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Show SEPTEMBER 27, 1932. THE JOURNAL BOAT A BIG ONE IN TUNA TOURNEY 1 8 Back. To School Lunch Joff On Holiday cheese are rich in proteins, vitamins and minerals, so needed in the school childs diet. With bakers cupcakes, fruit and milk, a diet is furnished, and one whose taste and eye appeal will make it popular eating with youngsters s Cheese Club Sandwich Hearty 4 slices Swiss cheese 12 slices enriched bread U cup soft butter or margarine 4 slices boiled or baked ham Spread bread with butter. Place 1 slice of cheese on each of 4 slices of buttered enriched bread and cover with a second slice of enriched bread. Top each sandwich with 1 slice of ham and another slice of enriched bread. Yield: 4 Hearty Ham-Swis- s Cheese Club Sandwiches. well-balanc- ed Ham-Swis- THE SCORING 670-pou- nd Poultrymen Can Increase Production Dishes With A "Difference" By Following These Suggestions To Add To Your Recipe File If you are a poultryman, agriCan you have egg room in or cultural economists at the Utah under, poultry house of large State Agricultural College Ex- flocks? tension Service say if you can Can you install automatic waanswer Yes," to a series of can questions, you will solve many of your labor problems. Less farm labor is expected to be available' during the year. Economists call it, the most important commodity a ter supply and disposal? Can you- place water foun- tains over a container to catch overflow and drip from birds beaks? poultry-ma- n Can you find other labor can sell. ing technique? They advise giving consideration to this list of can ques- - tions: SALLY'S Can you increase the size of your pens? Can you do more than one job on each trip to the pens? Can you reduce the number of jobs to be done? Can you reduce the number of times that a job is done? Can you elevate feed me-- f chanically and feed by gravity? Can you place feeders in one or two lines with ends towards the feed chute or door? - i I i ; jj i ? Can you place nests near the door or egg "room? I sav- SALLIES By ALICE DENHOFJT peel an eggplant and slice In ANSWERS io recipe requests discs. Cut 2 bunches shallots or today, recipes which we think scallions. Sautg in butter about may be of general interest as 15 minutes. Saut6 4 tomatoes hi well, such as this op for Peas another pan. Line a flat baking dish with eggplant, shallots, then Mt. Vernon. Remove stems anu aiJns from tomatoes, salt and pepper to 8 oz. fresh mushrooms (stems and taste, repeat, then finish with a skins may be boiled together to light dusting of grated Parmesan yield stock for future use). Dice type cheese. Bake at 300 F. for -mushroom caps into incb 30 minutes. 2 Tomato Rarebit pieces. Melt tbsp. butter in frying pan; add diced mushrooms. A nice supper dish with a Saut6 until mushrooms are cheese flavor is another request. brown, about 5 minutes. Cook one How about a Tomato Rarebit? ; package quick-frozpeas in To serve 4, add 2 tbsp. boiling salted water until just tapioca, y4 tsp. salt, dash done; drain. Remove to warm of paprika, to one c. milk, scalded. serving dish, and pour mush- Cook in double boiler for 15 minrooms and butter over peas, mixutes, or until tapioca is clear, ing lightly. Serves 4. stirring frequently. Add one e. canned tomato soup and one c. Shrimp Louisiana Louislane next 'u the grated cheese. Cook until cheese Shrimp is melted. Serve on crackers or requested recipe. toast. c. Pour one For something different to French dressing into a salad bowl. Soak in it half a finely cut serve with baked ham, try Jellied green pepper, one celery stalk, 6 anchovies cut in pieces, and 1 Dissolve one package lemon-flavorcooked mixToss pounds shrimp. gelatin in one pint boilture lightly. Cut 2 large peeled ing water. Add tsp. salt and tomatoes in thick slices. Place one 12 cloves. When gelatin begins to slice on each chilled plate, and thicken, remove cloves and add heap the shrimp mixture on the Vz c. prepared horse-radisTurn tomatoes. Decorate with water into 12 individual molds, filling cress sprigs. each only half-ful- l. Chill until For a pleasing eggplant recipe, firm, then unmold. en quick-cooki- ng well-season- ed Horse-Radis- h. ed h. From the language he used right after the accident he must be on his way to a masquerade party. & i a Kin ckrrrro ever-prese- nt elongated cigar, Prime Minister Winston Churchill is pictured in a characteristic pose as he left 10 Downing Street in London for a Jholiday in the south of France. TB, Bangs Continue to Decline in U. S. for the United States entries In the Ninth Inter national Tuna Cup Match, Wedgeport, Nova Scotia, salt water sports man William K. Carpenter (extreme left) Is assisted by his boat crew as they haul In a Bluefln. The largest fish taken on the first day of the match, the tuna battled for nearly an hour. (International) OPENING CHEWING ON an BY WALLY B1SHQK) Brucellosis (Bangs Disease) and tuberculosis in cattle continued to decline in the United States in 1952, on the basis f cattle tested, the Bureau of Animal Industry, USDA, reports. Tuberculosis declined from 0.14 percent in 1951 to 0.11 percent in 1952. Brucellosis declined from 3.1 percent in 1951 to 2.7 percent in (Wisconsins figures are not included in the national per1952. centage of brucellosis among cattle. If they were included the figure would be 4.2 percent instead of 2.7) In Wisconsin all dairy herds were given the milk test (ring test). All herds showing evidence of brucellosis on the milk test were then blood tested. The percentage of infection was therefore based on the blood tests of a select group previously screened by the milk test. As a result, Wisconsin shows a high percentage of individual reactors. In other States no attempt is made to limit blood testing to herds in which a milk test shows evidence of the disease. The milk test was made a part of the official brucellosis eradication program at the annual meeting of the United States Livestock Sanitary Association, held in Kansas City in November, 1951. Official records for 1951 show that it was used in 11 states to test 49,027 herds representing 810,777 cattle in the last four months of that year. In 1952, 454,732 herds r I i representing 8,585,476 cattle in 20 states were given the milk test. Nationally, 7,491,327. cattle were blood tested for brucellosis in 1952 compared to 5,640,836 in 1951. A total of 3,179,251 calves were vaccinated for brucellosis in 1952 compared to 2,542,333 in 1951. ; 5 If I t For tuberculosis, 9,164,265 cattle were tested in 1952 disclosing 10,351 reactors, while in 1951, 12,353 reactors were found cattle among the 8,847,288 tested. |