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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1912)
14 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2C, 1912. DON'S REVIEW OF TRADE Business Throughout Entire Country Never Better Than Now. WAS IN EAST HAS ITS EFFECT Foreltrner Takta; Large QuaatUUa of American Wheat, and He markable VpltU I Xow in Progress. NEW YORK. Oct -R. G. Dun 4t Co.'s weekly review of trade tomorrow will ay: While the Bulgarian-Turkish war cause that uneasiness abroad, its chief effect in this country has been, first, to pro duce large toreign selling of American securities, and, second, to cause large foreign buying of American wheat. Every report from every section of the country is favorable and the general busi ness situation is not only very active, but It is entirely healthy. Taking it al together there has never been a more remarkable uplift In Araertoan business than that now In progress at a time of foreign disturbance and of an important domestic political campaign; and it is notable also that the trade and industrial expansion, while testing the capacity of plants and banks and railroads and the labor supply, cause a comparatively small amount of Motion. While new business has slackened in some lines of iron and steel, this is more than compensated for by the railroad buying, which is on a heavier scale than at any previous time this year. Contract for rails Just announced exceed it tons and the orders already taken for 1913 es tablished a record to date. Lead ehlp- ment Is also in heavy demand, with 19, , -.ww cars placed this week and consider ably more than that amount still pend ing. Aside from the railroad requlre- ments the activity, as has been noted, is leu pronounced. Tills is due to the ln- , ability to secure prompt deliveries and r.lhe fact that most consumers of steel products are covered until next April. Frpru every large distributing center comes favorable rerorts of the dry goods , i market. About 26.000 bales of foods have ! , been taken for China, India and Red sea ports, the bulk of which are of standard ' drills, heavy sheetings and a few light " weight goods. Business in woolens and i worsteds is claimed better than for many ! " years. The leading mills have all the t " work they can handle for fall and spring. . The shpe factories report a demand i which brings production to the point of factory capacity. Leather and hides con .' tinue very firm. REPORT OP CXEARIlfO HOC SB : . Traasaettoaa of Aasoctafoa Baaka for the Week. NEW TORK, Oct 25. Bradstreet' . bank clearings report for the week end- Ing October 24 shows an aggregate of $3,767,417,000, a against W.M7,1M,W0 last week and J2.WO.17,0CiO in tlva correspond ing week last year. Following is a list of the cities: CITIES. Amount 34.il 20.1 u.4 4.8 .7 27.3 15.2 10.4 t.6 27.6 21. j 17.8 23.0! S1.31 8.9 11.7 ll.Oj 7.8 17.6 17.4 14.3 10.4 7,80.0001 IflO. Dee. 18.443.0U0I 8,230,000 7,314,000 U, 104,000 6,8841,000 7.13.000 11,142,000 6.846,000 6,163,000 7.8flO.O00 s.ooe.ooo 6,146.000 4.W1.0W 4,702,000 4,808,000 , 6.454.000 .,W ,6tl,H 6,063,000. ,i9,000 4,403.000 8,001.000 8,4fpO,O00 3,1HO,000 S,068,000 2,879.000! ,20,0I T.' Mew York...- iti.lWUfl.OOQI Chicago 331,44.000i Hoston ....... 16X3,out Philadelphia 174,0fi.OU St. Louis. ............ 80,184.000 Kansas City........ B4.2&8.00M Pittsburgh I 62,776, Han fTranolsco. wmjh.uw Baltimore S 40,401,000 Cincinnati 2670,000) Minneapolis . 33,84l,ouu New Orleans... .... , Sl,TM,W Cleveland .......... 2ti6,000 lXrtrolt 22,318,000 Los 'Angeles ,. i3.8W,0OM OMAHA 18,764,000 Milwaukee 1 14,231,000 LoulavlU ...I . 18,MO,00m Atlanta .f 17,671,000 Portland, Or 12,446,000 Seattle M,1!W,0U0 St. Paul 14.671.OUOI Buffalo it,m.vm Denver ,. 10,87O,oiW Indianapolis . Provideno Richmond , Washington, V, C, Memphis ........... fit. Joseph Salt Lake City.., Fort Worth Albany . Columbus Savannah Toledo ! Kashville ., Hartford Spokane, Wash.,.. Tacoma Dea Moines ... Rochester ......... Duluth Macon Oakland, Cat.. XNonoia ............. Wichita ... Peoria New Haven Jacksonville, Fla.. Hcranton i , Grand Rapids Birmingham Sioux City Augusta, Oft v. Syracuse Evanavllle Worcester .... Springfield, Mass. Dayton .... Oklahoma City.... Portland, Ma....... Chattanooga ...... xjme noca. ......... Charleston, 8. C...V Wheeling, W. Va. Knoxvtil San Diego, Cat... Uncoln Reading, Pa Topeka t Wilmington, Del... t Davenport ......... t fcacrstmento, Cal.. Mobile , ............. Wllkeebarre ' i Cedar Rapids, la. Akron Youngstowil ........ Waterloo, la........ Fall River T Canton, O I Springfield, IU...... J Fort Wayne......... ; New Bedford Helena Lexington : York. Pa 2 Columbia, S. C... 2 Krla. Pa. t Wtockton. Cal...... 5 Boise, Idaho J Roekiora, nu 3 Muskogee, Okl 2 Kalamasoo, Mioh. - Quincy, 111.......... : Bloomtnirton, HI... I Tulsa, Okl....-...., ; Ogdm, Utah Lowell S Chester, Pa. Knrirjrfield. O I Souths Bend, Ind.. vtlnarhamton i Woux Falls, 8. 0.. S Jackson, Mis...... 5 Decatur, 111 " Manfleld, O ; Fargo, N. D ' Fremont Neb..... t Vicksburg. Miss... ; Jacksonville, 111 ; 'Trenton ........... 'Houston r 'Galveston turers In mct industries are working' i to rapacity. The Iron and stoel industry continues j I in an enviable position, further advances in prices are being made and the rail ways have bought more frocly than at any time this year. Pig iron is not so (active but the general situation is such as to produce further stretch in prices. Retail trade tends to improve, especially in the west, south and southwest. Col lections are improving, and while mat ters In this repct are not yet entirely favorable, tho trends Indicate that bills are being met more promptly. Business failures In the United States for the week ending October 'H were 229 against 187 last week. 231 in the like week of ml; 22 in 1910; 217 In 190SI and 241 In 1908. Business failures In Canada for the week number twenty-three, which com pares with twenty-six last week and thlrty-elx in the like week in 191L Wheat, including flour, exports from the United States and Canada for the week ending October 24, report from Galveston not having been received, ag gregate ,55,W! bushels, against 5.785.510 bushels last week ard 8,730,014 bushels this week last year. For the seventeen weeks ending October 24, exports are 68.010,333 bushels, airalnBt EO,3fi,2i bushels In the corresponding period last year, -Corn exports for the week are 329,188 bushels against 67,569 bushels last week, and 636, 110 bushels In 1911. For the seventeen weeks ending October 24, corn exports are l,324,7tfl bushels against 10,022,306 bushels last year. Officers Emery and Wheeler Suspended and Under Arrest Following ths arrest of Officers Georg? Emery and Lyman Wheeler on the charge of aiding and abetting the de linquency of Margaret Nelson and Elsa Maher, Commissioner Ryder and Chief Dunn suspended the two motorcycle offi cers from the force pending the outcome of their trial. They were arrested ok warrant served on them at the police station by Mogy Bernstein, probation offi cer. The two girls have caused the Juvenile officer much trouble and have been be fore the polloe court and the Juvenile oourt Last month a young man was bound over to the district court on ac count of the Nslson girl. Both Emery and Wheeler deny the charge and say It is the outcome of a disagreement with Bernstein, They' are both married and have been connected with the fore a number of years. Dur ing this time their records have been good. The two men were arrested on complaint of the girls. The trial of the two officers will take place next week. They wr booked at the police station and released on bail tor their appearance at trial. The case was called thla morning In polio court. , On motion of Bernstein, It was continued until next Tuesday morn ing. The complaint were endorsed by Judge Howard Kennedy. Both men say they took the girls home on their machine on the night of Jury 7, having met them on a downtown street Some 9.8 IU.) fi.8 13.7 81 87.0 S4.4 'S3,i 24.8. 13.51 3.9 . 40.7 27.11 U.lo 20.8 13.W 8.1 47.7 17.5 8.8 2, 3,293.0001 2,600.000! 2,980,000 , 2,000,000 , 2,8144.000 , 2,798,000 2,99.000 8.128.0UO 1,607,000 2,281,000 2.758,000 t,L900 1,841,000 2.200,009 1,064,000 2.576,000 1.64S.0W 1883.000 1176.0001, 1,7X1,000 S.167,000 tSM.OOO 1,826.000 L7s000 l.TW.OtW 1,769,000 1.494.000 t!8.00W ' 1.8W.CMH 1.1SL0MM 22.8 21.3 24.2 7.8 84.7 12.8 ll.l 21.7 5. 3 123 16 8 M.Tl IS 4.t 10.1 24.91 60.1 47.6! 2S.7! 68.4 62.41 1,65.00M 20.11...,, .6 "i'.'t "i'.b 'ii'.i 2.1 Temperance Women Conclude Meeting PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 25,-Washlng- ton, D. C will ' be the conventlun city In 1913 of the National Woman' Chris. tlan Temperance union, which concluded tonight a week's convention here. The closing hours were devoted to , a discussion of woman's suffrage. Several of the speakers launched oaustlo at. tacks upon Dr.' Clarence True WUson of Kansas City, superintendent of the temperance department of the Methodist Episcopal church, who is the author of a brochure . declaring that "In state where equal suffrage exists, the cause of temperance ha been set back twenty flv years." The convention voted to tile a protest' against the brochure with the bishops of the churoi:,. and to send a letter to Or. Wilson, stating that hi pamphlet had been "seised by the brew tries wherever equal suffrage Is an Is sue, to encompass Its defeat." , Mr. Emma L, Starrett of Nebraska, In an address on , "Civic, Problems," mad a plea for the election of publlo official with "less Jawbone and more backbone,"- and advised her hearers to participate in every campaign and to fight every candidate who would not de clare hi intention to enforce laws that tended to civic righteousness. .' Good Tilings to Eat for Your Sunday Dmne Sunday Dinner Menu and Tested Eecipes SUNDAY MG.M'. BREAKFAST. Grape Fruit. Fried Mush. Boiled Eggs. Toast. Coffee. DINNER. Roast Lamb. Mint Sauce. Mashed Potatoes. Fried Parsnips. Peas. Orange Salad. Peaches and Cream. Coffee. SUPPER. Lobster Salad with Mayonnaise. Sandwiches. Heavenly Food. Coffee. Olives. Grape Preserve. Remove stem from the grapes and wash them, drain and place in a sauce-, pan, adding only enough water to pre-; vent burning; cook slowly. As soon a the skin burst the seeds will rise to the surface; remove these with a skimmer. Stir the grapes to prevent burning and . to be quit ure that all seeds are re-j moved, add sugar equal to the quantity! of grape, let boll ten minutes, fill Jars and seal. Wild Crape Jelly. Remove stems from four quarts of grapes, wash, place in kettle, add one pint of vinegar, two unpared sour apples, two whole cloves, two tablespoonfuls of stick cinnamon broken In srrudl pieces. Cook until the mixture look white, turn into a Jelly bag and let drip. Measura Juice and allow an equal quantity of sugar; boll the, Juice twenty minutes, strain Into Jolly glasses, seal when cold with paraffin. Formerly The Bennett Company by To Introduce Our 18.1 33.61 Identifies Man Who Killed Her Husband WINCHESTER, Ky., Oct 26,-Women were the star witnesses In the trial of S.I the fifteen defendants charged with the murder of former Sheriff Ed , Callahan of Breathitt county, which opened be fore Judge Benton. Mrs. Callahan, widow of the murdered 6.1 man, In answer to a question by Attor ney Byrd for the prosecution, as to l,ia6.W0 1.213.0W 1.214,000 888,000 9KO0O 1.831,0001 1 987,O0Of , 82,0O0j . 900,000 830,000 tmoooi 74,0M 798,0001 662.0WM 82H.0HM 96, 0W 22. J t7.0OM 21.8! 10.W 18.51 23.7 16.8) 19.61 80, 10.1 IS.fl 7.8 78.W 7.1 2.6 KO.OOOI 12.21 (42.000I 21.11 L3S1.M V&M ftuioovi M 812,000 iia . 4M,000 1.7 603.0OM 88.41 440.0OH U. 412,000) 8.7 248.0001 26.4 8R7,00m .2 278.0001 6.81 whether she could Identify anyone In the court room as being the one who hot her husband, arose and pointed her finger at Dock Smith, on of the de fendants, and said: - "Ye, thers Is the man who killed my husband." Mrs. Lillian Gross, daughter of the ..'murdered en-sheriff, testified that she .2 had seen Dock Umlth and Andrew Jack- - ! son, also a defendant on the hillside from which the shot that killed Calla han wer fired, v Mrs, Ruth Callahan, daughter-in-law of th dead ex-sherlff, told of firing six shot from a revolver at the retreating assassins a they climbed the hill. 1.7C8.O0O1... 66,904.0001 67.01 17.298.0UOI... : Not included In totals because contaln t jng other Item than clearings. 5 BRADSTREET TRADB REVIEW Baslnes Interest EH Week f Wonderful AetlTttjr. NEW TORK. Oct 25, Bradstreet' tomorrow will ay: The mercantile Interest of the country, speaking of them collectively, hav - perienced another weeK or exceptionally active trade. Jobbers of all ataple line hav enjoyed a brisk business and calls for winter good have come to the front In a noteworthy way.' Incidentally, buy ing for further account for next spring 1 becoming more consplclous. The relatively most active tones are the west, northwest and southwest, which sections have been blessed by bounteous crop. Even the south, for a long time, comparatively backward, is showing greater life, thank to free marketing of it chief staple crop, though things remain rather alow In the south Atlantic region. Shipping rooms, par ticularly of dry goods houses, are over taxed in getting out order, and manutac- New Uniforms for These Ball Players AUBURN. N. Y Oct 24,-Th following releases and drafts were given out today by Secretary Farrell: Released by Purchase Charles Alberts, by Fort Wayne to Sucramento; Rocken fleld. by Quincy to Kansas City; W. W. Cartwrlght, by Spokane- to n Fran cisco; "Chick" Hartley, by Spokane w Sioux City; "Ten Million." by Sioux City to Spokane; Catcher McDonough, by Chattanooga to Dallas; Forsyth, by Dal las to Chattanooga; Dessau and Merna, by. Lincoln to Kansas City; Ed Donald, by Cincinnati to Portsmouth; Gus Car dells, by New York National league to Hartford; Ona Dodd. by Pittsburgh to Columbus; George Dauson, by St Paul to Detroit. , Rsleseed by Draft Herst, by Davenport from Winnipeg; J. Barnes, by Davenport from Keokuk; Hoffman, by Davenport from Duluth. Released Sullivan, by Vernon; Charles McCafferty, nv Los Angeles; Thomts Madden and Thomas Bheehan, by Sacra mento, Cal. , ' Mooters Get oa Ticket. BATON ROUGE. La.. Oct. 26.-Th, pe tition of republican leader that the name of progressive presidential electors should not be printed on the state ballot Wn of alleged failure by the progressives to secure the requisite number of signatures to mrir petition tor position bn the ticket, was denied today by the district oourt. Cream Fla nan If addle. Pick apart one-half pound of finnan haddle and cook It In one heaping table- spoonful of butter till heated through, . then stir In a tables poontul of flour; moistened in a cupful of cream or rich milk. Let thla cook for five or six min ute, then add the yolk of one egg, a little paprika and a good teaspoonful of grated cheese.. . When. . thoroughly , heated serve on hot buttered toast. j Cheese Wafer. One-half cupful of butter, one cupful grated cheese, one-half cupful of milk, one teapoonful of baking powder, a little salt and flour to thicken. Roll very thin, cut out and bake In a moderate 'oven, j Tomato Soup. j One can tomatoes, one pint boiling i water, six cloves, one-half teaspoonful salt one scant teappoonful ugar, cay- i enne pepper. Boll five minutes. While I cooknng P"t a piece of butter and one onion In fry pan and brown. Put all to gether, add two tablespoonfuls of corn starch anud strain. j Rasiant of I,nmb. Cut the necessary amount of shoulder j of lamb Into quare pieces of equal slse. j Take off the pink skin and aute or fry j in a bit of butter an ounce Is enough for three pounds. Add some small onions and brown for ten minutes. Dredge with ! flour, a tablespoonful to a pound, ana stir well for two minutes. Moisten with boiling water or whit broth, a pint to a pound of meat, and season. It cook for forty-five minutes. Two minutes after It begins to boll thoroughly skim off the scum on the surface. Serve on a hot dlch with green beans and an equal quan tity of now carrot, cut In small pieces, steamed and well seasoned. Cnonmber Salad. Cut large cucumbers In rounds, place on Ice; serve with salt, pepper, oil and vinegar. Blackberry Padding;. , Wash and carefully pick over the ber ries and fill pudding cups to about one half their depth. Sprinkle generously with sugar and add a pat of buttor. Pre pare a plain, light aweetcake batter and drop a large spoonful upon each cup. Place in a bake pan half full of hot water.- r.ak In a mod emits oven until the cake Is nicely raised and browned. Turn out upon dessert dishes with the melted but ter, sugar and berries on top, Cream Date. Boll on and done-half cupfuls of sugar and three-fourths of a cupful of sweet milk,' add a half teaspoonful of butter. Holl until thick, which will be about ten minute. Let It cool; when lukewarm heat.. It, adding a teaspoonful of lemon Juice. When It becomes a soft, creamy substance remove seeds from dates, fill with this cream and serve with nuts. Sea Foam Caady. A homemade candy that "melts In your mouth" Is sea foam. It Is not hard to make, nor Is it expensive. For seafoam candy cook three cupfuls of light-brown sugar, a cupful of water and a tablespoonful of vinegar until the syrup form a bard ball when dropped Into cold water. Pour It slowly over the stiffy beaten white of two eggs, beating continually until the candy Is ntlff enough to hold Ha shape. Then work in half cupful of chopped nuts. Daop In small pieces on waxed paper. Coroannt Caady. ' One and a half cupfuls of soft pale yellow sugar, half a cupful of dark sugar, two and one-half ounces of desiccated cocoanut, ona heaping tablespoonful of butter, a quarter at a teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half a pint of cold water and two ounces of plain fondant Put In pan the sugar, water and cocoanut and etlr and dissolve, adding cream of tartar when It bolls. .Stir most carefully all the time and boll to 246 degree F. Work the fondant quite soft and pliable and put It in the batch and mix and stir it until It begin to grain. Pour Into buttered tins and when half cold 'cut In strips and wrap each In wax paper. Toasat Beef. Sprinkle email pieces of beef cut from the remains of a roast with salt peppr nd flour; put a layer of meat In a bak ing dish, over It put a layer of canned tomatoes or sliced fresh tomatoes; scat ter bits of butter over It; cover with a layer of beef, then tomato; make the top layer of buttered crumb; bake slowly for an hour. ' . ( Grtea Cora Padding. Grate the kernels from twelve oars of corn; stir Into the corn the beaten yolks We will offer Saturday the fol lowing extraordinary 3pecials in high grade fresh and smoked'meats Lamb, hind quarter. Saturday at lb. . .... . 7 , I . . . . A2 71 fork Shoulder, Saturday at lb 131c Hutton Roast, Saturday at ' Sic Round Steak, Saturday 4 1 A at lb. . . . - ,:J Mk Lamb Stew, Saturday at lb 'Codfish, fl 'A1 ayden's Meat Sept. Look over these Saturday specials, then take ad vantage of these extra low prices and satisfy yourself and your appetite. h v Boneless Rib Roast, lb. 12ic Hindquarters of Mutton 6c Forequarters of Mutton ; .... .5c Mutton Chops three pounds for 25c Mutton Stew 10 pounds for. 25c Porterhouse j ..15c Sirloin Steak 1 .'12V&C Pot Roast , 8C,TC, 5C Veal Steak .., ....... 15c Veal Chops , . 12C Veal Roast 10c, 8c Veal Stew . .. ..7c Corned Beef 6c No. 1 Haras . ..15c Bacon ; '..12&C, 15c, 20c Eiayd en's Meat Bept BR 12Mc No. 1 Hams, Saturday 1 01 at lb. . ..... -...j! 2 Holland Milked Her. ! rio,. Saturday at Jin V each Smoked Lloatcr, Saturday at each . . . . 3o Smoked White Fish, Saturday at lb. .......... ORKIN BROTHERS Setf company, 16tli and Harnsy Milk Fed Spring Chickens - Steer Pot Roast 7c and 6c Steer Steak three pounds for .25c Boneless Rib Roast ... I2V2C Young Veal Roast 10c Young Veal Chops .V 10c Veal Stew ...6Y2C Lamb Legs . 9M2C Lamb Chops three pounds for 25c Mutton Roast 5MC Lamb Stew 8 potmds for 25c Sugar Cured Bacon 15Y2C No. 1 Calumet Bacon .. .173iC No. 1 Hams ... . . . v. . . . ; , 13C COAL DEPARTMENT Spadra, Arkansas Anthracite Pocahontas Lump, Smokeless, best (or furnace Benton Lnmp, Egg or Nut PubUe Market Lump or Nut , A Good Lump PATR1DGE THOMSON CO. DELIVERY WAGONS LEAVE AT 10:30 A.M. snd 3 P. Hi f9.50 .OD $6.50 $5.50 $5.00 Iionglas 5612. 1610 HAS KEY ST. Phones : Douglas 2147 Douglas 2793 Ind. A-2147 (nd. A-2144 PURE WHOLESOME DELICIOUS SUNDGREN'S IDEAL HEALTH BREAD It is endorted by physicians as being as pure as pare can be. At all grocers Sc. Every loaf to you in a sanitary waxed paper wrapper. 1 TTrc--f7Mrs si UI II . tCSESat If. tS m tmst euujrv itusKs aerftwrsrw V CUT OFF igh cost of livini FOR CEREAL FOOD The SUPREME quality of Washing-ton Crisps is absolutel? beyond question. Thoroufchly steam cooked, toasted, deliciomly crisp, ready to scire. Oa erery .package the unqualified GUARANTEE that erery ingredient it of at HIGH QUALITY at the Ingredient! la cereal foods of ANY other make REGARD. LESS OF COST 1 and GUARANTEE that Washington Crisps are mads under MOST PERFECT SANITARY CONDITIONS pouibl to exeats In SPOTLESSLY CLEAN MILLS, by high-clas workmen. n Crisps from field to home, never touch human hands everything done by automatic machinery. Ve give BOTH the CONSUMER and the GROCER a Square Deal! Washington CrUps CUT OFF ONE-THIRD HIGH COST OF LIVING, for cereal food, and both Grocer and Consumer Instantly recognized this hence our big tales of SUPREME quality Washington Crisps to millions and millions of Americans. . ' Handsomest Pood Package In America Two superb portraits of George Washington on ery package, handsome enough to frame, or use unfrmH, to decorate your "Den" orLrring Room. WASHINGTON CRISPS are (in) "IV in ik HOMES f hi Ctuntrymm" II rrHArTiffSNy OTHER CEREAL) FOOD PACKAGE.' of five mks and a tablespoonful each of melted butter , and granulated sugar. Drop a bit ofbaklng soda not larger tiian nea Into a scant Quart of unsklnned milk and mix with the grated corn and eggs. Salt lightly, beat hard for a minute and add the whites of the eggs beaten tiff Turn Intn a butter,! DuddinK dish nd bake, covered, for half an hour. By then it should be light as a puff. Un cover aud brown delicately. , Serve at once before it fall. Cold Slaw; 1 Put a teaspoonful of melted butter In a stewpan and add to it a teaspoonful of flour; mix, and then put In a teacupful of vinegar. Beat an egg, and add to It a teaspoonful of mustard, sugar, salt and a half-teaspoonful of pepper; . beat all to gether and stir In the boiling vinegar; boil one minute and pour over sliced or chopped cabbage. i ' Peach Dampllnsr. Pare, halve and pit . ix large, ripe peaches and place the halves together as they were cut Make a dough precisely the same as for shortening, roll thin and cut with a large round cutter. Lay half a peach cut side up in the center of each, put a small bit of butter 'and three drops of vanilla in the center of each peach on the forms. ' Then place the remaining halve of the peaches In position, fold the dough over, roll gently In the liand to make ball shaped, lay them on a but tered plate, but not ' closely, et hi a steamer and steam twenty minutes. Serve hot with peach or any sauce pre ferred.' rsisrrnl of Lamb,' Two pounds of Iamb from back, two tablespoonfuls ?f drippings, two and one- half cups of well-aeasoned stock, one-half teaspoonful of onion Juice, five table spoonfuls well-washed rice,, one' cup canned or stewed tomato will be needed for this recipe. j ' Cut the lamb from bone in piece suit able for aerving, and dust with pepper and salt Fry in drippings, add rice and onion juice, then the tomato and stock Let come to a boiling point, pour into casserole and bake in a slow oven till tender about two hours. New . Potato Recipe. Take one pint chopped cold boiled po tatoes, one-half pint cream, two table spoonfuls of flour, one tablespoonful of butter, one teaspoonful of salt, one sweet green pepper "(boiled and chopped). Oil the baking dish. Add a layer of chopped potatoes and peppers mixed, bits of butter; sprinkle with flour and salt and one-third cup of cream. Repeat un till all ingredient are uf ed. Cover and bake half hour In a moderate oven. French fneiimhee Salad. Take four medium-sized fresh cucum bers, one-half cuptul of sweet cream, one fourth cupful of vinegar, two tablespoon fuls of salt . Peel cucumbers and slica thin layer lengthwise until the Beeda are reached Place a layer of cucumber slices in a dish, sprinkle with a layer of "salt Re peat until all sliced cucumbers are used Allow to stand several hour on the ice When ready to use remove cucumber from the liquid, spread on a towel and wipe dry. Place in a bowl and add, al ternately, cream and vinegar. Serve on head of lettuce or cress. ' " v ' ,"- Macaroon lee Cream. THry, . pound and measure one cup of macaroons, add to one quart of cream, then add three-fourths of a cup of sugar and a tablespoonful of vanlla. ' Freeze, using three quarts finely cut Ice to one part rock salt Orange Idas;, Take the clear juice of a small orange and confectioners' sugar as needed. Stir Ihe sugar Into the Juice until It is tlHj right consistency to apply to cake. Any other fruit juice, fresh or canned, can be used. Especially nice is. clear currant, raspberry or strawberry Juice. Retail Meat Prices Same as Last Year, Wholesale Higher The retail, prices of meat at the present time are about the same as they were a year ago, although the wholesale price has gone up. - Pork has seen a greater raise than other kinds of meats. Pork chops, which sold a year ago at 15 cents a pound, are now retailed at 22Vi and 25 cents a pound. Pork shoulders which sold for 10 cents a pound are now selling at 13 cents. Lard Is 2V4 cent higher ! than It was a short time ago, priced cow at 17 cents a pound. 'Hams and bacon range around 15 and 26 cents a pound. - Beef and mutton remain about tho same. Hind quarters of mutton are priced at o cents a pound while the fore quar ter are 1 cent less than that Mutton chops are sold for 8 and 10 cents a pound. Sirloin steak may 4e had at 12 and 15 cents a pound, while porterhouse Is 15 cents. , Pot roast is priced at 7, 8. and 10 cent a pound. Veal steak, veaf chops and veal roast are selling at 15. 12 and 10 cents a pound, respectively.- , A Frightful Eapertence with . bllUousness. malaria, and consti pation, is quickly overcome by taking Dr. King's New Life Pills. Only Sc Beaton Drug Co. Advertisement The Persistent anfi Judicious TJse of Newspaper Advertising 1 the Road to Business Success. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE GIRLS FORM SHAKESPEARE CLUB i The Shakespeare club, the senior glrlsf organization at the Omaha High School of Commerce, met Thursday at th school. The constitution was read and discussed. j This society promises to be the most active organisation of its kind at this! school. j Many social affairs have already beet) planned, the most important one being the club's Christmas party. ' The next meeting of the club will b held November 1, when the study o Ehakecpeare's "As Tou Like It" will b taken up. I 3 BIG SALE OF Blankets Monday at BRANDEIS STORES Watch the Sunday papers