Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, September 18, 1993, Image 57

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    These are busy days as I try to
empty my gardens in preparation
for a train and bus trip across
Canada. Of course it will include
several airplane rides that I am not
looking forward to as my ears
often hurt me during flights.
But for now I can pickles and
tomatoes. And, we buy pears and
plums by the basket Another ritu
al of September is the picking of
Concord grapes that climp up our
old, brick smokehouse. The juice
is canned and the grape sauce is
frozen.
I actually asked my husband to
rototill the green beans as I was
tired of picking them for months.
Now I have Kentucky Wonder
beans that grown on a permanent
fence beside my pole limas. Even
though it has been a dry summer
the lima beans managed to give a
Make Draperies
WEST CHESTER (Chester
Co.) Window treatments cost a
fortune anymore! Beat the cost of
dressing your windows in style by
learning to make your own drape
ries and top window treatments
taught by veteran instructors,
Trudy Dougherty, extension home
economist, and Doris Hoag, free
lance home economist, on Tues
days, September 21 and 28 and
October 5, 19 and 26, 9:30-11:30
a.m. at the Chester County Exten
sion office. Government Services,
EARLY AMERICAN STEAM ENGINE SOCIETY
36th ANNUAL
STEAM-O-RAMA
SEPT. 30, OCT. 1, 2 & 3 1993
SHOWGROUNDS LOCATED NEAR WINDSOR, PA
From 1-83, Exit 7 take Route 124 East for 7.5 miles to Manor Road Turn right
onto Manor Road for 1.3 miles to Show Grounds.
EXHIBITORS WELCOME/FLEA MARKET SPACES AVAILABLE
DRAWING FOR 5 FREE MEAL TICKETS EVERY DAY
IMPROVED PARKING - 8 ACRES ADJOINING PARK
FEATURING "FARM MACHINERY & TRACTORS
MANUFACTURED BY THE OLIVER CORP. PAST & PRESENT”
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1 - “FIDDLIN’ COUNTRY”, 6 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 -1:00-4:00 - COMPETITIVE HORSE PULLING
“CABIN CREEK”, 6 PM-10 PM
Massey Harris Pacer
DRAWING 4:00 P.M., SUNDAY, OCT. 3, 1993
STEAM ON PARADE DAILY
Steam Engines Calliope Antique Tractors Rumely Oil Pulls
Baker Fan Thresher Baler Shingle Mill Rock Crusher
Dynomometer Operating Saw Mill Black Smith Shop
Petting Zoo • Antique Cars • Flea Market • Gasoline Engines
Sausage Sandwiches Apple Butter Boil Pig Roast
Fresh Ground Com Meal Pan Haus Cooking Contests
FOR FURTHER DETAILS CONTACT:
Sue Knaub - 850 S. Pleasant Ave., Dallastown, PA 17313
Phone: (717) 244-2912
Ida’s
Notebook
Ida Risser
good crop. Last year they were all
leaves and no beans.
Allen has been using ladders to
pick apples from the tree in our
front yard. They are small but so
far we’ve made 24-quart of apple
sauce. Now we have used all of
our cans and all of our freezer
boxes so we shall have to stop pre
serving things for the winter. The
last sweet com has been frozen but
I still want to make cole slaw from
some of my many cabbage heads.
The other Sunday we were
pleasantly surprised to have three
Amish families visit us at the same
time. Their little children were
well behaved. Much better, infect,
than our own grandchildren who
rush in and grab everything and
then a big crash follows. My
children tell me that I should not
have little things setting around on
the tables to tempt little fingers.
Government Services Center,
Suite 370, 601 Westtown Road,
West Chester.
« This series will include instruc
tion and demonstrations on fabric
selection, measurements, con
struction techniques, and variety.
The fee is $l5 for all five sessions.
Enrollment is limited and, at this
price, the class will fill quickly.
Register before the deadline date
of September 13. For registration
information, contact the Extension
office at (215) 696-3500.
Where Talent, Hard Work
(Continued from Pago B 16)
back in the area, the couple offered
to help Janice’s aunt at the caramel
com stand.
Three years ago, Ellen retired
from overseeing die annual event,
and Janice took charge. As owner
of 10 U-Gio Learning Centers.
Janice has plenty of expertise in
management which helps in plan
ning and ordering supplies. She
purchased six burners to cut down
on rental fees, although they con
tinue to rent an additional four bur
ners on which to cook the caramel.
Two industrial size poppers are
used to pop com continuously for
two days, and 40 volunteers work
in shifts at the stand.
Everyone has an assigned job.
Some stir the mixture in the kettle,
others pop com, others fill the
kettle.... There is even an assigned
clean-up crew.
Caramel com bums quickly and
it takes constant watching.
"We are so busy, we barely have
time to talk,” Janice said.
A Little Bit Of History
(Continued from Page BIS)
in perfect working condition.
“I’m very particular” he said.
No nails hold the wheels. It is
held by a band of steel put on by
heat.
"The wheel should ring when
bounced,” he said. “If it thuds, it
isn’t right.”
He said, “I see people cutting
comers when they make replicas,
but I’m trying to take longer cor
ners make it better rather
than easier.”
He said, Tm sentimental in
Lancaster Firming, Saturday, Saptambar 18,1993-817
Despite the team’s best efforts,
almost every year, one or two of
the 75 batches made are discarded
because it became scorched.
This year, Janice and her hus
band, John, purchased 300 pounds
of popcorn and 170 pounds of mar
garine for the upcoming event.
Janice said that many volunteers
have been generous in supplying
things to make the job easier. Some
donations include a large spatula
with a long handle, which is used to
clean out the kettle between batch
es, a four to five-foot paddle to stir
the mixture, a rack to cool the pop
corn, and a wire sifter to sort out
unpopped kernels.
Although Ellen no longer is in
charge of the caramel com stand,
she continues to help with it.
’Tt gives you a good feeling
because the money goes to help
people who really need it," she
said.
It’s a lot of work lugging the
heavy kettles in and out, and a
sticky mess to clean up, but Janice
always looks forward to the event
what I do. I am the fifth generation
to make a wagon. I live and breathe
this every day.”
Ron makes about 30 wagons a
year, some are sleighs, water
wagons, and other types.
Ron’s interest in history and
wagon-making are so intertwined
that he wrote a historical account
of his great-great-grandfather’s
business. Each wagon and sleigh
sale includes a copy of the book,
which he has had printed.
Ron is on the board of directors
at Landis Valley Museum and
demonstrates wagon building
there and at several places such as
the Hans Herr House at Willow
Street
As an engineer for Ford New
Holland in evening hours. Ron
spends every afternoon in his shop
behind his Landisville home. He
and his wife, Yvonne, have three
children, Stacie, 6; Veronica, 3;
and Paul. 4 months.
Of finding enough time to work
full-time and almost full-time
again at his ballooning wagon bus
iness. Ron said, “I just hustle.”
His quest in life comes from the
biblical quotation in I Thessalo
nians 4:11-12 NIV: Make it your
ambition to lead a quiet life, to
mind your own business and to
work with your hands, just as we
Martindale Fire Company
FALL BREAKFAST
Saturday September 25th
Serving 6 a.m. to 10 a.m.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Ham, Eggs, Bacon
Scrapple, Pancakes
Toast, Homefries.Creamed Beef
Fresh Fruit, Pastries &
, Coffee
Everyone is Welcome!
$4.00 per person
She said that her aunt and herself
come from families of hard work
ers. “We both were raised to work
and serve.”
Many other volunteers work
together to make the auction a suc
cess by donating supplies, monies,
and talent In addition to auction
items, stands are set up with baked
goods and other food items, arts
and crafts, quilts, a farmer’s mark
et, share-a- meal, a heifer sale.
For those who would like the
recipe to use at home. Ellen and
Janice are glad to share it.
Caramel Corn
2'A to 3‘A gallons popped com
2 cups light brown sugar
A cup molasses (King or Turkey
brand)
2 sticks margarine
2 tablespoons vinegar
2 teaspoons salt
'/< cup water
Combine sugar, molasses, mar
garine, vinegar, salt and water and
bring to a boil at 280 degrees. Pour
mixture over popcorn. Stir quickly
to coat.
toldyou, so that your daily life may
win the respect of outsiders and so
that you will not be dependent on
anybody."
His dream is to turn a neighbor
ing warehouse into a museum and
restaurant. “I would fill it with
wagons and everything old.
Nothing would ever be locked
away,” he said.
Within the next few months, he
plans to make a Conestoga covered
wagon according to scale from
prints he obtained from England.
He’d also like to make a wagon
to be pulled by miniature horses.
If you would like more informa
tion about Reber Wagon Works,
call Ron at (717) 898-1819 or write
to 237 Broad St., Landisville, PA
17538.
Ron thinks it is symbolic thathis
great-great-grandfather was also a
minister in the Church of the Bre
thren faith and now the Reber
wagons are used to help raise funds
for disaster relief. Each year, three
anonymous donors share the cost
of the wagon to donate it to the
sale. Last year, the wagon sold for
$2,100.
The auction will be held at the
Lebanon Area Fairgrounds on Fri
day, September 24. at 4:00 p.m.
and Saturday, September 25, start
ing at 7 a.m. with breakfast