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Show 6 fage SPORT LIGHT Pro Grid Stars Have Been Shifted By A GRANTLAND RICE any other with the ball at least giving a good Imitation of jack FEW DAYS NOW, close to a thousand mammoths, mastodon and gazelle will be turned loose on the public domain These repre sent the pro football crop for 1950 with peace finally established. There will be 13 teams In action, where each rabbit In action. Ted also remembered that be Isnt getting any younger He will be 32 years old In October, which Isn't venerable, but which also Isnt too youthful. In other years Ted has mixed his home-ru- n hitting with more attention to mere base hits. This season squadat will beIn he Is really giving It the full treatleast large ment at a time where as Ford the earlier days o Frick says "Even the pitchers practice, be fora are trying for home runs." the pruning knife Williams will bave plenty In Qrantlaod Rlcefail. the way of competition tbe rest Just what the aggregate ot the way from Rosen, Klner, weight of these 13 squads will Dropo, Stephens, Campanula, be Is beyond our guess but the Snider and a few others, In weights run from 155 to 285 pounds and there are more players over 200 than under 200. The 13 head coaches and their aids have a. tough job to face In reducing the oil and fat content where steaming blubber must be taken off In tons. The new season will open with a Philadelphia explosion where Eagles and Drowns are figured to draw some 100,000 clients. So many players, good and average, have been shifted around, back and forth, that it Is only a raw guess now to start picking any winners, but you can be pretty sure the Eagles, Drowns and Dears will be up there. Do McMllllns Detroit squad will be another effective fit, especially with Leon Dart's 270 pounds In the cast. Hart may not weigh quite that much but It won't be far away, according to Frank Leahy's judgment last fall. "The boy Is still growing," Frank said, when llart reached 260. 'Tie Is only 20 years old." Among those who will be featured this season are Van Duren of the Eagles, Lujack of the Dears, Waterfleld of the Rams, Graham ol the Drowns, Conerly of the Giants, and other good passers with the Yankees, Colts, etc. Both leagues are well fixed tor passers but the Eagles still look to have the better passing and running combination for an attack. The others, however, getting first call in the draft have all been well strengthened where Greasy Neale had to stand pat or nearly cluding DiMagglo and Easter. But from the way long Ted Is taking his cut at the ball he Is tbe one more likely to reach the goal, if anyone does. Ralph Klner Is leading the Na tlonal league and be Is sure to pick up his pace later. As a rule he falls Into the groove after July Fourth. A year ago he hit 20 home runs the last 30 days of the seas on. The same output in 1950 mlgh Just push Klner over the top. He is the one drawing factor the Pirates bave left for the season. Feed, Labor 80 Percent of Of Keeping Dairy Herd, Re pasture and Good high-qualit- y, rV ot , m hay will cut feed and labor myst(rjlr-Vetercosts and greatly Increase net for dairymen, declared Timothy Hodge, Michigan State College agricultural economist. Hodge estimates that feed and labor expense represents 80 per cent of the cost of keeping a dairy cow. their feet s.iu Tbe lower the feed and labor costs voluntary danceV The latest I can be made, the bigger will be tbe reseat Kernkamp, a dairymans net return. Pasture and hay are the cheapest at the University 0f feed a cow can get. Agronomists re- - dicates that the myoclonia congenita JfS as baffling to scienti PASTURE SCARCE It might Interest Joe McCarthy AMPLE 6000 PASTURE when first described AND MAY AND LOW VOLUME in to know that no manager ever lef the scene with a better press than the departing Red Sox leader drew around the circuit. low-co- st re-tur- ns rel'M 5 W luriWw A V OTHER COST wm otheq COST LABOR COST second nature She pushed him away and ran up Bellamy. No one the path toward the ranch house. would have guessed, after one Once back In her room she facec glance at her gay, laughing face, herself In the mirror and laughed. after one look into her mocking, In the days that followed Lon tantalizing eyes, that Inwardly she persisted In occupying her thoughts. was afraid. Some what In desperation she cast Afraid about for escape. And then a plan sometime gome came to mind. Shed ask him to one of her vic- come to New York. Shed get him tims was going on home ground, compare him with to turn the the sort of life she was used to. tables. That It to say, she knew The Idea seemed a good one and that one day she was going to fall strangely enough Lon agreed to n love with one of the men with come In the fall. whom she flirted. And that, she knew, would be the end. The end pALL CAME, and she planned a o all her gay, reckless happiness. party. She invited all those who had been at the Double O Bar that She never dreamed that this man would prove to be a cowboy, named summer. Lon Falrweather. Lon arrived In due time and Deborah had joined a party who called at Deborahs apartment. She planned a months vacation at a was a little taken aback at the ease iude ranch In Wyoming. Lon was and grace with which ne wore his he foreman. He was tall, fair, smart new tuxedo, and In spite of handsome. After one look into his herself she thrilled when he swept sober blue eyes, Deborah began to her into his arms. ay her snares. The dinner was set for 8. At 7:30 Lon was different, but he was the guests began to arrive. Lon also human Hence he succumbed was surprised when he saw that o her wiles, just as had the others. the men wore d chap and The night he told Deborah of his boots; that the women were ove they were seated on a high garbed In divided riding skirts and blouses. joulder overlooking a hemmed-i- n ake. so. A butler came to the door and "Come yelled: about and get it, cowboy I the beauty and Something irandeur of the scene stirred DeDeborah felt a little uneasy as Thi Williams Goal borahs soul. She found herself Lon escorted her to her seat. Her Ted Williams has apparently istening to Loni love making uneasiness grew as he looked fixed both eyes on the Babe Ruth more soberly than was her cus- slightly puzzled upon home-rudiscovering mark of 60. tom. there was no silverware at his Ted sensed the fact that 1950 "Oh, Lon," she said a UtUe place save a knife. He was about as good a season as breathlessly, "Not now . . . hesitated, watching In amazement as the other guests picked up their knives, and with suppressed chuckles began to scoop up peas and shove them into their mouths. He watched as they poured coffee from their cups and drank from their saucers. "I understand," he said, looking directly at Deborah. "And 1 I can t appreciate the humor regret of the thing. You see," he added, "we westerners have had it drilled IN & FEED AND LABOQ COST FEED AND K; was 1'pLIRTING with Deborah that all-arou- high-heele- gay-colore- d n broad-blade- 1050. WILL FIND WELL OVER IWCNTY'FIVS MtlUON PGOHS TRYING TO CATCH THAT BIG ONE-TH- PITCHER JOG NAYNGS E of the m33ED T& JWOTHER OUT OF THE BOX MORE AMERICAN LEAGUE HURL FROM ONE COW MILK FROM ONE COW Jf? The above illustration clearly shows the net returns for ample good pasture and hay and returns when pasture is scarce and of low volume. port that 25 pounds of good alfalfa hay will supply all the protein needed to produce about 30 pounds of 4 per cent milk daily and furnish calcium, carotene and vitamin D as well. Good pasture cuts labor expense, because the cows do the harvesting. ' Three essentials needed to maintain good pasture and get maximum returns from pasture crops are: (1) a good Electricity can lighten chores and greatly increase ductivity. How its done is shot a new color film, Eecz Farming" which has been rtkj by General Electric. Crop dryers, barn cleaners; r ing machines, water pumpingj terns, electric brookers, and i j lating fans are cited as eiaaff mixture best the widening use of electrict legume-gras- s adapted to your growing conditions. (2) a fertile soil that will steadily furnish a well balanced supply of plant foods. Soil tests will show the lands need for lime and for phosphate and' potash fertilizer. (3) good management which rotates grazing and avoids overworking some areas while others become coarse and unpalatable. Good management also involves harvesting pasture growth at the peak of its protein value to insure high quality hay. production on modern farau. Soybeans Important Cr Crop in Minnesota Soybeans as a sota responded ing the war and cash cropist to high pricsj yea beC for harvested acreage it acre creased from 30,000 to 920,000 in 1947 and then t, back to 709.000, in 1949. MosU increase occurred from 1944 k post-wa- r In 19 counties 5 per cental of the tillable land wasinKjt Farmers Report New Disease Among Pigs harvested for beans lc 1941 A strange disease of Tittle pigs Care of Hatching Effl that makes them shiver, jerk and Holding eggs at too higbli sometimes "dance" is worrying perature causes them to lo j avoid tnai quite a few farmers. . ability to hatch. To or ba What causes the condition is somiP store them in a cellar . HOW us by you .easterners, that we?re fdeM nd have no manners, LAKES, STREAMS AND OCEANS OF THE UNITED STATES! holds the VW record d MILK FBI i out, he paused and made a little, perfunctory bow toward Deborah. "Now I know something else; know that whatever other manners you folks might have you dont know the meaning of hospitality. And with this he placed his napkin on thecarefully table, ushed back his chair and strode from tbe room. Lon! Lon!" she called. "Please come back. It was all my fault. I m sorry. Pleasel" But Lon was already the door and halfway down through the stairs. Above, on the landing Deborah stood as if dazed. There was a e gnawing sensation inside of her, a great, desolate, miserable She knew then that Lon feeling. Falrweather had been the man she was afraid of meeting. ter-ribl- CE&TMESMNE MOOES PORCELAIN sRErt NON' INSULATORS PROVIDE GOOD HOOKS FOR CLOTHESLINES Cl) |