CtOTHES FOR EA STER PROPER PREPARATION OF MEATS FOR THE TABLE. If you want the highest quality of garments, of correct fashion at moderate cost come here. Were you to visit the swell shops in New York City you would not see a greater va- a A- . t .-.Zm n w omt "l" I "fi - ! c f rf rATf-Aw as al aw-mr fc ew T AS 1 f than we riCiy OI Jmari SlJ' IC HUr 1 Ul v' nnion vra B,t.,a iuuiuj ui iaauva a&i offer "T See the Easter Display of Men's Suits in Our Windows at 810, 12.05, IS, 10, 20, 822.50 Fashionable Clothes for Young Men and Boys We have a range of styles and fabrics that permits of every taste being gratifed Worsteds, Tweeds, Flannels, Cassimeres and Cheviots oil stripes and plaids in the correct shades of Browns, . nn Of Hi Modes, Olive, Stone Color, Gray, Blues and Blacks.. VWaUiJ IJ OlCl tares pBC3g CWo 81 fa 85 i Easter Neckwear See Window Display gjch,Haiidme Designs and Color r J Effects just in from maker. Northeast Corner 10th and O Sts. SPEIER& S IMON just our of the high rent district We Save You Money ART OF THE COOS Cheaper Cuts by Skillful Handling May Be Made as Palatable an the Most Expensive Seme Recipes in Proof. DEMAND The UNION LABEL A PRINTER "DOPE SHEET" Q miTX EDM i I Mny people imagine that Gas is aa expensive foci. Nothing- couM be farther frM the truth. Far the kitchen it is the cheapest fuel obtainable. We will prave it if yen win let a. Besides betas the cheapest fad. it is the cleanest, quickest and hottest. People who once use it will not consent to being; without it- And that Is rood proof. A Gas Heater lings and evenings is aa economical comfort. We have them. They save furnace bills. We also sell Kitchen Ranges. Cash or terms. Orccdhni as surodl EDecftrnc Loglhitt Co- OPEN BVBXIXGS The Toledo Union Leader is a mighty good labor paper, bat It now and then sets its primorial logic on u.d side before. Just bow it is very wroth because a labor exebango that is advocating the election of Hudspeth used the phrase, -the trail of the ser pent." in referring to the present ad ministration. The Union Leader says this smacks too much of billingsgate. That is calculated to jar the labor editor who sat. in the galleries during the Toronto convention and heard James M. Lynch refer to them as -vipers.' It is also calculate! to jar those same labor editors wbo sat in the galleries at the Colorado Springs convention and heard T. W. McCul- lough of Omaha Mr. Lynch's prefer red candidate for Frank Morrison's job as secretary of the A. F. of L. refer to them as "buzzards.' "scavengers' and "vipers.' Having been the first to talk about "snakes' Mr. Lynch ought not to ob ject if the aforesaid "vipers' do a- lit tle hissing now and then. Nor should his adherents object if those same la bor editors refer now and then to the "serpent- question. Mr. Lynch and his friends are just now very anxious lest the campaign degenerate into a campaign of person alities. But neither Mr. Lynch nor his friends entered any- particular objec tion when the campaign against Don nelley was made about as fool and scandalous as a campaign could be made. Mr. Lynch was profiting by that kind of a campaign. But if this cam paign deceads to billingsgate it win be the fault of those whose battlecryJ is. "Who the hell is Hudspeth T Labor Temple Benefit. Auditorium, April 23. 24. 25. ln the Land of Gold.- James Futton and His Merry Company. Tickets. SO cents. three years has been foreman of that office. He has always taken an active interest in union affairs, and never shirked a duty imposed upon him. In addition to being a good and reliable printer, he is a newspaper man of ability. Mr. Smith will take into his new business enterprise an ex perience that will stand him in good stead. His estimable wife will be greatly missed from the Auxiliary. The best wishes of a host of friends will accompany them to their new home In the giant young state. urer. Vice President Hayes drew the biggest bunch" $417.55, expenses to Cleveland, Buffalo, Boston, Syracuse, rhUadelphia, Peoria and Kokomo Guess jumping from Boston, Massa chusetts, to . Peoria, Illinois, isn't something of a jump! President Lynch drew, in addition to his salary .of $16.66, the sum of $2S36 I15S.S6 of it "balance expenses to New York,. Boston, Louisville, Nashville, Eirmingham and Memphis, and (125 "part expenses to Knoxville and Wash ten." That's covering some territory, too. Let the members of each local union ask themselves what agency has brought" about whatever measure of success has been theirs. Has it been the personality of Jim Lynch, or of any of his overfed organizers, or has it been the grim and unwavering deter mination of the rank and file, coupled with the encouragement and freely given services of the labor press, whose unselfish efforts Lynch and his familiars have so often affected to de spise? Minnesota Union Advocate. Roy Kennedy has come back to Lin coln after having worked for a year or so .ia St. Louis. Hero is a little comparison that will be interesting, colled from Secretary Rramwood's report in the March Jour nal: Receipts. Omaha. No. 190. for January... S 92.00 For assessment, four weeks... 133.00 Total ....S227.00 Lincoln, XoOS, for January $4? . CO For assessment, two weeks 27.71 H. W. Smith leaves the first of the week for Oklahoma City, where he? will engage ia the publishing business with his brother, Frank Smith. They have established a list of suburban newspapers, and have a business out- Total 75.31 Expenses. Omaha. No. 190, benefits and special assistance $491.00 Lincoln, No. 209, benefits and special assistance 000.00 Omaha drew from the International $2&4 more than she paid in. Lincoln paid in $75.31. didn't draw a penny look that item; awfully good. Harry Smith has been a member of Lincoln I"0 tne Internationa, and paid out "Typographical Union for nearly twen- OTr hundred dollars for work that the International pays for in Omaha. ty years, with one or two slight inter missions when he worked in other cities. A goodly part of that time he has been in the employ of the Western Newspaper Union, and for the last From January 21 to February 21. 1S.VS. thirty-one organizers drew 33. $74.42 from the International treas- What's the matter? Here it is with in a couple of weeks of the time when the union will be called upon to nomi nate officers for the M!"l"g year, and nothing doing about candidates so far as the naked eye can see. This does not apply to the deJegateship, for which there are several avowed 'and active candidates. Ordinarily there are candidates galore for president., sec retary and financial secretary, hut up to date, this year has been different. Charley Love has been mentioned as candidate for financial secretary, and F. H. Hebbard, incumbent, is men tioned as his own successor.' .But neither seems to be mat-inr ny cam paign. If anybody is yearning for Secretary BrngamanTs job the fact has been kept quiet. - Yes, the label of the Allied Print ing Trades appears on the score cards st Antelope Park (his season. Mana per Green attended to that right at the start. "Labor Sunday" is the first Sunday ia May, and "Memorial Sunday is the last Sunday in May. Twice in one month will strain the church atten dance record of some of the boys. ;- - - "Doe" Righter begs leave to amend a statement made in this department lr st week. He has been a member cf the union considerably longer than his son. "Ted," is old. "Doe"" has car ried a card twenty-two years, and "Ted" lacks about three years of be. iag that old. ' New Place for Shaw. Leslie M. Shaw, formerly secretary of the treasury and ex-president of the Carnegie Trust Company, it was stated, has .tentatively accepted the presidency of the First Mortgage Guaranty Trust Company of Phila Roasting, as it is called ia thi country, is in' reality baking; as th. meat is cooked in the oven. Rosstiag proper is where the joint Is priced fa a tin kitchen or "spit" before the are, writes Elizabeth PyewelL This latter is the better method, bat as few people have the facilities for ft the following recipes hold equally good for baking, which is considered' more economical, especially for small fami lies, as there is less loss of weSgat than m roasting. ' Care should be taken that the floor of the oven is not too hot or the tat may be burned, which eaases aa un pleasant flavor. A great advantage of living is that it requires less attest- -tion than roasting in a spit- The middle ribs and sirloin of beef are considered the best eats for ba king, and require careful cooking not to be burned or overdone. Pieces weighing from 10 to 12 pounds 'win take quite three hours and a half to cook in a moderately hot ovea. The chock rib, brisket' and are considered -by epicures to f erior. but by proper cooking they i be made almost equal to the mere ex- - pensive portions. Not all butchers cut the meat in the same way. Occasionally there fs so much of the flank on the sirtaia that It will cause the meat to dry up in stead of cooking it. The operation of baking is intended to loosen the fibers and prepare it for digestion in the stomach; in this pro- . cess the joint win bear a greater aad longer heat than in either boiling or stewing. " ' Beef Baked in Forms. Mince fine equal quantities of cold roasf beef and tongue. Season wen with pepper aad salt and add the whole or a part of a wen-beaten egg according to the i tity of meat. Mix it well- Butter a mold, put in the i press it down hard to acuulie the shape of the mold. Turn it out on a baking tin, wash over with weB-eeatea egg and brown in the oven Toad in Hole from CoM Take some amdiiua thick cold, underdone beef, season with pep per and salt. Make a batter by beating the whites and yolks separately of four eggs. - To one pint of mflk add the yolks of the eggs, and sufficient flour to thicken; lastly, put. in .a little salt, and stir fen gradually the whites of the Pour the batter into a dish.- lay the meat on the top, set ia . the oven and bake until brown. Mutton Kefaobbed English. Take all the fat out of a kn of mutton; also off the outside if too fat. . Runajne the skin. Joint it at every bone. Mix a small nutmeg, grated, with a little pepper and salt, bread crumbs and minced herbs. Dip the steaks into the yolks of three eggs aad sprinkle the above mixture an over theav : Place the steaks together 'as they were before they were cut asunder aad put in the oven to take. Baste with butter and the juice which runs front the meat; sprinkle more of the season ing over. - When cooked lay it on a hot platter. Have half a plat of rich gravy ready, besides that in the dish, aad add two spoonfuls of catsup, rub down a tea spoonful of flour with it. Let this boo, and pour it over the mutton, first skim ming off the fat. The meat should be hot while the gravy is being preparea. Fillet of - Mutton. Take oT the chump end of a loin of mutton aad cover it with buttered paper.. Bake for two hours, but do not allow it to become the least brown. " 1 J Have ready some string beans, boiled tender and well drained from the wa ter. Warm them in the gravy, put them on a dish and serve the meat en them.. " ; ,'- Roast Beef Tongue. Soak a fresh tongue for several hours - ia atiuug salt and water and drain it wen. BOB slowly for two hours, "remove the skin and roast in the oven. While """"g baste with butter. Serve with currant jelly.: - s - - - - How to Make Any amount of trouble trying to read or write by a had fight; not only does it affect the eyes, but the whole nervous system as weJL For good, steady light there is nothing bet ter than a lamp, but, like most every thing, it has to have attention. After cleaning well and fining it place a small tump of camphor in the oB ves sel this wfl greatly improve the light and make the Same clearer aad brighter. : If you have no' wipa-irr add a few drops of vinegar occasionally. Bohemian Chicken. -Cut into the usual pieces. Pat one pound lard into deep kettle, smoking hot put in chicken, tightly, and simmer one-half Remove to colander, flour, pepper, and salt each piece. Place one tilihiupmni each of butter and lard in a skfflet. and when hot saute the chicken in several minutes. Lay on bhwllng pa. per, then serve. Buttermilk Cookies. , Two cups fight brown sugar, one cup butter, one cup buttermilk, twe eggs, one cup chopped raisins, ana third teaspoonful soda, one t MjHwi ful baking powder, flour to mix. soft. The cookies should be light aad soft. and will keep tor weeks. The is in using the soft sugar. -S3