THE JBEJJi: UMAJtlA, SATUUDAX, JVLil Z(, ( I Sunday iDinner Menu land Selected Recipes BREAKFAST. Oranges. Cereal and Cream. Fish Balls.. Breakfast Rolls. Toast. Tea and Coffee. ."V LUNCHEON. , v Cold Corned Beef. ' f. Whole Fried Potatoes. Rolls from Breakfast. Asparagus a la Vlnlgrette. : Heated Crackers and Cheese, j Cake and Jam. ; Ginger Ale and Grape Juice Punch WINER. Julienne Soup. Roat Lamb -with Mint Sauce. Green Peas, Young Carrots, mixed. String Beans with Bacon. Home Made Ice Cream. ; '- Black Coffee. Qwlck Nut Loaf. Mix two-cupful of graham flour (not sifted), one cupful of pastry flour, two- thirds cupful of brown, sugar, three teagpoonfuls of baking powder and one teaspoonful of salt. When thoroughly mixed, add two cupfuls of buttermilk. cne and one-eighth teaspoonfuls of soda and one cupful of pecan-nut meats, finely cut Turn Into a buttered breadpan and bake forty-five minutes In a moderate oven. The butter used for sandwiches should be worked until creamy, before spreading. If you wish them very thin, it Is , a good Idea to spread the bread before cutting from the loaf. Sandwiches which are prepared several hours before serving time may be kept fresh by wrapping in paraffin paper, or in an old napkin wrung as dry as possible out of hot water. . Boston Brown Bread. Mix and sift ope cupful of ryemeal, one cupful of granulated cornmeal, one cupful of graham flour, one teaspoonful of soda: then add three-fourths cupful of molasses and two cupfuls of sour milk. Turn into well-buttered molds, adjust butter covers and steam two hours. Molds should never, be filled more than two thirds full. Por sandwiches use one pound baking-powder boxes. The sand wiches are then circular in shape, with out waste in cutting. For steaming, place (molds on a trivet In kettle containing boiling; water, allowing the water to coma half-way around the mold, cover closely and steam,1, adding more boiling water as needed. One and three-fourths cupfuls of sweet milk may be used In place of the sour milk. Almond Meringue. Blanch one-half pound of Jordan al monds, finely shred one-half of them, and brown in a slow oven. Put one-halt cupful of sugar and - one-fourth cupful of water in a saucepan, and when boiling-point is reached add remaining al monds, and cook until the syrup Is of a golden-brown color, stirring frequently. Turn into a ' pah, cool and pound in a mortar. Beat whites of four eggs until stiff, and add gradually one and one fourth cupfuls of 'powdered sugar, one- .. half teaspoon vanilla, and one-fourth teaspoonful -salt; add powdered almonds. ' Shape by tablespoonfuls on paper placed over a wet board, sprinkle with shredded almonds, dust with powdered sugar .and bake in slow oven twenty-five minutes. Creole Ice Cream. . ITse six cupfuls of cream, one of maple sirup, half a cupful of sugar caramelized, one of almonds, half teaspoonful of salt and one ' tablespoonful of vanilla; color with caramel coloring. Blanch the al monds, cut crosswise In pieces, and brown In the oven, then chop fine. Caramelize the sugar, and add slowly to two cup fuls of scalded cream. As soon as the iigar melts, add maple sirup, nuts, salt and the' remaining cream. Cool, add the flavoring, color to about the shade of coffee and freeze. Saratoga Chips. . Slice thln Into a bowl of cold water, medium-sized potatoes. Let stand one and a half hours, changing water twice. Drain, .plunge into boiling water, and let boll one minute. Again drain, and i plunge into cold water. Dry between towels. Fry In .hot fat until browned, keeping in motion with a skimmer. Re move to dripping pan, lined with brown paper; sprinkle with salt. Dreamworld Muffin. Two cups of flour, one-quarter cup of sugar, one-half teaspoon of salt, one-half teaspoon of soda, one cup of sour cream, : one egge beaten light Mix in the order given and beat well. Four into well greased muffin pans and bake thirty minutes. . Peas Carrots. One cup of carrots cut in dice and cooked, two cups of cooked green peas, four tablespoon of cream, one table spoon of butter, salt and pepper, v Put ' the carrots and peas in a stewpan, add cream, butter and seasoning and heat. Serve in the center of the crown roast. Cream Cheese and Cherry Salad. Make small balls of the cream cheese; stone the cherries. Cut the cherries in halves and place a half Cherry on two sides of the cheese ball. Serve on hearts of lettuce, with French dressing, highly seasoned with paprika. Iced Watermelon. i Cut the pulp, of watermelon in inch cubes, sprinkle with sugar and a little salt and cinnamon. Put In an Ice cream freezer or pail, surround with ice and ' salt and let it remain forty-five minutes. Serve In champagne glasses. Japanese Esse. Three hard-boiled eggs,. cut lengthwise and yolks removed; three sardines minced fine; teaspoon of salt one ta blespoon of butter, a. few grains of cay enne, one and one-half cups of hot boiled rice, one cup of tomato Bauce. Mix the - egg yolks, sardines, butter and season? M. ings; form into six balls and place In ; the halves of, whites. Arrange the rice on a platter and place the eggs on the ; rice. Pour the tomato sauce around the eggs. . Crabs a la Somerset. One pint of crab meat, three table. . spoons of butter, one-half teaspoon of ;' salt few grains of cayenne,' yolks of V three eggs, one tablespoon of lemon Juice, f one-half cup of thin cream. . Cut crab f meat in small pieces.' Melt the butter, J add crab meat -seasonings, and lemon j Juice. Cook five minutes. Add cream. . Then add the egg yolks slightly beaten. V Cook until the eggs thicken and serve at once. . i ... . Blackberry Jam Cake. i One-half cup of butter, one cup of sugar.three eggs, , three tablespoons of mUk, one and two-thirds cups of flour, two teaspoons- of baking powder, one half teaspoon of cinnamon, two-thirds cups of blackberry Jam. Cream the but ter, add gradually the " sugar; add the yolks of eggs well beaten. Sift the flour, baking powder and cinnamon together and add with the milk to the other mix ture; add the jam and the whites of eggs beaten stiff. Bake in Washington pie tins. Spread boiled frosting between the layers of cake and cover the top with the frosting. Ginger Pear Chips. Wipe eight pounds of pears with a piece of cheesecloth wrung out of cold water, remove stems, quarter, core and cut in small piees of uniform size. Put in a granlteware kettle, add four pounds of granulated sugar and one-fourth pound of Canton ginger cut In small pieces. Cover, and let stand over night. In the morning add four lemons which have been wiped, sliced and cut in smalt pieces, removing all seeds. Bring to the boiling point and let simmer two and one-half hours. . Gooseberry Catsup. Pick over, wash and drain five pounds of gooseberries. Put in a kettle and add four pounds of sugar, two cupfuls of cider vinegar, one and one-half table spoonful each of cloves and allspice. Bring to the boiling point and let simmer two hours. Fill bottles and seal. Gooseberry RelUh. Pick over, wash and drain five cupfuls of gooseberries. Add one and one-third cupfuls of raisins from which seeds have been removed and one onion, peeled and sliced. Chop, or force through a meat chopper, put In a kettle and add one cup ful of brown sugar, three tablespoonfuls each of mustard, ginger and salt, one fourth teaspoonful of cayenne and one teaspoonful of turmeric. Pour over one quart of vinegar, bring slowly to the boiling point and let simmer forty-five minutes. Strain through a coarse sieve, fill bottles with mixture, seal. Preserved Damsons. Wipe damsons with a piece of cheese cloth wrung out of cold water and prick eacn nve or six times, using a large needle; then weigh. Put three-fourths their weight of sugar in a large stewpan and to each pound of sugar add one cup ful of boiltng water. As soon as sugar and water reach the boiling point, add plums a few at a time, that fruit may keep In better shape during the cooking. Cook until plums are soft, which may easily be determined by piercing with a small wooden skewer. It Is an excellent Idea to use two kettles, that the work may be done more quickly and the syrup does not cook too long a time. Wipe five pounds of plums with a piece of cheesecloth wrung out in cold water, and prick each five or six times using a large needle. Put two and pne half pounds of brown sugar in a sauce Pan and pour over one quart of vinegar then add two ounces of cloves, one ounce cinnamon, broken Into nlee ounce of allspice berries and one s 'of mace (all tied in ni of stick one ounce ounce -or mace (all tied In ...-Bun,, cnng mixture to the boiling point and let boil ten minutes. Pour over plums, cover, and let stand over night In the morning drain plums from syrup again, bring syrup to the boiling point let boil ten minutes and pour over plums Cover. let stand over night, drain, and repeat the process a third time. Green Beans Jump High on the Market Wax and green beans have Jumped from 35 cents to 1 a basket,, the heat having dried a considerable portion of the crop so that it is" practically unfit ror marketing purposes. Green peas too have dried up and merchants have' sent to Colorado for a supply. Lettuce, radishes, rhubarb, beets, tur nips and carrots are very plentiful and are selling at a reasonable figure Let tuce is sold six bunches for a nickel radishes, eight bunches; rhubarb, two bunches of beets, turnips and carrots, six bunches for 5 cents. v Corn on the local market Is of verv vuaiuy, tne ary weather aone n much damage, cents a dozen ears. I 1 ZD OMAHA'S OREATEST CLOTHINO MOUSE Vao Heed Shirts I Onderwear Come here today and take advantage of our great re duction. The largest assormcnt in Omaha to select from. Everything new and marked below actual cost. Shirts that are pleated and plain styles, cuffs on or off madras, oxfords, lightly figured or prominently patterned with stripes and dots, white grounds, pinks, blues, tans.x E.& W. and Manhattans included. . SHIRTS WORTH UP TO $1.00 now 50c $1.50 now 79c $2.50 now $1.15 Trousers Now $2.50 and $3. $1.55 $3.50 and $4 . $4.50 and $5 $6 and $6.50 . $7.50 to $9 ... $5.55 Straw Hats at reduced prices See them on display 4 UNDERWEAR 75c Poros-Knit Union Suits, now ...... i.. jW n la i and Eavntlan Cotton Union Suits, now too KttlB and Featherweight Lisle Underwear) 11.60 quality, now, per garment "8 Lisle and Fine Balbriggan Underwear. $1.00 quality, now, per MedUcotV Morgan Sea island' CoVton Underwear. Hi quality. now,f, per garment ' Poros-Knit Underwear, 11.00 quality, now, per suit TOO Nainsook Athletic Underwear Special, per garment ;" 26 per cent discount on all our regular lines of high grade knit union suits. Sonsatlonal Sale of TROUSERS Begins Saturday Morning, July 27 Over 3,000 pairs of CtO EC tnis season's styles and patterns, worsteds, cneviots, ocoica . v goods. Khakis, white serges and cassimere. Made up in Eng- lish or peg top styles, witn or wuuoui cuus. uigm weigui and medium weight. A great many suitable for fall wear. Sizes 29 to 52-inch waists. Come Saturday as this sale will not last long. 25 PIR CENT DISCOUNT ON ALL BOYS' WASH SUITS 53.55 $4.55 MEN'S SUITS AT LESS THAN THIRD OFF REGULAR PRICES Good Things to Eat for Sunday Dinner paign, inducing farmers to settle in Utah and Idaho. Elder Wells says that most of the work will be prosecuted In the rural districts and that only men with some money and those who are willing to work will be induced to come to the United States. having It sells for 12 LETTER CARRIER PICNIC ' WILL BE HELD IN AUGUST Omaha letter carriers have set the date for their annual picnic for Saturday afternoon, August 10. It will be held at Courtland Beach. The postmaster ass granted the half , holiday for the picnlo and the arrangement of the program Is now In the hands of a committee of five consisting of E. B. Alexander, 1 Arthur Asher, D. W. Tillotson, William Bouk and Ernest Kopald. There are 145 letter carriers daily delivering mail in Omaha, and it is the hope of the committee- to get all these out with their families for the annual afternoon of frolic. BANKERS MORTGAGE LOAN COMPANY PREPARES OFFICES F. McGivern of Fremont and George U Seymour of Elgin are in Omaha. Mr. McGivern is vice president of the Bank ers Mortgage Loan company and Mr. Sey mour Is one of the directors. Officers of this company held a meeting In their offices on the second floor of the See building Thursday evening, making ar rangements for the opening of business in quarters that probably will occupy the entire east section on the second floor of the Bee building. T. B. McPherson, president, and W. E. Farlow, one of the directors, were the other officers who at tended the conference. MORMONS GO TO IRELAND TO SEEK SOME FARMERS Twenty-three Mormons, most of them young men, all from Utah and In charge of Elder Wells of Salt Lake City, passed through Omaha en route to England and Ireland, where they will carry on a cam. Better Groceries for Less Money Why should you pay more for groceries t- Every day we con vince more people that we REALLY sell BETTER GRO CERIES FOR LESS MONEY. Give us your next order and we will convince you. Large new potatoes, per peck . . 80o 10 bars Beat 'Em All or Swift's pride soap 85 5 bars Fels Naphtha soap... 300 14 dosen 4-sewed, extra quality BKOOMS, very special at 39o Blue enameled WASHBOARDS, extra special, each . ..83o We will send these brooms and boards subject to approval. Paxton's gas roasted coffee, No. 2, per can SSo S bars Elderf lower soap lo 25c Baker's cocoa, for 30c 35c (tt-lb.) Llptons tea 30o 4, 10c rolls toilet paper, good qual ity, for 85p Grape Nuts or Shredded Wheat, per pkg lOo 25c Rubnomore powder for....lSo 25c Rumford or Calumet baking powder for SOo Imported oil sardines, can....lOo Pompeian pure olive oil, pint can for 48o Doles' Hawaiian pineapple juice. pint 25c, quart 45o Coronet floor, guaranteed, 48-lb. sack, special $1.40 ROSOMA FLOUR, highest patent, 48-lb. sack ...fl.SO Rosoma flour la guaranteed to make better bread and more bread. It is made from the best part of the wheat under sanitary conditions. Make a trial baking at our risk. We refund money If not satisfactory. Phone orders are given our prompt attention. We deliver promptly. L. ROSENBLUIVf 808 Wo. 16th. B-3560, Dong. 6383 No Credit! No Delivery! Rarely does one find a market refusing credit and making no de liveries of orders. The dealer who does not do this must have a good reason for breaking away from this custom. We have; we find that we can give better service, better meat and better prices by making this a strictly cash mar ket . Order your Sunday meat here and don't forget our choice home dressed chickens. Chickens lOo Choice Chuck Steak Steak... 130 Round Steak 18o Sirloin Steak 18o Choice Rib Roust 15o Pot Roast lOo and so Pork Steak 13Ho Home Made Pork Sausage. .130 Honve Rendered Lard, 15c, 2 lbs. for ......390 Small Skinned Hams 130 Try our Home Cured Bacon by the strip 30o Jos. Bath's Cash Market Tel. Bong. 6984. 1931 Pamam St. HELP YOURSELF TO THE 5LICE THAT5 NICE Sundgren's Plaited Milk Bread PTTSB WS0I.Z80MB 1TUTKXTXOUS. ' To tell of the n.any qualities contained in Malted Milk Bread would serve as texts for endless sermons, but Its purity and wholesomeness is evident due to the ever Increasing demand for it. Look for the label on every loaf. - At all grocers, fresh every day. Every loaf guaranteed full weight Made by Sundgren's Bakery. . NOTHING SO COOL ANB REFRESHING AS ICE CREAM "THE IDEAL DESERT' PURE WHOLESOME DELICIOUS You'll enjoy DELMCIA as you will no other. It's absolutely pure; fresh, pure fruit flavors and rich cream are used in its making. A flavor to suit every taste. No worry no bother. Order it from your druggist or phone us, Doug. 1401. THE FAIRMONT CREAMERY CO. "-Ma says, look for the Butter-Nut label, because if it isn't the genuine Butter-Nut she doesn't want it "Dad and I like Butter-Nut, too. It taste like more." New England Bakery Bptter-Niit Bread pleases every member of the family young and old alike. Tasty, crisp and appetizing, Butter-Nut is a real addition to any meal Try it yourself and see. Most good grocers have it .5 and 10 cents the loaf. 3ut insist on seeing the Butter-Nut labeL - Made by NEW ENGLAND BAKERY Hayden's Meat Dept. Meat Prices Shot All to Pieces Spring Chickens, Each . ;. . . . . i' , ' Pork Roast .....gC Hindquarter Lamb, lb. .Ql(S Forequarters of Mutton, lb 5c Lamb Chops, 3 lbs. for 25c Lamb Stew, 10 lbs. for 25c Sirloin Steak, lb 15c Round Steak X2ViC Shoulder Steak 10c No. 1 Steer Pot Roast, lb .'.8c Veal Steak, lb. 15c Veal Chops, lb ..12xkc No. 1 Hams, lb .....14c Bacon, lb. ........... .................... 12!c IIAYDEfj'S HEAT DEPARTMENT Z3I 19JUl.lt Fed Spring Chickens, gQ Pig Pork Roast 8c Steer Pot Roast 8c, 7c Steer Steak iqc Young Veal Roast .' iqc Lamb Legs .....lOViC Pork Butts nc Sugar Cured Bacon x .'..12c- No. 1 Bacon . . . . : 1534c No. 1 Hams . . .12c Presh Dressed Chickens IOVuC Grocery Department rEBW Found Bait With 1 Found of 3So or 40o Coiim, vane sugar, j pounds ror 1.00 . 3 lba. -Fancy Prunes in Dars a. a. or u. c soap ror. .3So Pet MUk, 6c size, 7 for aso Pet Milk. lOo size, 2 for loo 6 cans of Oil Sardines for . .2So 4 cans of 10c Mustard Sardines 2So Mason Jars, quarts, per 1oz....48o Mason Jars of Olives or Pickles ISo New Dried Apricots, Vb. .150 " Best Peaches, per lb ion . Package Creamery Butter, lb...35o Full Cream Cheese, lb lso Jell-O, 2 boxes for....... 150 Demonstration Cherry Phosphate Ice Cold Sample Glass Free. 1 JDJ- Z Have You Read the Want Ads Yet Today? - You; Will Find Most Interesting Reading on the Want Ad Pages. THE TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER la the Leading Agricultural Journal of the west Its columns re tilled with the best thought of the day in matters pertaining to the farm, the ranch and the orchard, end it la a factor in the development of the great veatern country. . . DELIVERY WAGONS LEAVE AT 10:30 A. M and 3 P. M.- 1610 HAR NEY ST. Phones; Douglas 2147 Douglas '2793 Ind. A-2U7 Ind. A-2144 "Silver Blend" Coffee One pound of Silver Blend ' makes 50 . cups of rich, mild coffee. Every pound is uni form in quality strength and flavor 1 lbs. 50c Grand Union Tea Co. Phone Red 1775 "500 Block. 22 lbs. Best Sugar, SI 1 lb. Best Coffee.. ;. . ; i40c y2 lb: Tea,-any kind.'.'.35c 1 bottle Pure Extract.. 25c Quality combination $2.00 Sugar sold only with $1 order other goods. . Phones, Dong. 2446; B-2446. r.ioYuriE TEA CO. 400 North 16th Street. 1-