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Trucks Now Hauling Majority of Stock Chicago Yard Conducts Truck Safety Program W. J. O’Connor, general mana ger of the Chicago stock yards, shakes hands with William Boock, Andover, Iowa, driver of the first track through the old stone gate at the yard in the yard’s trackers’ safety contest. the yards last year to reduce live stock losses through bruising. The yards will keep seven-month records on every livestock trucker bringing livestock to the yards. They will check arriving loads for dead, cripples or obvious bruising. At the end of the program, driv ers with the best records will be rewarded at a truckers’ jamboree which contest officials will hold April 6 in the international amphi theatre, home of the International Livestock Exposition. Livestock farmers will benefit most from the campaign since they share a large part of the cost of this annual loss. 'Aim' Pullets for Top Fall Egg Production Will your pullets be in top pro duction this fall when egg prices are best? They should if you “aim them’* by practicing good manage ment, using careful sanitation meas ures and feeding sufficient amounts of a balanced ration, poultry experts report. Too many good poultry men are still inclined to allow their growing pullets to coast along on range or a poor growing ration. Since grow ing pullets are not producing in come, some producers are willing to grow them at the lowest immedi ate out-of-the-pocket cost. What they> should realize is that they are build ing the production machines that will pay off during the fall and win ter months. It must be remembered that pul lets must consume sufficient feed for body growth and sexual maturi ty before laying any eggs. It is just a question of whether to grow out pullets during the growing pe riod or at the time they should be producing eggs. To get pullets in production early, poultry experts recommend getting them on clean range, feed them ample quantities of the best ration. Two-Headed Calf mm , m ‘Oscar’, a two-month-old calf wae recently shown by an ani mal collector in Paris, France. ‘Oscar’ has two heads and four eyes in one otherwise normal body. The left brain controls the calf’s hind quarters while the right brain commands the front. Premature Pasturing May Buin New Alfalfa Stand A little premature pasturing can ruin what is now a fine stand of new alfalfa, Michigan State college extension authorities report Seed- ings with spring grain crops have brought good stands. But with good growth, some farm ers may be eager to use the crop for pasture late this fall. This, the crops authority says, will weaken the plants so they may be killed during the winter. The livestock truck is Number One around the Chicago stock yards these days. Frank Flynn, general superintend ent says trucks now haul around 70 per cent of livestock received at the world’s largest livestock market. Twenty years ago it was only 3 per cent The livestock trucker will play the major part in a new phase of the Chicago safety program begun at Bring out Bean Pot for Hearty Snacks (See Recipes Below) Hearty Snacks ENTERTAINING the high school crowd after a cold afternoon of football? Or are you providing sup per to all-day hikers? Then plan hearty food and plenty of it. Occasions which involve a lot of physical activity foster appetites that are not readily satisfied unless you’ve planned food with a special stick - to - the- ribs quality. In this class come the Baked Beans, so extra good when home made tamale pies, and steaming casseroles of spaghetti riding on rich-red-brown meat sauce. • • • WHEN TOU MAKE your own baked beans, start the day before as the beans are to be soaked over night. The best part of the follow ing day can be spent in cooking them because they are at their best when cooked slowly. * Boston Baked Beans (Serves 10-12) 4 cups navy beans 1 teaspoon dry mustard 1 tablespoon salt % teaspoon pepper 1 cap pure dark molasses % pound salt pork Wash beans: discard imperfect ones. Cover with boiling water; soak 3 hours. Or, cover with cold water and soak overnight Bring beans to a boil In the same water in which they have soaked (to pre serve vitamins and minerals), add ing more water if necessary. Skim. Cook slowly for 50 minutes. Drain, reserving cooking wafer. Combine 3 cups cooking water, mustard, salt and pepper; combine with beans and mo lasses. Pour in to bean pot or casserole Score rind of pork; press into beans, leav ing rind exposed. Cover; bake in a slow (325° F.) oven for 3% hours or until tender, uncovering during the last hour of cooking. If neces sary, ad more water during bak ing. THIS HOT TAMALE pie with its combread topping gives a hearty supper snack with lots of zip. Make it ahead of time, if you like, and half an hour before serving, spread with the cornbread batter, and pop into the oven. Hot Tamale Pie (Serves 8) 1 large onion, chopped 1J4 pounds ground beef 1 (10H ounce) can con densed tomato soup 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon black pepper 3 tablespoons chili powder 94 cup chopped ripe olives 94 cup whole kernel corn Brown onion and meat in hot fat. Add remaining ingredients. Pour into greased casserole and cover. Bake in a moderate (325° F.) oven for 1V& hours. Spread with cornbread batter and bake un covered in a hot (425° F.) oven for 30 minutes. SPAGHETTI is an easy dish to prepare for a crowd of hungry folk because the preparation can be done ahead of time. As a mat ter of fact, the sauce gains more flavor if prepared in advance, re- LYNN SAYS: Rejuvenate Baked Goods In these Easy Ways Left-over muffins, rolls and bis cuits can be freshened by placing in the top of a double boiler when sprinkled with a few drops of water and heated for 20 minutes. Reheat muffins in pans in which they’ve been prepared like this if you want sometning really delic ious: Place Vs teaspoon butter and 1 tablespoon marmalade in each muffin cup. Bake in a moderate (350* F.) oven for 15 minutes. Yeast rolls and muffins which Lynn Chambers’ Snack Supper *Boston Baked Beans Brown Bread with Cream Cheese and Butter Cabbage Slaw Sliced Tomatoes Assorted Pickles Beverage Fresh or Canned Fruit Cookies •Recipe Given frigerated overnight, then to be heated while the spaghetti cook* Italian Spaghetti (Serves 6-8) 1 large onion, chopped H cup salad oil 94 cup butter 1 pound beef, ground 1 8-ounce can tomato sauce 1 cup water 1 No. 2% can tomatoes (394 cups) 1 clove garlic, chopped 96 bay leaf 96 cup chopped celery 96 cup chopped parsley 96 green pepper, chopped 1 2-ounce can mushrooms 96 teaspoon allspice Salt and pepper 1 1-pound package long spaghetti 1 4-ounce package Parmes an cheese Brown onion in hot fats; add meat and T>rown. Add all remain ing ingredients except spaghetti and cheese. Cook slowly for 2 hours. Cook spaghetti in boil ing water until tender. Drain; rinse in hot water. Pour sauce over spaghetti on a large platter. Sprinkle with cheese. BARBECUED SANDWICHES are always a winner for snacks. Mother can just lay out the ingredients and the youngsters can put them together when they want to eat You’ll like these: Barbecue Sandwiches (Makes 5) Bread, unsliced Roast pork, ham, beef of hamburgers 96 teaspoon paprika 94 cup butter or substitute 296 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 1 tablespoon lemon Juice 1 tablepoon granulated sugar Dash of cayenne pepper Cut 10 slices of bread, Vi-incb thick. Butter the slices on one side. Lay thin slices of meat on buttered side of 5 slices. Then spread re maining ingredients which have been heated together. Top with re maining bread slices. Cheese Barbecue Sandwiches (Makes 6) 96 pound grated American cheese 3 tablespoons finely chopped green pepper 96 cup finely chopped onion 2 hard-cooked eggs, chopped 3 tablespoons chopped staffed < olives 96 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 3 tablespoons catsup 1 tablespoon melted butter 6 hamburger buns Combine all ingredients except buns. Cut buns in half and spread 94 cup cheese mixture on bottom half of each bun. Place both sides of buns, cut side up on a cookie sheet under a preheated broiler (400° F.) for 5 minutes or until him tops are toasted and cheese is melted. Put together and serve. Toasted left-over rolls, muffins and biscuits, are excellent to use for toppings for casseroles. Sprinkle them with grated cheese, if de sired. Dried cake should be cut into fingers and used for lining corn starch or tapioca pudding dishes. It will give much the same effect as ladyfingers. Keep your toasted cake crumbs in a covered glass jar and use for toppings oh puddings, ica cream and desert dishes such as pear and apple crisper coffee cake toppings. Slice dried cake and top with rouin % piPOPTCP IN WASHIN6T0N <VALT£R SHEAD. WNlJ Correspondent Two Truman Victories »I«HE 81st CONGRESS has passed into the congressional limbo, or some nether region where all con gresses, good or bad, go when they die. And when the 82nd congress convenes next January many of the members of this congress will be left back in the hustings. Some already have dropped by the way- side as a result of primary action, but others will go by the boards as a result of the November elections. But whatever may be said of the 81st congress, no one can call it a “rubber-stamp*’ congress. No one can call it a “Fair Deal’* congress, for when it staggered to the close of its regular business any similarity of its record to the fair deal pro gram was only coincidental. But the closing days brought to President Truman victory on two subjects about which he had been harping practically ever since he assumed the presidency in 1945. One was to increase taxes, not de crease them, and the other was stand-by controls of prices and al locations of materials. He had aban doned hope of ever getting either until the North Korean Reds struck across the 38th parallel. Then both increased taxes and stand-by con trols authority beyond that ever giv en any other president were prac tically forced upon him. This congress has attempted, as other congresses have before it, to invade all the fields of govern ment. It attempted to nullify deci sions of the United States supreme court in the tideland oil bills and in the basing point measures. It attempted to set administrative policies in the executive depart ment by withholding or adding ap propriations; it attempted to in vade the field of foreign affairs in trying to mandate the President to make a $62,000,000 loan to Franco’s Fascist Spain. While the President was failing to make much headway with the fair deal program he did stop short two quarterback sneaks through the weak side of the line with the pres idential veto. One was the Kerr bill which would have added mil lions to the price of natural gas and the other was the basing point bUl. GOP Will Claim Gradit One Fair Deal piece of legisla tion went through sailing. That was the extension of the sociaf security program to include about 10,000,- 000 more persons and increasing the benefits all along the line. The Republicans, however will claim that was a bi-partisan program since such legislation was also ad vocated in the GOP platform. The President also was able to get 20 out of 27 reorganization plans through the congress and enacted into law aimed at streamlining governmental agencies and reduc ing costs. These too will be con sidered bi-partisan, since they were approved and advocated by the Hoover Commission for Reorgani zation of the government and the GOP will claim equal credit. Other victories for the President were acceptance of his Point Four program, Atlantic pact, military assistance program, extension of the Marshall plan. But again the GOP will claim equal credit since foreign policy is supposed to be a bi-partisan policy. But Guy Gab- rielson, the GOP national chair man, says our foreign policy is bi partisan only in Europe where it has worked fairly well. It is not bi-partisan in Asia, he says, where we are having our troubles. 690 Laws Enacted So far, out of more than 690 pub lic laws enacted by this congress, about one out of five pertain to vet erans, their dependents or the Vet erans* administration. This seg ment of the nation’s population now totals more than 19 million and these veterans of all wars won improved programs in housing and rent control, education and train ing, compensation for disabled vet erans and social security credit for the time in uniform. The President vetoed one bill passed by both houses by overwhelming majori ties to give pay raises of $100 for each year of service to postal em ployees who are veterans. It would have meant a pay raise of $163,- 000,000. Reasons given for veto by the President were: increases would go to persons who were not in postal service prior to their mili tary service; would discriminate against servicemen in other depart ments; is not a veterans bill since It applied to only 100,000 out of 15 million World War II veterans, and it would increase the postal deficit. CEO Upholds Truman The Committee for Economic De velopment, composed of business men and industrialists, farmers and laborers and whose research and policy committee is unbiased, unprejudiced and non-political and economically sound, in a recent release virtually upheld President Truman’s stand that all-out con trols are not needed at this time, >ut should be ready to slap on when the occasion demands. MIRROR 0/ Your MIND ^ Child’s Dislike Always Has Reason By Lawrence Gould Will a child dislike Answer: No. But when he’s little, his reason may have nothing to do with you or the way you treat him — it may be the situations with which he associates you. If you are a baby-sitter, for example, a small child may start to scream the mo ment you come in the door because he’s learned that every time you appear, his mother goes away and leaves him, and to him, that is about the worst that could happen. Be patient and realize that he has “nothing against you,’* — until the first shock is over, he would be the same with anybody. you “for no reason”? that don’t seem worth the effort. Letting this make you angry or un easy means you haven’t quite out grown the childish feeling that if you don’t get what you want at once, you won’t get it at alL Make the most you can of your time, but don’t expect perfection. Should you be afraid to “waste time”? Answer: On the whole. No. In an ideal ftrorld, it would no doubt be possible to spend every moment of your waking hours in doing things that were either pleasant or profit able. But as this world is, most of us must spend many hours either “waiting around,’* or doing things Can a person’s eyes really deceive him? Answer: Yes. You probably have noticed that when an airplane flies directly over you, you hear the sound as if it came from a consider able distance behind the plane. This is because light travels faster than sound. But Dr. Hubertus Strughold writes in the Journal of Aviation Medicine that in supersonic flight, the Interval between the time when an image reaches your eye and the time when you perceive it, though only a tiny fraction of a second, makes a pilot “see” another plane some distance ahead when it’s real ly abreast of him. THC BIBLE CONTAINS MANY REFERENCES TO THE ACTMTIES Of WOMEN IN POLITICS — EVEN IN THOSE ANCIENT TIMES. THERE WAS THE WISE WDMAN OF ABEL, WHO SAVED THE CITY THROUGH DIPLOMACY; 8ATH- SHEBA, WHO SECURED THE CROWN OF ISRAEL FOR SOLOMON; MEROPIAS. WHO INFLUENCED THE ADMINISTRATION OF HEROD; THE MOTHER OF ZEBEDEE'S CHILDREN, WHO SOUGHT FAVOR FOR HER SONS. KEEPING HEALTHY Behavior Spptoms Follow Disease By DR. JAMES W. BARTON W HEN A YOUNGSTER is suf fering with one of the Infec tious diseases of childhood (measles, scarlet fever, German measles) he gets every attention from the whole household “because he is sick.” Many children thus learn during their sick period to expect anything and everything to be done for them and even after they get better they continue to expect this extra service from members of the household. Children’s specialists tell us that it is at this point—when recovered from an illness—that many young sters are spoiled for many years to come and often complain of more or less severe symptoms in order to get extra attention. The child develops a dependent personality. That these behavior symptoms, as we call them, are not always put on by youngsters is stated in Post Graduate Medicine by Dr. A. B. Baker, University of Minnesota medical schooL “Appearance of personality alter ations following common infec tious diseases, especially measles and whooping cough, and less so. chickenpox. scarlet fever, and smallpox, is due to encephalitis (inflammation of the brain). This in volvement or slight derangement of the nervous system may occur in the course of a light or mild at tack of the infectious disease and may be unrecognized or may re sult in delirium, fever, stupor, epileptic attack, headache, vomit ing, rigid neck, irregular breathing and muscle spasm and increase in the amount and number of cells in the spial fluid if the test is made. A number of cases of epilepsy have been traced to whooping cough at an early age.” I am mentioning these findings of Dr. Baker because parents, teachers, and some phychologists, interested in the behavior of chil dren, are naturally going to sus pect the child recovering from an infectious disease of putting on an act, to attract attention to himself, which attention he has been receiv ing during his illness. The young ster may need real care immedi ately following ah infectious dis ease and therefore should be close ly watched for behavior symptoms. Benadryl is helping cases of night cramp in the caU of the leg. The common treatment for an attack of asthma has been an in jection of adrenalin. Coronary thrombosis and apop lexy are due to high blood pressure. • • • Except in emergencies when weight must be lost to save life, reduction of food intake is the best method of reducing weight. Symptoms of heart disease with no disease present cause a condi tion known as functional heart die' ease. B R I M M S PLASH-LINER WRIGHT A PAT T E R S O N T Pleasures of Rural Life I N DECEMBER of 1940 I quit an editorial job I had held for 50 years in Chicago and left the big city. My desire was to again live in the peace and quiet of a rural community. I was fed up with the roar, the rattle and the screech of a metropolis, I was tired of be ing shoved around by millions each time I set foot on a city street. I moved to a rural western town and have lived there and enjoyed its many advantages, its open spaces, its lawns and trees and flowers, its friendly people, their cheery greetings for close to J* years. One application MAKES FALSE TEETH FIT for the life of your plates or lower plate... bite and it moioi Hardens for lasting fit and comfort. E rubber plate*, Brirams Piasti-Iinergrres | results from six months to s rear or Ends forerer mess end bother of i applications that last a few hours ore sands of people all otct tb with Brimms Plaad-Iiner. • Ta Tasteless, odorless, harmless to you a gu*r*Mt**. $ 1.2 5 for liner for one plate; J for both plates. At your dru* stars. H#l Then recently, I developed » yen for the noise end the mobs of » city. I coaid see« or thought I could, something attractive In the crowds at State and Madi son streets, Chicago. EvidenUy, I wanted to be shoved around again. It was not practical to go back to Chicago. But I could conveniently go to Los Angeles, another metropolitan center, and to Los Angeles I went to again experience the life of a big city. I proposed to stay for a week, bat stack it out for only four days, and that was four days too many. WHEN SLEEP W< COME AND Y4 FEEL GLUM — - s-uM Use Chewing-Gum Laxative— REMOVES WASTl.-NOT60001 • Laxative — < :W2 Doctors say many •<*« their “fluBhlng** action «•• i (a the atousaek. Large doaes of i atlvee upoet digestion, flush ishlng food you need tor energy ... you feel weak, woj The California metropolis provid ed the same roar, rattle and screech I had known in Chicago for 50 years. Each time I stepped onto the street, I was shoved about by the milling crowds, as I had been in Chicago. I dodged the same number of trucks, busses, taxi cabs and private autos J had es caped from in Chicago; only in Los Angeles they are a trifle more reckless of pedestrian life and limb. I did not like being shoved around in Los Angeles any more than I had liked it in Chicago. The roar and rattle and screech of Los Angeles was no more agreeable than it had been in Chicago. But gentls ommended. works Chiefly bowel where It reus owes good feed I You avoid feeling. Uae fine, full of life I Spanish American Gats Pall Attar 46 Yai I sat for hours In the lobby af the spacious Biltmore Hotel, and watched thousands of peo ple as they paced hack and farth through that lobby, and among all of those thousands I saw familiar face a familiar voice. Every city is LA CROSSE, Wis.—It while, but soldier Richard her finally got paid. The army veteran, check for $374.30 to him for travel and expenses in getting ' cago after he friendly greeting, or much as a smile. From my hotel window, I looked Sown upon beautiful Pershing square, with its many species of palms, its banana and pepper trees, Rs lawns and flowers, but when I crossed the street to visit what- had seemed from my window to be • place of rest and rural quiet, I found it peopled by the lame, the halt and the blind, interspersed with all the freaks and fakes of Christendom, whose business is to prey upon those thousands of un fortunates. It was not a pretty sight. It gave nothing of the peace and quiet and contentment of my rural home town. At the end of four days, I had. all I could take, and more, and was homeward bound. I cannot Imagine myself ever again longing for the so-called glamour of any large city. I am sure I will be satisfied with the modest pleasure provided in a rural town. printing the of his and other Congress acted in II after Klaber’s first filed. Klaber, you see, old—a veteran of the American war. AniDriDan Soldiers Right to Listsn to Ri KOREA—Like in the lai American soldiers are still on to their right to listen start rumors. In Korea they a long list: All United States troops will be withdrawn suddenly and the air force will drop her of atom bombs on nist forces. United States troops Korea but will remain for 25 m after the defeat of the North Now, In my rural home, I ait contentedly en the son porch, overlooking the lawns and flowers, and watch' the world roll by. Remembering the ear- splitting noises of the city, I do not complalh of the hum of the antes, or the rattle of the acassional old jalopy. I am through with the so-called glam our of the metropolitan cen ters. It la a myth. It does not exist, either by day or by night. No city offers such pleasures as Are found in any rural community. Blessed are those who can live in a town or farm home, who have nothing other than the lowing of the cows, the tinkle of the. cow bells or the buzzing of the bees to disturb them. They can really en joy living.^ As for myself I have lost all desire for the big city. If I never go back to Los Angeles again, it will be too soon. Give me the peace and quiet of the rural community. * the eanjf. All North Korean tank crews either padlocked into their or chained within them. Other United Nations are ing a total of one million help in the battle against ean Reds. Other United Nations plan to no Troop* to Korea. North Korean troops are promised one acre of land for fifty Americans they kill. North Korean troops are fif with guns at their backs. Spanking No Worse Than ‘Yakyakking,’ Export Says LONG BEACJI, Calif.— At one expert does not disapprove of spanking. Dr. Frank Tallman in a report the Southern California Society 1 Mental Hygiene, reports: “The youngster understands righteous Aroused in the samU Congress treated the President un generously. It gave him, all and more of the economic and military controls he had asked. To apply and administer them is his respon sibility. His friends believed in his ability to handle the job. His en emies, the Republicans and south ern Democrats hope he fails. -*r The President, only, can now aay whether er not we most have ration cards If we are to eat. With the authority to nationalize the nation’s industry that congress has put in the hands of the Pres ident. we will have the opportunity of seeing just how efficient govern ment can be in the operation of Industry. Its greatest production will be the army of bureaucrats it creates. ent because he j felt the himself. But despite this, standing no youngster really predates a spanking.** Spanking leaves a child in skin and soul” and hostile to ward the parent. “Cold, spanking” can breed resent and harm, he said, advocating a firm but not too harsh Spanking is no cure-all but er is it worse than the practice < sparing the rod and “yi and explaining all the time.’* can also breed hostility, he ittitude. Detroit Man Wins Froodom With Ono Lonoly Ponny 1 DETROIT, Mich.—Theodore Gor don won his freedom with a single penny. When arrested for loitering he denied the charge in court “If you haven’t got a penny in your pocket you are loitering”, the judge said. Gordon dug through his pockets and produced one penny. “Case dismissed,” said the judge. 'mm