OCR Text |
Show Yacht Carries Englands Hope 4 CULL EVERY' TWO WEEKS UNTIL FALL Get Rid of Nonproducers for Poultry Success. The success. or failure of poultry enterprise may depend on proper cull- ing, according to" the poultry department of the New York State College should - of - Agriculture.- '- I'oultrymen cull regularly every two weeks, from t June to September 15, but If only one culling Is to be made, wait until Sep- tember t I lilt. Wwttr first-clas- s , . -- swe a '-- t 'r 4 ' j - ' ' I , u Bran la found necessary In many families to add roughage to tbe diet A roost agreeable mode of taking It I In tbe following: Beat Bran Fanolas. three eggs, add one cupful of sugar; when well dissolved add two cupfuls of uncooked bran, of two tablespoonfula melted butter, one third of a teaspoonful of salt, one teuspoonful of vanilla and two cupfuls of coconut or other chop;ed nuts as preferred. Drop by spoonfuls ou baking sheet and bake In a moderate oven for ten minutes. This makes sis dozen. Butterscotch PI. Beat the yolka of two egga, add three tablespoonfula of flour. Ueat two cupfuls of milk, add one cupful of brown sugar and pour over the eggs and flour. . Cook until amooth and .thick then add s of butter. Put Into a baked shell and cover with a merlngu pie made of the egg whites with four tablespoonfula of sugar.' Bake In a alow oven. two cupPotato DougHnuts-Ta- ke fuls each of mashed potatoes and sugar, teaspoonful each of cinnamon and nutmeg, or all of nutmeg If preferred ; one cupful of sweet milk, three tablespoonfuls of melted shortening and five cupfuls of flour sifted with live teasponnfulii of baking powder. Mix In the order given. 'Chill and roll on a floured (ward. Fry Until brown In deep fat. When cool roll or shake In a little powdered sugar In a .iiK- l' Trim as a gull, ahining from Its new paint, but still without Its mart, tha Shamrock V la ahown after Its launching by th countess of Shaftesbury at Gosport, England. Th boat la owned by Sir Thomas Upton and will ba raced agalnBt tha best of America for the International yachting cup. l t table-spoonful- Southern California has a quartet of star sprinters In Wykoff, Manrer, Guyer and Draper. Success of TopnotchersTend to Draw Ambitious Boys. Ted Lyons Uvea only about seventy miles from Chris Cagles home down In Louisiana and baa known him aver since prep days You should have seen Bed throw a football with his left hand," Ted says, "When he was down thfre at that high he could heave em leflhanded better than anybody else around could school-colleg- e right-handed.- duu-ge- r Gene Flchter, tall, thrge-fourth- s t I ' t 0 f f , f ! M ' ' - . Willis Iludlln, crack pitcher of the Cleveland Indians and mjjlo export de luxe, used to be the star fullback of the high school eleven down In Wagner, Okla. In fact, as John Parks, captain of the Wisconsin eleven of lust fall, saja, "He was the whole team." Parks plajed high school ball at Muskogee, Okla., and usually they played Wagner in their opener. John plans to continue In medical school at Madison this fall and will coach the freshman line. - t . - ,1 : ; is - Poultry Notes . Vr i i 4 - r , C f: - i 1 ; f ! , r i Charley Hcltu, a Baltimore police man, by missing a spare In the tenth box of his recent games In the Na-- ' tlonal Duck Pin Bowling congress tournament games at Wnterhury, a lost chance to set a worlds Conu., record at the small ball game. Helm shot a new tournament game murk of ISO. The world hard maple game record of 100 Is held by Howard Ityan of the Masonic league, Washington, D. C. hjuiS- ihcra .avSi:aivU y ..of - -- ? r : I - 1 s t 5 fi i f 4 t f 1 dh ass lllstandlng good health. J Un-trofl- d of vet iH hard hitting first sacker of the Buckeyes, Is perhaps the first sophomore of the Big Ten season to show up as a potential Mg leaguer. Flchter, who bats and throws lefthunded, hAs crowded the great Wesley Fesler from first to second base on the Ohio State nine. Ills field Ing In the Buckeyes six straight victories of the spring has been phenomenal, saving his inflolders many errors through brilliant recoveries, lie Is a long driver and a large share of bis hits go for extra bases. The SL IiOuls Cardinals are said to he Interested In Flchter and It Is understood that he can have a Cardinal contract for the asking as soon as he concludes his collegiate career. e ess of tbe Braves became a pitcher beea ns a there was a shortage of barters. He started at short s Ray Phelps, rookie pitcher with the Dodgers, Is one of the big burlers of the majors. He stands 0 feet 2 and weighs 210 pounds. 1 ess " Bed" didnt get his nationwide recognition, however, until he went to the army, and It Is very likely that he was playing better ball down South than he did at West Point after his legs begun to fall The big publicity tbe big schools get Isnt doing these small schools any good. Tbe success of men like Cagle and "Century" Milstead, who was an unknown at Wabush and an at Yale. Is tending to draw off all tbe ambitious boys from the small, schools, which are beginning to face bard going In many localities. Zuppkesnys lhat"af Illinois he never had Mg squads until after the Grange boom. The professor can rant all they want to about overemphusis of football; It Is stirring ambitions In thousands of youngsters that will never do them any harm. s Bob Smith -- catchers! Do young players prefer other posl tlons because of tbe wear and tear of a catchers Job! Ikies the modern hall plaer, looking for the line of the least resistance, pass up the catcher' Job bemuse It Is hard work? Whatever the answer may be, certainly there are few great catchers compared with the fine players of the other positions. "Find a good catcher," Is the Instruction given to a majority of tha major- league acouta. It may be that some of the bad pitching that has been laid to tha door of the rabbit bull Is due to the ..fact .that ball clubs are wit htmt- catchers capable of guiding young pitchers and old pitchers who may need guiding. A smart' catcher can steer a pitcher through ahoaly games. Bob Cooper, Temple universitys best pitcher, tore bis right hand on a barbed wire fence and can't play ball the retd of the year. s - Navya boat- r quarter-milllon-dolla- house has been named for Admiral John Hubbard, retired, who stroked the first Annapolis crew. ar former Chicago-WhiteSox outfielder, has been returned to the Toledo American association club by the New York Giants. Most!!, John "Lefty" Magyar, a Is among leading candidates for the Temple university of Philadelphia track team. He is a half miler. one-arme- Atlantic City Municipal auditorium will boast a mammoth Ice riuk, 100 by 200 feet. In the center of the main auditorium which will he In use all summer. essary. I serloQsly doubt If I ever saw a more thrilling play In the field than that staged by Johnny Rawlings to end the 1921 world series between the Giants and Yankees. Tbs clever manner In which It was polled, pins tbe Importance attached to Its successful completion, causes me to rate It number one. Th 1021 series was the first meeting between the two New York dubs In the championship event Victory was keenly desired by both teams, not only because of the prestige that went with It hut because of the rivalry between New York's two big leagua entries. e The Yankees got away to a lead, but when the eighth game came around (the teams were playing best five in nine that season) the Yanks were trailing four games to th ree, They must - win the game or the series was over. An error permitted the Giants to score a run In the first Inning. That one tally dedded the ball game and series. When the ninth Inning rolled aronnd that lone score, a gift, in the opening session, looked like a mountain. However, the final Inning of the aeries was to atage the greatest thrill of 23 years from a fieldlDg angle. Ruth, out of the game because of an injured arm, was sent to bat for Plpp. Much cheerina by the Yankee Get poisons out of system. . ,, Doctors know that this modern scientific laxative works efficiently in smaller doses became you chew it. Safe and mild for old and young, FOR CONSTIPATION - -- -- Puppy Ha Ortrich MeI An Alsatian puppy with the ambitions of an ostrich has been sard from the consequences of his appetite at the Royal Veterinary college in London. From his stomach wert recovered C7 nails of various sizes, two screws, three bolts with nutx one bolt, 16 brads, one stud, a piece of steel drill and a lump of coal, tlx whole weighing 15 ounces. . l AUGUST FLOWER Dickson, end coach St has been a lawyer and teacher and besides his gridiron job Is doing research In the experimental college here. Campbell Wisconsin, brings almost instant relief terrible colic pains. Banishes tburn, nausea, sick headache, biliots-nes- as . Virginia Van WIe, d twenty-one-year-ol- golfer, has played In 50 tournaments, reaching the final round In SO and winning 18 of them. She won the western Junior championship at the age of sixteen. When Purdue plays football In th Illinois stadium November I It will be the first meetlug of the Boilermakers and Illlnl since 1910. Their first game . waa.baek.io second that BH-- ' nol ever played.- - - - Riddle Is Star & V . k v V , ' ' . V J V. y mm- - Catcher Riddle, picked! op by Mam ugerDnnl Bosh of the ChlcagtrWhlte Sox from Indianapolis of the Amert --eair association, has developed Into a star and la being compared to Mickey Cochran of the Athletics. EiiOS, aU Sold Johnny Rawlings. Groans almost Immedisupporters. ately followed when he grounded out to first Ward received a base on ball. "Home Run" Baker of other days, was sent In aa a pinch hitter. While none of the Giants of 1921 had played iu the 1911 aeries, they all knew Frank Baker and his famed home runs. There were mingled emotions as he stepped to the plate. A home run would win the ball game, even up the series and make the ninth game necessary. Rawlings, the substitute, was. playing .second, base for the Giants. Ail through the series he bad been a source oftrx)ub!e.for,the.,Iankeea... , When Baker came to bat Rawlings, knowing Baker was a right field hitter. moved far Into first base territory. Getting a pitch to his liking ha pulled a sizzling grounder to' right that It seemed neither Rawlings nor Kelly had a chance to o much as to knock It down. The crowd was . In an uproar. - It seemed a certain two base hit on which Ward, who was running with the crack , of the bat would surely 'score. Ilow Rawlings ever managed .toreach ibatdx!ve. Is one of the mysteries of baseball. He made a diving stop, and while entirely out of position, threw accurately to Kelly, 'retiring Baker. Ward, confident the ball, had gone through the Infield, was dashing for third base at fop speed. Grasping tha situation, Kelly, s great thrower, made a rifle like shot to Frank Frisch st third. The bail beat tbe runner slightly but was a trifle to the left of th bag. Ward went Into the base with a deceptive fallaway slide. Frisch, with the hall In his hand, dove head first lntothe.runner-and.got.thdecision. e The game was over, the Giants had won a world series, brought to a close by tha greatest aeries of fielding feats I have ever seen. ky tbe BeU taw) . 't constipatioa. appetite a and regular, eliminatioa. GUARANTEED. DYSPEPSIA I at Quickly University of Illinois trackmen will not start the dual meet with Notre Dome scheduled at Champaign, May 31 until four o'clock so as to avoid conflict with examinations. Dave Walker, welterweight boxer of the Inlversslty of Washington, captained the varsity ring team last year as a lightweight, and the year before that performed as a bantamweight. fr hear- sluggish liver, Promptly restores good digestion, m thorough members of the Cardinals have surnames beginning with the letter "IP Hald, Haines, Ilallahan, Hill. High, Hunt and Ilafey. The first four are pitchers. Seven - CArl Lundgrcn, Illinois coach, has been In charge of his old team for nine yeurs during which time the IlUnl have won the Big Ten pennant twice and tfed for the championship once. I.undgren does not look a whole he cap talned Illinois, led his team east oa a famous Invasion and then went to the Chicago Cuba for seven years. Theoplillua Shepstone, and a hen b came s master of the High coo there. After the cession of tl Transvaal to the Dutch he return to England and read for the bu Haggard was knighted in 1912. Bt died In London on May 14, 1925. Included on Penn State's lacrosse schedule Is a game with University of Toronto nt State college June 3. Indiana Is slated to play on the same field June 7. t ' -- d youth the 1020 Popular English NovelUt Sir Henry Itlder Haggard 1925), English novelist, was born a Bradenham hall, Norfolk. At th time of the first annexation of tk Transvaal (1877) he was on the stag of the special commissioner, two-gam- Lartnnn Cox, an outfielder, bas been released by tbe Pittsburgh Pirates to Fort Worth of the Texas league, .from which club he had been obtained. Johnny ' triple play unassisted world series. It was a thrilling play, yet not particularly difficult. Usually triple plays are not hard plays. Aa a matter of fact, for one man to retire the aide onasslated, the atage must be all set. the play almost made to order. The quick thinking of the player that enabled him to grasp the situation is often worthy of far greater praise than tha mechanical skiU nec- BEST GRID STARS nt r. -- In BIG SCHOOLS GET three-fourth- s ' Trying to select an outstanding fast of fielding over a quarter of a century of big league ball la a most difficult I have teen at least one hundred t fielding stunts that I, would place In the superlative class. When a remarkable fielding feat Is palled In a world series, it takes on more unusual proportions because of tha Importance of that championship event, baseballs classic. I saw BUI Wambsganns make hi if i -- Almost everybody knowj Bayer Aspirin treats up a colZ but. why not prevent it? TakH tablet or two when you first fed the cold coming on. Spare yoursS the discomfort of a. summer coM Read the proven directions in even package tor headaches, pain By BILLY EVANS Sportswrhsr, Bit League Umpire sisd General Manager of the Cleveland Indiana - one-hal- f K u i FOODS LIKABLE table-spoonf- s' BASE1ALIL , ''VvJ Nawip culler can tell three things about each hen he handles: whether she Is laying; how long she has, or has not, been laying; and whut is the rate of egg laying. No heps should be kept longer than three years. Close culling limits the number of old bens and raises Cite average egg production of the flock. The easiest and most satisfactory way to catch hena Is to pen off a corner of the bouse with 'a piece of chicken wire fencing about 20 feet long and 6 feet wide. Attach the end of the wire to the side wall about 2 feet from a corner and unroll the wire toward the center of the room. This acts aa a harrier to drive the hens Into the corner. The end of the wire can then be brought around to the side wall, rolled up and fastened, leaving enoiigh apace for the hena. One person' remains on the Inside to catch and hand the birds to the Inspector on the outside. Another good way Is to build a catching crate with a sliding end and an opening on the top. The end of this crate la placed against a runway hole outside of the building, or In an opening between pens on the Inside. Scatter grain on the floor of the crate, drive a few hena quickly Into It, and close the sliding door. Each hen Is paper bng.. then easily caught and removed. Caramel Icing for Any Caks. Take 'cupfuls each of brown sugar and granulated, add seven tableGerm Responsible for spoonfuls of water and boll to a long Blackhead in Turkeys thread stage; must he sjlff to make a It has been recently learned that thick Icing, Pour over two beaten egg If the chicken has been Infected with whites, flavor and beat until thick. Corn Pudding. To one can of corn a certain roundworm, the worm may add three beaten eggs, three block the for resitonslble germ carry of melted butter, two table head In turkeys. By using the plan, which consists of spoonfuls of flour nnd one tablespoonplacing turkeys on virgin soil, pref- ful of augar, suit and pepper to taste erably sown to Alfalfa and not Inhab- and one pint of rich milk. Mir well, ited by chickens for at least two adding the beaten egg whites last. years, the possibility of Infection from Pour Into a buttered baking dish and chickens will be eliminated and tur- bake until the custard Is Bet, about forty-fivminutes. keys ran be raised without the o blackhead 'from thla source. . Crystal Bara. Bent three egga. The name blackhead Is a very poof whites and yolka separately, add one one for the disease for there are cupful of sugar gradually, then add many diseases In turkeys In which the one teaRpoonful of vanilla, one cupful head of the diseased bird turns durk each of cut dates and nuts, floured a blue or a dark color Just before death little. Sift cupful of flour with one teasponuful of baking powder and mix well, add the beaten Use Infertile Turkey whites. Spread In a shallow, well greased pan and bake In a moderate for Shell Pattern Eggs To break a fresh turkey egg for the oven. When cool cut Into bars and with powdered augar. pattern of the shell would be vandal sprinkle Ism, but If an Infertile egg la left In SOME FISH DISHES the nest, marked with the hens num ber, it la well to. blow It out, string It Any kind of fish In the market may and keep for a guide, since the turkey hen may steal iter nest In a different 6a Used with little variation for these When one can recipes. place next time. No two turkeys lay eggs that are pnrchn.se a thick slice or ttllet of rich fish there Is exactly alike The early clutch Is said little waste. A pound to be Invariably of a darker tint tlmn ' tho laid later, but the spots are the goes a long way. Any same. One enthusiastic turkey woman that Is- left may be used In used to cut cardltourd eggs and stipsalad, souffles or creamed and served on ple them aa nearly as possible like the model as a sort of trapnesting for her toast. small flock. Baked FllleL Wash the fish and Melt a tHbleopoonful of wipe dry. butter and brush over the fish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and rub gently with .a tablespoon ful of flour. But on the rack of a roaster,, cover and bake forty minutes In a rather Early chicks require good brooding hot oven. The flour am butter will accommodations. make a nle crust over the flsh. Serve with wedges of lemon and garnish with parsley. Ilungrj hens usually arent profitable layers. They need s full food of Green Onions Creamed. Take small grain In the afternoon to last them onions, cut Into halflnch lengths, through the long winter night. stems and all, and cook until tender; serve with a butter sauce or a rich Chicks need exercise. Pieces of pocream sauce. This dish la especially tato, mangel, cabbage or meat tied to good with fish. strings hanging within reach of the Broiled Fillet of Haddock. The chicks will often keep them from pickhousehold will be healthier If the ing ,jpach .others ..toe - , brotter-i- s used 'more a iTJlhe frying pan less. When on has a stove with During the last thirty years the heu a good broiler there Is no reason to has risen from merely a side Issue to use a frying pan. It Is the simplest become a basic part of our agriculthing lu the world to broil your breaktural wealth. fast bacon, chops and steak on a broiler. It must he carefully watched, men have farm the taken on. Many over the farm poultry business, after of course, but the results are worth their wives have demonstrated that It while. Have the broiler hot, grease the rack lightly and lay on the fillet Is a paying proposition. of flsh not too close to scorch It. I cook on both sides until well Clean, healthy young stock Is the turn and soon as It Is placed on a As done. key to success In poultry managehot pour over the flah two platter .be..mg Ub.IrepdUtgtdE instance . cun labTespmrnfuls of melted butter and must be sanitation but purchased two of lemon Juice. Dust with pep lived, practiced, and continued. ' per and serve with a tartar sauce. Molded Ramekin of Whit Fish. Cod liver oil Is usually fed to adult Jffh I ft eHfl el abl e pi m f id f t a j 1 ociT birds in the proportion of .hue quart C6 one with one of half milk, cupful to 100 pounds of mash nnd ftr chicks of salt, of cayenne, one pint to 100 pound of mash. one half tnldespoouful of minced parsClean chicks, clean soil, clean feed ley and two and one fourth cupfuls and clean management work wonders of UL.stand five 'In falsing thrifty young' birds and In- minutes then turn Into greased cue tard cups or ramektns and bake In a suring their future as laying hens, moderate oven until well cooked. and garnish the top otarh with When breeding stock or chicks are purchased, be sura that they have been a sprig of part, ley. Serve with caper aauce. produced by flocks which show out A . 1. r L'olua.) Oh, auna and aklaa and clouds of Juno .And dors of Juno togothor. To cannot rival for ono hour, October's bright bluo woathor. H. It Jackson. (A, Seeing Big League i Faulty Fellow Through The chief trouble with the weatbs man Is that when he gets s po I thing he seldom sticks with It dlanapolls Star. ipy,,i(d(or. 'MytKirtccn-ycar-olddau- IJ-- i g' ter Maxine was troubled with backache and pain when 6he came into womanhood I knew Lydia E. Rnkhams Vegctab-- f Compound would help her be cause I used to take it mysdi at. her. age. Now.she.does noj have to stay home from school and her color is good, she eao well and does not complain o being tired. We are recommending the Vegetable Co pound to other school who need it. You may public this letter. Mn. Floyd V cKcr, R. j2, CridUy, Kansas. : i VM i ir :(i ! "W Kin |