I» Simple Design After Dutch Style Makes Attractive and Cozy He me — THE BONDS T H A T HOLD By H. M. E G B E R T tt --------« iC u p y r lg h t, by VV. Q. C h a p m en ) HE day when I.eila and Tommy came Into the life of Jim Peters was his reddest of red letter days. He always saw the scene Just as he had seen It then. The early snows had begun to whiten the hills, and Peters had driven Ids stock down into the lower country for the winter pastures. lie was sitting In his hut, thinking over things. At thirty, he felt vague­ ly that he ought to be dcing better for himself. Not that he wanted to leave the cattle country for the city. But life In a two-room shack, where he cooked his own meals and made his own bed, was becoming unbearable. Most of the settlers of his age were already married. The settlement was beginning to prosper. Neat little flow­ er beds appeared round the houses ami the young wives were very gully dressed upon occasions, A church had been built; altogether It was a place for a young man with two thousand dollars In the hank to rejoice in. But Jim had always lived a lonely life; he did not know how to change It. Too bashful to make advances to any of the town girls whom he saw on his rare visits, and with a vague feeling that he wanted u wife of a special, hardly defined type, some­ thing above the common run, he was brooding In his chair when there came a tap at the door. It was a timid tap, such as he had never heard. The men who tapped at Jim's door hammered with hairy fists until he opened to them. Jim opened now, and was amazed to see a woman and a boy outside. Both were thinly clnd and shivering from the cold. Nevertheless the wom­ an did not attempt to enter, but only asked where lodging could be ob­ tained. She had come In on the evening train, she said. She offered no further explanation, but It was evident that »he was gently bred. The look of weariness In her eyes haunted Jim for days. He took her down the hill to a wom­ an of the valley. The hospitality of the West prevailed over suspicion. The stranger and her son were given shelter. t i r Next day Leila Drayton, as she called herself, went to work for one of the richer settlers. But soon she was asked to fill a pressing need. The children were grow ing up and. In spite of Its advantages, there was mi school In the valley. She became the school­ mistress. Speculation was rife about her. She never mixed with the valley people, newr talked about her past. Anil the West accepts women as well as men for what they are, and asks no ques­ tions. The days grew Into weeks. Into mouths. Jim Peters often found occa­ sion to saddle Ills horse and ride down Into the valley. He and the hoy be­ came fast friends. But Leila was as Indifferent to him ns to the other men. Perhaps Jiiu would never have found the opportunity he craved, of becoming her friend, but for on acci­ dent. The hoy was straying on the railroad embankment In search of birds' eggs. His mother was with him, hut seated a little distance behind the rise. Jim. watching them impatiently from the other side, knew that the afternoon train was due. Becoming uneasy, he hurried across the valley. He was Just oil the oppo­ site ridge when he heard the train in the distance. The sound, which hurst forth suddenly as the train came out of the tunnel, startled the boy. perched on a ledge. He lost his footing and fell twenty feet, to He unconscious aeons the metals. At the same time toe mother rose, discovered him and ■creamed. Jim plunged down the steep era bankmeut, seized the boy, snatched hint from the metals and cowered with him against the cliff, while the train went sweeping by, so near that the draft almost blew him from where he had planted himself. Afterward the The house contains eight rooms, as By W. A. RADFORD boy opened his eyes. shown on the floor plans. There are Mr. W illia m A. R a d fo r d w ill a n s w e r The distracted mother kneeled be­ q u a a tlo n « a n d R ive a d v ic e F R E E O P living and dining rooms and kitchen | C O ST on a ll p r o b le m s p e r ta in in g to th e and one bedroom downstairs and four ; fore Jim with her hands clasped. s u b j e c t o f b u ild in g , fo r th e r ea d er « o f bedrooms and the bathroom upstairs. "How can I thank you?" she cried. th ia p a p er. On a c c o u n t o f h la w id e "He Is everything I have, he la every­ e x p e r ie n c e a e e d ito r , a u th o r a n d m a n ­ All of these rooms are large and so ; located that each has plenty of win ' thing tn the world to me.” u f a c t u r e r . h e 1«. w ith o u t d o u b t, th e h ig h e s t a u t h o r it y o n th e s u b je c t A d ­ dows for sunlight and ventilation. The ’ “ B e my friend," said Jim holding d r e s s a ll I n q u ir ie s to W illia m A. R a d ­ rear entrance Is through a large wash i out his hand. fo r d . N o. 1827 P r a ir ie a v e n u e , C h ic a g o , room, which many home owner» like, | That was Jim's chance. Friendship fo r r e p ly . as It enables the housekeeper to have ! rl|»eiied. One day he asked her to be­ Dutch architecture has had a con- , the laundry done near the kitchen In- i come his wife. Then the strange look of fear that he knew so well came wldernhle effect on the appearance of stead of In a basement laundry. American homes. Simple In lines, hut The building la 34 feet 6 Inches wide Into her eyes. attractive withal, the Dutch homes, In and 2» feet 6 Inches deep. It is of "No, you must not ask me that," a modified style, have been reproduced frame construction with the outside she said. "I shall never marry again." tn many American cities and towns walls finished in stucco. And, seeing Jim's distress, she added: In the country. The best-known type " I will tell you the truth. I utn a of home that has come from the Dutch Flat Roof Success runaway wife. I cannot apeak ill of architectural Influence Is the "Dutch my husband now. I could have borne Depends on Location with his Infidelities, with Ids abuse, colonial.” Thia style home Is common and popular, especially In the suburbs The flat roof, which Is so desirable but—I did not want my boy to grow of the larger cities. In the West and Southwest, where up to be like him.” It was weeka afterward that «he A home that shows the Dutch Influ­ there Is little dew and no trouble­ ence Is reproduced herewith. This Is some Insects, would not always fit told him all. Her huaband was a a two-gable "plaster" house, as It Is Into ■ northern location, though some wealthy man. When ahe found that termed in Europe, but here would be have heard the Idea expresaed that ahe could endure life with him bo known as a stucco house, because of such a roof proves economical In longer she had run away, pennileas. the treatment of the exterior walls. fuel consumption In the northern ell- save for her railroad ticket. He had While In reality a two gable house, the mate ss a deep layer of snow forms one redeeming quality: he loved hla roof lines at the front are carried out s protective covering for the house ton. Un thia account she knew that over the porch la graceful lines. Thia Terraced roofs, flat roofs, low pitched he would leave no atone unturned to long roof sweep Is broken by a long and steep pitched roofs gable and find them. dormer projection, which serves the hip, entrance!, details of windows, I Jim went away. Borrowing. He double purpose of beautifying the ex­ doorways, porches, terraces, vase« ' knew now that aha could never be terior and providing more room on and garden furniture all aid In pro- hla. For ahe ahrank Instinctively, he during architectural variation. fait without asking, from tba pub the second floor. T » llcity of divorce. Besides, to seek divorce would be to put her husband on her trull. She wanted to let the years roll between them, creating an ever widening barrier, until she felt that the past could never stretch out its grisly hand upon her. So the months changed into years. It was nearly three years since Leila's coming when something happened which Jim had always known to ba Inevitable. It was morning, nnd he was on the high pastures with his cuttle when he saw her running toward him, with the boy, scrambling up the steep hill­ side. She reached him ; her face was white with fear. "He has found me 1" she gasped. “O, save me! Help me!" Up the road came tlte toot of an auto horn. Jim saw the cur cllnih the grade like a heavy locomotive. And in the ensuing Interval of sileuco he made his resolution. The car stopped. A mnn leaped out. a man in the prime of life, ab­ surdly strong, absurdly healthy, with the bluster and yet the sense of power that sometimes accompany the suc­ cessful man. He leaped to the ground nnd ad­ vanced upon the woman, siuiliug. Jim burred Ills path. "My wife," he said. "I know," answered Jim. "See here, young man. Yon don’t perhaps understand. I ant here to claim my own, my legHl own, my wife and child. She has nothing to feur front me. 1 have never laid my hands upon her. Stand out of my path." "You may have a legal right," said Jim, "but you ain't going to take her." The man laughed, whipped off his coat, and displayed a pair of muscular arms. "Her lover?” he sneered. “God witness, there has never been love between us," answered Jim. The woman sprang between them. “Jim, he Is right," she said. "Now he hHs found me. I must go with him." Jim. amuzed at the change of atti­ tude. stood absolutely mute. The man nodded. "Good for you," he said. “Leila, the past Is past. ‘'You’ll never hear of It from me. It’s only for the boy’s sake I want you back. And I guess— you'll be happier than you were." Mechanically the girl entered the auto. They lifted the hoy Inside. The horn tooted. They were gone. And Jim stared foolishly after them. How strong the bonds between hus­ band and w ife! She was gone out of his life. He had never dreamed of such a thing. But why had she gone with hint, when he was ready to fight for her? Jim did not understand women, their changes, their sense of duty com­ ing in so oddly nt critical moments. Like a man in a dream he watched the car shoot down the hill. It was going very fast. The brake was damaged h.v the rough road, In fart, hut Jim did not know that. All he thought was that it was going very fast toward the rutting. And sud­ denly there came the rour of the trulu leaving the tunnel. The auto shot forward. It was now evidently beyond control. Jim began to run. But he wns much too far away to he of any help. As he ran he saw the dreadful picture: the train racing along the narrow cutting, the auto cuuglit and overturned; the desperute efforts of the occupants to five them­ selves. . . . Then he saw the mint stagger to his feet, lift the boy In his arms anil toss him Io the farther hank. The train was almost upon hint, a hissing snorting monster with flaming breath But he caught up the woman 111 Ills arms and Hung her clear of the metals; and the next Instant the train was upon him, hearing him down grinding out his life l e t eath Its wheels, tearing the decapitated body along the way and passing onward. Jim was sick with horror when he reached thv scene, to find that the woman and the hoy still lived. lie kneeled before Leila, trying to shield her from the knowledge of what had huppened. Then, picking her np, he carried her to the top of the embank­ ment. And the look on her face told him that she knew So mixed was life, so mixed the qualities for good and evil In all. This man she hated had given Ills life for her. Some gnte In Jim's brain went down at that moment, and lie knew that life must he faced very soberly thenceforward—even with her. Ancient Wedding Ring* The Egyptians, probably, were t?ie first people to use a wedding ring. Primitive men, however, made cords and hound round the waists of women they wished to marry, nnd Inter It became customary to hind (he wrists and nnkles of the woman It Is prob­ able that the ring as we now know it originated from one or both of these customs. In Anglo-Saxon da.va the man placed a ring on the woman's right hand, where It remained until the marriage ceremony, when the bridegroom transferred It to her left hand. Civil War Landmark» The superintendent of Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military park aaya that the amall buildings known as the "Kelly house and barn” occupy the sttea of log atructures In exlatenre at the time of the battle of Chickamauga. The farm on which they were located la referred to In the official reports as a part of the Union line tinder General Thomas, that extended around the Kelly field. The building* are maintained aa land marks. Identifying the positions af troops engaged la the battla. SEE HOPE IN WAR ON WHITE PLAGUE S c ien tists A r e Interested in V a ccin e T reatm ent. Washington.—Despite the fact that there are half as many deaths from tuberculosis as there were 20 years ago, the white plague still remains one of the world’s greatest disease problems. The omnipresent bacillus of tuberculosis s,»rends with the great- est facility through the whole animal kingdom, yet the disease It produces would he the most curable of maladies If only titan could find the secret of his own natural Immunity. Medical science has established that practically every one In the more densely populated parts of the world, at some time In his life, becomes In- fected with tuberculosis, hut the pro- portion that actually die Is extremely small. What constitutes this mysteri­ ous Immunity that man has built up during centuries of civilization Is a problem that engages the best ntlnds In medical research. J ’ I 1 1 I | . | i ! Believes He's Found Preventive. Can this natural Immunity that en- I ahles the bulk of the population to I survive Infection he supplemented by | some artificial means? To produce nti attenuated strain of bacteria that would confer the power to resist dis­ ease, but whose teeth for producing virulent symptoms are drawn, has been a goal sought In many diseases and attained In hut few. However, Dr. Albert Calmette of the l’asteur institute In Purls believes that he hns attained such a preventive for tuber­ culosis In his vaccine BCG. BCG Is u kind of half-starved strain of tubercle bacilli that have been grown for many years In test tubes on the unappetizing diet of beef bile. Somewhere In the succeeding genera­ tions grown In this state of semlstnr- vatlon the hnctlli have theoretically lost their disease-producing power and yet retain a certain amount of their capacity to call forth antibodies when Injected Into the body. After a long series of anitnal ex­ periments the French scientist and his associates felt that they hnd suf flclent ground for trying out their new vaccine on babies born In homes In the Paris slums where tuberculosis In members of the family made their Infection with the disease almost In­ evitable. Records were kept of the Inoculated babies nnd of others who lived under the same had conditions hut were not Inoculated. Twenty-five per cent of the unvaccinated control babies, according to the Calmette data, succumbed to the disease within 12 months, whereas the vaccinated ones were all apparently uninjured by the treatment and failed to contract tuberculosis for a year and sometimes longer. THREE SONGS A teacher asked her pupils to bring to school objects that represented songs. Gne boy brought an apple, another a banana and a third an old whip. “What song does the apple repre­ sent?” asked the teacher. ’in the Shade of That Old Apple Tree." “What does the banana representT’ “Yes, We Have No Bananas." “And what does the whip repre­ sent?" “Thanks for the Baggy Ride."—Tba Progressive Grocer. DWELLING ON SELF She—That's it I Always dwelling on yourself! W in t e r R a im e n t A b o u t h e r b»*HU»y I m unt b r a < — • A nd y e t I h o ld m y b r e a th . I f nhe le a v e s o ff a n o t h e r ra< Khe'a » o tn » to fr e e s « to d e a th . Never Used Them ’Say, this bus doesn't look as If there was a single thing on It that wasn't worn ont,” declared the pros­ pective purchaser of the used car. “Well,” said the salesman, "It has at least two parts that are as good ns new ; It formerly was owned by a reck­ less speeder who didn’t even know It had a low gear or brakes." V a c a tio n B eat Little Jack was studying his lessons when his Uncle Rob walked Into the room. “Which do you like best, reading, United States Authorities Cautious. writing or arithmetic?'' asked Uncle In spite of these Impressive results Bob. After a moment's thought Jack an­ American authorities feel exceedingly cautious about this new way of ac­ swered : “I like vacation best" quiring Immunity to the white plague. The Introduction of living tuberculosis germs, no matter how weakened. Into Coward the human system Is fraught with Myrte—Why did you quit dating danger, they maintain. From long with Jim? years of experience and observation Gert—Because he’s such a cownrd. experts In the United States public Myrte—Cownrd? That bay a cow­ health service say there Is mi telling ard? Say, he can’t hardly carry all when any given stmln of tuberculosis the medals he won In the war for bacilli, even a half-starved one, Is bravery! likely to break out and become cap­ Gert—That may he, but the fool la able of producing virulent symptoms. afruld to drive with one hand. In cattle Inoculations It has been found that different animals react JUDGING BY APPEARANCE very differently to the same dose of the same type of vaccine. From such observations It Is ob­ vious that there are many factors In this work that are not yet completely known or understood. Consequently there will probably have to be much more study of these conditions before very many authorities feel tbsf arti­ ficial Immunity can safely replace the Imperfect sort that man has sotitchow evolved for himself naturally. U ae R are W rit to O ust D etroit M an From H om e Detroit. Mich.—In the Hamtramck city hall Is a crew of men ready to move a two-famlly flat owned hy Jacob Pltttch, fifty three years old, off Its foundations and pave a street over the site, while In the city treasurer’s office Is a sum of monpy which lituch ran claim as compensation for being ousted. Anil whether I’ltuch claims the mon­ ey or not, the men will probably Issue forth soon with Sheriff George A. Wal­ ters or his deputies at their head to move Pltttch ami his brother, who la the other tenant of the flat, out of the premises. A ypnr ago Hamtramck started con­ demnation proceedings to take PI- tuch's flat and the home of twelve others, to permit the continuation of Lumpkin avenue from Trowbridge to Caitiff avenues. All except I’ltuch ac­ cepted the awards of the condemna­ tion Jury. I Then Judge Miller made use of a rnre pow«-r a Circuit court Judge may exercise and Issued a writ of assist­ ance to Hamtramck ordering Sheriff Walters to oust I’ltuch from the flat ! Iceland M ay Uae Its H ot Springs to H eat C apital Copenhagen.—The Icelandlan pre tnler. Jon Thorlaksaon, has suggested to the Reykjavik town council that the capital use the hot springs In the environs for heating the central sec tlons of the city. If the project la agreed tn, the springs will give the same heat aa 20,000 tans of fuel. “I am wedded to my art.’* “Apparently a aecret marring«.* A Pun? Of Cor9€t It ! W h e n m o th e r cornea to v is it ua, Khe’a dreaaed In old a fy le w a y « : B u t th e o n ly t h in » m a k e s h u b b y fu s e Is th e le n ifth o f m o th e r's s ta y * . Service Worried Telephone Subscriber— I «ay, my telephone hasn't been work­ ing for a month, and you paid no at­ tention to m.v letter of complaint. Official—We did. We rang you np to ask what was wrong, nnd got no answer I—Tlt-BIta. Money’» No Object Doctor—Lady, your son lias I ho measles In the worst form. Wealthy Mrs. Green—Why, doctor, we are rich enough to afford the beat. Not Much to Turn Over The «upper table was set ami Mra. Profesaor was awaiting the arrival of her husband. "Wlmt can be keeping him so late?” ahe ashed. Daughter—Maybe he's been held up. Bright Hon—Well, he'll aoon be boro then; that won’t take long. A Good Loier "Haven't the Elderbya a skeleton la their family?” "They will have If Mra. Kld.-rbg keeps on reducing."