unday Bee MAGAZINE SECT'iONI Vol. 52 no. 10. - OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 20, 1922. KIVK CENTS i The Purple Lady By George Wood Pangbom The 3 Two Little Children and Some Paper Dolls; Two Big Children, the Rack of Dire Need and a Mother Who Wouldn't Give Up. I Jt T WAS a rainy afternoon, to Joe and Althea were in A the all ir, cut ting fashion ladies out of an old (jodev's f JL Lady' Book, lhat is, Althea cut out the ladies. Joe designed animal on yellow wrapping paper, Theie, lie taiil, would eat ttie tadic up. Hut when the hark of Althea' writ went to her mouth and lier eye, fixed mournfully on him, filled and filled, he (aid hastily that it wat only a few of the animal who were like that. The rett wrte good and would protect the ladic. Just let hint She lad never known the dream to be quite a dreamy before. The far comer of the attic were a little dimmer than the liked; in particular, the comer where the model of the machine Mood, all leg and elbow and lonif finger. It had been there ever tince she made the acquaintance of Joe's attic (which wa the tame always), and though Joe had explained all ahouHt how it wouldn't go and couldn't huit anybody ihe had never quite liked it. It lood in front of a little black trunk which she had eyed longingly through the machine' sprawling lever. But Joe laid the trunk thing weicn't old fashioned thing you could dress up in, but the machine' thing, drawing and model, lie had een them once, and ome day, when he wa a man, he wa to have them and the machine and ee if he could find out what it needed to make it go. it wa something about printing; he knew that much, and he told Althea what printing wa. He wa a wibe little boy. Then she looted sharply at Ihe psper lady, but the wa flat and dolhih. Like yet, only in the way the hair wa clone and the big kirt I ke a flower. 't he face wa quite differ ent. She put an inquinnggreaty finger on Ihe uaix-r lady' eoimtenance and Ihat person' la.t claim to beauty vau ished. U Althea at in the largest, moil comfortable chair in what bad hern Mr. Mark' room, but wa now her. Although there wa furnace heat throughout the home, in thf room a bit of wood fire also helped to tbnM bark the January cold. For it wa the January of I'JiH, and a winter storm wa raging against the window. Mr. Mack wa titling on an ottoman at Althea' feel- a dowager who had quite resigned her crown, but, who re mained O, ye, remained a power behind the throne of the new queen. Now, in the old queen' fare, o long a it wa unobserved, wa the light of battle; perhap of desperation. Ml She uxu ititint 01 7h floor, and fir yi'ule purple $kirt$ math a kU(fwy circle about her. have hi turn at the scissor and she would see. And so, indeed, it proved, for the beasts fought so terribly among themselves that in a short time good and bad alike were nothing but a heap of torn scraps, while the ladies, quite unscathed, still stood along the floor crack. Then Joe said U- studied the cookies being taken out of the oven and went down to ee. Althea wa hungry. Teople at home were sick. People . .i home, though this she did not know, were nearly at their 1 "its' end. So the kitchen at home wa at tixes and sevens, and the little cooking done there was almost inedible in re sult. Mrs. Mack knew all about il and was terribly sorry, and helped by having Althea over at her house o much that she had begun to feel a if she had a little daughter of her own, as well a that quare, blundering, noisy little son. And a she watched the two together, how splendidly they got on, her dreams would sweep foolishly forward to a time when Joe should no longer he to square and blundering, nor Althea so tiny and frail. What a pfr (hey would make it they carried out the fine promise of tfuitf babyhood! Perhaps it wa hunger that made Althea' dream feeling o strong that day, for he had come a ay with even lens lumhr.in that unul, and that after almost no breakfast at nil Now, at the smell of the cookie, giddy and ttrange, a if i he wall were mit, that he had to but thrut out hrr hand and put it quite through them, 1'hi ten-Mtion ii n-'thinkt new I be irt tint the hail telt it it had 'rialiti'iicd her; then it td become rather interesting. f.r !wav fi lt ht almost anything qu-er nmrhi htmien . ii f.ir cmmi'le, he c mi l dream ttiee p.ipir ladiet il' There a mie of them in a nitride u,nv wbti had ih i n'l null'' hv c.oildit't he dre mi t'm !ly mid instpil ,o i)t 4,1,1 t(t ),i ,tf,iiin,. ab.oit 'if t'.iof intteit if ftt f t-nf one lnv ti ingle nf a s'i-' it t ..i I in ' . r . o:. If.m mil! . ftvtei iaOi'v tvv.l- iT.i.t C'i'tii ui! id 0 v i lb.- .itw' Por it t"itn .1 mote like line tik, h It H t.-il v nr n .., iilil ..I ihe MOltl, and d'JK thriii iiji goii . .tt it..inN But, of course, now that things turned to dream, the machine was as unsubstantial as the rest, so as she looked at it through half closed eyes Althea was not surprised that it should thin, dissolve, become invisible. O, how lovely I She had done it! She had dreamed the lady real! Yes, there she was, a real dream lady, lady size, too, not Just a doll, and she wore a great braid of yellow hair around the top of her head like a crown, She was sitting on the floor in front of the trunk, and her wide purple skirts made a billowy circle about her until she was like some great inverted flower. The trunk wa open, and it was not just full of drawings and things. She was taking out the loveliest little dresses, just right for a doll, and holding them up and looking at them, then folding them up and putting them away again, the way you do to see if there are moth. Clove pinks! Well. I should think so! There they were at her throat, just where the lacy ruffle made a V, finished at it point with, a tiny black vel vet bow. As a paper lady she had not been wearing clove pfnk. In a number of way he wa not quite like Ihe paper lady only the way of wearing her hair, and the gown with it lovely wide skirts. The material had a vite ground and wat all sprigged with tiny flower and true lover' knoM, And then, while kite held up a tiny white dre between her l.u'e and Althea, Althea uw that her eye wrte looking at hrr hme the liltte outheld die Her mouth wa hid i!rn. Iml Alilira knew it smiled, llui just a Althea wat about to pe.ik Jo had to come Morntiitu up, and then lhre wa no lady enrept the paper mie slil! in hrr hii.aild ihe sprawling marli ne, as before, l.i in tttM of the trunk, There were not only cookie and milk, but a plate of oidaul es It wa nn aecomit ol Ihn ssndwichrt, Jo ts planted, lh be bad been o hwtr. Id mother bad Intiiled n I. uMitot wh'lc ti e mt lU'io up, and they mint be eileu lost she id, VHbea ! her mii((t , it,f ku. ,,. el ihiotih us !ti at t'lt- mink, It stai solid enough naw. Only when the young woman's eye were upon Iter then it was calm, confident, reassuring. "How warm and safe I am here," said Althea. "When I think of those mothers and babies 1 feel wicked." "I know," said Mrs, Mack. "But we are not wicked. We are reserves. Our part i to keep ourselves steady." "Yes," said Althea, "only when the wind is like that I seem to hear them," And, indeed, the wind had found a crevice which it could make whimper and wail like a tiny child in trouble. "But it is the wind," said Althea. "Just only the wind." She turned from the frosted window to Joe's mother, , "How was he when you looked in last?" 1 ' "Sleeping, I think. At least he was quiet." "Well," said Althea confidently,"! can be patient. It isn't a if I couldn't understand why he can't bear the sight of me. 'The world i no place for women,' he said. That tell it atl. He never could bear even small crueltie. and he bat been seeing thing that it almost kill u to read about. We know how he ha fought hi medal would tell us, even if he didn't know anyway." "Ye," said hi mother, and her voice wa calm. She even bent down and adjusted the lug more pietittely, "It it a wound of the spiiit, but a honoiable a one a the other or Ihe gat. I have tomrtimr thought that in this war more than in other war, the enemy ha bad power to reach man's soul. I may it mistaken; yrt, rven if it U so, stub a wound must heal. I do not believe any tueh wound, even of the toul, ran tuilt the teal center, t'ome, now, we mustn't get loo serious. That it a romttiion l h enemy, ".Stt you. have the little thing all airing! How tweet and toiilidriit they look wild Ihe little ileye tpread out I Wait nil the arm get In them and begin M Hap and wave! Jo wort out tvertthitigl I nevr uw tuilt a baby, II scrubbed through to long dienc jut h did later through In knkker. It' a ihama that he didn't l. e any. thing of his wardruht fr hit nwn baby but they nvr th'iik of that! II ihvtsfd Uu lfvtl uJ kukid II. luntf