Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 9 Oct 1930, p. 24

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One of the inexpensive cuts of meat, which may be made very appetizing, is a baked shoulder of lamb. This may be baked. with sweet potatoes and apples, which will add to the favor and attractiveness and make a whole meal, except the dessert and, of course, a salad, if wished. Salt Pepper Flour to dredge Baked Shoulder of Lamb %% vounds of lamb shoulder Things To Cook Dad gets the dope! ""We beat them 14 to 7, Dad! In the last quarter Dick Brady ran sixtyâ€"seven yards for the winning score . . . you should have seen him travel!"‘ Dad telephones his boy at school and "‘gets the dope‘‘ on all the games. Father and son talk.over studies, too, andâ€"need it be saidâ€"finances! Mother says "hello", too, and these little telephone visits keep her happy while her boy is away in a distant college town. 3 Sons and daughters away at school can telephone home and have the charges reversed"‘. Make a habit of "keeping in touch"‘ by telephone all through the school year. Long Distance is Quick . . . Clear . . . Inexpensive! One Policy + _ One System ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM % or 4 sweet potatoes 3 or 4 tart apples 1 green pepper if wished Brown sugar. Trim the lamb nicely and tie, keepâ€" ing it as compact as possible. Dredge with flour, place in roaster and sear for 25 to 30 minutes at 500, Place the . pared . sweet potatoes around the meat, cutting them lengthâ€" wise, if large, or leaving them whole if smallâ€" or medium size. _ Sprinkle both meat and potatoes with salt and pepper, with a little brown sugar over the potatoes. Bell Lines Reach Everywhere THE PRESS If you use the green pepper, reâ€" move seeds and white membrane, cut in thick slices and place over the poâ€" tatoes. Add oneâ€"half cup of water, cover the pan, reduce temperature to 300 and bake 1% to 2 hours more, adding another half cup of water durâ€" ing baking if wished. About oneâ€"half ~hour before :the meat and potatoes are done, core the apples without paring and place them in the pan, sprinkle with a little brown sugar and continue baking with the meat. Universal Service ADD 800 MILES OF \ â€" PAVEDSTATEROADS This Is Mileage to Be Finished by End of Year, According to Director Eight hundred miles more of paved highways are being added in 1930 to the Illinois total of hard roads, H. H. Cleaveland, state director of public works and bpildirigs, predicted in a recent radio address. The speaker stated that more than 37,600,000 worth of roads have been placed under contract, or advertised for bids, during the year, and that over 400 miles of work has been comâ€" pleted. â€" He attributed the unusual ac« tivity to the gasoline tax passed durâ€" ing the present administration, to federal aid funds and the surplus moâ€" tor license fees. Pointing out that this construction program has done much to stabilize economic conditions and relidve unâ€" employment throughout the state, Diâ€" rector Cleaveland states that there are now more than ten thousand men emâ€" ployed directly in highway construcâ€" tion and that at least 20,000 more are engaged indirectly in the production and transportation of road materials, Roads in Drought Zone In reference to road construction as a means of emergency . employment in the droughtâ€"stricken sections of the state, Director Cleaveland, quotâ€" ing from reports of the highway diâ€" ‘vision, stated that of the $37,000,000 worth of work under way on Illinois highways this season, $10,108,000 worth of construction is located in the area most seriously affected by the drought. This, he said, embraces 513 miles of paving, 119 miles of grading, and the erection of 81 bridges. ~Regulations governing the allotâ€" ment of federal funds, Cleaveland said, require that the actual construcâ€" tion must be completed and the payâ€" ments made by the state before the money from the United States treasâ€" ury becomes available. Consequently the allotment of about $5,000,000 apâ€" portioned to Illinois for 1931, and made available several months earlâ€" ier than usual, as a means of drought relief;, cannot be drawn upon this year. The 1931 allotment of federal funds for Illinois highways, Cleaveland exâ€" plained, cannot be utilized until the 1931 apportionment of highway funds also becomes available. The work now under way and contemplated will reâ€" quire all of the funds that will be applicable in 1930. 40 N. First 8t. Highland Park J. SMITH JUNK TELEPHONE 410 Thursday, October 9, 1930 Dealer in

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