stayed Home, 5 1 2
This Little Piggy Had... M M JC
ROASTED SOYBEANS
ALLEN SUMMERS
703 E. Christine Rd.
Nottingham, Pa. 19362
215-932-4761
mented, overlapping and frequent
ly unmanageable system.”
The typical social service deliv
ery models ignore rather than
capitalize on rural social relation
ships. No single worker or agency
addresses the total and usually
interwoven problems of the entire
family or assumes overall respon
sibility for its welfare, according
to Martinez-Brawley.
EFNEP
(Continued from Page B 14)
Gonzalez, Maria Feliciano, and
Krista Marrero.
Two out of the five full-time
workers with EFNEP, Ellie Brow
er, nutritional advisor; and Brenda
Stallman, unit coordinator;
received 10 year pins for their
work with the program.
Ford said, “We couldn’t make
this such a special time if the gra
duates, church groups and inter
ested individuals didn’t help with
the program. It’s so rewarding to
see smiles on the faces of those
who gave and on those who
receive.”
Those who donated time and
gifts include John Martin’s Meats,
Inc., Weaver’s Market, L.I.F.T. of
Manheim, Arlene Frey, Ruhl’s
United Methodist Church, Farm
Women Society 26, Helen Rohrer,
Joan Hershey, Dottie Slote, Ephra
ta Area Social Services, and Bren
da Stallman.
igher Profits From All Grains,
ig Improves TDN, Destroys Mold.
Toxins & Removes Moisture.
CUSTOM GRAIN ROASTING
DONE IN PA. &
SURROUNDING STATES
DALE L. SCHNUPP
RD 6, Lebanon, Pa. 17042
PH: 717-865-6611
DAVID N. GROFF
RD 3 Box 342
Lawlaburg, Pa. 17837
717-568-1420