South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 150, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 29 May 1920 — Page 9
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SAT Oil DAT XfOIlNTNG, MAY 29, 1W.
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PRICES OF FOOD
REMAIN STABLE
DURING WEEK
KITCHEN ECONOMIES
Winter Wheat Flour Takes Drop Over Previous
Quotations. Trie nn vegetables, Ktaples and fruits In South Fiend groceries for the most part remained ptatiomry lurinj? Ol pajt week and In the cases of several artlrlfs 3howed a flight drop. In first c!as prccerles creamery butter vra-s quoted at from 63 to 68 cents a pound, wbxre It reached 70 centu a week ao. Kzz remained fttatlonary at 4 5 cents for tested ess but ran bo bouijht cheaper wlvere they are not Kuarunteed. "Winter wheat ficrur Fhowed a decrease, from 2 to J1.35. Spring wheat was quoted at tho stationary jrice of 52.65 to $2-75. The varieties of chcedu ranged from 4ü to 60 cents. Vegetable Quotations. Vegetables were quoted In two ilown town stores as follows: rotatoes. $S bushel; rweet potatoes, 18 cents pound; strawberries, 33 cent3 mart; npa.rag-us, 15 cents bunch: Veet., 10 cents bunch; eabbape, eight cents pouud; cricumberF. 10 to 23 cents each; carrot, 10 cents bunch; celery, 20 to 3 S cents stalk; lettuce. ::j cents pound: lettuce, 10 to 20 cents head; green onions, 5 to 10
cents bunch; peppers. live cents
each; radishes, nvo to eight cents; trlni: beana. 20 to 2" cents pound;
tomatoes, 40 to 70 cents pound. In many cases whero the prices cover a
wide- ranpe the top prlco 13 on hot
house vegetables. The fresh vepetabls which have besrun to appear on the streets during tho week are selling at lower figures. Quotations on fruit from a Michigan 8t. fruit store were: Oranges, mall. CO cents dozen; large, 60 cents dozen; gapefralt, 15 cents each, two for 2S cents; banana, 30 cents jdoien; pineapple?. 23 certs each.
South Bend Markets HAT, BTKAW AXD FEED. UCcrrttd Dl!y by th Weirfey Mlllr I Vtoar Jt FMd C 420 8. M!rhln.i XEV.' HAY Paying $40 to 4, uelllng 1 to CO. STHAW Paying Ii:e!llos ot tale. OATS Ptjlaj 4L10. galling $1.G0 to Ni:W CORN Pajlng $2.00. aelllug $2.25 JtO 2.4X CUOVKR SEED Payinr 521 to 20 bu., gelling 5) to fcG2. AUSIKC CLOVCO-Stlllng W2.0O. ' ALl'ALfc'A (NortLera growü)-'? 00.
S03II; PAKTS OF TIIH ART OF SANDWICH CONTRIVING. Sandwiches of meat are not especially desirable for the children's lunch box. although many young children seem to develop a great craving for meat. r:g.cs, peanut but-
icr, cneese, nuts supply a more wholesome kind of protein and ehould be used far more often than meat. Peanut butter is a general favorite with tho youngt-ters, although cheese ia a developed taste. The sour flavor des not arpeal to them, but it can be softened by mixture with a weet, such as hony, and make most satisfactory sandwiches. ChccM and Honey SandwJclK-s. Mix together equal parts '( fr sh cream cheese and liquid hory to a smooth paste. Fpread on slices of white bread, buttered, and cut diagonally across.
I Ig;; Yolk Sandwiches. These are more convenient to eat than the usual hard-boiled egg sandwiches with" the egg cut into slices. Hub the yolks of hard-boiled eggs to a smooth paste, mixing with fresh melted butter. Add a little salt and pepper and spread on bread. This sandwich can be improved if a little chopped celery is added to the mixture. Peanut Sii nd wiclies. Fresh peanuts may be crushed at home if desired, although it is now possible to buy freshly made r.eanut butter in many of the larg; grocery stores, and there are excellent brands of the canned variety available everywhere. Mix the crushed peanuts with a little cream to a smooth paste and spread on thin slices of bread. Peanut butter can also be mixed with a good mayonnaise dressing to give it a moro tart llavor. Lettuce sandwiches are made more tempting if, instead of cutting the usual square slices, the bread is cut into rounds with a cooky cutter. Then butter each slice with peanut butter or cream cheese or mayonnaise and put a crisp lettuce leaf between each two rounds. Sartliao Sandwiches. Drain the oil oft sardines and drop into hot water for a few minutes to remove tho grease. Scrape off tho skin and pound the sardines to a paste. Add pepper, salt and shredded lettuce and spread on
GRAIN AJID FXED. .Corrrtci Dally by D. IS. Morga. btarr U1U, Hydraulic At.) ' SHELL CORN Pajing f OATS. Paying $1.10. selling $1.40. , 11KAN-Sllnf 13.00. ' MIDDLINGS Selling $3.r,0 bim.lred. CHOPPED FEED Veiling $4 00 per hrrt. SCRATCH FEED Seillug $1.00 per 1 RINDINGS äc busbM. ; WHILvT Uujing l75. , KIE Paying J1.T3 Tusnel. 1 (Corrected DnJly fry TVarnr Broa. Pead 8tor, ZZ H. Michigan St.) ' COW I KÄS $7.(X bus Lei. ! JAPAN KSK M1LLIJT to $'X. RKI CLOVE R-J7.W. a I. MOTH Y $7.60. ' SPELTS $4..y) wt. SOCDAN URASS $lt'.r-) to SlS.l") per t. und red. ALSIKH-JOO to MCm. LOWERS 20c pound. WINTER OR UAIR1 RLTCH-$27.C4 r-tr bubel. HLFE GRASS $5.00. SWEET CIX)VEIC $."J.0O. ' MAMMOTH CI"VEi:-$:V5.no to V.OO. WHITE CLOVER $4i(K). SWEirr WHITE CLOVER ?S3. " FIELD PEAS 4.00 t .5 .". k RAPE SEED (Dwnrf Eei t-S.OO bu. ' LAWN GRASS $.'U to ler lb. SOJA DEANS (1 to SatO $10 bu. fcEED CORN 4-1. &0 buaael. LIVE STOCK. Carreti Daily ty VaJor nrt., Laan M., MUhtwtkk.) HEAVY FAT STEKK fair to good. lOillr; prime. J2tU4c. HCMiS 1."4 ! LV Ifs.. 13c: 1S to IT", s, U!ic; 17j to lbs., lie; 200 up 31c. rnoircE market. (Crrrtt Xlay by tft Urot hrhod Grvary. tTO N. Ma'n St. FETTER AND IXki-S .'ren mrr butter. p;ulng " ponnd. P'lin "i.;.- iimid-1; rJ':i de.en, K'l'.lrg 4v Ouxea. FRUITS AND VEGETARLES Prtdta, California ustbI ranga. Oix- r Uoien ; fcl'.ir.g ciL; new cabbage, sdllDg Cc pound. rori-mv and mkats. C?TTtcted Patty vj Jlmml-'i Maxkft ItS E. Jffr,on P,Wd. BEnr-Kowt. bollJng-. 2CV ;
round iteak, oc; ino, ik; pvrterfceufe. 70r. ORK LOIN 40c. LARD ;u CHICKENS DreiH'd. .V. I1IDEA AND TALLOW. Corrctel Taday tr . W. Llypcnan. 210 M. Main W. ftn.ierf.1 taüo, J.S: a lb.: -ough tsl111I:S lO to IC-; cetkr. to 2-V ; lcrw, SCc a Ib.; tefiwax. 2-Ci"i-c.
COKY GRADIXG SCHOOL FOR LOCAL FARMERS
County Acent Pird has been r.otir.ed that a fchool for the gradin.-; ef grain will bo held for the brnctH "f the St. Joseph coaciy farmers in tutli Bend on June .1. The school Is row touring- tr.e rtatc and is ma.de I-Oiaible by the efforts cf tho United States bureau of market, cooperating with the soils and crops department of Purdue university. Tho jurpo5ft cf the in?tn:ctlon i. to give the farmer the opportunity to rome more familiar with hi-s rain X rrt u r ts and thereby enjy t:r,tter financial anl ruarketing benerits.
Clemenceau is bark in ParL, hin ne r(cr-t being tb.at illr.r reenlil him from doing wh,,t lie ha Always wanted to do visit the Holy
sandwirlies. A few drops of lemon Juice may be added. Nuts of various kinds make good sandwiches. Walnuts, almonds, Alberts can be chopped, mixed with good mayonnaise or with a little heavy cream and spread on bread
not too thinly sliced. Fruits also make tempting sandwiches. Slices of apple, banana pulp, sliced plneatple p:acd on buttered bread and sprinkled with a dash of rutmeg or chopped nuts make sandwiches that are almost desserts and yet contain real food va'ue. Mayonnaise is almost an essential In tho making of dainty sandwiches, pr it helps to spread the ingredient amoothly. Here is a home-made mayonnaise that can be bottled and kept on hand for a long time: 4 eggs yolks only. 1-2 cupful of sugar. 1-2 cupful of cream. 1 cupful of vinegar. 1 tablespoonful of butter. 1-3 teaspoonful of cayenne. 1-2 teaspoonful of salt, fepper, mustard. Heat the egg yolks well and beat in the other dry seasonings. Heat
vinegar and ndd butter, pour over
other mixture and boil up. then set to cool and nour into Jars.
Keep in a cool place.
OKLAHOMA WHEAT CROP IS HEAVY
Employment Service Estimates Number of Harvest Hands Needed.
Glasses Correctly Fitted
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Broken lenses duplicated tho same day. Dr. J. Burke 230 S. MICHIGAN ST.
Success Is Easy for the Weil-Groomed Man . It is easy to look prosperous and successful if you send your suits regularly to this modern dry-cleaning establishment. Success -socially or in business depends in large rneasure upon your personal appearance. Our skilled dry-cleaning service not only aids the ambitious, but it saves money by increasing the WEAR of your clothes. Your suits will always look like new if you send th em regularly to us. Just telephone Lincoln 1903 our wagon will call. Perfection Cleaners and Dyers 1101 King Street
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KANSAS CITY, Mo., May 21 The United States employment service, a burenu of the department of labor, estimates that Oklahoma will have two and a quarter million acres of wheat to harvest this season, and that several thousand harvest hands will be requlrd in tho central and northwestern counties of the etate. Federal employment agencies will be maintained at Enid. Oklahoma City. Tulsa, Ardmore and Muskogee and the cutting Is expected to begin about June 10 and continue until
about June 28, In this section. Nebraska Is expected to harvest approximately a much wheat as In 1918, slightly moro than threo million acres. Cutting in the extrem southern countiea begins about July 1; in the south central counties July 1 to 10. and in the Sidney district. July 10 to lB. Approximately the same wages are paid as in Kansas. Missouri expects to cut about 2,600,000 acres of wheat, and harvest labor probably will be needed in the western counties. Federal employmfnt agencies will be maintained in Kansas City, St Joseph and St. LouiJ. Detailed information in regard to North and South Dakota is not yet available. Cutting in those fields usually begins July 20 to 25.
This pioneer of American finance once said: "If I know that a man's proposition is sound, and that he is banking with a sound bank, I usually feel inclined to take a chance on his success." Mr. Sage undoubtedly meant that a man cannot go far wrong provided he uses the service of a modern banking institution. This bank prides itself upon being ultra modern in all its equipment and methods. It has every facility for extending valuable, intelligent, thoroughly modern banking service. It looks after the financial interests of its depositors to the utmost of its ability. Its policy is liberal. It consistently extends every accommodation sanctioned by sound banking principles. On this basis it solicits your account.
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ST. JOSEPH LOAN & TRUST COMPANY ..lii..i..i.iUmiJuM!luuuiMiUi
HOTIC
Monday, May 31st, being a holiday, there will be no ice delivery except to restaurants and dairies. Ice will be sold at the plant until noon. ARTIFICIAL ICE CO.
Union Shoe Company 223 So. Michigan Sr.
Invjoon ßroeeiry
438 S. Michigan St. Coffee, very good. .23V2C Large No. 24 Pineapples, 3 lbs. sugar with each dozen $3.20 E-Z Bake Flour. . . .$1.99 Dried Figs, lb. 20c; 22lb. boxes 16c 5 Lbs. Rolled Oats. ..25c 2 Large Cans Hominy 25c Lima Beans, lb. . . . 15c Large Grape Fruit . . .15c
SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY AT
BROS
118 South Michigan Street, Main 1462. LARGE SUPPLY OF FRESH COUNTRY CALVES Veal Stew or Pocket, pound . . .20c Veal Shoulder Roast, pound 26c Veal Loin Roast, pound , .r.30c Fancy Veal Cutlets or Veal Chops, pound 32c Fresh Lettuce, 2 pounds for ...29c Best Creamery Butter, pound 58c
Pork Loin Roast, lb. . .25c Boston Style Butts, lb. 25c Pork Chops, small and lean, pound .28c
Beef Pot Roast, lb 17c Standing Rib Roast, pound 18c Flat Rib Boiling Beef, pound 15c
Pork Link Sausage, lb. 25cl Fancy Rolled Roast, lb. 25c
Sugar Cured Breakfast Bacon, pound ...32c Cottage Butts, pound , ...45c Roberts and Oake Sweetmeats, pound . . .,.48c Dry Salted Side Pork, pound .25c Morris Supreme Marigold, 2 pounds for .73c PLENTY OF ALL KINDS FRESH AND SMOKED MEATS
WE WILL CLOSE AT NOON MONDAY
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Says Mr. P. Nut: "Don't forget that good Peanut
Butter
HTJ
. he Cof f
133 North Michigan Street.
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Detter ffyamrf xtev
The Test of
Taste
That's the test we ask vou to give our bakery goods. There is a delicious flavor, a substantial quality, a satisfying taste that you'll like about our products. Our bread, our cakes, our pies, our cookies and our fancv pastry are unexcelled in goodness, purity and wholesomeness.
esse Baking Co.
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Better Bread for a Bigger City"
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319 South Michigan Street.
Smoked, Fresh and Cold Meats Best Wisconsin Cheese
Veal Roast fi)
Shoulder LnW
Veal Pocket or Stew Pork Shoulder Roast or Butts . .
Frankforts, f (??
large or small ... (ü)10
Fine Beef Pot
Roast ÜTO
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113
Li l I ritt
Hamburger Steak Gem Nut
oieo sm Cream or fyßnt Brick Cheese, lb. )SR?
Limburger
Uieese WLa
Peanut -7n G
Butter IL
Canned Goods All at Wholesale Prices.
&UEHLE
Thomson & McKinnon 301-204 J. M. S. Eld;. Meaberi Ktv ?ork Stock Ztrba&x, Kai Tork Cotton xrbaor. Jftw Orleaoi Cotton Ex cfctrfe. Cilcajro Stock Excba&z. CMea49 Board cX Trtda and Indiana Dinkcra Aasoclatton Direct PTl'lta Wfr I iOl X&rkeU. BC Mala SftQ, S9t, 99 XJnoaln
Ideas Are Valuable Lt m deslg-n and draft your Invention alon? mechanically correct lines tar the machin? shop ar.d patent o!f;ce. Models made. Write mf. Theo. A. Runyan Elkiiart, Indiana
Try NEITS-T1MES Want Ads.
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THIS TIME TESTED MONEY Loaning conipaiir in jours Dollars Do DouMe Duty.
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