COUPEE DOE i ONEOF MRS. BUCKLY’S} BOARDERS | 5 CEEOOCOIERERNEODEOEERE® oO (© by D, J. Walsh.) HEN old Doctor Buckly died he left a wife who was all- ing and whom he had mar- ried late in life and a daungh- ter, Madge, who was twenty and just out of high school. He also left a big, rambling house set In fair-sized grounds and several books full of ac counts which would hardly pay for the trouble they would take to try to collect. His last sickness and death used up nearly all the ready money there had been, and as Mrs. Buckly, who was wont to defer to her hus- band in everything, was not much of an asset for a young girl to lean on, poor Madge found herself facing a situation which was almost appalling. OO whenever she found herself just on the point of giving up she would look at her delicate little mother and gather fresh courage. Surely she, a great girl of twenty, ought to be able to wrest a living for out of a world which hitherto had only turned its friendly side to her. For days two finally decided to keep boarders. The following week a neat appear- ing and well-worded little notice ap- peared In the weekly Tattler, an- nouncing that in one week Mrs. Imo- gene Buckly would open her home to a few paying guests. Rates might be had on making personal application at the Buckly home evenings. Needless to say, a house so attrac- tively and conveniently situated as the old Buckly house was to the business section of the town was soon booked to its fullest capacity. And such a cleaning and arranging as went on the few days before the house was opened! Everything was beaten, dusted and scrubbed until not an atom of dust could be found in the whole place. Madge was busy supervising the cleaning, smudges of dirt appeared on her pretty nose and great callouses burned on her hands, which hitherto had never done any- thing mere arduous than play golf or wield a tennis racket. Needless to say, Mrs. Buckly spent the greater part of her time sitting in her room weakly bemoaning the past glory of her fallen estate. Yet loyalty to her brave little daughter prevented one word passing her lips to anyone save Madge. A month later the household had quite fallen into a dally routine which might have run smoothly If it had not, been for the little daily differ- ences and jealousies which were sure to arise between some of the boarders. There was Miss Pitkin, for instance, who taught school and who had, In quite crabbed in. her disposition. watched the other boarders Madge to see whether Madge or her mother showed any favoritism. If, instance, Mrs. Jedkins, who sat on Pitkin's right, seemed to have been helped to a little better portion of roast or chicken than she had, or if Miss Clawsen, who was head of spock at Wooley's department store, mite more whipped cream on piece of shortcake Madge was accused of partiality. And Miss Pitkin would sulk. At times Madge found the wom- en quite difficult to manage. Always some one complaining of lack of towels or that certaln ones had held the bathrooms longer than the stipu- lated twenty minutes which was al lotted to each boarder for the morn. ing bath. Madge grew quite distracted at times when she was commanded to be on three floors at once, but she al- ways sighed with satisfaction when the weekly balance was struck and she saw she was somewhat ahead financially. The men she found were more rea- sonable, They almost never com plained. They were seldom in the house longer than to eat their meals and sleep. Madge was several weeks learning about her man boarders, find then caught only bits of what was passing between the women, who big parlor. Thus matters went on for weeks until one day a plainly dressed, little, old woman sought board at the “Buckly,” as Madge had named her boarding house, The little old woman came beautifully recommended by a former boarder as to character, but nothing was said as to her circum- gtances. She took the best room .n the house, which happened to be va- cant, and settled herself to be com- fortable. She was no trouble at all, she did not mix with the other board ers save to pass friendly greetings, and she even cared for her room ex cept for the weekly cleaning. Madge found her quite refreshing and soon tearned to love her dearly. And as for Mra. Buckly and Mrs. Herron, as the little old lady, called herself, they struck up a friendship which was very agreeable to both Madge and her mother, who found little enjoyment in the other boarders’ society. It also gave Madge more time to attend: to her duties, as she felt more free to ive her mother with their new Yo Before the coming of Mrs. Herron, Mrs. Buckly, who was deli. cate and could only attend to the ‘mending and repairing, kept much to her room, and oftentimes, in conge quence, found hersell very lonely, One day Mrs. Herron called Madge to her room and told her that she had just recelved a letter from her nephew, Tom West, who had been In South America for his health and who was now entirely recovered. He was coming home and had taken a fine situation in Elmhurst, She desired that he might board at the Buckly with her and wished Madge to ar- range to take him. At first Madge thought it would be Impossible, but finally made the necessary arrange ments, which would permit Mrs. Her- ron to have her wish, Madge met Tom West at dinner the night he came. He was a fine young fellow with dark eves and hair, and a face so honest that one instinctively felt drawn to him. He was most cour- teous to all the boarders and most at- tentive to his aunt, but as far as Madge was concerned, she might just as well have been a stick for ali the notice he paid her. The rest of the boarders soon absorbed him, the wom- en hung on his every word, when he related incident taining to his recent travels. Miss Pitkin ceased to watch plates of the other boarders and kept her eyes fastened In adoration on the of Tom West. This went on for several when one day Mrs. Herron ill. It happened to be a there was much sickness impossible to get a nurse a notice, There Madge to do but just Ider added burden and assist Tom West In caring for his aunt. This, of course, threw them much together, and al though Tom seemed grateful for all that Madge was doipg for his aunt, he still maintained a cool until one morning as Madge Mrs. Herron's room bearing a upon which was placed a breakfast for the Invalid, who now well on the way to recovery, the tray slipped out of her tired especially some pers weeks, time and it at so sl was shou tray A few opened her moments later when close to hers. darling,” he was saying and over. “You have worn out with many duties and I can never, never forgive myself, Surprise and joy brought the color swiftly back to Madge's white Tom West cared for her! she hidden the secret herself that she loved her mother had not been aware the struggle Madge was to kill a love which she was sure most untimely. Tom cared for And his aunt did not Madge could see that from woman's smile, bending “My 80 almost him that even disapprove. the were way moon. pretty little which quietly married and on South for an extended Madge looked very happy and in her dark traveling suit close fitting hat. As the turned to her husband and sald: “Now, Tom, you sald as soon as we were on board the train you secret to tell me. Please tell me “Well, my dear,” Tom said, an adoring look, “I you will agree with pleasant one. First just a poor clerk, And next while we are away Aunt Abbey Her- ron and your mother are going clear out all the boarders and reno vate a1 | refurnish the now.” think of all, 1 am not til everything Is spic and span. all agreed that you have enough to deserve a fine rest.” jut, Tom,” Madge said in zled little voice, me so coolly if, as you me at first sight?” fair to you,” said Tom “But honey, 1 am a rich and my Aunt earnistly. Abbey has oodles me and not my money. own living long enough to be sure that I had brains enough fo take care of what 1 had. like girls—and I didn’t mtil 1 met ness.” And so after, they Negro Waiters Given Credit for Cake-Walk The cakewalk was probably the first negro dance destined to enjoy large popularity. Its inception Is ac” credited to the negro waiters of a period now a part of history; waiters who, at large barbecues that were given in the South, balanced huge trays to the accompaniment of rhyth- mic steps, Always, peoples—from the ancient Egyptians who performed In credible feats of moving enormous stones through synchronized move ment of the galley-siaves who faced storms with the persistent chorusing of a “Yo-heave-ho ["—all peoples, con fronted with work to do, have ap- proached their tasks with a respon. giveness to co-ordination—a dance mood-—but it remained for the negro to dramatize this as the American dance-expression, Great Slave Lake Great Slave lake lies in northwest: ern Canada and ls the fourth larg est body of fresh water in America, Superior coming first, then Huron and Michigan, It is 8% miles long and 00 miles at its widest part. It was discovered and named by Samuel Hearne during hig exploratory trip in 1771-2, when in search of the Arctic const and copper deposits of the Cop permine river, __ Dame Fashion Smiles By Grace Jewett Austin Whoever made that old adage, “You can't have your cake and eat it, too,” was luckilys not thinking aboul dresses, Dame Fashion has heard wom- en say that they really didn't en- Joy wearing a dress for the first time, but that is so far from her atti- tude of mind that she Is al- Grace J. Austin. ways tempted to take a grain of salt with the hearing. now, isn't it just one of the to starting gown? able give—that of brand new Now maybe that first-pleasure-feel ing is where the “not eat and have” comes in, for of course that first love- ly thrill is gone with the original wearing. But what Dame Fashion was thinking about is that dresses often give a steady pleasure to until they are just “done When we start off on that trip to that we all drean abeut-—though how in the world does one get a passport familiar gown, and that is pre- what every travel-direction Be comfortable at the starting; familiar clothes, and especially, fa- miliar shoes, Dame Fashion heard from a whole- saler that men's wash suits and trou- gers are promising a tremendous late Talk about the power of politics! Nothing would convince Dame Fashion to dis. believe that because thousands upon thousands of men heard over the ra- cisely way men could be comfortable in the heat of the Houston convention was suits, Is the factor that cide that what is good for Texas is good for hot days in other parts of the country. And listen this! These same “Long hur is being taken Into consideration in the design the crowns to back to allow for the hair” What a Joy It is to say, por “I After diligent study of advance style pictures, Dame Fashion sald, “I'hey may talk about their frills and but these new dresses look straight to me.” And now the esale report comes, “The straight line silhouette remains.” The whole secret is, that onless we are exceedingly young and charming, the picture of our great-aunt, Jane in the Civil war picture album, if we adopt too many spreading skirts (Es 1928, Western Newspaper Union) Long Lines Flattering Long lines are flattering to the aft. er-fifty figure, says the Woman's Home Companion, especially if it is inclined to be a little heavy. In this frock the cross-over front panels create this be. coming effect in a simple easy man. ner. The yoke and panels are cut in one with the extra fullness gathered to the yoke. The skirt has inverted box plaits at either side of the front. There are also two similar plaits in the back of the skirt. The design (s readily adapted to many types of ma. terials. For early fall navy blue crepe de chine Is suggested and for late fall a lightweight woolen. Moire Coats for Evening Evening conts of moire are among this season's pleasant surprises, Two attractive ones seen recently were In yellow and palest flesh pink, The yel. low one reached only to the knees but the pink «cont was full length, Discarded Flous Bags Make Suitcase Outfit seasoned traveler betrays her- | #¢lf by the way her suitcase 1s packed, | The womin who 1s used to journeying | hither and yon ¥nows just what to | take and how to pack it so that at! the end of the trip her clothes come out fresh and unwrinkled, What could | more useful, then, than the sult- | ease outfit shown here? | The set consists of a cover for | blouses or frocks, a pair of shoe cases, ‘he Cover for Frocks, Cases for Gloves, Kerchiefs. Shoes, a rubber-lined washcloth and a case for gloves or handkerchiefs, And the entire set may be made for only fifty cents! Two used flour bags, two bolts of colored blas tape and a small piece of gum rubber are the only ma- terials required. The bags can be had at a bakery for a few cents each. The stamplagz is not difficult to re move if one will soak it In kerosene or cover it with lard for a few hours and then wash out in luke warm wa- ter, To make the blouse take 8 piece of the material a yard long and the width of the suitcase, usually about 22 inches. Bind this with the tape all the way round. The sides are left open, The ties are stitched In the center along one edge of the case and slipped through loops placed inches down on the other side. This makes them adjustable, The shoe cases hold one shoe each. They are made out of two pieces of goods, cut as shown in the illustra- tion. The larger is 17 Inches long, the smaller, 12. The width across the top | of the opening Is 6% After the shoe Is in, fold down the top and the ends and tie them behind washcloth case is made of a of the flour bag material 6x10 inches, and Is lined with gum rubber. The button and loop buttonhole or the snap fastener should be put on be- fore the lining and cover are bound together with the tape. A strip of .the material 8x12 will make a handkerchief case 5x8. For a gift, it is thoughtful to pout in a tiny pocket on the ipside to hold a small sachet. case cover, inches, Cross The strip Watch Food Values in Selecting Family's Diet | Every woman knows that when the mark something happens to the ap- rest of the year, The thought. ful menumaker, therefore, plans her summer meals to include much lighter food-—plenty of crisp, appetizing sal- But there is one danger that should against in planning the ideal hot weather regimen. That is in mot getting sufficient real nourish. Valuable and necessary as veg- etables are for their minerals and body building materials that children need to keep on growing and adults need to keep up their usual program of activities, A considerable amount of the enervation and lassitude which people feel after a heat wave of several days could probably be traced to their attempting to live solely on light foods, One way of solving the hot weather food problem Is to omit heavy foods, such as beans, much meat, gravies, potatoes and heavy puddings, replac- ing them with foods which are light but which also contain the same body building qualities of the heavier foods, This means drinking plenty of fresh milk and also eating abundantly of foods containing skim milk solids, bread, cake, cheese, cookies and lee cream, Skim milk solids are milk with the fats and the water removed, They con. tain all the minerals and vitamines of the whole milk except that which is supplied in eating butter, They are rich in bone and tooth building min. eral salts, Their protein is a rich gource of muscle and tissue building material, while the lactose In skim milk solids is particularly valuable for keeping the Intestinal tract in a healthy condition. Cheese and Ice cream naturally con- tain the skim milk solids, The slight effort which it takes to see that the bread and other bakery goods pur chased for the family are made with skim milk solids will be rewarded by increased health and vitality during the trying months, Nervousness, Neuralgia, Wel send a generou Dr. Miles Medical Big League Not E: Buck ledfern of White Sox is rookie hink the big league brush, “1 could the Ro i the Chicago one who doesn't is ns ensy burn ‘em up down In uthern Texas different and “but It's here, there $ays, {t's tough, 1 is to it Redfern the up sp here, That's all " much far Goesn t big fown. (port Notes still Jones above the golfing . * + Bobby with remains par world, A decathl ion is any en athletic events, Up a screen of com Such binat as pt on iting door, ad *® - Members of the New York boxing have to attend every fight a job—it's a punishment. * Mr. but he his me certainly ca ing Ney As an ne could come and live. 0» A Philadeiph name of Firpo. He is Firpo a junior lightweight wen quite a sensation. . * - taken the (Kid) has ia boxer has Joe who “Fifteen minutes after pulling on a wrote the sarcas- the prominent knitting made my first hole in tic golfer concern, one.” io wy ® * @ Our lot, paving ancestors were a sometimes as much eight hear Jenny Lind sing, in- stead of forty to watch heavyweights waltz. queer as fo - * - To De Mar, marathoner, goes wonor of being the veteran of America’s 1928 Olympic team. He is the only survivor of the 1912 brig ade. Clarence the * * * Due to the excitement of making a hole-in-one on the golf course at Elge- mont, N. J., Paul T. Bloodsworth, aged twenty-eight, of Hornell, N. XY. fell over dead. » - * William C. Vogt, expert angler and champion caster, can snap a pipe from the mouth of a person fifty feet away with a bassfly attached to a fly line and rod . = * Oh! East is East and West is West, and it is noted in Helen Wills' new book that the word “nut,” as applied means Members of the Indianapolis Gun club have an unwritten tradition that conditions. . & » Retired four years ago, the thor oughbred hatf-miler Doctor Kelly, sald to be twenty-eight years old, Is still demonstrating Father Time has not robbed him of all of his speed, .- % » Jack Caywood, heavyweight boxer of Fort Crook, Neb, claims the long: pst reach of any fighter in his class His reach is 81 Inches, just an Inch ghort of that of the former heavy weight champion, Jess Willard, . "oe Johnny Farrell, golf champ, set » mark for the future to shoot at on the new Hillendale course In Balti more. The score was 00, weather ‘. DIAMOND \PICK-UPE Piteh the Louis: ft tia ndod er Deberry with a4 rece - are baseball writers who the American ieague they ki walk-awis There refer to when ow itis a Winston- Sal has Piedmont nholz, third Indians league baseman, he Cleveland Speaker hit J for opped out then in a ten he 300 SCARONS class and string of eight returned for a row. for resigr Ray the hority not wonders ths om plist Chal ght members teams, . basebal VArious The Federal the city acres and the 10 06%) 4 of spectator ng arden "nl iriey Hargreaves don mask and mit. ahl ig 20Ie 5 Outfield been purchase wv the Americans fram the West Texas lea Dorman Tyler clul gue Bloo ta Moline purchas Jay Sig from Indians Anders . Big in the minors this terial which is not al ajor league worth- ready club. while owned some In Edson tele graph operator at grounds has never been known arrive at the ball field without rubbers and um brella Brewster, the veteran Polo to * * L left-hander of the Boston College team, signed with the Joston Red Sox, less than 24 hours after graduating and joined the team at once, John J. O'Shea, » » * It Jake Flowers, the maintains his precent batting and fielding pace for the Robins, Manager Robinkon’s second base problem will solved. ex-Cardinal, be * - , Joe Hornung, onetime star oud fielder of the National lergue, has sn old baseball on which is inscribed, July 16, 1878. Forest City, 8; Te cumseh, 0” * * Dazzy Vance, the Brookiyn star, has no rival as a strikeout artist. He has led the National league in this department for the last six years and probably will lead again this year. » * . base, Margare{ Gigolo led her team, the Blanford Che, to victory in the Vermilion county (Indiana) division of the Amer ican national baseball tournament, *. 0s» Rube Parnham of the Balti more club won 33 games and 20 of them came in a row. Socks Selbedl, veferan with Reading, 1s trying to rus up a big total this year with 15 al ready in, Playing second In 1023 Tha Philadelphia Athletics hold the highest and lowest team batting ver age ever ~ompiled In a world series They made the former with B17 aver age in 1010 and the latter with » 162 average in 1905, - - . It Ig a far cry from the old-time musical denble-play combination, such as Tinker to Evans to Chance, to the Brooklyn trio, Bancroft to Riconda to Bissonette, or Durocher to Lazzeri to Gehrig, . 8s 0» Nick Alrock claims to have made more putouts In one season than any other pitcher. He made 49 with the White Sox In 1004, 3