-7- 



5. Fish, fresh or canned, mashed and laixed with salad dressing. Use 

 with lettuce, cucumber sliced or chopped, chopped cabbage or spinach. 



6. Liver spread - 1 cup ground cooked liver, moistened with salad dressing. 

 To this may be added 2 teaspoons grated onion, 2 teaspoons finely cut 

 chives, 2 tablespoons minced parsley, or 1 tablespoon chopped pickle, 



7. Egg, hard-cooked or scrtimbled, with salad dressing. Chopped celery, 

 lettuce, spinach, cabbage, or crisp chopped bacon may bo added. 



8. Cheese, (a) American - grate and mix with s alad dressing, (b) Cottage 

 or cream - with chopped dried fruit, nuts, olives, marmalade, jam, 

 jelly, preserved ginger, or grated raw apple, 



9. Peanut butter (softened with salad oil, milk, cream, or salad dressing) 

 with grated carrot, chopped raisins or prunes, or sliced raw apple, 



10. Parsley or chive butter. Cream butter or reinforced margarine, add 

 equal parts finely chopped parsley or chives. 



11. If bread is well flavored or moist, a very delicious sandvfich is made 

 with only butter or reinforced margarine. This is particularly true 

 of some of the quick breads to v;hich fruit and nuts have been added, 



— May S. Foley 



ADDITIONAL NITROGEN RELEASED TO INCREASE 1945 CROP YIELDS 



Additional nitrogen fertilizer has been released by VjTB on 1943 crops. 

 The fertilizer is of two kinds: (1) A very limited quantity of nitrate of 

 soda (15 per cent nitrogen); (2) a relatively large supply of ammonium nitrate 

 (30 per cent nitrogen). There is no restriction on tlie use of this supply. 



This will be sold by fertilizer dealers direct to farmers. Farmers 

 who can use this fertilizer should place their orders immediately with their 

 usual fertilizer dealer so that orders may be assembled in carload lots for 

 quick distribution. 



Dealers' margins on this material will be very small, and little ex- 

 pense can be incurred by the dealer in canvassing farmers for their needs. 

 The material must be moved as rapidly as possible and it is hoped that it 

 can all be distributed in the month of June. 



It may be used to advantage on vegetable and forage crops and pastures. 

 Hay lands from which the first crop is removed may bo treated immediately with 

 100 to 200 pounds of ammonium nitrate to increase the second crop. On pastures 

 it should increase the production of late season g rasscs. 



Ralph V!. Donaldson of the Massachusetts State College sees in this 

 supply of fertilizer an opportunity for farmers in Massachusetts to substan- 

 tially increase their yields of ha;/ and pasture forage. 



