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Show 4444 4444 44444 ly as made with compressed yeast and Independent Line to San Francisco. 4 halted In a gas oven 4 The most important transaction in HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. 4 local railroad circles which has been 4 A some 4f4 444 44444 frequently hear (he most extravagant praise of the 'old time eook: ery, and the memory of the good things in grandmother's pantry, is a We favoritie theme with some of our elders, hut if the truth were always told there was probably as great a difference in the quality of the cooking in various households in those old time days us tnere is now at the beginning of the twentieth century. The memory ot one old kitchen where the most of (he cooking was done in a slovenly manner before the hearth fire the pies cooked in the tin baker to save the trouble of heating the brick oven contrasts unfavorably with that of another tiving room where regnlarly each week two entire mornings and an infinite amount of skill, patience and we re given to the preparation of the food, all of which was invariably perfect in quality. But even the best recipes of the best cooks of the early nineteenth cen tury, most carefully followed will not produce the genuine article. Not only are all conditions of living different, our tastes changed, our appetites satiated with the complex mixtures of the modern chef, but our food materials have changed also. Our fine granulated cornmeal is quite unlike the flaky meal with which grandmothers chest was frequently replenished to furnish the chief food of the family. Molasses in these days is an uncertain quantity; of soda is a great improvement over saler-atuthe .granite kettles and pans do not quite take the place of the smo whity-brow- n care-takin- half-bake- d g, home-groun- d s; oth-as-gia- ss 22. BOX ELDER NEWS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY Page H. round bottomed iron pot; the gas range, however perfectly the flame may be adjusted, falls far short of developing the flavor secured by the brick oven and the hot stones in the bean hole, pnd more than all else we miss the personality of the cook. Grandmother stirred into every mixture kneaded into every loaf and rolled into every pie plenty of love and good will for the partaker. Honest pride in her success and the skill that comes only when ones heart is in her work. The following recipes are genuine s, but have been modified to suit modern conditions. elightly Recipe for Baking Indian Pudding. Rub a tablespoonful of butter the bottom and sides of a smooth iron kettle; when melted add half a cupful of boiling water to preAdd vent the milk from burning. one quart of milk, let it boil up and almost over the kettle, then sift in one pint of granulated yellow corn-mea- l, holding the hand high that every grain may be thoroughly scalded. Stir constantly; add half a teaspoonful of salt, and when cold stir in one cupful of New Orleans molasses and one quart of cold milk. Pour it into a well buttered, deep, earthen pudding dish, cover with a plate and bake very slowly for ten or twelve hours. Grandmother put It into a Satur-da- y afternoon oven and let it remain over night, serving it for breakfast on Sunday. Cooking the meal in a double boiler for an hour and baking it, with the very low flame, in a gas oven, is the modern variation of this mehtod. Crullers. Beat the yolk of one egg, stir into It too heaping tablespoonfuis of sugar and one spoonful of melted butter. When very light beat the whole of the egg stiff and blem it with the mixture. Add a quarter of a teaeach of mace and salt. Mix spoonful to a stiff dough with flour, using to enable you to roll it out a third of an inch thick. Cut it Into rectangular pieces about two and a half by three and a half Inches. Make four Incisions lengthwise to within one third of an inch at each end. Take up the second and fourth strips and let the others separate in the middle from those in the hand as you drop them into the hot fat. Cook until brown, turning over the same as doughnuts. Drain and sprinkle with powdered sugar. A BAD considerable consummated for time is that which has just been closed by the Rio Grande Western Rail-oa- d company and the Utah Independent Telephone company, by the terms of which the telephone company secures all the telephones of the Rio Grande system and the Western Pacific, now in course of construction. It also includes a private branch exchange with a capacity of 150 points which will open up communication with all departments of the Rio Gran de Western and the Western Pacific. S. L. At the Opera House, Saturday, Feby. 24th., 1906, including character plays by each of the four wards of this city. This is something good. Be sure to see it. Admission will be 25 cents in the evening. The matinee will be given at 4 oclock p. m. and the price will be 10 cents. MIX-U- P. i, ,i. H.i.K- Ills own iauui , . Hi- - H- - I- .- O " ,a,her - , " 1 ... -r iV is in nearly as bad a flu. as Hi, the father of his late wife. b- , . ' ' NO BAD MIX-U- f -ts 4 rooms, porch, home-groun- luke-war- m H00PES & EDDY. lid. In recent years I tested occasional- - Kennedys Laxative Honey and T ar Cars all Conors, and expels Colds from tfto system 5y gently moving the powols. Call and see us if you need any of the above mentioned articles. J. B. McMASTER & SON ;agi A .is a b -- AT- ik 5 ores Amanda Gleet. North Main St.BrighJ lOUS , piano! The Yellow Fever Germ. has recently been discovered, it bears a close resemblance to the malaria germ. To free the system from disease germs, the most effective remedy is Dr. Kings New Life Pills. Guaranteed to cure all diseases due to malaria poison and constipation. $.25 at The Eddy drug store. at Sold 44 44444 444444 all kinds of -- JOB PRINTING Quorum Meetings. The First quorum of Elders meet every Friday evening in the 4th ward meeting house at 7.30 p. m. The Second Quorum of Elders meet every Friday evening at 7.30 p.m. at the First ward Relief Society hall, n 23 The Fourth Quorum of Elders will hold meetings at Honeyville every ? price from one c largest manufacturin 1 lanos shipped direct t, from factory and save, retail price as the factoryM anxious to have their m COmpi Neatly and Promptly Executed I troduced in this locality, 5 pianos atpr; want to sell monthly payments. One of these seen at at piano, 4 Thursday at Box Elder News. JOHN If 7.30 p Wednesday evening at you don't buy A show oj will ts N. L HANSEN res id be si 7:30 You dont n23 p. m. STREE' 4! m., Thatcher and Elwood every Wednesday evening at 7:30 p. m. and Bear River Ward eyery ANDEHSO SOUTH MAIN buy Shoal We Guarantee The Fifth quorum of Elders will hold meetings in Garland and Bothwell every Tuesday evening and id Beaver ward every Thursdayjevening at 7:30 oclock. The Sixth quorum of Elders meet in Every .care b ibelr Pah, iilare. PROFESSIONAL CARI MONUMENTS Order NOW Snowville every Wednesday at 7 p m.; at Stone the third Sunday of every month and at Park Valley the fourth Sunday of every month at 2 p. m. 3 '.ne. TO INSURE DELIVERY FOR ecoration -- ay Attoekiy- ach RON FENCE- S- nst Brigham City, of all kinds i lire Sail s0'.7Y(75-C- O. JOHN District ATTORNEY AND COUNSKLLOE C Room 23 First Nat. Bank But manufacture -I- BATHS. For a good refreshing bath, call at Bergs Barber shop on west side of Main St., $ block south of court house. pain FRED J. IIOLTON, 3 H & DUMBECK QARTHEY CVICACI. betra PLUMBIC BOTT & Sons. TELEPHONE 219 ti (t 82.' - - - Salt Lata Stats St iace City (r III, C, OQUIRES, ARCHITECT. 48 First Natl Bank Buildii El OGDEN, Bell Phone 770 Y arm; acb Km we As An There's something doing in Washington this month, but THERES ALWAYS SOMETHING Hart & nebeker, LAWYERS, Suite 5 and 8, Commercial Advertising Medium... because builders who deed lumber know that we have the largest stock in the city and can fill any bill - 70. V ft nc te je Block Here UTA Lock!! the i ore m ere GEORGE R, n w. a Telephone No. DOING HERRE - - - LOGAN, CHAi o inha N'ews ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Brigham City, ON A MOMENTS NOTICE. QHAS. E. FOXLEY, ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Merrell Lumber Go. Both Phones Na 8. Brigham, Utah Selling Off i The Box Elder ...NEWS... ATTOF Also many odd pieces of my own stock at COST. COMMENCING. SATURDAY NEXT. 116 South Main Street. W Office Court " House Brigham City, ANDREW FUNK, Archi OVE OFFICE N. C. Mortensen As Brigham City J. D.CALL1 ATTORNEY. retail GREAT REDUCTION. House JAMES S. PERRY, Having purchased below cost the entire stock of District School shoes of Mrs. John Christensen, who has business, I will at Court Brigham City At BROWNS relinquished them at a Attornej (County Office wedge-shape- d l, jts & Ask vour fill vour prescriptions, Experienced prescription clerks doctor about us. Tribune. FRIENDS! PATRONS rye-mea- fpa Embroidetj Brigham City Pharmacy, yeast-cak- in ies done corn-mea- l, P1-0- Underwear OCCURS AT THE P cel- lar, and coal house. Electric lights in every room. City water. Good and Indian Bread. Rye barn and hen house. Lot 4 x 10 rods Put into the mixing bowl one pint with peaches. Apricots, cherries, prud of sifted, nes, plums, raspberries and shrubyellow This is within 20 rods of the bery. with and scald boiling water Just enough to wet every portion, af-- County Court House nJ wont last $900. ter ten minutes mix to a soft battern at LEE & DUNN, with cold watr, Wlren fidd half a cupful of homemade yeast This Will Interest You. e moisten (or onefourth of a There is no reason in the world ed in half a cupful of warm water) half a cupful of molasses, one level why every advertiser should not be teaspoonful of salt, half a level tea- able to determine for himself just spoonful of soda and one pinf of rye what circulation he is paying for. meal (not rye flour.) Beat thorough Unscrupulous publishers misreprely, cover with a pan and a cloth, and sent their subscription list in the set It in a warm place to rise over hope of securing patronage. We are night. When the surface cracks op- not of that kind, and if you will call en stir It down, then grease and flour on us with a request to be SHOWN a round iron or steel pan, turn in the we will give you the key. dough, smooth over the top, and sprTO OUR inkle evenly with flour to prevent a crust from forming. Let it rise until cracks appear, then bake a it in moderate oven from two to three hours, vovering with a tin cover after the first hour. When served, who anticipate building in the wipe off the flour, cut a future. piece from the center to the edge We are in a position to take and shave off thin slices. of you with your mill work, This bread has a peculiar gray col- care is soft and moi- having just installed some wood or from the We also st in texture, and quite unlike the working machinery. steamed Boston brown bread. It is carry a complete line of lumber, the genuine Ryen Injin Bread, shingles, lath, doors, sash, mould made by one family and its decend hair, plaster ents in the same house for nearly a ings, plastering hardbuilders cement, paris, century, and I have frequently watchready-mixed both in ed as it was shoved into the front of ware, glass, paints, and dry colors, table and the brick oven, on the wooden peel, had been the weeks after baking pocket cutlery, shears, scissors, drawn out. In other kitchens I saw tin and graniteware, stoves and It baked in an iron pot before the and their equipment. hearth fire, with coals underneath the ranges kettle and also above in a covered Quality and Prices Guaranteed high Ginghatas SPECIAL BARGAIN. cottage with India11, , heir-loom- A 10 .,rooms We also CONCERT FOR THE LIBRARY. New Summer lit Office 3 if a 1 Is Unexcelled. We Reach The People. at room 24, Ban Brigham City, 8 jSjELS JENSON, ATTORNEY-AT'LAW- Practice Room In all Supreme 2021 i gout Ba" Nat , Brigham City, B. n. JONES, ATTORNEY AND Practice In Stale and Fdg fore united Offloe over R06110 Brigham city ste L BERG, Ig BrnHHmttHmmmTmmwwm 1st Natl SHAVING HAIR W . , JR- - BARB CUTTING- - Si |