Ligonier Banner., Volume 78, Number 33, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 August 1944 — Page 2
.. V & ( x 30 ' oy | CRANTZAND RICE i
M UCH to the surprise and shock of several American league managers, plus their supporters, the long time lowly Browns have refused to crack. ? They have kept coyly away from the soapy chute under the smart direction of my old Titus, Ala., friend, ) James Luther Sew- &%&f ell. Luke’s main in- *%b structions have B % been to ‘keep them E§ w 8 = And the Browns Ee N have kept rolling **éf‘w““ for about the second PRV S time in over forty [ W « 0 years, dating back [} rg“ to the days of oL George Sisler. No one will stand MERStings e -up and say that the Browns have any shining set of stars. They haven’t. But they have a set of steady going ballplayers, including Vernon Stephens, George McQuinn, Chester Laabs, and Al Zarilla, plus at least a good mid-war pitching staff. Tpey claim no outstanding stars, but their average certainly matches anything else in the American league. In Luke Sewell they have a smart and well-balanced manager who has earned their liking and their respect. Luke ought to know his share of baseball. He began catching for Cleveland back in 1921, a matter of 23 years ago. Luke stuck with Cleveland for 12 years before he moved on to Washington—and later to Chicago. He was only a .259 hitter, but he always knew how to handle that big glove, and direct his pitching staff. When he drew the job of managing the Browns it was something like being sentenced to Siberia. What difference did it make—who might be managing the Browns? I talked with Luke early this spring and his only comment was: ‘“We have just as good a chance as ‘any team in the league. Just at this spot there are at least five teams that are evenly matched. It's the sort of race where it might be important to get the jump. That’s ‘what we are shooting for. The team that gets the jump will have a big advantage with so many other clubs killing off any single challenger.” How It Worked Out It has worked out just as Sewell predicted. The Browns got the jump. Just back of them were the Red Sox, Yankees, Indians, etc. There was little difference. ; L Luke Sewell had called the turn as far back as April showers. ‘“Get the jump.” ‘ The Yankees and Red Sox, Indians, Tigers and White Sox, all began clawing each other or one another. Once in a while some Brown challenger would win four or five in a row,.then drop the next four. The Red Sox and the Yankees both kept making threatening moves. Then the Indians cut in. But when the dust had settled on various fields and the smoke had blown away, there were the Browns still out in front, piking -along and still winning their share and protecting that® early jump that Luke Sewell worked for, i T It is a much tougher proposition for a leading club to have only one fast-moving pursuer on his heels. When _you have three or four they keep taking care of the chasers and dragging them back. - The charge has been made that St. Louis hasn’t supported either club —Cardinals or Browns—that St. Louis is not a two club major entry. ‘This is all true.’ e . St. Louis, for one reason or another, is only a one club entry in the major leagues, and hot any too hot as a one-club spot. There are any number of cities, including Los Angeles, that would be a big league 4§old mine ~ix;+g:o,n}_pa;'i§pn, : DoBLe i 3 has “fiGthing to do with the ballplayers composing the double line-ups of Cardinals and Browns. But the facts are that the ballplayers working for St. Louis :ans liave dominated both leagues so ar. . < The Cardinals were a romp before the first ball was thrown back in April. The Cardinals would be an even bet against a team picked from the other 15 clubs in both leagues. But one might have thought that the uprising of the Browns would have churned up_the old town in Missouri. In place of that the Dodgers in last place in the National league have been outdrawing the leading Browns. : This has soured the baseball crowd in general, taken from the map at large, against the Browns. It has been my belief that the two best baseball cities in the country are Brooklyn and Detroit, when you con--gider their population. " The main point in early August is that the Browns were supposed to crack some time back—and they haven't cracked yet. @~ = = money as well as any other club,
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Keep Cool With Shrimp Salad in Aspic (See Recipes Below)
Keeping Cool
There are still warm days ahead through late summer and early fall, and plenty of opportunity for keeping cool. ! - Formerly it was thought that one should eat extremely lightly of just . low - calorie salg /'/// - ads with "hardly f -i) enough nourish- : 4 ment for the S body, and cold — drinks. Nowwe a4t /, . recognize the necessity of using enough proteins in the diet to keep the body in good condition, and also know that a cup of hot soup will be as cooling as the coolest drink.
Naturailly our proteins may be in the form of salads for we like them especially well in the summer. Here is a good one using a shrimp in aspic, both cooling and nutritious: Lemon Aspic. Serves 6)
2 tablespoons gelatine 14 cup cold water 1% cups. hot water 15 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar ‘ 1% cup lemon juice LS 1 cup cooked or canned shrimp 1 cup chopped celery { Chicory or. other salad greens:
Sprinkle gelatine into cold water. Add hot water, salt, sugar and lemon juice. Cool, then add shrimp and celery. Chill in ring mold. Unmold on crisp salad greens. Fill with: . &
*Shrimp Salad. - i (Serves 8) : % cup cooked or canned shrimp 2 tablespoons french dressing 1 cup diced celery 1 cup lettuce, cut in pieces 1 cup peas iy b Mayonnaise to blend
‘Marinate shrimp 15 minutes in french dressing. Combine with remmning ingredi- SR STRRRR ; ents. Garnish the &B i, lemon aspic with & [, -’% lemon. quarters | { ,’,;K,,“.,,A and shrimps. T\l Do you ever *gp ey feel that potato x@“ salad has a flat “oG D taste? That can : > easily be remedied by marinating the cubed potatoes in french dressing to give them an extra flavor. . Creamy Potato Salad. (Serves 6) 2
4 cups cold, boiled potatoes, cubed % ecup french dressing 114 teaspoons salt 1 medium onion, minced 3 hard-ceoked eggs 14 cup diced celery 3 slices bacon, fried and crumbled 6 sliced radishes % i;.;up mayonnaise or boiled dressg
Marinate potatoes in french dressing one-half hour. Toss together with remaining ingredients and serve with cold meats, wedges of tomato and cucumber slices.
Chicken Salad. (Serves 6)
2 cups diced chicken or veal ¥ ecup diced celery - 1% cup sliced, toasted almonds Salad dressing Mix all ingredients with enough
Lynn Says
Go-Togethers: Some foods served together are inspired combinations. You’ll like: : Roast loin of pork with minted applesauce, creamed onions, brown bread and coconut cake. Curried Chicken with boiled rice; corn muffins with fig jelly or jam, or quince honey; lettuce salad; aate and nut pu!ding with cream.. .
Beef en casserole, with potatoes, carrots and green beans; ap“le salad; bread and butter pickes; bread with plum jam; peach 2rumble.
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, IND.
Lynn Chambers’ Point-Saving Menus Strained Vegetable Soup *Shrimp Salad in Lemon Aspic Rye Bread-Cream Cheese’ : Sandwiches Olives Pickles *Peach Crumble *Recipes Given :
salad dressing to moisten. Serve on lettuce and watercress. s
If you are looking for fruity salads, there are any number the family will like:.
Fruit Ginger Ale Salad. .. " (Serves 6)
-1 tablespoon: gelatine L Y 4 cup.cold water orfruit juice 4 cup orange or other juice 2 tabléspoons sugar ' 2 tablespoons lemon juice = 14 teaspoon salt 1 cup ginger ale 1 cup fruit “Soften ' gelatine 'in cold water. Place bowl over warm water and stir until gelatine - ' , is dissolved. Add. =~ sugar, salt and . fruit juice.. Cool . ‘ifll‘ - and, add ' ginger AL.II =fi;;, 53 ale. Chill, and S.o 5%/ -’ when mixture be- ==H . g~ gins to thicken, —L! | e add fruit cut in ' small ' pieces (canned pineapple, pears, apricots, cherries or fresh fruit such as oranges, apples, grapes or bananas). 'Two tablespoons of ginger may be added if a high ginger flavor is desired. Turn into individual molds that have been rinsed in cold water. Chill." Unmold on lettuce and serve with mayonnaise.
Best Salad. (Serves 6)
1 tablespoon gelatine .. ; 14 cup cold water - ’ 2 1 cup cooked salad dressing 1 cop cream or evaporated milk, whipped gl » 15 cups chicken or diced veal % cup almonds, blanched and chopped b % cup malaga grapes, canned pineapple or oranges. 1% teaspoon salt
Soften gelatine in cold water. Place in dish over boiling water and stir until gelatine is dissolved. Cool and combine - with. salt, salad dressing, whipped cream ‘or whipped evaporated milk. Fold in chicken, using white meat, almonds, and skinned grapes, seeded and cut into pieces. Turn into mold, rinsed with cold water, and chill until firm. When firm, unmold and garnish with lettuce, almonds and grapes. _Fruit desserts? Here are two with apricots and peaches:
*Peach Crumble. (Serves 6)
8 fresh peaches, sliced 14 cup water _ 1 teaspoon lemon juice 34 cup flour 1 cup brown sugar 2 tablespoons butter 1% teaspoon salt
Arrange peaches in buttered baking dish; sprinkle with water and lemon juice. Blend sugar, flour, butter and salt together until mixtyre resembles rough cornmeal. Sprin-: kle over peaches. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) until peaches' are soft and top is brown and bubbly, about 35 minutes, Apricot Dessert.
Fill honeydew melon ring with orange sherbet and garnish with apricots halved and peeled, marinated in lemon juice and cantaloupe balls.
Get the most from your meas bm roasting chart l:m Miss Lynu! G.él.yawm. Nenbywriunglo in care of Western ewspaper Union, 210 South Aupla MSMMC&:;’W 6, Nl Please send o """ -addressed envelope for your muwmuowmmum
s oA - ;_ 2 "‘.‘r % "Tarm Joptes = = 7.;7"/ -’
Cover Crop Seed Increase Sought
Supplies Needed to Maintain Acreage
Growing of legumes -and cover crops—with particular emphasis on seed production—is receiving more attention than usual from Uncle Sam this year. . : The nation’s farmers for many years have relied upon legumes and cover crops to protect their soil from erosion, preserve valuable moisture, and gather life-giving nitrogen from the air. In most cases, these crops are plowed under as green manure to make room for more profitable row crops, such as cotton, corn, or tobacco.
Heavy wartime demands for more food and fiber crops from each acre under the plow have increased the need for seeding legumes and cover crops, the War Food administration says. Records show that growing these crops in winter will bring abouf a substantial increase in per acre yields of subsequent crops. The urgent need for more feed crops to support added numbers of livestock also has a place in the picture, WFA says. These crops provide excellent pasture for several weeks before turning under, thus supplementing dwindling supplies of concentrated protein feeds. Principal emphasis is being placed on harvesting of seed from 1944 crops of legumes and grasses because supplies now are at dangerously low levels. Adequate supplies of these seeds are essential for providing
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Good Clover Stand
winter feeds, protecting land during the winter months, and maintaining soil productivity at high levels. ~ Increases in production of legume and grass seeds must be made in 1944 if there are to be sufficient new seedings this fall for hay and pasture production and for sod acreage in regular crop rotations. Nations liberated from Nazi domination will need seed quickly to help reestablish themselves by restoring their devastated farmlands. Shipping seed abroad is an economical way of exporting food and lessens the drain on our own food supplies. - . Harvesting of legume and cover crop seed will be encouraged under provisions, of the 1944 conservation program of the Agricultural Adjustment agency. Substantial payments will be allowed for each acre harvested, up to a maximum of 25 acres per farm, Prices of seed will be supported at levels designed to give the farmer a fair return. Crops. eligible for AAA payments and support prices include meost principal legumes and grasses. 5 In addition to the profit realized, farmers: are being urged by the WFA to produce adequate supplies of seed for two principal reasons. First, WFA says, if farmers are to maintain their record production levels, every effort must be made to keep the nation’s farmlands in top productive condition. Any effort to draw upon soil fertility without replacing it is a dangerous gamble which may result in declining production in later years. In the second place, many of the crops now being produced in record quantities to meet urgent needs are soil depleting. Continued. . production of these crops makes it imperative that productivity be _preserved by every means possible. ; ;
Here is how the situation sums up? 1. Red clover—Reserves at 40 per cent of 1940 level. g :
2. Alsike clover—Carryover reduced one-half -by. two short crops.
3. Sweet clover—l 943 crop smallest since 1922. Carryover July 1 expected to be 40 per cent of 1939-1943 average. it S e
Cattle Liver Flukes
Liver flukes, long a serious menace to cattle production in parts of Texas and other western states, are now being fought with a new chemical treatment, according to the War Food administration. The drug ‘““hexachlorethane’” is combined with
bentonite in water to make a smooth emulsion that is easily given as a drench. Liver flukes, difficult to reach by medication, are small, flat, leaf-shaped parasites. ‘
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Brother-Sister Summer Play Set
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410 Below Zero
Liquid nitrogen is used today in one plant in this country to produce the temperature of 410 degrees Fahrenheit below zero that is required to shrink steel parts so they may be fitted into their corresponding pieces. :
B Hearem Crackle/ ™™g E W g i : i 1 RICE KRISPIES & . “The Graias arscreatfoccs— Nt Withey | ~ l et
— _""’ euf /> ‘&fi_“g\ Rl )i) r:‘ guoron\ee ot _ izm-ym‘wfl.“,, g S:\e:':a., \c*.&‘é PERFECT gaking P e 87\ § BALANCEL d,o o\-E'AG‘\'\fl" ‘3 DO ' . 610 T Goud Houreie ) LE == As Ll f,‘he'ng bow/d . KM - oven OTHER, SHE ’ ' KNOWS
I CLABBER GIRL l ey A L
) ‘?o’s H EAT G T %}0& D *¢: wn n m N W O N < 11111 . COAL HEATER
ufls% :“:‘“ LS;{FEERLS P ST T - oy @ A 2 T B g iii" 4 {:&1“.',;-.» . ;\:.’,',mlé“fi;%h ; ! !u.m‘ ) NTEROR pwew || HEFERR
36-inch material; blouse 11 yards; girls’ jumper, 13§ yards of 36-inch material; blouse, 13 yards. : Due to an unusually large demand and current war conditions, slightly more time is required in filling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. ' Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South w;ns St. Chicage Enclose 20 cents in coins for each pattern desired. PAUEIR NO.. cioieienss: SiZe..covane Name ‘............;...L.............'. Address .1....1....-..11..........‘0.
MOROLINE
G’atherr Your Scrap; * % Throw It at Hitler!
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