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FE ATURES. Yellow and Green Easter Luncheon YDIA LE F favorite form o entertatnment. . There typical motifs that lend them ster many admirably to table decorations and to viands also, and Spriz.g flow. are a feature of the season. Giver hese delightful ac n be most artl nd ous, dainty and pictorial. fs no color scheme more ap £ or appropriate than and green. food de WATER = LILY FORMS THE THE BEASTER EN MAIN LILY SURPR the and rs of sunshine and the green of verdure that assumes delicate beautiful hues when it first appe in the Spring. Two other pleasin color schemes are pink and green and violet and gree Any of these schemes may be separated from the others, as, for instance, yellow, pink, BEDTIME STORIES Drumming Without Drum. When once you set yourself to learn Surprises wait at every turn. \ —Peter Rabbit! “All my life I have believed that Thunderer the Grouse drums by beating a hollow log with his wings," muttered Peter Rabbit to himself he sat in the dear Old Briar Patch thinking over what he had seen in the Green Forest the day before. “I was told that when I was a little fellow and until yesterday ‘I never once doubted it. But that log Thunderer was drumming on. yester- day isn't hollow, and because it isn't APPEARED A FEW MINUTES. with moss might pound it with his tiey were broken with- noise worth mention- the always do his of course, a g to do with that Thun- log, but n't I suppose he hollow and is covered Thunderer wings until out making a ing. Cousin Jumper Thunderer doesn’t drumming on a log. log doesn’t have anyth the noise supposed derer always use Jumper says he doe doesn’t.” Just then Peter's long ears picked up a faint, long, low rumble like tant thunder. It came from the Green Forest. It was the drumming of Thunderer. Peter looked around cautiously to make sure that little Mrs, Peter wasn't about. Then he started for the Green Forest, iip perty-lipperty-lip. His white pow- derpuff of a tail bobbed up, down. up, down, as he scampered as fast| him. “orest those long legs could tak When he reached the Green he sat up waited with h ears wide open. He was listening. Presently he heard that long thunder oll and once more started on. At st he was so near the drummer t he moved very slowly and care- fully. He wanted to see without being seen He W fearful that should Thunderer spect that he was being watched he would become shy ané refuse to drum Potsz was looking for a log. He expoctea to find Thunderer on a 1og. Bus when at last he saw Thunderer the latter wa standing on a big rick and there was no log in sight. “His drumming log must be behind that rock and he has jumped up there for look-around,” ~ thought FPeter. W he goes back to that 1og to drum I'l peep around that rock and ®atch him.” Peter's thoughts were interrupted the boom-boom of the beginning of that thunder roll that had brought him over there, and it was so lond that at first he was startle He wondered if, without realizing it, he 1 turned his head and Thunderer had gone back to hfg drumming log. But he hadun't. 'Thers was Thunderer t.w Grouse with. s neck stretched nigh, his handsome black ruff spread out and his wings'- well, his wings were moving so fast that Peter couldn't really see them. was drumming and he was doing it right there on that rock before Peter's eyes. What was more. that as th by drumming was just as Joud and just. s clear as ever Peter had heard it trom an old log. When the long roll ‘ended. Thun derer appeared to listen for a few minutes. Then he spread his stout wings and whirred away over the treetops, leaving Peter to scratch first one long ear with a long hind foot and then the other long ear with the other long hind foot Teter's are ories, a the vellow The yellow is descriptive FOR Hare says it long Thunderer { BARON WALKER. ¢ violet, green, but are especially good. -| For the centerpiece a potted plar with flowers in the correct color fo -| the scheme is satistylng. 1f a Jac n | Horner Pie i nted, have the flowe pot covered with green crepe pape |and filled with favors. Stick cut flow ers and foliage (n the crevices be -| tween the packages until they are en- { tirely concealed. Ilave the ribbons | that go to the places in the same color as the flower: Or the ribbons be omitted and streamers of smilax or other trailing green be used instead. The favors should, be wee chickens, burnics, miniaturé potted plants, ducks, Lily Luncheom Menu. (Developed in yellow and green and white) Cup Canapes Lily en Surprise Stuffed Baked Potatoes Fresh Green Peas Curled Celery Sticks ster Lily Salad Horseradish Cracker Sandwiches Calla Lily Ice Cream Flower Cakes Bonbons Cofree the combinatio: ete. Lily Water Lily Cup Camapes. with a paste made with highly sea- soned minced ham, cross with wisps of green pepetr. Strip the red from radishes and scoop out the center. Gash the edges to resemble petals and put a few drops of vellow mayon- naise in the hearts of the flowers. Put one upright in the center of each prepared circle of toast. Water Lily En Surprise. Fill shallow paper cups with creamed chicken. Sprinkle well with finely minced fresh green parsley Shell and cut hacd boiled eggs length. wise and remove the yolks. Cut the whites into petal-shaped pieces. Mash and season the egg yolks. Put in center of filled cups and arrange the petals to radiate from the yellow centers. Serve hot on individual plates. Cut the edge of a slice of pineapple to shape it like petals. Lay on crisp lettuce leaves. Fill the hole in pine- apple with cheese mayonnaise, made by mixing cream cheese with mayon- naise in equal proportions. Horseradish Crackers. Spread horseradish mixed with mayonnaise between toasted crackers such as can be bought from any | grocer. The mayonnaise supplements that in the salad and makes these sandwiches particularly good accom- | paniments. Calla Lily Cream. Any caterer will make nto the shape of calla lilies. An at- tractive way to serve the lilies is to alternate yellow and white ones. They will have leaves molded of green ice cream under each. If these molds are a bit too expensive the housewife can put a slice of pistachio ice cream on a serving plate and on top of it a thin ring of vanilla ice cream, filling the hollow with yellow whipped cream. Use a doughnut cutter to cut the vanilla rings BY THORNTON ¥. BURGESS ideas were more upset than ever. He found out that Thunderer didn't have to have a hollow log on which to drum and now that he didn't have to have a log at all. “He drums ju as well on a rock as on a log. muttered Peter. All that day he spent Thunderer whenever he | found by his drumming. And so it was that once Peter fouWd him drumming on neither log nor rock, but on the ground, and his drumming was just as good as ever Peter heard it. watching was to be Cut bread into small rounds. Spread | ice cream | | Misti, THE EVENING Ra_mble BY RIPLEY. Tie FuSlyAMA of the SBUTH AMERCA e AND Twenty-First Day. AREQUIPA. Peru, February Each night as the sun sinks dowr the ‘Pacific it sends its last long r of light up through the Valley of the Rio Chili and gently bathes oriental old Arequipa in gorgeous glow, then oftly places a golden kiss on the brow of El Mistl, towering 19,000 feet behind, and quickly fades away. Little wonder Pizarro and his coura- geous crew, struggling up the Andes on their way to the land of the Incas, stopped at this very spot in the gold- en light of this fading sun and said: *Ari, quepay! Meaning: “Let us stay awhile.” I wish 1 could. I like Arequipa with its hot days and cold nigits, its old Spanish buildings with tinted- walls of green, blue, and yellow .in~ closing delightful little patios, its long narrow streets with open sew- ers, its sleepy plazas, its ancient churches, majestic mountains—and Quinta Bates. Quinta Bates is almost as famous as El Misti, and more popular! The beaufiful home of Mrs. Bates will al- ways remain evergreen in the mem- ories of all South American travelers. It is not a boarding-house or.a hotel—but a home! And there is no place like home—when you are away from it. Mrs. Bates will mother you and call you *“Sonn: and Jesus Maria, the servant, will bring you holy water from the Jesus Springs | little | Jack Pedestrian, which is still going | nearby, or, if you prefer, a strong here; you will find good food to eat; good friends to talk with— and then there is Consuelo. Consuelo is Mrs. Bates' eighteen- year-old niece. She is shy and beau~ tiful. She is chic and charming. When she speaks Spanish it is like a rippling brook, and her English is sweet melody. She is modest and un- spoiled. I must take that ferrocarrd again and somehow get around those threé towering sentinels of Arequipa—El 18,967 feet high; Chachani, 19,- feet, and Dichu-Pichu, 17,800 feet, —all glistening with their snowy caps in_the moonlight. Beyond lies Inca’ land, and I am going there. A I went up to the roof garden) with Consuelo. El Misti is. never. :more beautiful than by the light of an Arequipa moon. Misti is the hz- vama of South America—or maybe 1 should say that Fujiyama is e El Misti of Japan. e But since you asked me—aind bkt cause I have seen both—I must give the prize to Fujivama. That is what I told Consuelo also—and L.neyer could He to-her. And I am a-pretty good liar, o, by the way. But there is honor and beauty enough for béth. El Misti, rising sheer and clean to the moonlit skies, has been described For 40 years I have searched the ||/ world for the best beauty helps in existence. I spent nine years in France. And countless experts elsewhere have given me their | best. Those helps made me a famous beauty. They have retained my youth and beauty. The thousands who see me daily on the stage marvel at my bloom | Now the best I found is placed at ||l every woman's call. Toilet counters ||l everywhere supply them. And I | gladly send to all who ask a sample |of any for test. I urge every girl and woman to try, at my cost, the matchless helps I found. My rosy bloom 1 found in France a liquid cleans- |er, used by famous beauties there. ! It contains no animal, no vegetable fat. It cannot assimilate in any way with thelskin. It simply cleans to the depths, then departs. I call this product my Facial Youth. One use will give you a new con- ception of what a clean skin means. T use a super-cream called my Youth Cream. It contains a dozen | ingredients which experts have ad- | vised for me. These include prod- | ucts of both lemon and strawberr. Also the best that science knows to !|| foster, feed. and protect the skin, {|[A test of Youth Cream will amaze {and delight you. White Youth Clay Clay is the greatest holp that wo-| men can empicy. But not the crude) and muddy clays so many have ap-| i I use a clay which is the| final result of 20 vears of scientific| It is white, refined and ' Free to Any Woman i My youth and beauty helps By Edna Wallace Hopper dainty. And it combines many helps besides clay, 1 call it my White Youth Clay. It purges the skin of all that clogs and mars it, the causes of black- heads and blemishes. It combdts all lines and wrinkles. It causes a rosy after-glow by bringing the blood to the skin. Many women seem to drop ten years in oné ap- plication. No girl or woman can look her best without the use of clay. My envied hair My hair is thick, lustrous and Jux- uriant. The thousands who see me daily on the stage wonder at its glory. I have never haa falling hair or dandruff, never a touch of gray. In fact, my hair is finer far than 40 years ago. This I owe to my Hair Youth. It combines many helps in one. I apply it directly to the scalp with an eye-dropper. There it com- bats all that stifies the hair roots It stimulates and tones. I never met a woman who found anything to bring comparable résults. I wish all women who love beautiful hair would learn what Hair Youth does. All druggists and toflet counters now supply Edna Wallace Hopper's beauty aids exactly as I use them. Mail this coupon for a sample of any, stating which you want. My Beauty Book will come with it If the sample delights you, get my prod- ucts at your store Clip coupon now. Your Choice Free Mail to Edna Wallace Hopper 917 536 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Name Address ........... —Advertisement. | PuINTA BATES STAR, WASHINGTON, Around South Americ; Re' AREpUIA by experts. Anything beautiful they may have sald about it is true I can only second their emotions. Beyond lies the Sky World, and the City of the Sun. Nothing less would. take me away from Arequipa 80 soon. Nothing but to see the Children of the Sun, who (so they believed) were | the chosen people of the great lumi- nary and parent of mankind, who in his compassion propagated them by sending to earth a celestial pair, Man- co and Mama—brother and sister, and at the same time husband and wife. Honeycomb Pudding. Mix together one cupful of sugar, one eupful of flour and one cupful of molasses. Melt lukewarm one-half a cupful of butter in one-half a cupful of milk and add one-half a teaspoon- ful of soda. Combine the mixtures and beat thoroughly, then add four eggs well beaten. Turn into a but- tered baking dish and bake in a mod- erate oven. Serve with creamy sauce made as follows: Beat the white of one egg until stiff and add three- fourths cupful of sugar gradually, while beating constantly, then add about two tablespoonfuls of milk and the yolk of the egg beaten until thick and lemon-colored. Add three- fourths cupful of heavy cream beaten stiff. Fillet of Halibut. Halibut, one and one-half pounds in slice; lemon juice, two teaspoon- fuls; salt, one-fourth teaspoonful; melted butter or margarine, one- fourth cupful; pepper, one-eighth teaspoonful; onion juice, few drops. Cut the fish into fillets; combine the seasoning and melted butter. Dip each fillet separately in the seasoned butter and fasten with a toothpick. Dredge with flour and place in a baking pan. Bake in a hot oven about 15 minutes. Take out skewers and arrange the slices on the serving dish. Garnish with hard- boiled egg rsolks and serve with tomato sauce. ——— D. WEDNESDAY, Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Oranges Rolled Oats with Cream Buckwheat Cakes Bacon Curls Graham Muflins Coffeo LUNCHEON. Fish Hash Potato Cakes Rolls Lemon Cakes Tea DINNER. Creamed Halibut otatoes String Beans Fruit Salad Crackers Mashed Cheese Coffee BUCKWHEAT CAKES. Two cups buckwheat flour and one-half yeast cake which has been dissolved in lukewarm water. Make a batter with rm water and set to rise over night. In the morning put in a little salt and two-thirds teaspoon of soda dissolved in a few drops of warm water. Stir in well and your cakes are ready to cook. Be careful not to make your batter too thin. FISH HASH. Place a pound of salt fish in a dish on the second cover of the stove, with cold water to cover. After it soaks a while, change the water and let it steam, but not boil. About six _or seven boiled potatoes. Chop all together and fry in pork fat till brown. Moisten a little with milk. FRUIT SALAD. Peel and cut two large or- anges into pleces, add one cup ehredded pineapple, half pound Malaga grapes from which the ekins and sceds have been re- moved, and half pound marsh- mallow cut into quarters. Sweeten to taste, place in nests of lettuce leaves and crown with boiled dressing mixed with an equal quantity of whipped cream. Firearms are important accessories of moving picture production, and one studio boasts 1,200 rifles and 400 pis- tols and revolvers, Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. APRIL WOMAN’S The_ Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, ) 8, 1925, mas R AR B Alw i - dEdEE & HHHER SNEN Across Steps. Cola Ballads Not many Negative Floor cover Prefix meaning down Note of scale Around. Pleasant (rare) Hurried. Revolution (abbr.). Allow. Indefinite article. Worth. . Exclamation. Vegetable. Membranous pouch Noise. Different. Preposition Name of severdl European To change Liquid measure View. Deed. On condition that Girl's name. Manganese (abbr.) Conducted. Famous American writer To grow weary. Jugs. Resting places Fire extinguishers loaded with the! carbon-dioxide gas used at every soda | fountain to carbonate soda water are | being employed to fight switchboard fires and fires on oil tankers other ships, because the nates water damage and i gas climi- (pla.) Down Desert dwellers To prohibit. Preposition. To walk on. Intelligence. Spanish_definite article Born (French). Substance supposed all space, Comparative sufx People. Coarse cloth mad Kicks (foot ball) Sin Lubricate. onsume imble Iven Harvests. to pervade " Jhe WeddingVeil of the uJ My Neighbor Says: In order to Keepgsilver that is not in constant use in a good condition, fill a paper with al- ternate layers of forks, spoons and other objects and common flour that is pecfectly dry. If the silver is bright and dry when you put it away it may be used at any time without be- ing cleaned for a year or two. After this time the flour should be changed or ths flour dried. This plan saves a great deal of cleaning. Hang two bags in the laun- dry, one for clothespins and the other for the clothesline. Thus both are kept clean and ready for immediate In making a meringue for lemon pie, when it is all read to put om stir in two table- spoonfuls of boiling water and the meringue will not run. To each egg white use two heap- ing tablespoonfuls of lated sugar, one of water and one-half teaspoonful of vanilla. All wooden washtubs, when ! should e about two inches of water in them. This pre- vents them from becoming too dry and the wood from shrink- ing so that they leak To pre new pinching, a cloth mo in hot water actoss the place where the pressure i= feit most changing the cloth as soon as it becomes cool. This will make the leather shape itself to the foot. PAGE. use. buckets not and se. shoes Snowballs. Cream one-half a cupful of butie or substitute, add one cupful of suga: gradually, one-half & cupful of milk and two and one-fagrth cupfuls of flour-mixed and sifted with one-half a teaspoonful of salt and three and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking pow- der. Then add the whites of fou eggs beaten stiff. Steam for thirty- five minutes in buftered cups. Serve with quince marmalade or preserved strawber: After You Have Used "SALADA TE A you have a standard by which to judge other teas. teathan SALADA in the world. -] No finer 7108S$ p\ospz'glz'osz' § great grafldtkéfliér . —a bit of rare old lace so delicate and beautiful, and so cherished by this Italian Princess she dare not trust it to any other cleansing “Ox~E of my choicest possessions is my great grandmother’s wedding veil of old blonde. It requires the ‘most delicate treatment. Of course there is nothing better than Lux to clean it with. I can say after using Lux that it deserves my warmest approval.” Princess Giambatistta Rospigliost - For the whole laundry now —like your fine things all your cottons and. linens—your hands, too—repay this care CrotrEs and house linens are so nice nowadays and cost so much ing house dresses of yours, the children’s little gingham frocks, —you cannot afford to trust yours to ordinary laundry soap! Into sparkling, magically cleansing Lux suds they must go! All your things—the whole family laundry! Gaily you swirl them about i those familiar, bubbling suds, so gentle on your clothes, so kind to your hands! And when the laundry is done and you tuck away those becom- No more in-the-dishpan hands Is it any wonder that sift a few familiar Lux fi Just about one teaspoonful? Now you wouldn’t dream of washing dishes any other way. Lux keeps your hands so soft and white and smooth. Jne day you curiously akes into your dishpan? It actually makes the disagreeable task of washing dishesa much more pleasant one! your nice house linens—you are delighted to see such fresh un- faded colors, such snowy linens. Lux always works such wonders. All your things last much Jong- ernow! Fabrics do not wear thin so soon or colors fade. Such a little Lux is needed too. Just a few delicate white flakes foam into bounteous cleansingsuds. It’s really an economy to use it for the whole laundry! Package, too