Show TJIE GARLAND TIMES GARLAND IJTAII An Adventure in American STEAK IN ITS PERFECTION Many Methods of Cooking and Each Has Its Adherents— Some Excellent Sauces for Its Embellishment Steaks their cooking and serving fire and season Add parsley Just beand sauces to accompany the popu-- ' fore serving lur masculine standby Currant Jelly Sauce are thus dealt with by an authority teaspoon flour on the subject: I teaspoon mustard "Discussion waxed hot the other 1 tablespoon melted butter 1 tablespoon evening among a group of men and vinegar '14 cup boiling water women and what do you think it S ejtgr yolks was about? — not the depression or 14 teaspoon salt the war in China hut about food Pepper S tablespoons currant Jelly The food that created the greatest Cayenne dlscnsslon was the steak Each of the men was convinced that Mix flour and mustard Add bu"he could cook steak better than any- tter" vinegar water and egg one else In the world over boiling water nntli thick t There was the man who uses char- Add seasonings and beat In jelly coal briquets In the fireplace for the Serve at once steak which he brings forth Horseradish Sauce black but not burned on the outside cup crenm rare and Jnlcy inside and covered 14 cup horseradish with a quarter pound of butter for 14 cup scraped apple sauce There was the other man Salt who uses the coni furnace for broilPaprika ing but Insists that no butter should Whip the cream add the other inbe added to obscure the natural and servo with steak flavor There was the man who gredients chicken or game Is perfectly lacking other facilities © 1951 Bell Syndicate— WNU Service satisfied with his electric broiler He scores with roquefort cheese Died Doing Good Ceed A woman contributed a more elabSolicitude for seagulls in cold orate method which included n small weather led to the death of Miss This Is Alice A Woodward at Eastbourne tenderloin for each person At the insurrounded by a ring of bacon The England last winter steak itself is covered with minced quest It was told that she went dally garlic and chiii sauce with a dash to the seashore to feed the birds of Worcestershire and is then baked Overcome by the cold she fell from In a very hot oven Another woman a slipway and was drowned told about the “cubed” round steak cut into pieces for serving and broiled quickly under a very hot fire This steak Is prepared by the butcher who nses a machine which cuts the connective tissues and thus en 'invest Hotel ables oa to broil the less expensive cuts of meat At this special botcher shop steak of this type costs abont 7 cents a portion -There were further points of discussion to snuces— in regard whether they should be used or not and If so what kind The favorites were butter (maltre dTiotel nnd hernnise that Bauce) variation of hollHndalse and whipped cream with horseradish To this last I like to add Rome scraped apple Discussion abont sauces Is often Inconsistent I find thnt many per sons who scorn a sauce for ment demand the ketchup or chill snuce bottle to cover tlie Rteak at the table and the mustard Jar as often By the way a miiRtard butter sauce is 200 Tile Baths 200 Rooms delicious with either meat of fish I Radio connection in every room particularly like It with hnmbirg RATES FROM $150 steak are also Onions and mushrooms Jmi oppottit Mormon Tobrmnth delicious for stenk accompaniments ERNEST C ROSSITER Afgr whether you call them sauce or not You may “smother" the onions or Baked raw sweet french fry them onions of the Spanish type are delicious arranged In overlapping layENJOY A TRIP TO ers on the broiled steak before it SALT LAKE AND comes to the table must cook It However you steak NEWHOUSE have a very hot fire for Its cooking and myst be turned often If you lack a broiler heat a heavy 'frying pan very hot grense It a little with a piece of the fat from the meat sear the stenk quickly on both sides and turn often After It Is almost brown enough lower the heat slight As fat cooks out it must he ly poured off so that the pan beeps as dry as possible Personally I will eat with steak properly delight cooked in the first place with or without sauce Salt Lake City’s tffiTd! 3 All picture Yale University from Pm MThe Pafeant of America ” cotirtesy By ELMO SCOTT WATSON 0 MOST Americans mention of the event which we celebrate on July 4— the signing of the Declaration of Independence — brings to mind the famous painting of that historic scene nliirh hangs in the rotunda of the Capitol in For it Is through Washington tlie eyes of John Trumbull the Connecticut painter that we have received most of our visual not only of what took place In Inimpressions hail In Philadelphia on July 4 dependence 1770 but of many of the other great events In the American Itevolution A short time ago Vale university commemoratof the opening of the oldest ed the centenary art gallery in this country connected with a The founder of that art gallery the college architect of the original building was this same John Trumbull whose body lies in a vault beneath the fine arts building which has succeedwhich he designed ed the simple little structure and which housed the original collection of his canvasses that have since become so famous ceremonies which consistThe commemorative ed principally of showing ngain all of the Trumas they had once of paintings bull collection been displayed in the vanished building which to honor the not only served he designed America's epic” but It emphasized “painter of once more the part which this university has of Americans played in the “visual education" In the history of their country It recalled once more an ambitious project in this educational field beof that institution gun more than a decade ago and appropriately to a triumphant conclusion brought enough during the year in which the was being celebratof American independence ed That was the publication of “The Pageant of America" a pictorial history of our country which lias "worked something of a of presenting and methods In the revolution studying American history" The Idea for such a project took form while the Yale University Press which had Just comof another notable historical pleted publication “The Chronicles of America” was exseries with the presentation of the drama perimenting of American history through the medium of The result of this experiment moving pictures was the outlining of a plan for a 'pictorial chronicle of America" In book form Thera have been many “pictorial" histories of America but the majority of them have been valueless because ‘the pictures comparatively have often been an excuse to weaken the text and the text has been an excuse to pass off or deceptive pictures on the confidhackneyed So the problem of the Yale auing thorities was not only to avoid a repetition of the errors which had given pictorial history n bad repute but also to prepare a combination of and text which would be scholarly pictures "scientific enough to satisfy the most exacting and lively and interesting enough to historian” meet the demands of “popular appeal” without authenand of nccurncy anything sacrificing ticity conBut the most interesting story of all In of this unique nection with the presentation Is the story of the world wide search forj Is the It story tm pictures which went into it of an adventure in American- history as romanIn many of its aspects as any tic an adventure In our school hisIncident which Is recorded search For it Is the story of a tories and those of gov- collections private through rnmeital bodies historical societies libraries scums art galleries learned societies and read" French uniforma worn during the French from the painting and Indian War by H A Ogden 2 The earliest engraved likeness of Columin 1575 bus published from the “Jovius portrait” the original source of all Columbus portraits 3 Attacked Emigrants by Indians on the Plains — A typical Western incident of the after country opening of the the drawing by F 0 C Darley the foremost illustrator of American life and history in that period 4 The First Oil was Well — "A derrick of Titusville Pa erected in the neighborhood and in the year 1859 the boring for oil began In the photograph Drake wearing a silk hat his Peter to a friend Wilson appears talking From a contemporary of Titusville" druggist taken by John A Mather photograph -- and religious and educational institutonly in this country but In foreign countries as well It is the story of some fine work” in following clews some of “detective and some unsuccesswhich ended successfully in the fully of persistence and perseverance face of baffling problems and seemingly Insuperable obstacles — all in the name of historical aca total of It out But of more all came curacy than 10000 authenticated pictures as the basis for what is now recognized as the first and thus far the only real source book of Pictorial Amerwhen the work was comicana Incidentally for cappleted it represented the expenditure the ital account of more than $'582000 probably sum ever spent for a single piece of largest research but a very modest amount historical of when compared to th value and Importance the results obtained the task before the Yale auIn considering thorities it must he remembered that American were before there began long long history cameras to record historic incidents as they are So the only pictorial record recorded today of the greatest hiswe have of some events was made by artists torical Importance equipped only with the crudest sort of InstruBut the ments and materials for their work lies In the of their accomplishment Importance recfact that they furnished “contemporary can be used for ords” and the modern camera copying their work And here again comes In the matter of cost “The Pageant of America” In producing for in many cases the cost of securing a copy of some individual anywhere from $100 picture ranged In two of the volumes of the series up to $350 Illustrations (such as Is shown are 17 above) which reproduce in colors the uniforms In the various American worn by participants wars The search for authentic paintings daguerreov and engravings of contemlithographs types events and for charters commissions porary arand other documents preserved in official chives took the research staff of “The Pageant of America” Into many strange plnces It was at the the start that recognized discovery of America was Only an Incident In the discovery of Asia and that to illustrate the" background of the beginnings of American history It would to find pictures which would show be necessary In Europe as far back as the the Influences time of Parpinl and Marco Polo which led timately to Columbus’ attempt to find the route So the earliest "dated "to Asia by" sailing west in the “Pageant" is a page from the picture of Adam of Bremen in the Latin manuscript Eleventh century In which the first mention of YInland discovered by the Norsemen jvas made" After considerable diillcnlty this manuscript was oca ted In the Stants Bibliotbek In Vienna Of portraits of Columbus popularly regarded Institutes ions not as the discoverer ot America there are legion But It remained for the Yale research staff to trace back for the first time all these portraits and that original to their original source source is the “Jovius portrait” (shown above) an engraving which It Is believed was first puba 1575 Is nnd copy of a portrait In which lished that hung in the famous gallery of I’aulus Jovius archbishop of Nocera a man of vast wealth who spent a fortune In collecting portraits of the great men of his’ time and who was an ardent admirer of the Italian navigator It is believed that this Is the only portrait of Columbus painted during Ida lifetime Back of a portrait which appears In another of volume of “The Pageant” — ‘The Winning Freedom” la a typical story of perseverance the auWhen this volume was In preparation thors wanted a portrait of one of the German officers who fought under the British flag during In this None the Revolution being available country a search was begun through the AmerAfter considerican consul general in Berlin able correspondence with various museums and private collectors the consul general learned that an excellent oil painting of Baron the Hessians Riedesel who commanded under Ilurgoyne was still hanging In the castle of Neuenhof bel Eisenach Hessen Through the a deRiedesel courtesy of Freiherr Albrecht scendant of the Eighteenth century baron permission was finally granted a year later to make a photographic copy of the original Even more devious was the trail which finalof Willy led to an authentic daguerreotype liam F Harnden founder of the express business in the United States While assembling Com"The March for of volume material (he merce” the editors came upon a very poor woodcut of Harmjen in Stimson’s “History of the Express Companies” published In 1858 Desiring the original daguerreotype from which this reproduction had apparently been made they enlisted the aid of the officials of the American Railway Express company general auditor at Through S M Baker Chattanooga Tenn they learned that the original had been in the possession of Ildrnden’s son who was living In San Francisco shortly direcafter 18(50 Using the San Francisco tories they addressed Identical letters to several Harndens listed therein One of these was W K Harnden and he proved to be a grandson W K Harnden replied of William F Harnden that he believed the desired dnguerreotype was In the possession of his elder brother Frederic Ihen living in I’alo Alto Such proved to be the case hut the end of the trail was not yet for the elder brother could not locate the picture as it had been in storage for some time Finally however a year after the first inquiry a copy of the daguerreotype was received Just in time to be reproduced and included In the pictorial history of the express HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE Bernaise Sauce cup butter yolke tablespoon tarragon vinegar teaspoon salt Cayenne M cup boiling water I teaspoons minced parsley Divide bulter into 3 pieces put one piece in saucepan with the yolks of eggs and tarrngon vinegar place the saucepan in a larger one containing boiling water stir constantly until the butter Is melted then add the second piece of butter and as it Add the thickens the third piece water stir 1 minute remove 400 d C ikouqkt' $250 TWO PERRONS— Cbfliei Ovtflidi Raw vltk Batb $2L° THE HOTEL NEWHOUSE SALT LAKE CITY UTAH alls untib )- tuihb - Instant starting and improved anti knock alt degrees of temlightning perature in nCw or old pick-ucars longer mileage established by rouand bountine trips tiful power in evidence all fhe time T hen convince everybody! in GASOLINE J I3 $ 'qcuoUmsj ctcumi Mirvk WATERS Fret Mer ft SUTTON i Rooms— 400 Baths $200 to S400 Family Room 4 or $ Persons from business’ But not all descendants of past notables were as helpful as the Harndens The Yale authorities tell the story of the search for an authentic portrait of a little known but important figure in the Revolution They located one of his descendants in a small New England town a who owned a contemporary woman oil portrait But when apof the Revolutionary fighter pealed to for permission to reproduce the paintof the ing she refused presumably' because reticence and reserve which characterize the spinster lady of the Yankee type nnd also possibly because she feared the some Injury to the painting might result So It was necessary to send a member of the editorial staff there for the purpose of coaxing the old lady to make it possible for her ancestor to be represented in this Important historical work The staff member found the portrait hanging in the parlor where it could not be photographed on the wall and he experienced great difficulty In persuading her to let him take Then when he secured it down from the wall the necessary permission she would not let him take the painting out of the house so he had a commercial to bring for more photographer than one hundred miles In order to make certain of getting a good copy hr Wtra Nwppr Union) MRS eggr 1 r |