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iFage 8 7‘ ^4^ JlyML i?ll.railr-r.-«y,iiilini»,iBiiiwii uim 1 rri iy_ '4^ 4 ’T I ,4 Zx -p s/ he situation idpoint, for a is a first preferred B*' jwn as a ng all dif _t the body repairing i’ll tap 1 se and gjpplies no ex 1 luota. L.1 als, ned to *44 Potatoes, Teamed With Eggs, Are a Delicious Meat-Saver (See Rec.pes Below.) Meat Savers I ’oluntary meat rationing is al k in process. This period be __ fore the actual rationing starts— 'CHI' .^SX .___ i person to 2 14 a week is the time for every Mrs. America to ML take stock and Cj^Hays ahead—days when cks her meat ration nr sugar ration books irket. HBk has been a ehel nge which home ^^HB^Meat rationing a challenge— where meat twice and day. But this met, for iding onlics be &>: s vs jf. S 4-J| Baked shrimps in a rich dressing are a boon to any menu and pick-up for any appetite: Baked Shrimp Salad. (Serves 6) pounds fresh conked or canned Shrimps 1 cup finely diced celery $4 cup chopped green pepper tablespoons chopped pimiento Salt and pepper *4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 1 tablespoon lemon JtLlve 1 cup mayonnaise Buttered bread crumbs Toss together all ingredients, lightly so as dot to break shrimps. Place in buttered shells or individ ual casserole dishes. Bake in a moderate (350-degree) oven until the crumbs are browned. Garnish with lemon curls and serve immediately. Cheese will be a blessing for many of the days on which you find your self short and slim on meats. II Xl It’s easy to cook j|y Q) if you do just two things: cook it slowly and cook |j ''c'ke. over indirect i*^,^*^-**^ A leat There are io strings at- .4, Leched to cheese cooked this way: Ok Cheese-Macaroni Loaf. HR (Serves 6) egt yolks png whites "P grated American ip -oft bread emmbs macaroni, broken 'toons butter 'nd Transport Battle Delayed By Land I This Week’s Menn •Idaho Suzettes Stewed Tomatoes Shredded Lettuce, Raisin, Apple Salad Whole-Wheat Bread Caramel Bavarian Cream Cookies Beverage per. Bake or broil 15 to 20 minutes in a hot (425-degree) oven until fil lets are cooked and delicately browned. Make sauce by boiling pulp with spices for 20 minutes or until thickened and well blended. Add salt and sugar. Mix and strain, Pour over fish and let stand in oven 5 to 7 minutes with sauce before serving. NEW YORK—(FP)—Nov. 25— Failure of Emory S. Land, chair man of mission to set up on the East Coast a ment board similar to that existing on the West Coast, has delayed loading of war cargoes. the U. S. Maritime Com- labor-management- govern- One ship in the North River took paper points out that the average as much as 28 days to load, accord ing to the “Longshoreman.” The turn-around time, which a ship takes to unload and reload, is 10 to 14 days on the East Coast, as compared with four days on the West Coast. Another factor holding up the loading of ships, according to the “Longshoreman,” is the shakeup system of hiring. While the un loading of a ship may be held up at one pier because of a lack of men, at other piers unemployed dock workers await a ship which may not arrive for several weeks. This could not occur if a central hiring system was maintained, the “Longshoreman” points out. Poor loading on the East Coast waterfront has caused several ships to return to port to be re loaded, which means delay in get ting war shipments to their for eign destinations. P7/r minted Pper in boiling. linutes tei on it i en egg Output e reeJ INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 23 (FP) Proposals in Congress for a longer work week would, if en acted, result in lost time and labor wastage, Secretary of Labor Fran ces Perkins told the National Con ference on Labor Legislation, Nov. 17. After considerable study, the secretary of labor said, several Federal bureaus, including the U. S. Maritime Commission, U. S. Public Health Service, War Pro duction Board, Manpower Commis sion, U. S. Department of Labor, and the War and Navy Depart ments had joined together in con cluding that a seven-day week should be discouraged because it injures the health and efficiency of the workers, cutting down their productivity and morale. These Federal departments, said Secretary of Labor Perkins, “warn against too long daily and weekly hours and ask plants exceeding the 48-hour schedule to analyze the experience with respect to output and time lost on account of ab senteeism, illness, accident and fa tigue.” "I has been found,'* said the sec retary, “that excessive working working hours are apparently causing time loss and labor wast age which makes the practice to tally uneconomical.” Attempts to repeal laws against homework also were scored by Miss Perkins, who said that the War Department agreed with her that this is the most uneconomical method of porduction. Hyde's to Your Success *ral Outdoor "sing, Inc OSTER {SING k TOLEDO UNI President Fk'‘7 1 *•, 3 •-., fey -'Xsi b* To eliminate “confusion and in£ pairment of morale caused by con flicting directives issued by a mul tiplicity of agencies,” the confer ence approved a committee recom mendation that “all federal labor policies should be decided by or in cooperation with the U. S. Depart ment of Labor.” Sec. of Labor Frances Perkins read a telegram from Pres. Roose velt which said: “The standards which have been built up over the years to protect our industrial workers against accidents, disease and fatigue have great importance in conserving the manpower of the war effort today. -For if the in dustrial army is crippled by these enemies on the home front, the supplies for our fighting will be curtailed.* Joint APL-CIO Nagotiating Co mmittee Formed In Pittsburgh PITTSBURG, Nov. 25 (FP)— Ratifying an agreement made by union officers with the Natl. War Labor Board, striking members of the Building Service Employes Inti. Union (AFL) have returned to their jobs at Pittsburgh’s 8 major department stores, Gimbels, Kaufman’s and Frank & Seder. Strong AFL-CIO unity developed during the strike against the stores. Three CIO unions as well as 13 AFL craft unions refused to cross the picket lines, and a joint AFL-CIO negotiating committee— believed to be the first of its kind in the U. S.—was formed. All 17 union contracts with the 3 stores have expired and the unions have agreed to negotiate jointly. Under the truce worked out by the NWLB, the board will settle any points that can not* be agreed upon in negotiations. Dear Mr. Gosser: My wife has just informed me of her employment at the Willys Overland Co. I deeply appreciate what you have done for her •iid wish to thank you. Please say hello to everyone for hie until we meet again. k "’y and fraternally yours, BBB&fefr-J-'rick G. Heidelberg I 4 1 ON JOURNAL O. Jack Kroll of Cincinnati, who will preside at the three-day convention in Columbus Nov. 27 to 29. The meeting will be an important one and as largely at tended as last year's Youngstown convention. 48-Hour Week, Ov er+ime Pay After 40 Indoseci By Conference INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 25 (FP) —A 48-hour workweek, providing for time-and-a-half pay for all work over 40 hours, was indorsed as necessary to the war effort bj the 9th annual Natl. Conference on Labor Legislation Nov. 19. Meeting for the first time out side of Washington, 150 delegates, representing federal and state la* bor departments, indorsed a report of the conference committee sta ting: “The committee wishes to make clear however in indorsing the scheduling of 48- hour shifts for war production it also upholds the payment of time-and-one-half for overtime beyond the standard workweek of 40 hours, and urges active and full enforcement of the provisions of the Fair Labor Ctand ards Act.” Ballard Passes Out Prizes I 1 i 1 I e». ■I s M, /....... __________________________ Unions Cusled Frc^i Srhonl Ikard KENOSHA, Wis.—Nov. 25 (FP) The appeal of Edward Weston and Edward Rice, ousted from the local school board because they are union men, has been taken under advisement by the state supreme court after a hearing held Nov. 11. Chief Justice Rosenberry chal lenged the attorney for the plain tiff who sued for the ouster of the union school board members. He said “When a man intrudes into office, that’s cause for removal but when a man is lawfully in office performing it someone does not like, cause for removal.” in a way there is no Rosenberry if the men In addition, Justice told the attorney that had not discharged their duties faithfully, it was up to the voters to make a decision, not the judi ciary. Weston and Rice were ousted by the Kenosha court on a charge that they had violated their oaths to uphold the state and U. S. con stitutions because they were also loyal to the principles of organized labor. Home Mortgage Debt Declines Sharply forces WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 24— Payments to retire indebtedness on homes being financed under the FHA insured mortgage plan have increased sharply during the past year, according to Commissioner Abner H. Ferguson of the FHA. Retirement of FHA-insured home mortgage debts has been particu larly marked since early June, at which time private lending institu tions participating in the FHA pro gram were called upon to cooperate with the President’s anti-inflation program by urging their FHA bor rowers to use increased earnings to reduce the indebtedness on their homes. During the five months since the President’s message to the lending institutions, FHA-insured mort gages totaling |43,332,141 have been paid off in full in advance of maturity, an increase of 32 per cent over the same period of 1941. In the eight years of FHA oper ations, only 3,771 home properties, of less than one per cent of the total number insured have been foreclosed by private lending in stitutions and transferred to the FHA in exchange for the insurance. 2 112 Cherry M, 2/c cola. BANG 7 T~“ a ■r I I $ w I $ IW: rv’i Winners of the Willys-Overland prizes: left to right: Betty Dickson, Chuck Ballard, W.-O. chaii man, Melvin Paeth, Delores Wozny. Bottom—Carol Jean Eppard, Margaret Ellen Eppard. Use Insane To Break Strike TRENTON, N. J., Nov. 24 (FP) —The Trenton State Hospital for the Insane pulled a new. union busting trick Nov. 7, when it hired 30 inmates in a fight against the State County Municipal Workers. Demanding an immediate in vestigation of “this terrible condi ton,” the Union wired U. S. Sur geon General Thomas A. Parian that “dire and disastrous results can take place from such a pro cedure.” k ife as as The 30 inmates, discharged cured and immediately hired attendants, are getting $30 month, which is $20 below the existing minimum. Like regular employes, they work a 72-hour week. The union, which is also organizing other state hospitals where scales are as low as $35 a month, is seeking an $80 monthly minimum, a 48-hour week and im proved food and living conditions. Hiring of the inmates climaxed a series of anti-union acts which started last April when the union began organizing. The hospital has also attempted to smploy conscientious objectors, who are paid no wages at all. S?rort On Me dies Due to the armed services re moving such a large number of the medical profession, the United States faces a potential crisis in the event that some serious epi demic hould develop. Steps are now being taken, by means of an initial investigation in Congress to replace some of the medics, particularly those who are trained in obstetrics and female diseases. So many obstetricians have been taken by the army that many rural districts are entirely without the services of men to handle confine ment cases. This raises the question of what the army wants with this type of specialist, but so far, no body has come up with the an swer. Meanwhile, the country is losing more and more doctors and halt has not yet been called the federal government. Patronize Our Advertisers ISeri Leon and Son Funeral Directors the by GA. 1112 1 1 t- t’ & '1 u t: i V %.■ 1 & “v W. O. Gala Parfy More' than 6000 attended the an nual Halloween party sponsored by Willys-Overland Unit, Saturday, Oct. 31, in the Administration Building. Following the Grand March,-/lur ing which three judges picked the outstanding costumes of the mas queraders, Chuck Ballard, Willys Unit chairman, awarded cash prizes to Melvin Spaeth, the best-dressed man Miss Delores Wozny, best dressed lady Leo Syzmanski, most comical costume and Betty Dick son, most comical lady’s costume. Judges were Pat Mini, Josephine Piotrowski and John Jablownski. Refreshments, liquid and other wise, were served to the overflow crowd, 'while dancing and revelry brightened the evening. Goblins and skeletons vied with beautiful girls in entertaining the onlookers,. Music was furnished by Dennis Birchard, Jr., and his eight-piece orchestra. Starvation Faces Actors llollyubod Cries Over $25^000 Incomes (FP) and year HOLLYWOOD,—Nov. 25. Some 300 executives, stars directors whose salaries this will be over $67,000, drew breaths of relief when the order came through from Washington that the $25,000 ceiling would not be ap plied until Jan. 1. There had been no pay checks for over 200 of them the Wednes day before the order came through, and the self-pity campaign that had been conducted for them by one trade paper had reached the crucial moment. Implication had been that the over—$67,000 people live on theic checks from week-to-week, and if the ceiling were applied as of Oct. 27, they would have to quit their jobs because they could not afford to work for nothing. fib ru BSUAC MORE WAR BONDS. November 27, Conservation I News By O. J. Pecord— Editor’s Note: For the time ing, this column will be conducted by the editor, not because he Jacks for work but because of his per sonal attachment to the cause of conservation. As soon as a writer can be se cured who is interested enough to keep abreast of current conserva tion news, we shall gladly turn over this column to him. OUTDOOR RECREATION A news release from the Ohio Division of Conservation and Na tural Resources states that the Division, as part of its present war tinge program, urill provide more Wholesome, outdoor recreation, par ticU!arly near population and de fense centers, by obtaining fishing watej’^’- Lake and pond owners willing'^0 cooperate should contact :the Ohi^P*v’si°n Conservation and NatuYal Resources, Columbus, 0hi7A i (m^of a °f over 1’200 lakes and por4® ’n Ohio, 500 are open £o public1 Asking with per mission of the landowner. Owners of lak’S participating in the Ohio Djvisioi of Conservation, fishing agreemenv gree to open their lakes for thre years to free, controlled, public faking from the shore and water, to provide a path or lane for ile fishermen to enter and leave *t. lake, to gether with a .margin? strip of land around the lake. Pr us* fishermen. “Conservation fop Toiyrr°w’8 America'* is the title of I. book now being distributed by thecate .... .. 1 Department of Education to the schools of Ohio. Sponsored by the Ohio, of Conservation, the book is^^^B suit of two years’ work dealin^^^^S/ helpful suggestions and teav..*ng material, adaptable for all teachers and may be used in all grades in school, including junior and senior high school. MI ST BUY STAMP While youthful hunters under 16 years of age are required to have a $1.00 state hunting license to| carry a gun, Federal regulations! governing the shooting of water fowl require the purchase of the $1.00 duck stamp by Wnljr those hunters over ,»^"X GLUB NEWS W Out of the 65 factories repre sented by units in Local 12, there are a number of sportsmen’s clubs. News of club activities should be in the hands of your paper not later than Monday noon, but pre ferably before that. It is our wish to develop the clubs in the units. We shall gladly make arrangements to at tempt to organise such clubs in those Units which are interested enough to want an organization. Those who desire help in organiz ing a club may write to the Ohio Division of Conservation, Colum bus, Ohio, telling of their inten tion and aid will be given theim^ Congratulations to the Toledo Union Journal Sumner’s Working Men's Store 431 Superior AD. 3300 ERIKSON'S INC. Office Equipment and Supplies ^nion Water*marked Paper Our Specialty 319 ERIE ST. MAin 3211 Virginia Washed Stove Coal, $9.00 per ton HERMAN FUEL CO. 2706 Summit St. PO. 2601 Employee Group Affiliated VP'ith Local 12 nA- Cv F. H. Cnm^erworth •9 I w. 0*.. C-