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page two Consumer Notes Issued Weekly by Consumers' Counsel Division, A. A. A. Washington, D. C. A Good Diet Has These Things Pin a food expert down, and he'll admit there is no one perfect diet plan to fit everybody's need. Every food we eat makes some con tribution to health. Some contribute more than others. That's because they're richer in certain nutrients bodies need. Some 3 dozen nutrients are needed to help bodies grow, resist disease, digest foods, carry strain, and give bodies spring and joy. First rule in meal planning is to know what different foods are good for. The easiest way to remember that is to think of 4 groups: 1. Milk and cheese: Put these at the top of every diet plan, because milk and the things made from it are princes among foods. Milk and its products are triple-acting foods: They help to build bodies they help to make bodies operate more efficiently and they give bodies energy. They do these jobs at a low cost, compared with the cost of getting the same nutrients in other foods. 2. Fruits and vegetables All fruits and vegetables don't do the same job in the diet. Some, like potatoes, give more energy than others, pound for pound, or dime for dime. Some, like tomatoes, are more valuable for their vitamins. Divide them this way and choose some of each type: Potatoes in one group tomatoes and citrus fruits in another group green, yellow, and leafy vegetables in a third group. 3. Lean meat, poultry, fish, & Kggs These are the muscle-building foods because they all are good protein foods. Cheap cuts of meats for stews and pot roasts are as nutritious as steaks and chops. Look for lower quality Government grades in meat they are as nutritious as top |uality 4. Cereals, sweets, and fats: These are the energy foods par excellence. Some of them have other food values, too, especially whole-grain cereals and some of the fats. Because lots of people like to have the food experts work out diet plans for them, the Bureau of Home Econ omics has prepared plans for 3 good diets at different levels of cost, from low cost to hitfh. These have been printed in the CONSUMERS' (JUIDE, and are available without charge so long as the supply lasts. Write tht Consumers' Counsel Division, IT. S. Department of Agriculture, Washing ton, D. C. u A Wringer Must Be Sate*. First safety rule when ou buy a washing machine is to get on^with a safety release that works easily The release should not only spread the rolls it should also automatically cut the power when touched. Rolls of the wringer should be easily accessible for cleaning and wiping, with all gears enclosed and no loose joints where (til might drop on clothes. As to choosing between rolls or hard rubber and rolls of soft rubber, you will have to make your own decision. No research so far has conclusively proved the advantage of one over the other. Hard rolls may injure buttons or hooks, but they last longer. Soft rolls are said to adjust more easily to various thicknesses of material, to be easy on buttons, but to wear out more rapidly. Some manu facturers compromise with either tin semi-soft rolls, or one hard roll and one soft one. Ask to sen the wringer in action be fore you buy. Then you can tell for yourself how efficient is the safety release, and whether or not the drain board reverses itself automatically, as it should. Swing the wringer into various positions to be sun* it doesn't wobble or lose balance when set away from the tub. If you get a 'spinner basket' in place of a wringer be sure all tin rotating parts are enclosed. A safety feature to look for, in a high-speed drier, is a cover that can't possibly br removed until the spinner has stop ped revolving. Make sure the spinner basket is removable so that it can be cleaned ami dried after each ua. h. On The Air CONSUMER TIME will bring list eners information on the differences between pure dye silk and weighted silk, and advice on how to guard against trichinosis during its broad cast on Saturday morning, February 8, at 11:15 A. M., Eastern Standard Time. The program, a weekly feature for consumers to help them become bet ter buyers and homemakers, is heard over the Nation-wide Red Network of the National Broadcasting Company. It is sponsored jointly by the General Federation of Women's Clubs and th Consumers' Counsel Division of the II. S. Department of Agriculture. If you want to Know the call let ters of the station nearest you to whom the program is made available, write to the Consumers' Counsel Di vision, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C., giving the city and State where you live. SEES IT THROUGH Little Henpeck, safely out of his wife's hearings, wa letting himself go. To a friend, who complained of pome domestic difficulty, he i-aid grandly: "My dear boy, we never have any trouble of that sort in our house. If I say a thing is to be done, I in gist upon its being done." "And is it?" asked the friend. "Of course," repli*d Henpeck, "el even if I have to do it myself." Local No. 33 Sends (Continued from Page One) ning and with such a fine crowd of fellows as No. 133 had in Beaver Falls that night. We are going to return the match Saturday, February 8, and hope to be able to beat them on their own alleys. Following are our averages for the first half standing of our bowling league, also the scores of the New Castle-Beaver Falls match: Final result of first round of play: Won Lost Liners 28 17 Warehousemen 28 17 Jiggermen 24 21 Batterouts 18 27 Liners won the play off for the first half championship winning the first two games of the playoff. High one game individual—A. Flis, warehousemen, 205. High three games, individual—L. Greco, Jiggermen, 587. High one game team, Batterouts, 841. High three games, team, Batterouts, 2387. Individual Averages for First HalT T. Capo 153 L. Greco 150 C. Stippy 144 M. Toth 141 B. Townsend 137 C. Mawhinney 135 C. Goff 134 H. Harris 133 A. Flis 131 J. Greco 120 J. Peluso 128 B. Samek 128 G. Hardesty 127 B. Hardesty 12(3 F. Haddox 125 I). Townsend 123 B. Stewart 122 P. Blinn 120 II. Shook 120 R. McClurg 120 B. Baker 119 A. Elliot 118 B. Rov 118 B. Rose 11C C. Rhoades 114 B. Haddox 110 W. Mellenkoph 110 J. Manzelowski 109 E. Johnson 99 W. Owary 93 II. Miller 87 I!. Wickiine 84 The first and second teams of Lo e:il No. 33, Beaver Falls beat the first and second teams of Local No. 33 of New Castle: First Team Local Union No. 33 2641 Local Union No. 133 26G0 Second Term Local Union No. 33 2828 Local Union No. 138... 2208 Each team was comprised of six men. Officers of the bowling league arc: L. Greco, president J. Peluso, secre tary H. Harris, treasurer. Mayer China Toth 146 135 162 443 Townsend 107 168 160 43f Harris 123 142 160 425 Greco 157 144 147 448 Capo 202 146 101 441) Ackerman 164 128 149 441 Total I'uska A. Veri I'ogdon Nelson Kaufman V e i 899 863 879 2641 New Castle 126 136 ... 150 ... 140 ... Ill ... 167 ... 193 10!) 137 198 121 371 438 44 427 441 438 151 107 165 148 122 126 123 tal 917 829 814 2560 Bad Epidemic Of (Continued from Page One) dent James M. Duffy from the west and First Vice President E. L. Wheat ley, Fourth Vice President Charles Zimmer, Fifth Vice President George Newbon and Organizer James Solon from the Trenton district. To the other western Board members, you missed a grand time and we are sorry you couldn't attend. Maybe you can make it next year, oh yes, we will be one year older next year and that will ill for another celebration. We are quite proud of the number of charter members wo had with us remember this local is 41 years old so the following men have been in the National Brotherhood of Oper ative Potters and Local Lin ion No. 45 for the past 41 years. That is a record to be proud of and we know the members of the trade would like to so? their names listed 11 years from now. Congratulations to the fol lowing: Aaron Potts, Arthur F. Wild blood, Sr., John Hutchins, George Hulse, Joseph Salt, John Hulse, Ner val Miller, Harry Hassall, James Lewis, James Elder, James Hassall, Alex Lnngmuir, Edmund Massey, John Jones, John Ford, Thomas B. Dennis, Matt Reardon, Joseph Cotton and John Huston. Members present from Local Union No. 96, Perth Amboy, N. J. were Hugh Church, J. Jankovich, John Adametz, Brigham Young, Arthur Moulton Andrew Vamos, Walter Liberie, John Thomas, Harry Ryford, Nels Hansen and Jack Kovels. Local Union No. 35, Trenton: Alex Young, M. Carolan, James Tuzzulo and John I'oulton No. 87, William Cameron No. 49, James Yeager and Larry Do lan No. 173, Horace Carver, LeRoy Fisher, Frank Bow'lby and Ernest Baker.—0. C. 45. MOST OF I HE TIMI'J "What are you doing here, dear?" "Looking for a husband." "But you've got one!" "That's the one I'm looking for." Anti-Trust Suits (Continued from Page One) employer groups to restrain trade, its activities are not subject to prosecu tion under the anti-trust laws regard less of whether jurisdictional disputes or other practices complained of by Thurman Arnold are involved. The decision recited the fact that consternation arose in the labor move ment when the Sherman Anti-Trust Act which was adopted to break up big business combines was held by the courts to apply to labor unions. After a long campaign, Congress adopted the Clayton Act in 1914 to exempt labor from the application of the Sherman Act, but the courts again so interpreted the law that the status of unions remained in doubt. Agitation again led to new legisla tion and in 1932 Congress passed the Norris-LaGuardia Act. "Congress in the Norris-LaGuardia Act," said the Supreme Court deci sion, "has expressed the public policy of the United States and defined its conception of a 'labor dispute' in terms that no longer leave room for doubt. "This was done, as we recently said, in order to 'obviate the results of the judicial construction' theretofore given the Clayton Act. "To be sure, Congress expressed this national policy and determined the bounds of a labor dispute in an act explicitly dealing with the further withdrawal of injunctions in labor controversies. But to argue, as it was urged before us, that the Duplex case still governs for purposes of a crimi nal pros«cution is to say that that which on the equity side of the court is allowable conduct may in a crimi nal proceeding become the road to prison. "It would be strange, indeed, that although neither the Government nor Anheuser-Busch could have sought an injunction against the acts here chal lenged, the elaborate efforts to permit such conduct failed to prevent crimi nal liability punishable with impris onment and heavy fines. "That is not the way to read the will of Congress, particularly when expressed by a statute which, as we have already indicated, is practically and historically one of a series of enactments touching one of the most sensitive national problems. Such leg islation must not be read in a spirit of multilating narrowness. "The relation of the Norris-La Guardia Act to the Clayton Act is not that of a tightly drawn amend ment to a technically phrased tax pro vision. The underlying aim of the Norris-La Guardia Act was to restore the broad purpose which Congress thought it had formulated in the Clayton Act but which was frustrated, so Congress believed, by unduly re strictive judicial construction. This was authoritatively stated by the House Committee on the Judiciary." In addition to Justice Frankfurter, the majority opinion was concurred in by Associate Justices Reed, Black Stone and Douglas. Chief Justice Hughes and Associate Justice Roberts dissented and Justice Murphy, who was Attorney General when the anti trust suits were started, refrained from passing on the case. Cold Weather (Continued from Page One) Brother Loren Baxter, member of our local, who is now employed in the mill must get in touch with the finan cial secretary at once. He is behind in his dues and will be suspended if this is not attended to at once. Any one who can get in touch with this brother please notify him so he can get in good standing and receive a withdrawal card. The Resolutions committee chair man asks that any resolutions th members have to present for the com ing convention should be in soon, so they can work on same and have them ready on time. It is much easier on the committee if these resolutions are in a little ahead of time, so they don't have to rush through them at the last minute. Bring your resolu tions to the meeting and they will be turned over to the committee. —O. C. 86 Defense Plants (Continued from Page One) sensational story. Here were labor leaders in industries vitally integrated with the nation's defense work pub licly denouncing that work! "When the communist press warns against 'collaboration with the ene mies of the people' in producing war goods (New Masses, December 31), it is in effect calling for sabotage of fense efforts. Labor should know that unions in bottleneck industries an under strong influence of people hold ing such views. And the general Am erican public should know it. "Their interference will boomerang unfortunately, on the rest of the laboi movement. To rid American trad anion ism of this pest, responsibilit must be divided—labor must cleat house, and government must learn distinguish between the communist bath water and the essentially healthy trade union baby. Only if both labor and government recognize the ramiti cations of the problem, will the dan ger of throwing out the baby with the bath water be averted." SPOT ASH alimon\ Daughter: "What i mother?" Mother: "It's a married man's cash surrender value, dear." tfffi f^frERS HERALt) FIFTH CORPS AREA HAS NEW ADJUTANT GENERAL Designation of Lieut. Col. Russell B. Patterson as Adjutant General of the Fifth Corps Area, succeeding Colonel Samuel G. Talbott, who has been transferred to Washington, was an nounced today at Headquarters, Fifth Corps Area, Fort Hayes, Ohio, by Brig. Gen. Clement A. Trott, Com manding General. Colonel Patterson has been Assist ant Adjutant General since Septem ber when he completed a two-year Philippines assignment. He first came to Corps Area Headquarters in the same capacity in June, 1935, and as Adjutant General lie returns to a post he held from June, 1936, to May, 1938, when he left for the Philippines and was succeeded by Colonel Tal bott. Among Colonel Patterson's duties will be the direction of all Army re cruiting in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia, including Flying Cadet procurement. The new Adjutant General, now 51 years old, has had a long and varied, educational and military career which associates say fits him admirably for the post. Born in Washington, D. C. he holds a Science degree from Dart mouth College and a Master's from Georgetown University. Entering the Army in 1912 as a Second Lieutenant of Cavalry, he was promoted rapidly, serving with -the 12th Cavalry in South Dakota, New Mexico and Wyoming and with the First Cavalry* in Colorado, Arizona and California! In 1918, as a tempor ary Major, he vas detailed on the War DeinrtrlHfr- General Staff. Or dered to Frnnce in 1910, he served successively in the auditing branch of the General Sales Agent's Office in Paris as Post Quartermaster of Cob lentz, Germany, with the Army of Occupation and as Assistant G-4 o:t the occupation forces. Returning to the United States ii 1922, Colonel Patterson attended tin Cavalry and Command and General Staff schools ,and later rejoined hi old regiment, ahe First Cavalry, at Fort D. A. Russell, Marfa, Texa. After a period as cavalry instructoi with the North Carolina National Guard, he served with the Historica Section of the Army War College Washington, D. C. He remained then four years, two years as secretary until he was ordered to Fort Hayes O. He was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, August 1, 1935. In the Philippines, Colonel Patter son was Adjutant General on dut\ at Corregidor, a large island at tin entrance of Manila Bay and as Har bor Defense Adjutant of Manila and Subic Bays. Colonel Patterson is married and has two sons, Ivincaid, 6, and Walter Brown Patterson, 11, 4, ami a daugh ter, Jeanne Ileth, now in school in Washington. His wife is the former Katharine Rincaid of Statesville, North Carolina. TALL TALI] FROM TENNESSEE Memphis, Tenn.—Here's a tornado yarn, as told by Guy Smith, of Dres den, Tennessee: At the home of a friend, a twister unscrewed a water pump from the top of a well pipe Found after being carried some dis tance away on the wings of the wind, the pump was easily replaced, with not a thread stripped, Smith declares. Look for the Union Label when you purchase clothing. The Tools Your Eyes Work With Be sure they're up-to-date and efficient. The eye-glasses prescribed for you here by a Registered Op tomcrist will help your eyes do better work—and improve your appearance. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE AN APPOINTMENT IS BEST Convenient Time Payments Dr. Herschel A. Rubin 0 0 E I S At Loon Rabin's J«welry Stor* 513 Washington St PHONE 2427 'Labor Shortage' (Continued from Page One) ophy" and pledged that the American Federation of Labor would support President Roosevelt in his program of full aid to Great Britain. "All labor asks," he said, "is that in our efforts to preserve the demo cratic way of life as we know it here in America we protect and preserve in the process the cherished rights and liberties that make that way of life desirable." The A. F. of L. secretary-treasurer scored the "effrontery" of those rais ing the cry that there is a labor shortage and that therefore labor must agree to work an unlimited num ber of hours at straight time, "the laws providing for time and one-half for overtime being repealed, ripped apart or just laid on the shelf." Think of it!" he said. "Here are men ready to assert that we are all out of manpower, that there isn't a jobless worker to be found anywhere, that the situation is just as desperate as desperate can be, while all the time, as we all know if we keep post ed, there are 8,000,000 men and women still unemployed." Mr. Meany cited the construction of the mammoth naval air training station at Corpus Christi, Tex., as a splendid example of the type of co operation which organized labor is giving in the carrying out of the de fense program. With 15,000 skilled building trades mechanics required, there were less than 5,000 men available within a radius of 300 miles. The Building and Construction Trades Department, through its organizational machinery, brought to the job from all over the nation more than 10,500 skilled work ers, Mr. Meany related. The gov ernment was not asked to spend a penny for transportation. Mr. Meany said that no other agency, public or private, could have done what the Building and Construe tion Trades Department did in pro ducing so many trained men in such a short space of time. Organized labor does not seek praise, he asserted, but feels that the record should be kept straight, espe cially in these days when there is a vast amount of unfounded criticism of labor's cooperation. Anderson Demands (Continued from Page One) job. Low wages mean smaller bene fits when workers are injured, unem ployed, or retired because of old age Low wages are at the root of our re lief problems in this country and mean that taxpayers in the final analysis must subsidize firms that fail to pay their workers enough to live on." •i Lease-Lend Bill (Continued from Page One) tions." Taking up the section of the bill which empowers the government to manufacture any defense article for any country whose defense the Presi dent deems vital to the defense of the United States, Mr. Green said labor believes the implications of such a provision and its possible conse quences to our entire national econ omy to be so vast that there should be inserted "a proviso that would fully spell out the desire on the part of Congress to maintain labor stand ards and labor's rights unimpaired." Mr. Green supported the recom mendation for reports by the Presi dent and the government agencies by pointing out that, in the development of so far-reaching a program as that contemplated by the Lend-Lease Bill, it is imperative that the people of the country be kept fully informed of the progress made. On the reciprocity-for-aid amend ment, Mr. Green said: "Congress cannot lose sight of the crucial problem we shall be facing —possibly in a short time—when our nation stands face to face with the task of returning to normal life and of dismantling the great arsenal we shall have built up. "It is only fair to our own people and equitable to all peoples concerned that, in return for effective aid we furnish to other nations, these na tions, through a solemn covenant would pledge themselves to a cooper ative arrangement which would as sure an outlet for American goods in a peacetime world market and thus provide a basis for full employment to our workers when peace comes." To guard against chaos and col lapse at the end of this war, Mr. Green said, it is imperative that there be a clearcut formula of full economic participation by the United States in the period of postwar world recon struction. HOW ABOUT IT. WALTER? "Who gave the bride away?" "Winchell, last Thursday." CROOK'S Thursday, February (, 1911 NOTICE! Important Announcements of Local Unions are to he found in this Column NOTICE L. U. NO. 9 There IS a Difference 137 WEST SIXTH STREET PHONE 439 FEBRUARY SALE IN FULL FORCE Months ago we started planning for this annual event —buying the best values offered by famous manufac turers for spot cash—taking advantage of special dis counts, to bring this merchandise to you at the lowest ever prices. FURNITURE FOR EVERY ROOM FLOOR COVERING OF EVERY KIND Drapes, Curtains, Shades RANGES FOR COAL GAS, ELECTRIC ALL GOOD GRADES—STANDARD QUALITY AT PRICES YOU'LL NOT DUPLICATE Buy On Our Budget Plan—Pay As You Earn THE FRANK CROOK CO. East Liverpool The Best Place To Buy After All ... AUTHORIZED GENERAL ELECTRIC DEALER Local Union No. 9 will have important business at regular meeting Feb. 7, 1941. All mem bers are requested to attend. & $« «$• ATTENTION L. U. NO. 94 All members who are in ar rears three months or more in •their dues will be suspended. lj» A. F. L. Intercession (Continued from Page One) nocent of the charges of which he was convicted. The men paroled are W. B. Jones, Chester L. Poore and Jim Reynolds. Mr. Myers explained that he has a doubt as to their guilt or innocence, but since he was not sure of their innocence he could not grant them outright pardons. The pardon of Benson and the pa role of the three other miners repre sent a great victory for organized labor. The American Federation of Labor at the recent New Orleans con vention adopted a resolution urging the release of the four men. The res olution charged that they were im prisoned "solely because they dared to organize a union, dared to strike and dared to picket in Harlan County, Kentucky." Mr. Green wrote Edward H. Wey ler, secretary-treasurer of the Ken tucky State Federation of Labor, ex pressing the gratification of the A. F. of L. and suggesting that the appre ciation of the A. F. of L. be con veyed to the Lieutenant-Governor for "this fine action." FOR YOUR VALENTINE! SAY IT U IT1I FLOtt FRS— FROM YOUR PERSONAL FLORISTS JOHN GRETA JACK BETTY GOLDEN'S FLOWERS II