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22 WOMAN'S PAGE. The Fragrance of’ p lmuoon rather glibly, be rather embarrassed if we had to show our ability to differentiate these colors. And the fact really is that Anticipates its Exquisite Flavor /PURE TO A LEAF AND FRESH FROM THE GARDENS Send a postal card a your groeer’s name m to Salada Tea Company, Boston, Mans. address for a free sample THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THE RBCORD O BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. F NEW COLORS. We may use henna and rust and but we might rics to standardize the colors shown cach year this standardization does not go beyond those in the profession. haziness in the use of color terms that you might expect from your mil- liner's newest saleswoman. But it really doesn't matter in the least—at least from the point of view of the chic or beauty of the ciothes. And, the designer .who has a true eye for color is of far more use to us than the one who is glib in the use of color terms. However, there is an interesting bit of psychology in color names that is And often a dressmaker or designer|ghoos away of note will display just the sort "{le‘n(‘rully ‘ma: LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON. “I've been a good wife and mother.” she wails, “why doesn’t he love me any more But he doesn’t love her any more. He loves some one down in the office who files all his correspondence So he doesn’t have a moment's WOITY, irritating visitors, and ces to make his whole work machinery run like a summer often made use of by the writer of ad- | vertisements. The merchant who| knows his customers knows that the have a fondness for interesting sound- ing color names. If vou new fabrics you will do well specific, instead of merely raying the new shades.” 50, a name of picturesque newness. name old and tried and a name that “all A French name or s new but self-explanatory and onc that leaves the reader in a quandary | —that makes a good list of color| names. So the merchant mentions’ brick and orchid that are self-explan- | henna and jade that are old ys. seafoam and old red to! your curiosity with possibly | paradise to leave y It is not a new trick. however the color names of vears were perhaps devised by m ers. merchants and dress stimulate trade. Rather aud was the one who originated puce ared to name a color for u flea ou_guessing. and But it was the audaciousness of the name the quality of the color de it such a long-time ite. London fog was a D name for a once-popular gray. nt of ro- | 1oving MONDAY, MARCEH -1 A Meeting in the Green Forest. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. “Gainst tooth and claw I'll always pit A clever tongue and ready wit. —Reddy Fox. Mrs. Buster Bear was not welcome in the Green Forest. Of this there could be no doubt. When Reddy Fox suggested that a meeting of all the little forest people be called to see what could be done about it, Sammy A “luhy dert you Tove m:, Jike 3:!1 uset o, sweetie ? * ® song. He didu't plan to love her. He hardly knows that he s love her. sut he d nds on he verlast- mu that he ju an’'t help her. And at home his wife cries, and | buys 2 bilue organdie dress becau i he proposed to her when she wore that color, nd cries, and tells the i the are faw-therless now, and henn her hair be- | little is a blonde, | !ing | chard and up to the Old Pasture. Be- tend. It was agreed that the meet- should be at sun-up the next morning at a certain tall pine tree in the Green Forest close by the Laugh- ing Brook. Sammy and Blacky at once started out to carry word of the meeting all through the Green Forest, over the Green Meadows, through the Old Or- fore the day ended cverybody knew of the meeting and what it was: to be for. it doesn’t interest me,” said Danny adow Mouse when he heard of it | ter Bear doesn’t hunt on the n Mcadows and Mrs Buster isn't to, 80 why should I worry rly all the little people living| on the Green Meadows felt the same way. Only Peter Rabbit in the dear Old Briar-patch was interosted. Noth- Jay and Blacky the Crow at once; offered to invite all, the others to at- | 1Ssammy. “AH RECKONS AH JUST AS SOON YO' DIDN'T think T am right,” sald he, “in saying that most of us feel that there is no place for another Bear in the Green Forest. It means more trouble for all of us, “Not for me.” spoke up Sammy Jay. Several other birds agreed with “True,” agreed Reddy. “True enough. | But we who live on the ground feel differently. For all of us it means one more to watch out for. For some WOMAN’S PAGE To Cook Shad Roe. The best way to cook shad roe is to fry it, or it may be cooked as fol- low: cooking butter and flour together, in equal quantities until,a rich brown, then add a pint of cream or milk and salt and pepper. ten minutes. place in a baking dish, pour over thre erate oven. hard-boiled eggs. Make a thick brown sauce by Boil the shad roes the sauce and bake for fourths of an hour in a mod- Garnish with parsley and For years discriminating women have insisted on Nadine Face Powder You will like its soft texture, exquisite tint and fragrance. It adheres throughout the day. Con- stant - applications not At leading toilet counters or by mail, 60c. Send4c. for postage on sample in tint preferred. National Toilet Co., Paris, Tenn, US A. The thought of them puts your appetite on edge! Sweet as nuts! Richly fla- vored—some with the celi- cious tomato sauce for which Heinz is famous! Easy to digest! " OVEN BAKED That's tfie secret of their unbroken jackets and mealy centers, their sweet flavor, ease of digestion, and body- building nutriment. Which kind do you prefer ? HEINZ Baked Beans with Pork and ‘Tomato Sauce HEINZ Baked Pork and Beans (with- out Tomato Sauce) Boston style HEINZ Baked Beans in Tomato Sauce without Meat (Vegetarian) HEINZ Baked Red Kidney Beans One of the 57 Varieties WOMEN! TS FUN Dye Shabby, Faded Skirts, Dresses, Sweaters, Draperies, Each package of “Diamond Dyes contains directions <o simple that | giving it a it is fun for any woman to dia- mond-dye old, faded skirts, waists, | —then Everything, Like New for Few Cents “Diamond perfect dresses, coats, sweaters, stockings, | anteed. draperies, _coverings, everything. | Beware! Poor dye streaks, spots, | cotton, linen, or a mixture. “dyed-look.” Dyes"—no other kind results are guar- fades, and ruins your material by Buy Tell druggist whether your material is wool or silk, or if it is Diamond-Dyes Experienced Advertisers Prefer The Star AND SILVER BROCA ) AT THE SIDE AND HT WITH SHADED GREEN AND PURPLE GRAPES. there are no hard and fast lines to show just where one color begins and somewhat more parties were more of a novelty than they nessed an affected fondnes: Chinese orchard or Cleopatra’'s apple lionized and studio re today. In the davs of Louis XVI that wit- for things pastoral. when artists delichted to|Has a wife merited her husban paint the fair women of the court |exclusive devotion because she think: | Iposed as shepherdesses the like of {of him when she buys her clothes, which never tended sheep in any|and desires to kiss but him alone? Iands, there was a fad for giving pas- | Suppose he just wants to sit alone toral names to colors then in vogue. |and smoke and think out that big “Lively shepherdess” was the color | de nd have a fried egg sandwich name to indicate a fresh apple green, | afterwards, without emotional trim- !which was much admired when|mings. Then isn’t it the higher love I striped with white. to leave him unkissed? As a departure from jade—though it | The wife doesn't think so. He used is still with us—we are turning to|to kiss her once—he doesn’t kiss her | other greens, notably emerald and{now. Sobs. But the little stenog apple green. But the affectation of | goes on filing contracts. Who wins? INCH oF this age is not for things pastoral. would be more to the taste of fash- ions o ftoday that keep eves turned toward the orient. ver with green remains a fa\'nrltel combination. In the frock shown to- day apple green and silver are worked another ends. Despite the efforts of makers of fab. Lfficient IAn Inexpensive Easter Party for i the Child. | The day is past when mothers think | they must go to great expense in or- der to give a party for their children. Since the world war, which taught | women a lesson of economy they will | never forget, the housewife mother | does not feel it necessary to buy game prizes and table decorations; instead, | she makes such things herself. The | prizes for the following games might | all be boxes of homemade candy—ihe | boxes being plain ones covered with | yellow “crepe "paper with pictures of Tabbits and chickens pasted on them. _The party might be started with a jlively game called “Chase the Bunny.” | This is plaved by all the children kneeling on the floor in a ring with | hands on each other's shoulders. One | child is chosen to be “Bunny” and this | child runs around the outside the ring, | then touches one of the kneeling play- | ers, who must rise at once and chase | the Bunny to the “hole” left by his | rising. The player who was touched | must run to the left, while Bunny runs to the right. They must tag each | lou-er as they pass and each must at- | tempt to get to the hole before the | other reaches it. If the Bunny fails { to reach the hole, he is Bunny again: | if not, the other child is Bunny, and the Rame goes on as before. A quieter game might follow—such {as “Pinning the Ear on the Bunny." In playing this each child is blind- folded ‘in turn and given a long paper rabbit's ear with a pin through it. On | the wall hangs a large piece of wrap- | Ping paper with the picture of an ear- i u The Red Nose. An unusual number of complaints | about red noses have come to me lately. Thiy is due mostly, I think, to the season and the weather. If there is any tendency toward a {red nose, it will be much more no- ticeable in the winter than in the summer, because of the cold weather, which affects any one with a poor circulation. One cause of a red nose is poor circulation of the blood. An- other reason why red noses are com- mon at this time of the year is be- | cause we have all been eating rather rich; starchy foods and our blood has | become rather thick. When we get well into the spring and begin living lon the fresh green foods again. the blood will thin and fewer people will {be_troubled with red noses. Many write and ask me whether there i not some lotion that can be used to stop this. I have no particu- | Cleaning a Black Skirt. The woman who goes away oh a vacation Wwearing black clothes has far more trouble in keeping them clean than do the women who wear colors. Her black skirts get dusty, show spots and look seedy because they can't g0 to wash. It might be wise for her to heed the following suggestion, which was given by a clefner, and which takes a little trouble, but the result is sat- isfactory. First, brush the skirt carefully. See that tie whiskbroom is thor- oughly cleaned afterward, or use another one to dip in a cup of strong coffee to which has been added one teaspoon of ammonia. Before applying the whiskbroom shake it quite aclittle so it will not wet the skirt too much. Then brush the fabric quickly. If spots remain—and they usually do—clean them with a small sponge dipped in ammonia, alcohol and water in_equal parts. It is best not to try this mixture on grease spots such as come from the food at the table. Remove these by sponging with salt dissolved in alcohol in the proportion of one to four. When the skirt is dry cover the spots with a woolen cloth which is | dren begin hunting for the flower- | together in a brocade which is drape at the side and caught with shade green and purple less rabbit drawn, or pasted, upon it. The child who can pin his ear nearest the part of the rabbit's- head where the ears are supposed to be wins. Next will come a “Flower Hunt." The hostess has previously cut colored flower-heads from an old seed cata- logue (or has colored plain black-an. white pictures of flowers with cra ons) and has cut each of these blooms in half. These halves are hidden about the room. At a signal, the chil- | halves. The one who finds ¥re great- est number of halves that fit together | perfectly wins. An “Egg Race” follows. The hos- tess has previously colored real har bolled eggs, one for each little guest Each player fs given a spoon and ali are stood at one side of a long room. The game consists in seeing who can bush his egg with the spoon | along the floor to the opposite end of the room. Or the game might be to see which child could push his egg | to the opposite side and then back | again to the starting place, in the shortest time. It will ments. now be time for refresh- Suitable ones are: Ice Cream. ! Small Iced Cakes. Iced Cocoa. The refreshments table might be| decorated with a “Rabbit's Nest” made | of cotton as a centerpiece, and fill d | with homemade-fondant candy in the shape of cggs. A paper rabbit might | stand guard nearby. After the refreshments games such as “Hide th Blindman's Buff” and “Still Pon might be played until 5 o'clock, when the small guests will take their depar- | ure. ordinary Thimble,™ lar faith in the few lotions for this purpose, because the only way to overcome redness of the. nose is to find out its cause and then cure that. | Improved health, improved digestion, good circulation will all be necessary. | but as the immediate local cause for | red nose is congestion of blood in the | veins of the nose, immediate relief will be found by stimulating the cir- culation of the blood 8o as to scatter that congestion. This s done by massaging the. nose from the eyes to the nostrils and then | by tapping it all over with the tips of the fingers. If this is done imme- diately after a facial treatment, it will be more effective if you have held cloths wrung from hot water over the face. To finish the treat- ment, rub the nose with toilet water, toilet vinegar-or even plain vinegar. As these preparations are astrin- gents, they will impwove the complex- fon of the nose and will also help overcome its redness. i Boiled Fresh Salmon, Sew the fish into a coarse cloth or netting and boil twelve minutes to the pound in salted water to which the juice of a couple of lemons has been added. Serve with Hollandaise sauce. Sauce—Beat half a cup of butter until creamy, add the yolks of four eggs and blend with the butter. Then add a tablespoonful and a half of lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of salt and 2 pinch of cayenne pepper. Place the bowl in a pan of boiling water, add a third of a cup of boiling water to thre mixture and cook until it thick- ens, beating it continually. Eggplant Salad. Pecl, slice, salt and press the egg- plant for an hour or more. Drain and cook In bolling water with salt and vinegar until tender, but not soft. Drain and cut in sticks and soak in ice water. Parboil celery sticks the same size and plunge them in the ice water. When cold and crisp drain and i be on the sa fection toward another person, or i it the regulation of that outpouring to serve another's essential need?” We're all very keen on loving, but | we want to love in our own W. HOME ECONOMICS. ABETH KENT. BY MRS. Instinct of Justice. There is no stronger instinct of the human reason than that for justice, none therefore that carries with it more passionate feeling or more important ef- fect upon the character. Rewards and punishments are the inevitable cxperi- ence of every human being, and during the carly vears of his life a child re- celves indelible impressions of the work- ing of human and natural laws ugbn him. Nature deals with him impersonally, with no regard for his feelings, If he| plays with fire, he is burned: if with @i, he s soiled; if he ignores the laws | of zravity, he is bruised. He soon! learns 'to accent nature's dealings, at| least in the more obvious aspects. But his instinet for hu Justice is trained | by mother, father, servant and the other humans around him. No greater re-| sponsibility can come to them than this | of training a child in the ways of human | Justice. ) R i There are two laws of right punish- | ment and reward, one that the child should recognize it as the natural result of his ac the other that it should e plane as the act. 1 To whip a child for an accident is to | produce in him nothing but resentment and the feeling that you take advantage of your superior strength. Find rather | some simple. obvious v of letting him | take the consequences of his a 1f he has broken something of great value to | you. let him feel vour grief rather than your er : it will punish him far more vely, and let him make i in scme way he can und Money rewards for spiritual virtues are degrading; do not pay a child for unselfishness with money or candy. ion. ) ward him with appreci; (Copyright, 1 Re] Things You'll Like to 1 Make. | Eyelet Embroidered Crown. Eyelet Embroidered Hat Crown - While eyelet embroidered frocks | hold sway, make the crown of your | silk hat “evelet embroidered,” too. Cut the silk for the crown and stamp or have stamped a design in.circular forms five inches in diameter to form a band around the crown. If the silk is navy blue or brown, or even gray a lining of henna or orange showing | through your eyelet embroidered | crown makes a stunning chapeau. H FLORA. 1219-21 G St. N.W. " Hemstitching Pecot Edging Plaiting . arrange them on leaves of lettuce in square shape, fill the centers . with mayonnaise, place a spiral or cone of fresh young carrot in the center, dust all with minced chervil and chives slizhtly damp and then press quickly i hot iron. and serve. A spiral cutter may be Lought to use for any vegetable. - Buttons Made o Order e Quick service—modorate prices —work guaranteed. { those living in the Green Forest the |up was Paddy the Beaver. {Man Coyote. “I'm no friend of yours.” { Possum softly. ashes of roses had an elem of us it means harder worl o a mance about it that appealed to the ! i ing could have kept Peter from thatijiving "y want to know howkn:an';e;r: Vietor comen who wore it. Nil to kiss him e mecting. Old Man Coyote and old| jing to try to scare this stranger green dated from a time when ex- % sobs. and has (o have | Granny Fox left the Old Pasture | I, o cavations in Esynt were focussing Yo becausef her ex- | early o be on hand. Several of A‘(mnulzlr !nrvmsv“ There was me | nerves. If that isn’t love|little people of the Old Orchard went (Copyright. 1821, by T. W. Bargess.) { when burnt sienna. ochre and names like to s ample! e ';V]Ill!l‘l'lfnr :(na um;gzu«n;.“ xz.om.umel“{ of colors on a painter’'s palette zaine But what love, anyway? s | didn’ make any differens Popilarity—a time when artists were | merely the Gring of your af-|how many bears chose to live in the To Renovate a Velvet Tam. Green Forest, but sthey didn’t want to miss anything going on. But to coming of Mrs. Bear meant .a-great deal, and the only one who wasnt on hand at the tall pine tree at sun- Paddy preferred to remain in his pond, where Le was safe. Sitting on rocks in the Laughing Brook were Billy Mink, Little Joe Otter and Jerry Muskrat. Granny and Reddy Fox and Old Man Coyote The schoolgirl’s velvet tam-o'-shan- ter has become more or less worn by this time, but can be quickly transformed into an attractive spring tam. First, brush and steam it well, then buy enough soft taffeta to make several yards of strips two inches wide and cut on the bias. Join each strip meatly and firmly, and fringe out the edges. Run a gathering thread through the center and draw sat under the tall pine tree. Chat- terer the Red Squirrel and Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel were up in the tall pine tree. Bobby Coon and Unc' Billy Possum were in another tree close by. So was Prickly Pork the Pordupine. Whitefoot the Wood Mouse pecped out from a hole in a tall dead stump. Peter Rabbit and Jumper the Hare squatted under a pile of brush. Mrs. Grouse, Sammy Jay, Blacky the Crow, Tommy Tit. the Chickadee, Drummer the Wood- pecker and-« lot more of the feath- ered folk =4t about in the trees near enougk to see and hear everything. Even Hootv the Owl was there. Lightfoot the Deer stood in a thicket, a worried look in his big soft eyes. When he was sure that every onme ho was coming was on hand, Reddy Fox spoke. “Friends,” said he. “Don't call me friend,” growled Old “And I'm sure I'm not,” sputtered Mrs. Grouse from her perch in the tall !" barked Jack Squirrel. ‘Ah reckons Ah just as soon yo' didn’t call me tHat” said Unc' Billy Reddy saw at once that he had made a mistake, and he hastily corrected it. “Neighbors,” said he, “you have heard of the coming of this strange Bear to the Green Forest. Some of you have seen her, 5o it isn’t necessary for any one to take just my word for it that up to form a ruche. Start in the center of the tam crown and sew the rughe on round and round until the edge of the crown is reached. and then tuck the end of the ruche under the preceding row. The sides and brim of the tam need not be covered. To calculate the amount of .material required. allow a strip of three vards in length to make one yard of ruching and, remembering that its width will when fringed be about one and three-fourths inches, measure how many circles will cover the crown. Creamed Eggs and Pimentos. For six hard-boiled eggs cut in slices allow one cupful of white sauce. one Spanish pepper chopped. one slice of chopped onion. one tabiespoonful of chopped celery leaves or parsiey. one-half a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pepper. Add\the chopped par- sley, onion, pimento and seasoningzs to the white sauce. and finally lay in very carefully the slices of hard- boiled eggs. Cook until the ingredients are thoroughly heated and serve on toast or toasted crackers. Young Turnips Fried. Sweet turnips, when they are. young and tender. may be pared and cut, crosswise in quarter-inch slices. Lay she is living here.” “It is a good thing it isn’t necessary. 1. for one, wouldn't -take. your word ‘or anything.” snickered Chatterer the Red Squirrel. - Reddy pretended not to hear. “I openings—just to sce what for you, wouldn’t you? of spring. are delightful variants of the the mode that have made a success in Paris. mannequins have up their little short sleeves ‘The next best. thing to do is to buy this Early Paris Openiggs Number of Vogue. In it is all the last breathless news from Paris . . . models from Poiret, Lan Dceuillet, Lucile, Worth, Molyneux and other great houses—60 designs’in all, the first conclusive examples of the fashions Besides these froeks, suits, and wraps, there them in ice-cold water for half an hour. Cook until tender in boiling unsalted water. Drain and dry on a cloth and before they are quite cold sprinkle with pepper and salt, cover with flour and fry. : Early Paris Openings If you were in Paris now, you'd go to the surprises the turn of her pl of Spain to her 3 the groom! accessories of up yours with Have you seen, for instance, how with a le wrist the Parisienne has adapted the fringed and embroidered shawls ality? And have you scen the lace capes and - - the crépe capes and the capes that are every- | thing except what we're used to? They, and other quaint, whimsical, and charming i things are in this Vogue. Of course this is the Brides’ Number, too. And there isn’t a thing of interest about a wedding that isn’t in this Vogue—except Paris—this very minute!—is making up its mind about fashions. P PENINGS number of The * smart fabric glove Durable as well 23 Dainty Made in the USA for men women & children I¥sa OWNES that’s all you need to know about a Glove. W hether vou'll use the simple mode as Lanvin uses it here, and go in for bright. wool embroidery and fringe or wear a black bow at the col- lar of your bell-sleeved coat, or whether you'll follow some other Paris lead that'’s simple in a different way is a matter that you can’t decide until you've seem this Fogue © Vogue own sophisticated person- Make this EARLY PARIS VOGUE Condé Nast, Publisher Edna Woolman Chase, Editor Heyworth Campbell, Art Director On Salée Now! AtAll News Stands!