May 19, 1916. 
and with plenty of good butter; the 
indifferent way—well, who is inter- 
ested in the indifferent way, anyway? 
Asparagus omelet is delicious. The 
asparagus is boiled until tender and 
the tips cut in small pieces, these are 
mixed with four well-beaten eggs and 
seasoned with salt and pepper. This 
mixture is poured into an omelet pan, 
well buttered, and stirred until thick. 
When ready to serve it is folded over 
and served with clear brown gravy. 
Salad is always appreciated, espe- 
cially for luncheon, as it is not oniy 
refreshing, but easy to prepare unless 
one attempts the more elaborate sort. 
The following chicken salad is as sim- 
ple as can be to prepare and is always 
good. Take breast meat, cut in smail 
pieces, mix with an almost equal 
amount of celery, also cut fine. Mix 
this with mayonnaise dressing and 
serve on fresh, crisp lettuce leaves. 
Apple is a pleasing addition to the 
salad if desired. 
Ripe tomatoes used alone or in com- 
bination with other ingredients make 
excellent salad. Tomatoes and cucum- 
bers served on lettuce and with may- 
onnaise are very good. Tomatoes 
may be combined with cold meats, 
perferably veal, and mayonnaise 
dressing for a substantial salad. Meat 
and tomatoes should both be cut inco 
dice and mixed well with the dressing 
and served with lettuce. 
Stuffed tomatoes have for long 
been favorites and at this time of the 
year, mushrooms make _particulariy 
acceptable forcemeat. To prepare 
the tomatoes for stuffing, cut a slice 
from the stem end, scoop out the 
seeds, sprinkle the inside with salt 
and invert. Let them drain for about 
twenty minutes. Then fill with the 
following mixture: 2 tablespoonfuls 
butter, 2 teaspoonfuls minced onion, 
cooked together with 1 cup: fresh 
mushrooms, sliced. Saute for ten 
minutes, add 1 cup breadcrumbs, and 
season rather highly with salt and 
pepper, then place in the tomatoes 
with buttered crumbs sprinkled over 
the top. Bake in a buttered dish at 
least half-an hour. Serve hot. 
OLFING interests hereabouts will 
center at the Brae Burn Country 
club, West Newton on Thursday and 
Friday, June 15 and 16. The attrac- 
tion will be the open golf champion- 
ship. competition for Massachusetts 
The competition will be 72 holes 
stroke competition, 36 holes to be 
_played each day. The competition is 
not restricted to residents of Massa- 
chusetts, but is open to all golf pro- 
fessionals and amateurs. Entries 
close Saturday, June 10, at 12 noon. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 19 
YACHTING, GOLF, TENNIS 
AND OTHER SPORTS 
Along the NORTH SHORE 
on 
ACHTING.—The clubhouse of the 
Corinthian Yacht club at Marble- 
head will be opened for the season at 
noon Saturday, May 27. Since the 
house was closed last season, the 
building has been enlarged by adding 
a new  billiard-room and _ sleeping 
rooms at the southern end. This was 
made necessary for carrying out the 
plans of taking part of the old dining- 
room for a ladies’ department. 
Commodore Herbert M. Sears’ big 
auxiliary schooner Constellation wiil 
soon be ready to go into commission 
for the summer. Since the return of 
the yacht the first of April from a 
two months’ cruise in the West Indies, 
the schooner has received a thorougii 
overhauling. Several port bow plates 
have been renewed and the paint has 
been chipped off the entire topsides, 
as she is to be painted black once 
more, instead of the white topsides 
put on for the southern cruise. 
J. L. Saltonstall’s patrol cruiser un- 
der construction at Lawley’s will be 
ready for service in about one month, 
delay having been met in delivery of 
materials. This boat is described as 
one of the finest examples of moder- 
ately heavy construction ever built at 
the Neponset yard. 
The regatta committee of the Bos- 
ton Yacht club has announced the 
schedule of races of the club for the 
1916 season as follows: June 17, open 
race, Hull; Aug. 9, open race, Mar- 
blehead; Aug 17, 18 and 109, open 
races, Hull. Also the club will cruisz 
down Maine, the itinerary of which 
will be announced later, from July 15 
to 22 with the rendezvous at Marble- 
head. The Quincy Challenge Cup 
match for Class P will be held off 
Marblehead, July 31, Aug 1 and 2. 
Championship prizes will be awarded 
by the club in Class P, Bar Harbor 
31-foot class, Class R, and first and 
second special rating classes, to 
qualify for which a boat must start 
in at least four of the club’s scheduled 
races. Charles P. Curtis, whose vart- 
ous sonder boats under the name of 
Ellen have been challengers and de- 
fenders for the Boston Yacht club in 
the Quincy Challenge Cup for a num- 
ber of years past, is to defend this 
trophy for the club with his 31-rater 
Ellen, formerly the Valiant. In the 
Manhasset Bay Challenge Cup match 
off Greenwich, Conn, the last of Aug- 
ust the club will be represented by 
Commodore Allen C. Jones’ flagship 
the <P” class racer, Nutmeg’ ITf 
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL 
Saturday’s game between Story 
High School and Dummer Academy 
at the Manchester playground was 
marred by the many errors whicn 
both teams were guilty of, Manches- 
ter being the worst offender and pay- 
ing the penalty of a 13 to 7 defeat. 
It was the first game lost by the local 
high school team this season and al- 
though facing a superior team in age 
and experience Manchester would 
have had a show of winning brit 
for the inexcusable errors in the early 
part of the game. Features were 
home runs by Rush of Dummer, and 
Chadwick and Beaton of Manchester. 
Bohaker stopped Barbour of the 
Dummer team from making a homer 
by plunging into the brook in center 
to field a long fly. 
The score: 
DUMMER ACADEMY 
AB RBHTBPOA E 
Niltten Saapenre deere = Ota rosie 0) eon 
Brows Darian eee Beg vega” Rees ee 
Rush) 20ers Seon le ees wl eel 
Barbour eG ee. sone OD, doen PO aan 
Puss Le ee ee ee er le eG ies Ores el. 
Hersuson pe. pee Omer OO. Poe a eel 
Bader OC Gianna CRO ORR Gs SO 
LO Wee Lisa prsn aeae SPL 0-01-00, 
‘WOOGWarGset ime eeetare Som MO me Ole Unmet) 
JObNStOWes Tie we tae Li ie he Or OR rd 
S623 C1320 827 hls 
MANCHESTER 
AB RBHTBPOA KE 
Micelle Die eet AOS gO Sa OR SE 
Height bie eee ATL, 5 aoe TH) 
Cra tts. pieces ase. Be 60) tele Sect 
Hrancis Gsear.necr Sn On 3 BA or Soro 
Walsh; 2Gis.ys riot toes 40). > Le ey ace 
Beaton yates at eet A202 omer aes 2 eel: 
Reahodiy, srt wernt Sh MOV Oher Oe eh anh 
(Tad witcleliteas trae Ae Tl eal 4 0 OO 
Wi Ge ak Cie cetera cs ORONO 0 One Ono 
Bohaker, (¢f) 2.4 se) Zo RU A ep ah at) 
Score by innings : 
dns de 4D 67 8-9 
ADJubaaWanN=b me ome | oe ake 10413:°00 0 4—13 
Manchester ...... OeOrS sl Ls 1.01 —— 37 
Home runs—Rush, Chadwick, Beaton; 
3-base hits—Barbour; 2b hits—Barbour, 
Nutter, Miguel, Francis; bases on balls, off 
Crafts 4; hit by pitched ball—Crafts by 
Ferguson; Rush, Barbour, Rowe, by 
Crafts; struck out by Crafts 7, by Fer- 
guson 6; umpire, Slade. 
A pupil in a school near Chatham 
Square, New York City, thus defined 
the word “‘spine’’: ‘A spine is a long, 
limber bone. Your head sets on one 
end, and you set on the other.”— 
Lip pincott’s Magazine, 
