o EVENING .LEDGER PHILADEiLHIA; TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 1ft 14. L-'-l T - Etnlli i VuTBIK. ' ?b.: he jSl. W &'fil! is SfrF It E'R two WHAT EVERY WOMAN WANTS TO KNOW-THINGS THAT INTEREST MAID AND MATRON ELLEN ADAIR SEES STEERAGE FOLKS IN MERRY DANCES Enjoys Her Days Aboard Boat Watching Happy Homeseekers as They While Away the Time. VIII. Tho dnys flew by on the Atlantic liner, seven lit nil. I think those quiet dnys ncro happy ones. Among the eteeWBe crowd were kindly folk. The Irish were the merriest of all. ami nothing damped their gay enthusiasm. They tltinccd their native dances on tho deck untiring, unfatlguod. A concertina, aadly out of tunc, wns their sole or chestra. I loved to watch the pretty colleens dance, shawls round their heads, and Irish eyes aglow. Each bos soon led his colleen to the floor, ami In clogged feet they tripped the happiest measures. But In the dnnco Gallclans took the palm. Strangely enough, tho men would danca together, scorning a woman part ner. I have never seen more graceful dancers than these men, Oallclan and Italian. The rhythm of the music spurred their feet, and lent Imagination to their dance. Strange cries they some times gave, but musical the gondoliers of Venice give the same when piloting quiet gondolas along. I almost heard the splashing of tho oars In their strange cries, and raw the loggias sparkling In Italian sun. HAPP1 HEARTS OX BOAHD. When the dance was over each single man would seek his girl again, who, too, with the Italian girls hnd danced. To Ecther they would share on orange or a kiss. But when that dreadful con certina whcczlly began once more each man would rush to find his own male partner. Among the fecund class above, who often watched the steerage dance below, I saw the merry, humorous youth who Tiad traveled In my railway carriage down to Southampton. Kach day that boy was with a different girl. Stray Ecraps of conversation floated down to me. for I hail claimed one solitary spot os mine a coll of ropr ocslde tho rail and there I nearly always sat "I think you are a topping girl!" I'd hear him murmur to his oarly-morning partner on the upper deck. "I'm really frightfully keen. ou know you look so lovely In this cold, clear wind! I love a itrong athletic girl the best In fact. Just you!" By afternoon his Early-Morning Girl would disappear. I think she spent long hours In that great swimming pool the "White Star liner carried. So In hr stead would come a. different type. The Boy would place two deck chairs in the sun. I glimpsed a fluffy, pretty face amM3t a cloud of wraps. "I hate the sea!" a petulant voice would exclaim. "I nvcr will get up till after- noon, though momma says I'm lazy.' "You're all a woman ought to be, and that Is simply perfect," cooed the Boy oh, base deceiver! "I hate the strong, athletic type a man likes to protect a Eirl." ILLUSIONS OF THE SEA. The pure ozone of the Atlantic breeze most truly breeds flirtation In Its train. An ocean voyage brings such strange hallucinations, too! Up in the flrst-class set the Married Man, so Jolly In the gay deck-sports, so gallant In his manner toward the girls, has now become an object of commiseration and of pity. He Is unhappily married so the rumor has Jt ".Poor fellow!" says the Prettiest Girl on board. "I feel so sorry for that man' At last night's dance he really hinted that he cared for me and there he's tied up to a wife he cannot love! Poor fellow! It Is so sad and strange!" It did seem strange. For Just a day or two before I saw him almost weeping as he fondly kissed his pretty wife fare well upon Southampton dock. "Good heavens! I hate to think of this beastly voyage without you, Mary'" I had heard him say, with frankly red-rimmed eyes "Drop roe a postcard every day to let me know how all the kiddles are. This four week's trip Is Just a bit too long." Yes, It was strange' Perhaps the sea had given the Prettiest Girl hallucina tions! The voyage drew at length to Its last day. That final morning I rose early and watched till New York Harbor and the great Statue of Liberty appeared I was deeply Impressed by the lovely tatuo with the beautiful strong face and high Imperious arm. She seemed to beckon lonely emigrants onward, onward to peace and prosperity. V, slowly aalled up the North River and the swarming river-craft looked strangely foreign to my English eyes. The landing at New York was a long nd tedious business. Protracted inter views took place with doctors, Immigra tion authorities, customs men. I began to wonder and to doubt if America could really be the land of freedom and of liberty after all. When all formalities had been gone through, and they do not make It easy for a girl to land alone I scanned the faces on that great wide dock. I scanned them for a long long time. No uncle was In sight "The time of a business man is nver really his own." said I to myself In a would-be optimistic spirit, "he will certainly be at the Philadelphia terminus " THE RETURN TRIP. In half an hour my luggage was trans ferred. and I stood awed within the portals of the finest railway station In the world. I thought I muat be back In dear 3alnt Paul's Cathedral once again. No sign of smoke or trains was there, and yet Its name was Pennsylvania Railroad Station. In the hush of Its vast spaces, men and women moved so silently that one scarcely heard a sound. Tho prevalent air was one of method, beauty and a silent quick dispatch. Our English stations would do well to copy this magnificent New York building. Do-n some long steps I went, and s'H&P'r idJiB -ITR'arf, V'PsSx I At&mWM. :-"V ' . 1 I m JPlpllPfepMt:- $ $ , Ik ffomM simmm vs i HB jn IoBnS9pix &- '&.' vi ?SKf?. sSgroagsy sBLSf-v" tSP38fl? BEFORE THE SANDMAN COMES SIX little crayon pencils stood in a row in a little celluloid case on Tommy's desk. Each stod up straight and tall, with its sharpened nose erect in the air. Tommy was very proud of his pen cils and he often sat in front of his desk- and looked at them. "I wonder which one will get worn out first," he thought to himself, and he counted over the colors carefully. "U.l t.-, ,,. ...-Ilr.uj. ntirnlc and blue; of course, they're all very nice, hut somehow red seems to be the nicest I" - . . Tit.,, 1. (... 1 .n ,niti. tiiacra2lltcs mi i so he could color the pictured adver- ?3 ! tiscments in the back. r1 "I think I'll color this picture first, nc sain, as nc loiinu in i ", i i t big antotnobile. Then he looked his pencils over to decide what color It should be. ...... "Of course it will be red," he said, after much thought, and he set to work making the most gorgeous red automobile you ever sawl , To be sure he put green grass ami some yellow daisies at the side of the automobile; he made the road brown and the sky blue, but for all that the picture was red very red. , Then he found a picture of a btg factory. "Maybe I ought to make this brown," said Tommy thoughtfully, SOLDIERS OF TIN FILL YOUNGSTERS' HEARTS WITH JOY AN INCOMPLETED COSTUME WHICH AWAITS A FINAL FITTING FOR ITS LAST TRIUMPHANT STITCH found the trains were waiting there. They looked so different from our English trains, and oh, the size of their tre mendous engines! In a few minutes I was off, and flying through the flat country that lies be tween New York and the city of Phila delphia. The painted wooden houses seemed so strange, like great big toys and Noah's Arks I could not think that they were really farms. I saw such strange new trees, too, and new flowers, and great advertisements flared in the fields. Strange weeds grew in the marshes, towering high, and through the carriage window shone the hottest sun I've ever known. Such heat was new to me, an English girl. I did not like that blazing, burning sun. I wanted a cool shade, and one quiet sleep. But Philadel phia was drawing dote, and that meant friends, and hope, and a nw life. I closed my eyes and pictured happiness. RECIPES FOR THE HOUSEWIFE COUNTER CONFIDENCES LIVER STUFFED. Choose a calf's or sheep's liver. Lard It carefully with little pieces of fat bacon. Prepare a stuffing of breadcrumbs, thyme, parsley, a little pl'ce of lemon rind, 2 ounces of suet, and mix with a little milk. Grease a small baking tin, spread the stufllng In the tin. lay the liver over and bake for three-quarters of an hour. ENGLISH TEA CAKES. Ingredients. pound of flour. 3 ounces A v..,..,. 1 tnfinnnnful baking nowder. 2 ounces of sugar. Rub butter Into flour, add sugar ana Damn, puwuer. mix. iu soft paste with milk, roll and cut into rounds Inch thick. Hak In quick ovui Eaten hot or cold, cut open and butter. LENTIL SOUP. Wash Hi pounds of lentils, peel and ii- .mail nnrmt. 1 nntatoos. '2 onions Slut Ulc ntiii. - - - - - and cut small enough turnip and celery to fill a teacup, trry to onions in a. mue dripping till brown; add the remainder of the vegetables and fry also for a few minutes. Now add the lentils, with 2 quarts of water, or stock made from a marrow bone Simmer for two hours, and then pour all through a sieve. Return to the saucepan, season with salt and pep per, stir In a lltUe dripping or buttr. heat up, and sen with crisply toasted bread. JET TKIMMINGS IN VOCHJE The glitter of Jet Is seen on many of the creations of the season It U riding the wave of popularity and Jet motifs, bands, wide and narrow, and balloons of different cut and slzt trim frocks and blouses Jet buttons In olive and diamond shape are u?d with loops of silk Instead of buttonholes The touch of black that con tributes to the artistic success of some of the moat delicate and ethereal cos tumes Is supplied most delightfully by Jet A Few Points Concerning Present and Future Prices for Cotton Sheets. OP COURSE, it is dllllcult to 'tell what tho future price of cotton will be, but one thing Is certain. It won't be any less and In all probability will be much higher. At flrst thought this see.ms to be a most illogical condition of affairs, for, accord, ing to nil reports. Southern warehouses arc bursting with bales of raw cotton, simply because there Is no European mar ket for this staple. Another fact In con. nectlon with the probable rise In the price of cotton goods Ik that bankers nnd brokers are loaning money to plantation owners and cotton brokers nnd accepting warehouse, re. elpts as collateral. This may be the first time In the history of the cotton trade when wnichousc re- 1 celpts became le?al tendci, bioadly sptaklng. While tho yardage supply of cotton sheeting and pillow case tubing seems to be as limitless as usual, nnd while a broker can ootaln money on warehouse receipts, he will not sell his cotton to manufactuiers and weavers for a lower price than that which he can obtain ordinarily abroad. He suffers no Imme diate loss of Income, and the chances are that If he holds his commodity he will make a goodly prollt later on. Should tho war be settled within a few months' time or peace be declared, pend ing new treaty piospects, then Europe will be hungiy for cotton again. In either event It seemH as though thoe of us who will need to buy sheets and pillowcases fui our spring and summer supply had better take ndvnntage of the present rates, which are normal, and lay In a supply to anticipate a future rise In price When the time comes for replenishing these wholesale stocks, then we shall ace a higher range of price?. A word to the wife Is sufficient. "THE GIRL HEHIND THE COUNTER." Correspondence of general Interest to women readers will be printed on this page. Such correspondence should be addressed to the Woman's Editor, Evening Ledger. Be? Reflection of War on Toy Market No Scarcity in Supply of Playthings of All Kinds. Here's good news for you, boys and girls. Expensive toys, which have been so scarce since the war wa begun, are now to be hrd In abundance, and even If peace Is not dcclnred within five years tTifi nursery will not suffer to any extent. On your doll's piano, your Bled, or that flue drum that you havo been Using for many years you have noticed tho words "Mnde In German-." In fact, on al most nil of your best playthings these words appear. Rut conditions hnvc changed since the European nrmles were assembled, and hereafter on many of your toys will be printed In great, broad letters "Made In America." And, b) the wny, Philadel phia bonsta of the largest toy factory In the United Rtntcs. When commerce between this country and the German empire was discontinued the toy merchants were frantic. Their business depended almost entirely upon Importations. Toys of a certain kind were plentiful enough here, but tho deli cate tin playthings, dolls that make speeches, and all of those things which are typically German wcro not obtain able here. The American toy man la resourceful. He decided that, as far as possible, wliat can't be had from' Germany shall bo mad In the United States. Consequently, many of tho factories are now producing goods that have hitherto been sold only by German firms, Terhaps tho domestic product won't bo quite ns good as tho European, or per haps somo foolish children will be disap pointed by their failure to see, "Mado In Get many" on their playthings, but the average American child will bo ns happy as ever with tils American-made boats, dolts, guns nnd games. To please tho exceptional youngster who won't be content without tho foiclgn klnd3 a slilnp will sail to this country every week bearing n few toys of Euro pean manufacture. The goods will be Khlppcd from tlio German factories to Holla. id or Sweden nnd from tho ports of either of those countries the toys will bt shipped to New York. So there Is no reason to worry about playthings while the troubles of school arc Jurt beginning. Santa Claus' chief assistant, the best known toy man In Philadelphia, said today that of nil things that ho has In Btock tin soldiers arc In greatest demand. While mothers and fathers arc talking of tho terrible times In Europe, It Is only natural that the little ones should be thinking of military matters. Aa a re sult, every boy who Is having a birth day Just now Is anxious for a set of soldiers. They always were a favorite among children, but now they are liked more than ever. Somo make bcllcvo sohllors aio made In America and some In Ger many, nnd It Is hard to tell which brand Is best. The largo toy factory in this city Is now making cannonB that shoot rubber balls. They mako a nolso that Is snld to bo almost as loud as real guns. Automobiles made entirely of wood are now on the American market. They are being sold In Inrgo numbers because whether you kick them or hit them, thtow them In the street or stamp jour Toot on them, they won't break. Airships are as popular as ever. and he tried brown on a corner of the building. But brown was so dull he didn't like it at all, so he decided to color the building red red brick, of course. By the time that was doric the red point was all worn off and Tommy's father had to make a new one. That, of course, made the red pencil shorter, but Tommy didn't care he had his red pictures what did the length of the pencil matter? Over and over, every day the same thing happened! The magazines became full of red colored pictures, for Tommy colored everything from canoes to garbage cans the same gaudy color. And the poor little red pencil grew shorter and shorter, till it was only a tiny stub, barely sticking above the white case. Then one night something happened what do you suppose it was? At the mystic hour of midnight, when you and Tommy were both asleep; at the very hour when all sorts of queer things happen, those crayon pencils began to talk! "Oh, dear, I don't see why nobody likes me," grumbled the brown one; "here I have never even been sharp ened but once I" And he looked very mournful as he aired his grievance! "I wish I wasn't so popular," groaned the red pencil sadly. "I'm nearly worn to death with hard usage." Just then two little mice came snooping 'round to see what they could find to nibble. They heard the red pencil speak, so they hurried up to see what he was like. "Nice soft wood, better try some," said one. "Let's see what's inside," said the other. They nibbled away till the red pen cil was ruined, then they scampered off to the pantry in search of some thing more filling. And how do you suppose poor Tom my felt the next morning when he found his beloved red pencil all ruined? Copyright, 10H, by Clara Jngram Judnon. Tomorrow House Hunting. BurnweJI Coal The test of the fiercest fire you can make won't clinker BURNWELL COAL. That's one par ticular quality that makes this grade both efficient and economical. Sold only by E. J. Cummings J Yards: Main Office, 413 N. 13th St. WC DtUVISJ to3SB3 tWHuClMUk YOUTH AND' AGE THERE'S not a Joy the world can give like that It takes away When the glow of early thought declines In feeling's dull decay; Tls not on youth's smooth cheek the blush alone which fades so fost. But the tender bloom of heart Is gone, era youth Itself be past. Then the few whose spirits float above the wreck of happiness Are driven o'er the shoals of guilt or ocean of excess: Tho magnet of their course Is gone, or only points in vain The shore to which their shivered sail shall never stretch again. Then the mortal coldness of the soul like death Itself comes down: It cannot feel for others woes, it dare not dream Its own That heavy chill has frozen o'er the fountain of our tear3 And though the eye may sparkle still, 'tis where the ice appears. O, could I feel as I havo felt, or be what I have been. Or weep as I could once have wept o'er many a vanished scene; A spring In deserts found seem sweet, all brackish though they be. So midst the withered waste of life, those tears would flow to mel LORD BYHON. George Allen, Inc. 1214 Chestnut Street 1214 Millinery Opening Featuring many Paris Models and our own exclusive designs, developed from imported materials and trimmings in the most desirable autumn colorings. Specials for Wednesday Ribbons 5'inch Dresden Ribbon. Pink and Blue Grounds. Regular 35c yard. Tomorrow, 28c, 5-inch Dresden Ribbon. White Grounds Pink, Blue, Lilac, Satin Kdgc. Special, 30c yard. 6-inch Satin Taffeta. All the leading shades. Special, 40c yd. . Sale of Brushes Five kinds to choose from. 25c to 35c qualities. This week, 18c each. Hand or Nail Scrub Brushes. Regular 50c value, 25c. HAIR BRUSHES Regular 75c value, SOc each. $1.00 to $1.50 value, 75c each. COUNTING MALCOLM S. JOHNSTON. I've had one peppermint, And now I'll eat one more. I wish I only knew, If three conies first or four. For "three," my mother snld, Was all that's good for me. And so I'm wondering. Docs four come first or three? (Copyrlcht. 1914.) J COURTING A SPANISH GIRL PROCEEDS ON ODD UNEsi Nowhere Else In the World is Cn torn Bo Novel. In no other country In the world fl0. the process In coUrtlnB proceed on ,!' unique lines. as In Spain. In no oth country docs love at first sight so f, nucntly lead to marriage. The yJ'. unmarried girl of good social pouihl never walks In tho street Unless acT panled by a chaperon, and It g permissible for any man who Is aUr6,M by her to follow her. Ho muat 'not ,iw abreast of her, nor ought he, on Z first occasion, to speak to her. itav,"' ascertained where she lives, f h(i slncero In his pursuit, ho makes frequj appearances under the window, and "' tlnues to follow her when slio and h chaperon go out. If tho lady Intends to respond, she m presently make an appearance on th. balcony and enter Into conversation whs him. He ma'y oven talk to her Wh she goes out, nnd her chaperon will tura a deaf ear when tho lady coyly throwi replies over her shoulder. In this som. what extraordinary way each discover! the social position of the other, and then. If Independent Inquiries made by parenii and guardians aro quite satisfactory, th, little flirtation from tho balcony pur'suei an uninterrupted course, and the man gradually attains a recognized roslt0 aa uis ntiorcu ono a novlo. For months the bashful couple it linger nt this pleasant stage. But it length the times comes when tho novlo li received Into the girl's home and meeti her parents. He Is, however, never for one moment left alone with her, and an; cvcnlnc In tho Castcllano In Madrid you may see young couples In this stage walk. ItiK out, accompanied by a deaf mut lady! The tram cars In Madrid are con structed with seats for two on one side of tho gangway, and a slnslo seat on the other; tho slnslo ono Is known as the chaperon's. While these pleasant stages are drlftlnj on. cither party Is free to end tho friend, ship, but at last comes tho time whea tho novlo, plucking up all courage, joi through the formal ceremony of nsklng for tho lady's hand. If this Is duly granted, there Is tlu-n an official he trothal. which Is usually followtd by wedding within a fow weeks. J. Franklin Miller 1626Chestnat St. ANDIRONS And Fire Fixtures In every size and style nt prices al ways consistent with good quality. Do You Know This Step? The girl who can dance THE CASTLE POLKA will not be a wall flower The Castle Polka is Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle's latest creation; and it will sweep the country this fall and winter, iust as the ''Hesitation" did last season. Let Mr. and Mrs. Castle teach you in your own home how to dance it. They give you personal lessons in two pages of pictures and text In the October Issue of The Ladies Home Journal You can learn it in an hour or two in your own home, just as if you were in Castle House, where all fashionable New York society will dance it. Fifteen Gents the Copy, of All News Agents Or, $1.50 a Year (12 issues) by Mail, Ordered Through Our Subscription Agents or Direct THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square, Philadelphia Pennsylvania -LJl V1 ' -n L'iriUMi i "" m-m-mtmttimtm " Z