Lemon Jelly.

Soak one-fourth box of gelatin in cold water. Pour over it, stirring meanwhile, enough boiling water to actually dissolve it, and no more; add about one-half cup of sugar, one-fourth cup of lemon juice, a speck of salt, and enough ice-water to make a pint in all. Strain and cool.

Orange Jelly

Is made like lemon jelly, but a larger proportion of juice is necessary, as orange is less potent than lemon.

Macedoine Of Fruit.

Use either lemon or orange jelly and strain it into a pitcher. Set a mold in a pan of crushed ice and salt, pour in a half inch layer of jelly, and let it harden. Then arrange over it a garnish of different fruits, nuts, etc., and pour over a little more jelly without disturbing the pattern, and let that harden. Proceed thus until the dish is full.

Chartreuse Of Fruit.

Line a mold with jelly by first letting a layer harden in the bottom, then gently place a smaller mold on that, and fill the space between the sides with liquid jelly. When hard fill the center mold with warm (not hot) water, and in a minute the mold can be pulled out without disturbing the jelly. Color the remainder of the jelly pink, or beat it until full of bubbles, and mix with any fruit cut into bits. Fill the lined mold with this mixture, and chill.

Snow Pudding.

This consists of a lemon or orange jelly with which the whites of eggs are beaten, while the yolks are made into a soft custard to serve as sauce.

Coffee Cream.

With an egg whip beat one cup of heavy cream until it begins to thicken, then gradually beat in a spoonful at a time of slightly thickened coffee jelly, using one pint in all. The coffee jelly may be made like a lemon jelly from fresh or left-over coffee. Less sugar is needed than with the lemon juice.

Peach Bavarian Cream.

Select six or eight of the best half peaches from a can and put in cups. Rub the remainder of the peach and juice through a strainer and make into a jelly, adding a little lemon juice and more sugar. Beat one cup of heavy cream stiff and combine with a pint of the jelly, and fill the cups where the peaches are.

When turned out garnish with whipped cream and cubes of any peach jelly remaining, which may be colored pink if desired.

Use Canned Cherries In The Same Way.

Quaking Pudding.

Make a soft custard with one pint of milk, the yolks of two or three eggs, and one-fourth cup of sugar, or one cup of custard and one cup of scalded cream may be combined. When taken from the fire dissolve in it one-fourth box of gelatin softened in cold water. Strain, flavor, and cool. This may be served with whipped cream, or fruit or chocolate sauce.

Crumbs of stale cake may be arranged in a mold and such a cream poured over them, and the whole left to chill.