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NEWEST TH!NG IN FASHIONS FOR YOUNG CHILDR! MY HEART =« MY HUSBAND ADELE GARRISON’S NEW PHASE OF Revelations of a Wife What Betty Had to Say to Allen] out ob yoh skin wen soh seal ¢ bs. Doan’ yoh ebah worry. Mis Drake: Madge. W'en ebah I knows yoh's due Unless otherwise noted, these motices are written by the > 1Is it| {o eat heah I jos' takes mah foot in{ bureaus of the theaters or ovher attractions wiik which the :fi hustles up de tings yoh “Well? How about it peace?” Allen Drake's tone held per- | mah hand an’ ! ; likes best.” s ) suasive cagerness, though so low that | likes Dest® = 0 o urse as S T ey I could scarcely distinguish the svlla-1 g, \us talking. As she came to & Charles Ray in “The Girl Dodger"” MISS VAN WALDRON. bles. An involuntary glance at Lillian | len Drake's side he struck a reveren=| o=, Jleadingsattitude and looked | ] i ety with | Night in the Trenches,” ave the at- : e biz vaudeville novelty Ellen Neal had discarded her sim- old me that she was rather ostenta-| tial and 3 . told m et SR tha| up at her, his fine eyes filled > ple servant’s gewn and in the interim tiously rearranging the flowers in the | Wb B1 BEC Ll ¢ tractions at Fox's tonight. A e S T L O low bowl near her. and I knew that “Betty, I'm every bit as fascinating Thosc who Witnessed the pr S i o she must not only be aware of OUr| _cyi . ci,ham, if you only knew it.”" | tion of “The Girl Dodger” at Fox's| e apR g WIthtie murmured conversation, ‘but was| (% 4. “Wan’t you adopt me, too today, will admit that Charles Ray | hereine of “Common Clay” only a n edly ignoring it. The old woman grinned in broad| has been supplied with vehicle | visionary figure in perspective There was only one way ?"‘xn\‘ "'1 delight, but shook her head dec 1- [ that suits 1 “down to the ground.” d to the awkward situation. I raisec a college story r - Ray 1 ot ‘{\,1 “ ‘;,\, 1‘—“-=lwn no hint | 1% - It is.a college story, wherein Mr. Ray Ry eyesitoshllantling teSIL “Doan’ know nuflin on i is seen as a dreamy bookworm of a % s in them of the resentment which still] . "q jared. 1 doan’ 'dopt nobody | student. He takes the place of a | Of Hllen Neal's type across the foot- lingered in my heart. ! | cept I've summered an’ wintered | jively fellow student and sgets into a | lights,” Miss Van Waldron “Peace, of course, and thank you, s was to be discussed ard analyzed ad libitum. “What is necessary to get a woman was asked. ‘em.” tangle wherein are involved an heir- She pondered the question. “YWhat 1 said smiling. Mr. Drake turned to Lillian Withless and a chorus girl whose indenti- { do you mean by a woman of Fllen Thank you!" he murmured smil-| S5 8 0 Gon ties confuse him. The finish is a | Neal pe v she asked. ing back, then he turned to Lillian “This settled it,” he said. *“T shall { syrprise and the whole story is typi- “Well, in the' ordinary accepted carelessly. “It's a wonder 10 me SOMC | o 1ho 5 tent and camp on your door-| ca) of-Jife on the campus. Mr. Ray | sense, a bad womay : hotel manager doesn’t affer Belty] S on o) Botty declares I've ‘summer- | i¢ qupported by pretty Dovis Lee and “But Ellen isn't bad. The about a million dollars a week and} J. " intored” sufficiently to be . fine cast. A two-rcel Sunshine | can say about her is that s take her away from you,” he said,| ;o 5i0q comedy, the latest Pathe News, Mutt | a bit spotty. She isn't pure, of course. with reminiscent admiration for the} ““n "\ an threw back her head | g jeff and the 10th episode of “The | but to call her a searlet woman. or o frapped chicken jelly J and gave a chuckling laugh. < | Tiger's 1il,” with Jdashing Ruth | woman inherently bad in the .smlsu h-h-h!"” Lillian whispered dra- “Yoh kaint come it over ole Bel!¥| piiang ana George Larkin, complete | that the women portraved by some of matically as the dining room door| .o .., qoes count vohself de beatinest| " G1m program. our foreign actresses is bad. is alto- swung open ta admit the old colored} .05, aj) qis town,” she said gleeful- Fox vaudeville is headlined by the | gother misinterpreting the character. woman in the picturesaue E‘J"" ‘”‘"l“' Iy Lillian’s quiet voice punctuated comedy movelty “A Night in the! In'the &in of Ellen Neal there is logic, fects to her own satisfaction and the| ;.. sentence. “Trenches,” ail the members of which | and circumstance, and what is still delight of all Lilllan's ”"""_‘_, e Lillian ntervenes. are members of the well known 77th | more important—humanity. She is She bore a tray from which arose| . o\ "7 Cll something burning, | division of the U. S army. Miss Ma- | neither a feminine Don Jian, who the steaming savory odor 9 _fl'w““\'j son, the lone lady in the act, was a | seeks the devil because he is . ner culinary poem., There never is an Bett She scut. | canteen worker in Brest and mar- | a feminine Iago, who goes to the dev- formality about Lillian’s small di “Oh, my good gracious.” She scul-{ o4 one of the members of-the 77th | il because she. is perverse. She is a ners, and from long experience I| . (5 tno door, while her mistress| division, who was instrumental in | iremendously human, fremendously knew H'\Ej surest way to Betty's | strangled a laugh behind her servi-|staging the act. Night in the | sympathetic figure. In whatever bad- £ so I spoke promptly. Sy s g trenches” tells a story of the late | ness there is in_her, there is the ex- Leftgichann gz o siitio ibrawniand l UL iRl s D § Beliy BT exclaiimed) JoRlEtes e i s 1o | WAr in @ most graphic manner, amidst | piating method of humani vellow cretonne with brown pipings. r!”v with trimmings of fancy really those deviled crabs of yours? It is Lillian's invariable custom to | Jitf & 0% SUADE st o Saocof 2 : Mr. Drake's Plea. ! G O G e S e (F SR L hen you ,\TL me ‘What is neces- “Ho, ho!" Betty baomed. “I'se jest| PEr™Mitt i i Py s i ss station, fele- | sary {o get a woman of Ellen Neal f sayin’ toh mahself out in de | (o the badinage of her guests U phone. rapid-fire gunning, a pretty | type across the footlights?’ I say to EOLEIo0 N Mght | the conversation threatens to get em- | jove story in which a war correspond- | you that the essential thing is to un- kitchen dat I'd bet you'd jump right] ' 0 =i o™ Then she effectively gets N"l and a Red Cross nurse arc the | derstand Ellen Neal—not nierely the rid of her by some absurd pretext, | prificipals is unravelled in a most | detail of her conduct—bul her back which Betty either believes or ac-|satisfactory manner. Several songs|ground. Her motives, her g | cepts with an understanding of Why |are| introduced. the action is rapid, | T am quite convinced that the acts of s her mistress has given it. the \dialog snappy and the scenery | people tfaken: in themselves apart A lS ee | “That's decidedly a score against|perfect in every detail. Tt is an act | from these other considerations are ! \ou, Mr. Drake,” Lillian laughed|that \will surely be enjoved as it | nothing at all in the world. Unl # | When Betty was safely in the kitchen, | brings to us a perfect replica of our | we probe deeply for causes, we shall Ju Iy fh to thh | “Yes. I am staggering under the 1dmn=s “over there.” with the | always be deceived by effects. T want blow,” he returned. “The worst af it | add.$ional advantage of really clever | o know about the heart and the mind is that's the second time within a|comédy and a he story worth | and the house wherem the one thinks week that I've been accused of having | whif. and the other feels before 1 care to ° ° Ictorla e S \ RreEe sit in judgment upon what the hand He_ was careful not to look at me. R 5 does hut fi\gould feel my face flushing : | “So I picture Ellen Neal hotfe, Teedige had sald ruthfully : psychologs a great character with a strange destiny and — e B SXGithingan fhouRseandinamea me ad [Eahat W.cry Woman Wants” at the tre to zet hér ‘oter the footlights as ows B! his accuser 1 coulaynol ~have been . ainca. S | more embarrassed. \ S, R e xgurious glanc “Grace’ Darmond, the screen heauty, | — e : \ considerate-| Who has had notable success in photo- = t sene then locked amayis dramag with Tyrone Power, otis Har-| YOUNG SIRS al T iYou must deserve it siakctorted | 1an #hd others, makes a tremendous VIBBERTS’ LOT A ngmn}“ ilianiane orinnge thatolls e REalin e emendousiprofustion | ARE CHIC TOO M abruptly, o iy Stanley. St. s did you tell me 3;;\1“*{6\ ORF WORCIANERIER 5 il would have that man on hand?” eanim s anmond el Auspices New Britain §# Mr. Drake permitted a faint lonk | the partjof Gloria Graham. secretar, ()rder of Owls No. 548. of surprise to pass over h ce. lLil-{ to a wealthy middle-aged h.u!.u'l-m: lian doesn’t usually ask to have her| Whom shé marries when her lover 10 SHOWS memory jogged. But I knew that she | reported killed in France. Gloria rea- soned that if she could not have love had asked the question simply to di- | soned th ; L st 3 RIDES vert his attention from my flushed | She would®love —luxu and 800 Specml Matinee | “One of my operatives will e | nied “her. fohe clothes, which had always been de- After a brief period of Wed. and Sat. him at the cornct nearest that wom- | happiness, or W hn‘; she !h'nu:‘m"‘\\‘,w‘ || 2n's house at hai-after eight,” he re. | happiness, hes husband went hack to, < § bits. neglecting her i plied. his philandering h 2 | thr c 00k County hosp thi o T for mnother woman. i teaity n J roughout ( unty, 11 hospital this t 1 s to th The Chicago Tuberculosis institute | carries two nurses and a yhysicia atient i ¢ifference and insulted | = e g a physici patien o et ailsat wHEnd f ahe !t-;\rn<; B i ” {hat her lover's death had been falsely | I . e reported. When her husband has been lover trap- MATIVEES 110 AND 0o _ ovmiGs i v e [l 0UeA et 108 2ot e , Heroic French War Dog, Honored by Army, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ! wnfpmittigmurder afd assumes respons “WHAT EVERY. WOMAN WANTS” e DA e ) ' Now An Amer can, Thanks to YM C.A. Man ¥ tional triarscene brings about the ‘;ll Q e expose of the real murderer, and Glo- l,AR “ ]v‘. i «what every woman wants CE ;r'\au?(l\";iw“rr a real man. Miss I (By Betty Brown.) Loost, Credited Wth Two SOME SAY—That woman has a dominant desire for onc thing, and mond wearg some stunning gowns Just to prove that even masculine Official Cltatluns, Spent that is a desire that is never satisfied. during the :production which reveal| youth has its fashion foibles we ex- Y N 5 ; : a e E D ears in No Man’s Land OTHERS SAY—That woman mostly wants “her own way” or “the the fact thaj she possesses beauty of last word” or a couple of automobiles, 7 e figure ag well as of face. Other 3 on Slopes of Verdun Pro- Sicih E nobiles, cats, pretty P arepitcs Gaclude the first of the | ™Man of seven summe He wears one ) i q 5 Ly K 2 i t r- SHE FOUND—“What cvery woman wants.” and she found it after Cyelone Smith stories with Iddie | of the new picturesque suits of blouse tecting O tposts from Ge; a heart breaking scarch for what she thought she Polo, a new sareaming Mack Sennett | persuasion, done in a tan cotton man Raiders and Patrols. wanted. Tt wasn't at all what most peoplo (hini comedy and others. A new big vaude- [ weave which cleverly simulates Shan- ) every woman wants. ville show includes the Threc Ander- | tung silk. There is a long, rolling col- If the airmen were the eyes of {MACK SENNETT COMEDY — sons in mirth, music and comedy; lar and a belt of patent leather. the army, this dog was the ears of EDDIE POLO IN CYCLONE Ve the Strand Trio, real entertainers. and RSSERNGT PN BIG VAUDEVILLE SHO KellandiiDe \wiitinfaicoms edyimonety & (s oftering. VED AND 1f a patient is too ill to go to the| (¢) Underwood & Underwood. hibit this very well gotten up voung at least a part of it. For two years he lay every night out.in No Man's V.and, watching and listening for CRUELLY TREATED (erman patrols and raiding parties ! His name is Loost, and as a ! a B flmpflunna e — y . real veteran of the war he has two oo citations to his credit for having The Pnpulnr l‘lcmulc Grounds. : > % 5 saved French troops from surprise E A attacks by Hun patrols Zn the out: N ! 7 er defences of Verdun. So acute is Band Concert .y : Loost's hearing that he could detect A : : i ; appers trying to tunnel under the VAUDEVILLE | 45 Every Sunday , gk French trenchios, a gift that enabled SocfND BEXTMETURES - : ST ] : ; : him several times to spoil the plans § Dancing, Boating, Bathing, Pilliards, 4 4 of the German nng%npers_ ; “:::::25 }"{;\1:,« Coaster n,,e,é the Whip 5 3 & After the armistice was signed. Dinner, Table D ‘Hote and A La Carte ’ " i . LoosticamefintojithelhandsiofSthe | t 2 French War Dog Society which en- S G Ty wr L s 2 couraged the breeding of such dogs ;. Y Piercet and Norton, Itob E i 5 : ¢ 4 long before the war and later has i ¥ o A & i : taken care of those animals which X 8 became disahled or tco old to be longer fit for active work. It was TONIGHT — TOMORROW — SATURDAY ; : : SR : : B -~ Pt while he was a “guest” of the so- In the Howling Comedy ; " 4 4 - ciety that Loost met hie present £ . el o by AP | n\vnc-r, Ra:ph H. McK vey, a .Ve*: ; " i o Gl Joing weltare work in Framee for A Whirlwind Sunshine Comedy B CHONI 100 ki 5 LA Ll ; . FP. 10 OF_ THE TIGER'S TRAIL Matinces Fvery J Wednesday, @ | L o 5 McKelvey’s work was the distri- & 2] » : ; Thursday and sgturday—Posi- v i : bution of fons of hooks. for the gakaE Jows MO EAD] g g B dvely the cotfest Place i T S dougliboys in all parts of France French, but when talked fo in bis and another time Loost was citél Town I : " S i\ great warehouse in Paris was nati tongue he seems to under- by a colonel anc EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION : pss ; 1 € lonel und paraded before the’ CORMICA™ PLAYERS H & i i filied with volumes, pamphlets and stand anything, the “Y" man says. grateful Fer‘H troops. 2 3 : reading matter of all sorts, and it On the liner on the way home, at In all probability, Loost hever! “ ,’ “ in the Scnsational Hit of the : 5 il was McKelvey's job to keep this McKelvey's order, Lo; climbed a will see his native land again. Mr. Season— mass of literature moving to the ladder. “Go ahead! Go up, Loost!"” McKelvey has a large country plasd i 1 Ty 2zl points where it wag most needed. got only uzzied stare and a in northern New York gnd there i oL (1) m‘o ‘ i ! Margaret Fuhrman Gent: who re- So well ¢éid ke do thi vhi k b Keivey ¢ A 1g3 hrman Gent: So he is that the whine. b Yy cried, the war hero will go v I A Rapid Fire Comedy by the members of the 77th. v C m n las | i 11l go to live, having irned on the Lorraine to return to president of the War Dog Society. “Allez st! 3 02! Loost at nothing mote diffie, 4 5t Night Thrilled from admirati % niat: 1 i : 1lt or dangerous York Division. Audience Laf e e her home in Chicage. She an acniatio 1 nce < ! 3 che: to do than occasionally to drive and [Pelighted. work, and knowing Mec Don't Mise phis atic Treat An Act that Took New York by Storm. McKelvey's ¢ the voy home the cows—'‘va ' as Loost bu was ar: a Ger- i § C i Amefican but was married to a of dogs, promised him a canine war _ On one of the occasions when this will know them In fact, McKolvey 5 ur Seats Now. man. as refused a divorce from her hero to bring to America and give dog was honored, the French com- foresees the need of a Fréach 3 OTHER ACTS 3 s e husband and was kept in Germany, a home. mander of a company at one of the course for his i farm hands !f hi§ later being imprisoned and ecruelly Loost does not know a word of outer defences of Verdun officially new do . £ 0 e WA f lefences n offi~ially g is going to esce; pros : — — — GOOD EDDI treated. 3 . English. and has to be spoken to in. recommended him for a citation, homesick. b Rol 3 e T s g . (C) Underwood & Underwood. £