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| REVELATIONS OF A WIFE B! ADELE GARRISOY surely have your’share of gameness and resourcefulness. I'd like to have you working with me instead of Why Drake Sald “It's, Useless to Deny It I_was glad to be seated when Mr. ‘ane. the stranger whom Dicky had brought home to dinner, leaned. for- ward in his chair and asked me it T knew why my father had changed his name., I know if I had been stand- ing that my knees could never have supported me, so terrified was I at the knowledge of my father's secret which this stranger evidently had, and meant me to know he possessed. 71rue, he had not said in so many words that he knew that Robert Gor- don was my father, but his whole ruanner, his deliberatian when he uttered the words: “Charles Robert Gordon Spencer! Can you throw any light upon the gentleman’s reason for changing hi name—Mrs. Margaret Spencer Gra- ham?"=~told me that he was in possession of my father's sécret, FRIDAY SATURDAY The Picture of the Hour Many Other Features LYCEUM HAT 1:30 p. m. Night 6:30 p. m. Arrange Now 'deqs, Window -and | Porch Boxes. 'Our fine stock and: long experi- voice was steady; and then said, nor can I imagine any reason why you All This Week the same look of sympathetic admi m the 'World’s Greatest Wild | Words which followed that he had no Animal Actors and “Bravo! liftle lady!” he said, and AFTERNOON | B Al-l-o- to the Grounds' Al Free genuine eénthusiasm in his voice. From all New England points to BRARY-LOUNGING SLEEPRERS, ence insure s‘flsfactory to Chleago, with direct connections Carte morning and evening meals save money by writing me for rates But I was resolved to yield no hint of my own knawledge unless I was coldly: “You are talking very strangely, should adopt so meladramatic t man- Vibberts’ Lots, Hartford Ave. | ™[, . Dreves o . R ol tion I had causht before. clapped his hands together softly. intention of letting Dicky gain any Banpd Ooncerts, : and Fyee | hint of the subject we were discussing. rActs his low tones did not disguise the “r like grit wherever I find it, and you “ E THE FAVORITE CHICAGO, via BUFFALO, ERIE, CLEVELAND and FT, WAYNE, DRAWING ROOM SLEEPERS and DAY COACHES. | for all Western and. Pacific Coast || pointa. ranging in price from- 25c up, with . Table d’'Hote Luncheon at 75c. and information.. L. P, BURGESS, N. E. PA forced to do s0. I waited until my Gmtfl' SHEESLEY Shows | #r. Drake. I do not understand you, Into Mr. Drake's eyes thers nuh d. ! People + 1,000 NOw Idens realized from the gesture and the “I Admit Noting.” ¢ AND EVENING ROUTE TO THE WEST THROUGH OBSERVATION LI- Deily, from New York and Buffalo - Inviting: Dining Car Service, a ‘18 Before arranging your Western Trip, aleska Suratt ~In GorgeousDnmflchupieeeinWhichtheShrAppenum the Most 4.Elnborate Gowns Ever shown on the Screen “THESLAVE".: EXTREE !! EXTREE ! ! EXTREE CHARLIE CHAPLIN | RETURNS BY SPECIAL REQUEST in the BIG LAUGH R “EASY STREET” v | ¢ .“SUDS OF LOVE”—2 part Fox M—PAWE WEEKLY & Many Ofllels/ FRmAY AND SATURDAY (Star of “The Whip”) CHARLE BLACKWELL and JUNE ELVIDGE “THE PAGE MYSTERY” -, - FIVE GRIPPING | ACTS 5 against me. But I'll have to tell you plainly that yalr wonderfully clever little air of misunderstanding my meaning won't do. I see I shall have to lay my cards on the table: after all.” He paused a moment, and I reunzed in that’ moment of waiting how a charmed bird must feel waiting for the doom it cannot move a muscle to escape. ““You are the daughter of the man wha calls himself Robert Gordon, Mrs, Graham,” he said slowly at last. “It is useless for you to demy it. I have absolute proof of the truth of what I am saying. Whether or not you know why he changed his name I do not know, nor do I care. The anly thing which concerns me i8 the gentleman’s present address, and that is what I am sure you will give me.” The .absolute certainty of his tones maddened me. I sprang to my feet and faced him, quivering with anger. “You are uttterly mistaken,” I said. “I #dmit nothing you have said, and under no circumstances should I give you -Mr. Gordon's Mdrm even if. I had it.” The sound of Dicky's footsteps de- scending the stalrs came distinctly to hath our ears. Mr, Drake altered his manner in a moment. *“We will discuss this again before I leave,” he said quietly. “May I point out to you that it ‘'would be very un- ‘wise.for you to involve your husband in this matter? ‘If I guess correctly, and I think I do, he does not know as much about your father as you do, and the knowledge I do not imagine would add much to his general peace of mind.” A Hidden Menace? The next moment he had turned to the door and greeted Dicky with a merry quip as far removed as possible from the half-velled sinister, threat that he had given m And not once, during the remainder of the evenihg dld he refer In any manner to Robert Gordon. But I—I lay awal e llmont all of the night by Diok: e trying hard to keep from waking hlm by my rest- lesuness. For a deadly fear was upon me, not 80 much the fear for my father's safety, as a dread that be- ‘hlnsao tl:: rAnystery of his long absences n Sou merica lay somethi: - ter, criminal. ¥ sty Should I tell Dicky my fears? This was the question whiich I thrashed out at length during the hours. Of course Dicky knew that my father's name was not Robert Gordon, but in telling’ him I had minimized the earnestness with which my father had urged me to tell no one but Dicky and Lilllan. of his identity as Charles Spencer. I knew from his manner when Mr. Drake spoke of Rebert Gordon that he had no thought of anything but 1dle curiasity behind the questions. I did not like to share even the semblance of a secret with this stranger, but there was a menace in his talk of my father that I could not understand, and which I finally made up my mind to heed. I resolved to keep my own counsel, even from my husbahd, until I was ¢ertain just what danger to my father lay behind the stranger’'s words, The rather high curved crown and wide brim is one of the new hat HIGH HEELED SHOES PUT CORNS ON TOES Tells women how to dry up a corn 80 it lifts out without pain. Modern high-heeled footwear buck- les the toes and produces corns, and many of the thousands of hospital | cases of infectlon and lockjaw are the result of woman's suicidal habit ] of trying to cut away these painful pests. For Mttle cost there can be ob- tained at any pharmacy a quarter of an ounce of a drug called freezone, which is sufficient to rid one's.feet of every—hard or soft corn or callus ‘without the slig] danger or in- ‘convenienc: A few drops applied directly upon the tender, aching corn stops the soreness and shortly the entire corn, root and all, lifts right out. It is & sticky substance, which dries the mo- ment it is applied, and thousands of men and women use it because the corn shrivels up and comes out with- out inflaming or even irritating the surrounding tissue or gkin. Cut this out and try it if your corns bother you. encircle the field, dropping poisonous gas bombs ond other deadly missles on the men fighting beneath. Then come the decisive naval battles after America has eoncon- trated every energy and prepared her- self for the terrific amslaught of the foe. The fleets move seaward in a majestic line, every gun manned by an expert marksman and every bofler attended by devo Now a shell pent from t nemy's ship finds its mark and shoots through the wau leaving behind it the dead ite trail of foam. Finally it comes “WOMANHOOD” QPENS TODAY AT LYCEUM Perhaps ‘the most—realistic, vl"g tomorrow and Saturday Ww! Vitagraph presents ‘““Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation,” the: soul- stirring patriotio spectacle by J. Stuart Blacktan, starring Alice Joyce and Harry Morey. As far as the human eye can reach in the battlefield strewn here and there with the heroes whe have fallen in honor that their country might live. The air is dusky wit the smoke of conflict and bombs burst, con- tinually rising clouds of dirt as they tear up a goodly . portion qf the ground. Then the trenches with their men leaning upwabds, rifies atmed at the approaching foe are SIDE TALKS in few \moments hundreds have been claimed by & watery grave.' Thy men in the boller room fight one apother like rats in & hole as they fesl their vessel give a lurch sideways and rulu- their means of escape is cut m Lyceum will show this produc- &ou today, Friday and urday with matines daily, Saturday’s show will be continuous from 1 to 11. The Supreme Sacrifice “If you can force your nerve and brain and sinew To serve your turn long atter they | are ' gone, ] And lo hold on when' there is noth- all to pieces. . ‘Which was right and kind. never mentioned. And, that was her kem thc will that says to you, | sister who had not gone all to pl.n-. The two were under similar straln, 0- | ilinegs in the family, financial wors usiness.' “Hold on.” The other night I heard so! ple talking pityingly about a who has completely broken down un- der the strain of overwork and fam- ily fliness. “She has gone all to pieces,” said | wouldn’t let herself go to pieces. one, “had to give up completely. They Deserve a Shintng Reward. Doesn't take any interest in anything. riea,_overwork in b And onp went all to pieces. was under.” “We ought to do something her,” sald another, Let's send her some flowers.” “Maybe she could go out in my machine some pleasant day.” But They Forgot Q‘h,:' ‘Woman tor | SuPreme selves go,—and then taking a fresh hold on themselves and still enduring. Wh And to my mind there are no he- roes or heroines in all the world ‘who deserve a more. shining ret Held So the talk ran, full of pity for When one- the woman and of eagerméss to do DASHING SHAPES A MILLINERY HALLMARK shoulders, the oil of love ‘Is poured into. one’s wounds. People who havent’ paid any attention to one before bescome sympathetic aazd pitying (witness my friends and their flowers and' autos). One ceases to lean on ones own strength and leans the strength of others. Like Laying One’s Aching Bones in Bed. q It s like giving in to an {llnesy with which one has long been strug- gling relaxing one's weary aching y in bed.’ It is the natural, the human 'thing to do when the strain becomes too Breat, just loose the bonds of self control and stop trying to be a re- sponsible being. And it is the super-natural, super- human thing to do, to take a fresh hold on yourself and simply refuse to let onese}f go to pieces. If there are any gradations of Heaven, any upper and lower para- dise, I know where such people will Household Notes To bind soups and ' purees, melt butter, and when bubbling add an equal quantity of flour; when well mixed, add to the bolling soup, stir- ring constantly. tilted brim, gives us this hat trimmed merely with banding and rosettes of If you have cold roast lamb narrow black grosgrain ribbon. - e over, slice it, sprinkle with salt and tobasco sauce and heat in a hot jelly mixture in & saucepan. The mixtute is made of jelly, butter md lemon LUNCH BISC [-ounr.hln‘ for her because she had |of com ‘While the other has held on to her- self with an iron hand and simply {n Cuba during the Spenish w ovelt has appiled SURATT THRILLS AT FOX'S THEATER Interpreting & character that could be attempted by no one else in the world, Valeske Surati, as the vanity- loving sales-lady in a Fifth avenue Smart Shop, gave the Fox audiences last night a vivid glimpse of how the other half of mankind lives and fiour- # experience ishes. Made cynical by her with life, and determining to satisfy her lust for finery, she allows herself to marry a worthless but wealthy old man., For a time she is his favor- ite, but soon another takes her place in his heart, and she finds herselt an outcast. One of the most striking ° situations ever conceived is presented when, & few years later, she is con- fronted with her own daughter Dulce, who is being courted by the brother ot the man whom she herself mow, . loves’ Original indeed 1sthe solu-'. tion to this unusual climax. The, pert of Caroline, the sales-lady is particu- i larly sutted to Miss Suratt. The comedy feature of the pro= gram 1is the inimitable Charlie Chap- lin, the king of fun makers. As the reformed vagrant who joins the ema- clated police force and sets his single hand to the thankless task of ‘“‘clean- ing up” the toughest neighborhood in the community, Charlie finds himseif in the most amusing situations of his checkered career, and as usual, makes his audience scream continuously for two reels. - The Pathe Weekly brings the latest fore the eye, and more hilarity afforded by Hank Magn in “Suds of Love.” A double reel drama “Miss- ing” completes the-bill. A genuine, baffling mystery I8 promised in “The Page Mystery.” the feature for tomorrow and Sa In this photo-play, no less than principals confess themselves vidually as guilty of the murder. . NO SLACKERS WITH SHEESLEY'S SHOWS While all true Americans af !ch.l and lawful age were registering service in the armies of Uncle Sam, J. M. Sheesley, who owns and operates the shows which are at the show lot this wesk, called all his possible con- scription men about him and after addressing them, advised them all'to ntothooltyoluklnflmmlr names and places of residence. In case there should be :h huvi draft ‘}: 4 w put these shows o pegpa b But as Mr. Sheesley puts it ‘W hout country we should not need :shows,” and he places the But all the time I had a . deeper | fiag far ubove any mercenary com: pity In my heart for someons ‘they M;:.uon"a iese men had registered at Waterbury last vnk‘;‘::‘t 1t u‘fi. safe are n b mm Teft out "Tuesday. z‘ sm:l is a native “d f;:fl-hur‘: Jana sent 'his pame an ress some time ago. Percy Phlilips, who was in the service at Porto Rico &nd though secret work' in the\war umt. I 1 Mr. Phillips is the elephant trainer It shows what a terrible strain she | . % SVery COmMN z'thonn:e:h - ok crifice,—enduring to the Infln point where' further endurance stems impossible and they long to let them- lel'-n-. who with the wild animal show. Frank aled vogis- has also 0. K. Hager the man the autodrome be sent to the fromt. - ‘Brolled Bacon Scalloped 'Potatoes, ] Baked Hash Pepper Salad strtwbcrfln and Junket . DI-'. Cream of Lettuce Soup Roast Stuffed Leg of Mutton Browned Hominy Stewed Tomatogs Lettuce and Apple Salad ‘White Custards ) Caoffes Stuffed Leg of Mutton—Have ths butcher bond the leg of mutton. ' The bones and trimmings will yield stock for a good soup. Fill the cavity in the roast with a bread stuffing highly seasoned with pepper and onion ud molstened with dripping. White Custards—The whites three eggs well ten with ll.k. pinch ":: and one pl W m Pal‘ cups like ca mefiumm When cold, serve with shaved mapie’ sugar (or'¢ brown si r) and whipped cream. Fads and Fashions All-white gowns are very K esmart, but thil is alays the case. x.u continue to show much se- verity of line and tfimming. Coral and gold shades are favorites for all sorts of garments. The whlh coat must have belt of blue .suede and collar of blue silk. Most short sports coats are made of jersey, tussor or black velvet. Imitation sueds gloves even have strap fasteni: ke the.real suede. o g ‘White pique makes a dear frogk for the small girl, especially if it:jg trimmed with blue batiste which /is embroidered with white cotton. contact with the ship and in a [évents on land and sea vividly, h: ERS: L3 ) 4 < & . 4 (S A P