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Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, : A Chafing Dish Luncheon icable, or if for any reason it seems undesirable. Strawberries. Radishes. Creamed Lobster. Watercress Sandwiches. Olive Sauce. Panned Sweetbreads. Green Peas. Jellied Tomato Salad. Small Cheese Biscuit. Fancy Cakes. Frozen Pineapple. Coffee. A differs The salad here suggseted tomato the Jelly, the ordinary form fresh fruit being used. Small, firm tomatoes must be selected and boiling water poured over them. As the skins crack, lift them out quickly and drop Into a bowl of ice water. In ten minutes drain and skim them, then place on ice until firm. In the meantime make a clear, quick aspic Jelly by uniting one half of a package of granof a ulated gelatine in one-ha- lf consomme cold of may (which cupful when be made with beef extract); soft, stand at the side of the fire until dissolved. Season one cupful and a half of consomme with salt, tobacco and one tablespoonful of lemon Juice and add a few drops of kitchen if necessary, to tint it slightly. To this add the dissolved gelatine and set aside. Cut the chilled tomatoes In thick slices, remove the seeds and cut in cubes. Heap them lightly in small timbale or fancy moulds, pour the Jellying consomme over them until the moulds are filled, and put in the refrigerator. ' Soak the sweetbreads allowing a pair for four persona in cold water, changing as often as discolored, until well blanched. Place them in a sauceof a teaspoonful of pan with one-ha- lf salt, a few peppercorns and a slice of onion, cover with boiling water and simmer for twenty minutes. Drop into cold water until chilled, then put under a light weight until next day. bo-qu- et, Before making the mayonnaise be sure to chill all the ingredients. Drop the yolks of two or more eggs in a of a teaspoonful howl, add one-ha- lf of salt and a dash of cayenne. From a cupful and a half of measured olive oil add a few drops to the yolks and atir until they begin to thicken; add a little more oil and stir again. Stir always In the same direction and continue to add a little oil at a time until the mixture is. very thick. Now add a few drops of lemon Juice or vinegar, then more oil, and proceed in this manner until all the oil is used and the dressing is thick and Jellylike. As It thickens the oil may be added more quickly. From one to two of vinegar or almost twice as much lemon Juice will be needed, the amount depending upon the intensity of the acid; it is better, however, to withhold a portion until the dressing Is needed for the table than to make It too thin at first. Having attended to this portion of the menu on the preceding day, select the fish course. If fresh lobsters nre to be had, choose one large or two small ones, making sure that they are alive and in good condition. Boil them from thirty to forty minutes, according to size, in salted water, and when cool open them. Twist off the tail, cut the thin shell on the under side, remove the meat, and from the upper side of it remove the intestine running down Its entire length; all of the meat is edible. Break open the body, pull off and discard the spongy gills, and remove the meat lying between each thin section at shell; seserve the green fat and coral If any for the sauce. Cut the meat In little cubes. If canned lobster must be used, open the can early In the mornitable-apoonfu- lls ng. turn out its contents and let stand In a cool place to aerate. !. rye and grate or chop fine a sood sljed pineapple. Pour over it a eupfol of cold water and let stand while boiling one pint of sugar and one Pint of water for five minutes. Stir this Into the fruit and let all stand un til cold. Strain, squeeslng out all the Juice, add three teaspoonfuls of lemon Juice and freeze. When half frozen add one cupful of thick cream, whipped to a solid froth, and finish the freezing. stand for at least two hours to lt ripen. Shell and wash the peas. Trim the radishes and put them on Ice or In eo water. Cut two dozen olives In ng strlpa Whip a cupful of thick erenm to a solid froth and place on from a bunch of cashed watercress, dry In a cloth, tund them to a pulp and mix this Ith twice as much creamed butter. "Im the crust from two days' old bread, spread with this butter, cut in the-leave- s 3u, 1901. j 3 .' 4 of the Fish You Didn't Catch V You won't thin slices and put together ELIZABETH .GREENBOUGH OIL MAGNATES. in dainty sandwiches. Until needed cover them with a napkin wrung out In cold water; this will keep them moist. Sift together two cupfuls of llour, one heaping teaspoonful of baking powof a teaspoonful of salt der, lf of a cupful of grated and Rub in two tablespoonfuls of butter and mix into a firm dough with sweet milk. Roll out half un Inch thick, cut in tiny circles or fancy shapes. Lay well apart on greased pans, sprinkle thickly with cheese and bake in a brisk oven. It Is best to make these Just before the menl, but If that is impossible, do not sprinkle with the cheese until ready to reheat Having attended to these preliminaries, give attention to the dining room, especially the trays needed for the chafing dish work. To avoid, confusion it is best to assemble the Ingredients for each dish on a separate tray and to have them properly proportioned, that no measuring at the table will be necessary. Use as small and as decorative dishes as possible for these prepared ingredients. Be sure to have a metal tray under the chafing dish, that no harm may result should the lighted alcohol overflow. As soon as the cooking is finished, have the tray of empty dishes and soiled utensils removed, then serve from the dish. For the lobster, put in the blazer one tablespoonful each of butter and flour, lf of a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of paprika. Light the lamp and when the butter melts and mixes with the other ingredients, gradually add a cupful of rich milk, stirring until smooth. Add the lobster, cover, slip the hot water pan underneath and cook for five minutes, adding more seasoning, if necessary. If liked a tablespoonful of sherry may be added uat before serving. For the next course melt two of butter in the blazer and In it brown the sweetbreads, keeping them covered to prevent spattering. Draw them to one side, add two scant tablespoonfula of flour and one cupful and a half of stock or consomme. Stir until thick, add kitchen boquet to give a good color, seasoning to taste, add the olives and simmer for five mlntues. The peas are sent In from the kitchen. The strawberries are sugared and sprinkled with orange Juice. Each mold of salad is arranged In a nest of blanched lettuce leaves and topped with a spoonful of mayonnaise (prethe whipped viously mixed with cream). The cheese biscuits are passed with this course. Fancy cakes are passed with the frozen pineapple. The coffee appears last, but. If preferred, Iced tea may be served throughout the meal. one-thi- MAY Dcmt Brag By Cornelia C. Bedford. At this tea son of the year the young matron may plan a lunch party for a few close friends which will not he too will heavy a tax on her resources, yet menu The most satisfactory. prove here given is planned with a view to the use of the chafing dish, hut it can Da dispensed with if there are too many at table to make its use pract- .MONDAY, Husband Invented Kerosene need to if you see us .SUES Process-Recei- ved $300,000 From H. H. Rogers. first for Fishing 1 . J r g J Abbey&F,,bS.Tackie rd one-ha- one-ha- ; table-spoonf- Fifty ltiillioin dollars U claimed by Elizabeth T. Creenbough, of New York, widow of the famous inventor, Benjamin P. Green bough, in a suit against Henry H. Rogers, of the Standard Oil company, and the executors of the estate of Charles Pratt, once Mr. Rogers' partner. The action has been commenced in the Massachusetts superior court, and summons have been sent to Mr. Rogers and the llatt executors. BOSTON, May Sirs. Greeubough's 3u. SinKers, etc. PATRONS OF THE are way up all but the bread company. Union Pacific Rairoad are assured . In 1847, when Rogers and Platt were young and poor in the oil business, Grecnbough Invented this process and sold it to them under a contract guaranteeing him the royalty mentioned. Within a few years Greenbough had received J5JI0.000 in royalties from the Standard Oil company, to which Rogers and Platt had transferred the Invention. Then Greenbough was lost at sea and his widow, having no knowledge of the contract with her husband, made no claim for royalties. The Standard Oil company also apparently forgot it. A short time ago Mrs. Greenbough found among her husband's papers a copy of the contract, and a suit Is the result. Though begun against Rogers and the Platt executors, the Standard Oil company Is the real defendant. Greenbough during the Civil war compounded an explosion that proved so terrible that his wife begged him not to reveal its secret, and he never .To cold draughts of air, to keen and cutting winds, sudden changes of tern perature, scanty clothing, undue ex' posure of the throat and neck after public speaking and singing, bring on coughs and colds. Ballard's Horehound Syrup Is the best cure. Mrs. A. Barr, Houston, Tex, writes, Jan. SI, 1802: "One bottle of Ballard' Horehound Syrup cured me of a very bad cough. It Is very pleasant to take. 25c, 50c, II. Geo. F. Cave. The Overland Route SOME TABLES one-quart- er Exposure Z. C. M. I. ISasKets, Reels, Flys, claim Is based on the invention by her husband of a process of oil refining which renders kerosene and she alleges that she is entitled to a royalty of a cent a gallon on all of the oil so treated by the Standard Oil HER WEEKLY WEEP. Her little craft had skirted the coast of Bohemia for many an "art student" year, and the rocks and rapids of a life had given her big citys high-tld- e more than her share, perhaps, of the ups and downs of bread winning. But she kept a sunny sweetness through it all, and an appetite for the verities that the quibbles and vagaries of amazingly many sided metropolitan standards seemed In nowise to Impair. But she had a mysterious engagement, every Saturday night (for the keeping of which she shut herself up in her room at an early hour), sorely puzzling sometimes the more observing among her associates, as did also the persistent preservation of a dogeared old algebra, among her most cherished volumes. I One day the secret leaked out a have to have let good myself just cry, she confessed, at least once In the seven day round, and, of course, It has to be Saturday, because my eyes look like pink puff balls the next morning. And the algebra? Well, you see, when people dont keep their promises, and things don't happen as one expects, and the plans Ive counted on so long are all pulled green, and there seems nothing much left to tie to,' Just go and work out a few knotty problems, all so misty and confused at the beginning1 and so perfectly plain and dependable at the end, and I think, well, two and two still make four, so I won't give up yet awhile, and Monday morning Im ready to try again!" New York Times. It Holds All the Big Ones Poles lOc to $15 Lines SilK, Linen and Cotton that all human Ingenuity hue been adopted to protect them against Hone of dol accident Mil- spent by the Railroad Com-- 1 lars have been Union In pany of Pacific the mporovement This ment its equip line is renown 6 ed for ita fast their and tralna sit time, arrival and the general euperlorlty of Its service. Union 3?etoiflo RUNS Three tralne dally to the East, the fastest trains arriving many houra ahead of all competitors. Full Information cheerfully furnished on application to G. H. CORSE. did. TRY THI8 AFTER HOU8ECLEAN ING In these days of card playing the care of the hands and especially the nails, is of vast Importance to every woman. Happy the woman, who is able at any time to command the serFor vice of an expert manicurist those leas fortunate, there are some old fashioned simple little remedies which may be used with good result To soften and cleanse the hands, nothing is better than flint sand or white quarts. Fill a basin full of sand and soap suds, hot as can be borne. Wash the hands in this for five minutes at a time, brushing and rubbing them in the sand. Rinse In a warm lather of good toilet soap and after drying rub the hand in dry bran or corn meal. This plan effectually removes the roughness caused by housework and should be used at least once a day. It Is well to use an add first to remove fruit or vegetable stains, and always rub the spot with cold cream or oil, after using an add on the fingers. The next proceeding is to give attention to the nails. To tone up the nails and give them a fine healthy color, rub them with a mixture composed of equal parts of cinnamon and emery, followed with a gentle massage of oil of bitter almonds. Should the nails be disfigured by white specks, these may readily be removed by using the following mixture: Mix equal parts of pitch and turpentine, and add to it a little vinegar and powdered tosulphur, or pitch and myrrh melted resulta with used be good may gether Use a file to shape the nails in preference to scissors. Never use a sharp Instrument for pressing down the ever ever Nothing has rising cuticle. that for stick the orange equaled For Weak, Languid People. Weak, sickly people often remark, If I could only get something that would nourish me and give me strength," they do not know why, but the food they eat is of no benefit to them, they gain no flesh and feel no stronger. The fact is the stomach Is too weak to perforin Its work, and the little appetite they once had Is soon Six Hours in Denver at your grocer's to SL Louis en-rou- te IRST NATIONAL BANK. 2384 Washington Ave. CAPITAL 8URPLU8 1150,000 AND PROFITS....! 73,245 We transact business In all branches of banking and extend every courtesy consistent with soundness. DAVID ECCLES THOMAS D. DEB .... JOHN PINGREE JAMES F. BURTON The Burlington Route's daily through sleeper, Balt Lake to 8L Louis, is halted in the Colorado capital from 4:00 p. m. to 10:35 p. m. Booing Denver" ears leave the union dopot ovary hour and will carry you all over tha city in two houro for 50 cents. Afterwards you may take dinner with your frienda there, spend tho evening at their house, attend the concert In tha city park or do whatovor else your fancy dictates. Meanwhile the ear porter is guarding your wraps. You do not havo a thing to worry about. President Vice-Preside- nt Cashier Amtt Cashier JU8T DROP IN And feel the cool breezes of OUR ELECTRIC FANS Don't forget the place. Mop m Nice way to relieve the Journey of tedlousness, isn't It? Let me tell you more about It Ticket Office, 79 W. Second South R. F. NESLEN, Gonoral Agent, 8alt Lake City. "Those Lite Men Commecial Electrical Co. STAN S. STEVENS, Mgr. 8t J Going East? IT WILL PAY YOU TO 8ECURE COMPLETE INFOR- MATION ABOUT THE NEW 8ERVICE ' CAKES LIKE MOTHER MADE bread, pies and all sorts of pastry as well are not hard of attainment ' If Riverdele or Phoenix flour Is the chief Why not, then, get the Ingredient. Riverdale or Phoenix brand of flour? If your groceryman hasn't It, hell get gone. The blood becomes more thin If you Insist on it and watery, bringing on faint sick It quickly enough use Riverdale or and Ask for, buy spells with loss of memory and atnbl tlon. There is a remedy for all this Phoenix flour. that acts in the right way. It is call ELEVATOR CO. ed Dr. Gunn's Blood and Nerve Tonic, OGDEN MILLING 75c. sold for all per Is and by druggists box. or I boxes for 12. It turns the food you eat into rich, red blood, mak YOULL ALWAYS FIND an and flesh ap creating strength, lng Corn-Fe- d petite because the system demands sustenance. For sale by Wallace Drug or any other Rood kind at company, Ogden, Utah. Union Pacific and Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Line IN REGARD TO RATE8, STOP-OVERINFORMATION ETC WILL BE GLADLY FURNISHED. S, C. S. WILLIAMS, 106 West Second South St., Commercial Agent, Salt Lake City, Utah . 4 Eastern Beef BALLARD & RINCKER. Journal Want ads bring you resulta Satisfactory Tailoring at Satisfactory PrictsTl 7 That la oxsctly wkr we doltha Tailoring Busineii of Ogden. Anderson 282 Twenty-Fift- h Slrwwt, Ogdan, VtnK.1 |