Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1929 — Page 25

(E 29, ID29_

J RHcy SATURDAY SPECIALS j LARD TANARUS“ Per pound, IAI Creamery iO 1 4 lb. limit lU2C Butter 4jfC f EST. 12k j 18c : Pin 1 r , Choice Cut OO '•* S * 13C i Beef Roast ZjC U Shoulder j or j Tender OO H Bn es Lbs. £DC J Chuck Steak ZjC 4 Sugar Cured oa I Standard Special or *1 Breakfast Baron £UC I B>nd Coffee ZDC 4 Call Your Orders In and Thev Will Be Waiting For You S Riley 9948 0

-22 s. Illinois-”™™"” BEEF Su*.ir fur-tl I Snit.ir f iirf(l lßk ROAST PICNICS 1 BACON I9 C j|j :z, 19c I 22* I &hmbi i 'bbhbi VEAL ra, f.ggs Z/ C > ' K!,r ' ROAST m HAMS 24c I— 39c 28c I fho( ,.„ , £§ KING.AN o*7 Whole nr V |j| Siiord BACON. Z/C - v VEAL POC KET 170 SIRLOIN Bk VEAL CHOPS.... 28<- LAMB Hk STEAK H ~ ROAST g IS FORK STEAK...23O 29C ff PORK CHOPS , 280 I Sat Only R LAMB BREAST IRo Genuine BHI BEEF STFAK ... HOP Fresh Dressed HENS and SPRING CHICKENS

Marvelous m Rye Bread By m That Famous Belgian 4— lftesp You’ll like the improvement Ij Belgian peasants’ know how to bake into delicious, nourishing rye bread —using both malt and hops* You get the same result from the flavor of the fresh hops processed ty the patented Wennersten method. .. WENNERSTENS

4 ~s, YOU UKr) Will Profit Jg //V THE LONG RUN BY trading at A & P Stores! CKIIpSO Large Size % Pkgs. ;%'7© Life Buoy Soap 3 cakes 19c Stuffed Olives Libby s r 55© Tea Grandmother’s n„ 2©C Fresh Tomatoes “-15 c Watermelons Rack 45c Lemons S6O Size Dozen 37c Cantaloupe 1- 2 tor 25c Chum Salmon 2■- 25c Salad Dressing Rajah Quart 39c x., Pork Loin Roast Lb - 25c a Mantc& Ruined ESTABLISHED 18S4

STATE TO PAVE 450 MILES OF ROADS IN 1929 Year's Program Calls for Expenditure of $10,000,000. Three hundred and forty-five miles of concrete and 100 miles of bituminous paving and thirteen miles of grading va-111 be under way on state roads by the middle of July. Director John J. Brown of the state highway department announced today. Twenty-two additional miles of concrete will be placed under contract July 9. This is the state highway commission's response to the legislative demand for more paving made effective by the additional one cent gasoline tax. Brown pointed out. Rush Paving. He also said that by the middle of next month work will be well under way on 95 per cent of all construction projects. It will be rushed to completion so that nearly all roads will be back in service byfall. eliminating the unconvenient winter detour tie-ups. In addition to the paving. Brown pointed out that of the 5.000 miles of state road, 500 miles are being treated with oil or calcium chloride to allay the dust. Recapitulation of the construction program shows the department carried over approximately fifty miles of concrete paving from last year and thus far in 1929 have contracted for 267.96 miles. With the July letting the total will be brought to 345.16 miles of concrete, all of which is expected to be completed by fall. Pave 450 Miles of Road. With 100 miles of bituminous, contracted for early this spring, the 1929 paving program will add 450 miles to the Hoosier state's paved system. Paving in each instance is a, continuation of the plan to complete roads across the state, close gaps in slabs already in sendee and extend paved routes in all directions throughout the commonwealth, Brown said. Chief Engineer William J. Titus pointed out that the construction program this year calls for an investment of about $10,000,000, of which $8,500,000 is for pavement and $1,500,000 for bridges. This program provides employment for many thousands of people in all parts of the state he declared. Os the $10,000.00 invested, approximately $5,000,000 goes for wages and salaries paid by the contractors, material producers, machinery manufacturers and transportations companies he estimated.

FORD BUYS 1910 CYCLE Fays §25 to Boy for Ancient OneCylinder Vehicle. Bn United Prrftt CLEVELAND. June 28. Henry Ford will pay $25 to Don J. Person. 16, in payment for a 1910 Curtiss Blackhawk" one-cylinder motorcycle. it was revealed today. Person wrote to Ford asking him if he would like to add it to his collection of antiques. Details of the sale were arranged and it is to be shipped to Detroit. Protest Boosts in Tariff HAVANA. June 28.—A resolution protesting against proposed increases in United States tariffs as possibly a fleeting the good will between Cuba and the United States will be forwarded to the Federal Council of Churches in Washington. The lesolution was passed by the United States delegation to the HispanoAmeriean Evangelical Congress.

w POULTRY Dressed Frw M’hlle You Wait MILLISER POULTRY CO. J 1 N. WEST ST.—Riley 6996 2 Blocks West of 2 Doors North of State Capitol Wash. St. Open Saturday Evenings

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Prize Winning Recipes

Th- Indianapolis Ttmfs Pri7e Recipe column is conducted (or the benefit of our subscribers, ar.d The Times '*•111 send a prise check of SI.OO to e - . ery subscriber xhose recipe is selected for this column. Write or print your recipe plainly, sending it to the Recipe Editor. Indianapolis Times, and within two weeks after it appears in the paper, a check will be sent you.

Baked Oyster Loaf Grind 1 pound of fresh lean pork and 1 pound of round steak. Mix with 1 quart fresh oysters and 3 beaten eggs, salt and pepper to taste and bake in loaf pan with 1 pint water, for 1 hour. MRS. CECIL HARRISON. Scipio, Ind., Route 9. German Puffs Beat 3 eggs, add to them 4 ounces of flour, mix until it becomes a smooth stiff batter; then add 1 ounce of good melted butter, 2 ounces of castor sugar, a little nutmeg, 1 tablespoon of cream, and the same of milk. Put this batter Into well buttered tea cups, fill them half-full. When baked turn out and sift a little powdered white sugar over them. MRS. MARGARET DAILY. 717 North Bancroft street, Indianapolis. Pop Corn Sticks Three quarts of popped corn, l cup maple flavored syrup. 1 cup sugar, 1 tablespoonful butter, ¥> teaspoonful salt. Place popped corn in large pan, discarding kernels. Melt butter, add syrup and sugar. Boil until it spins a thread. Pour mixture gradually over corn which has been sprinkled with salt, stirring constantly. Press down firmly in long shallow pan and cut with sharp knife into narrow strips (about one inch thick.) DOROTHY LOWE. 609 Wilson street. Columbus. Ind. Fried Tartlets Pie paste, gooseberry or other jam. stewed cranberries or chopped cooketf dried fruit. Roll pie paste moderately thin, cut into circles about five' inches in diameter. Put a spoonful of fruit on one-half the circle. Fold other half circle over, press edges firmly together. Care-

The Best Pound You Ever Bought!

Don't Bother to Stir it, A cup of steaming hot coffee. A pitcher of cream. And as many Jack Frost Tablets as you like. Delicious, of course, but convenient, too. Jack Frost Tablet Sugar dissolves almost instantly. You don’t have to stir it and stir it. That is one thing that distinguishes Jack Frost Tablet Sugar from ordinary "lump” sugar. Just take a cup of coffee and make the test yourself. Put the smooth, uniform Jack Frost Tablets in and watch them melt away, almost instantly. Remember, there's JACK FROST SUGAR lor every purposes GRANULATED BROWN POWDERED TABLET CONFECTIONERS Don't ask your grocer for "sugar*’. Insist upon Jack Frost Sugar in the Blue Box. Sold by all stores that featurm quality products Refined by THE NATIONAL SUGAR REFINING CO. of N. J. ggiJncK Up frost SUGAR NATURE’S ESSENTIAL SWEET

fully place tartlets in deep boiling fat or cotton-seed oil and cook until they are a light brown. Dust with powdered sugar'and serve hot. A. COURTNEY. 1744 North Pennsylvania street.

SEALSKIN BATHROOM TISSUE Soft—Pure—Absorbent 1000 Sheets 325 c l Oc Each j

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I FRESH PICNICS 18c Fresh COTTAGE BUTTS ■-. BREAKFAST BACON ~ ' 27e POT AT© SALAD D ' licio “ Flavored Lb - 2S© /KltMiyßUe FRESH DRESSED FRIERS , . CHIVIkEN9 Young Hens, lb., 39c Lb. CHOICE 100% PURE STEAKS and CHOPS LUNCHEON MEATS soap Chips© s 2=37* #t*gmg MILK 00UI>liyctab 4 ISc CfttlF CHEESE CREAM A Very Low Price Lb. 2$ C 2*,SA3\ oßt JP ° nge Fayer Fresh from Kroger ovens. 2 layers Large W* ~ A MM* Wll of fluffy sponge cake, iced all over Wp pkgs. with Butter Cream Raspberry Icing. Salted Peanuts Lb. i§© Marshmallow Cakes Lb. ?jc French Coffee rSfir Lb. 45c Salada. Tea 19c Sandwich Spread T,r 23c W ater melons Average Each PEACHES FANCy SLICING 2 Lbs. 15c CORN WELL nLLED 6 for 25c TOMATOES HOME anovn ’ 2 uts. 27c Bananas 0...f..., 23 ORANGES CALIFORNIA VALENCIAS J Do*. 2$C GREEN BEANS FANCy 3 Lbs , 2 g c BEETS and CARROTS HOMFGROW! ' 3 sunches £oc Potatoes 10 29 c

Friday Salad Coarsely chop the contents of two small cans of sardines and mix with i cup chopped celery, 1 tomato cut into small pieces and one-third cup |of mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaf i garnished with one slice of tomato and sprig of parsley. L. B. YOUNG. 1028 North Colorado avenue.

■IIP’ Satisfactory : IPIIXG RESULTS |P- 7*o kcep with the (WRAKtI women who expect more from E-Z-BAKE FLOUR J its quality will always be M ' HF-jps I maintained, and, if possible, j|| / ~~~\ improved by taking speedy advantage of every scientific advance in wheat-growing and milling methods. *<— |k

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