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" fmperative that 1 leoked . mext door?" he asked. was - little, and Mrs, MY HUSBAND’S LOVE Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE The Way Dicky Gave Madge Something (0 Think, About Dieky's tone was so unconseiously st him 11 is not like him to [ eurlous about anyihing which docs pol concern ourselves, and one veice fn the hall could not he mistaken as o any erson other than our Aambeyant nelghbor his amasement beton Mrs Marks whom he had disiiked ever sinee first meeting with her “Mps, Marks and one of her| friends,” | murmured in us low a tone a8 | conld nage, hut Dicky mut onsistent and insistent | 1 listened with him to the animated colloquy going on oul side the door. | wWell ! of all things ! Mrs, Marks' Righ-nitehed voice had said as she opened the door Maollie What aver are you doing here at this time of day!” Aldn’t go to work this morning " Nell.” The answer was in the sur ngly well-modulated contra f Mollie Faweett, the girl with the Eng Hish name and the Southern FEuro- pean type of heauty, whose personal fty had so interested me the day be- fore. “Didn't go tg work ! Mrs, Marks shrilled, “How's that?" | [ didn't get him o'clock.” “Phat’s no excuse for you." There was & maternally reproving note in Mrs. Marks' tone I've known you to dance all night and go to work as fresh us a dalsy the next morning.” “[ know. But, oh ! Nell " the fresh young tones had a trill of excitemait in them, "I 1 SUCH a queer ad- venture last night—1 didn’t go to sleep for hours after T got ome, | thinking about it, and I just cofldn’t go to work this morning until T had told you about—you're all the mothoer or sister 1 ever had, you know." Madge Is Wary “Well ! come along in and spill it,” Mrs. Marks bloomed in a mollified to! Iy Potey's just getting wp, but I'll pack him off in a hurry-——he don't want anything but a cup of cof- | fee and rolls, and then we'll have a chance to talk.”" The closing of the down the hall punctuated tence with a period, and Dick . lazily, and an apparently yawn. 'Whe's that dame whose only fem- {nine relative is our flamboyant friend “Heaven will | have to protect the working goil’."— | he hummed the old couplet—"if M Marks is the only safeguard she ha: Somewhere within my censciousness tinkled a tiny warning bell. What it meant 1 did not know, but when- ever I hear it, T am wary—and— chary of speech until T am sure of my ground. / “When Do the Crowd Get Here? “I am net sure,” T said slowly, “put her voice sounds like that of a girl to whom Mra, Marks introduced me one day. [ believe all her rela- thves were killed in a fire when she Marks brought | until three Marks' door her sen- spoke cuareless | | her up.” Dicky lit a ciga lous attention to the “Voice doesn't sound like the bringing up of Mrs. Marks" he ‘drawled. “Do her looks match her voice, or is she like her mentor? t te. Letter from Mrs, Joseph Graves Ham- | flton to Mrs, John Alden Prescott. | My Dear Leslie— I am hastening to write you ‘aj little note to tell you some news that| will shock you greatly. Leslie, 1| think your father is very ill. Yeater-| day he had some sort of seizure in| the offica and after he was brought| home he lay in a kind of stupor for| quite a while. | he doctor seemed very much| afraid of a paralytic stroke, aithough your father still has the usc of his| Himbs and has no trouble in talking. WOMAN SICK TWO YEARS Caused by Troubles Women Often | Have—Relieved by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound Medina, New York.—‘‘1 had a great deal of trouble such as women often bave, and this af- fected my nerves. For over two yearsl suffered this way, then Iread in the ‘Buffalo Times about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound and have taken it with very good results. I am very much better and feel justified in " pn;igimf]t e Vegeta- Compound to my friends and neigh- bore who suffer from anything of the WMYI{ ApKing, 311 Erin N. Y. Feels Like Girl Sixteen Rochester, N. Y.— After my twin irla were born I was all run-down. My neighbors thought 1 was going to die. 1 saw your advertisement in the paper and bought Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound. The first bottle helped me and 1 kept on taking it. 1 o1l~ weighed ninety ds when I began taking it, and I have gained in wef:nt and feel like a girl of sixteen. I never e#n say enough for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compornd.” —Mrs. NELLIE DoRey, 16 Skuse Jark, Roche ter, N.Y. | athruptiy ol with h\nnru-h‘ condition of the hody notice her loaks 1 said mendaciously quite pretty 1 apele: to Mollie's exqui “and with niee Paweelt,"” name." 1 really didn’t | particutariy, e derk I.ur.t mentall brupette heauty eyes. Her name is Mollie But that's an English | Digky sald hastily, then stopped | 1 looked at him with ap parently careless inquiry, although my pulses were hammering. Why shouldn't she have an Eng lish name?" 1 askied No reason at all,” he promptly, “except that your tion scunded sort ™ foreign the love of Mike; can't you talk about anything except Mrs, Marks and her friends 'm getting mighty fed up with that hunch, Buppose you eut it out for an hour or two at least Wien do the crowd get here? 1 held back the ohvious and just comment that T had mentioned my nelghbors exeept in direct answer to his own questions, Instinctively 1 was on my guard against this sudden pretense of irritation en Dicky's part There was something odd back of this len questioning—something which | meant to reason out later, and 1 did net wish my fuenities hefogged Wy any acrimonious debate with him 1, therefor jgnored his comment, and answerod his questions. “Lillan and Marion ot others at siv.” “You won't need me then, will you?" he asked. “1 really ought to get over to the studio, I'll shave and make a sneak, if you don’t mind."” answered deserip Bu: fer five, the hefare four py DR. CLIFFORD C. ROBINSON MASSAGE Massage may lled a body skin and nerve tonic. It invigorates the body without the usual doping of any tonal medicines. In many so-calied nervous treubles it does great aid with very little ex- haustion to the central nervous & tem. Massage also aids metabolism (the chemical provess of repair and waste in the hedy) and does much toward musgele development. It is par- ticularly an aid to the facial m 3 whieh receive little or no ex These may he stimulated, rounded out and the face contour improved by massage. The abdominal muscles are tightened up, aided and strengthened by massage, while the great muscle of the back and shoulders may be de- veloped and improved by this treat ment. I am not advocating any form or system of massage as treatment for anything. The question at issue is the value of massage or skillful rubbing er kneading of the uter skin or muscles towards an im- rovement, flexibili and soothing as a general help on the high road to health. Of course massage is only a nat- ural, simple process to encourage the circulation. Free or increased cifeu- be or ial Of course we had the best specialists in town and they finally decided it was entirely a nervous trouble that aftected him. He has been {solated from every one. Even I am not to be allowed to see him except for about five minutes a day, just long enough, the docter said, for me to smile and not to him and say every- thing is all right and he is not to worry. Just as soon as he is able to be moved we are going to take him'to a camp in the Adirondacks. One of your father's partners has offered his beautiful place up there. I will telegraph or telephone you cvery day. Should have telegraphed yesterday only the doctor said it was foolish for me to do it, as there probably would be no change in him for a few days and I could give you only the bare facts which might worry you inexpressibly and in a lotter 1 could tell you everything. Leslie, your father has been work- ing beyond his strength. Iver since the prosident of the steel mills died your father has taken upon himself| his duties as well as his owngand it/ BAILY FANRION SEPVICR rom Paris Reach Popularity Here American designers unite this sea- son (n saying “there's nothing new in Paris,” but they also unite in saying there are many styles that are de- lghtfully smart and adaptable. Here are two variations of the vogue for apron tunics which was in- troduced in the spring In Paris and is] ——————— —— * lation means more blood means better supply to the and cells which in many persons are | little used and subsequently not fuily developed. A blood renewal through massage produces a healthy “normal tone which the muscles and nerve sys- tem share in the general toning-up | process, | just new reaching its greatest popu- lurity here, As the style is still good In France these models are doubly recommended. The black froek is velvet with a silk Jace apron held by a strip of velvet down the front, The tallored dres: is of fine wool kasha with the new flat embroidery for trimming. silk lace, the lace finely pleated. More®hiood | Tihe pleating permits the slip to eling tissues o the figure and yet allows the great- est amount of freedom, Velvet Appliques Velvet flowers appliqued on velvet gowns is one of the neweat trim- ming notions, On one model, colors ranging from orchid to purple are used. Marked H: It vou mark your hdkerchicrs handkerchiefs | with indelible ink, you will find that Cretonne Jacquettes | Jacquettes of cretonne and i veteen, in warm autumn shades, ‘ worn with white wool skirts vel- are Yor Afterhoon Separate coats of sueae cloth in beige, tan and rust are trimmed in narrow bands of fur and worn with afternoon frocks. The String Tie | The smartness of the autumn coat| and skirt snit lies in the high eellar|can be put into the flour and butter folds closely about the throat|and stirred with a whisk beater over which and turns over a brilliant with long narrow ends belt, tring tie the | Costume Slip costume slip continues in popu- T One of the newest is of tinted | larity, eml | can do other housework | clothes are getting elean. | keeping on a business basis. the center is the most inconspicuous place to put yvour initials, If you nsr oidery, the corner is most appro- priate, Washing Machine using washing machine you while the By a Keep a Budget Don’t neglect to budget your house- hold expenses and keep your house Quick White Sauce When making white sauce the milk saves time and uce a hot fire. Thi makes a smooth systematic Dishwashing Before starting the dishwashing job, scrape and stack vour dishes and wash in the regular order. amacmargeos JOHNNIE o th. CIRCUS . and his CUFFY BEAR b, ~ By ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY THY, TALL FARMER. Mr. Guffey, the Giant, often marked that he had never met a man | who was as tall as he was. He took took great pride in his height, just as| Commodore Mudget the Midget took| great pride in his lack of it. As Johnnie Green discovered, these | two were close friends. In the side- show their platforms were side by side. The lecturer was in the habit of picking up the Commodore and setting him down upon Mr. Guffey's platform, so the audience could sece them together. 3 It was hard to tell which of them was the more pleased by this act. Of]| course Commodore Mudgett made Mr. re- they got on famously with each other. Johnnie Green found much pleasure in their company.' They were quite unlike any fricnds he had eter had before. One day when Johgnie was wan- dering idly about the show lof, he caught sight of a tall figure standing in front of the lemonade stand. The mau towered above everyhody else. Johnnie wondered what Mr. Guffey could be doing there, at that hour, when the side show was open. So Johnnie trotted over to the lem- onade stand. And when he got ihere, | he had a great surprise. It wasn't Mr. Guffey at all. It was another giant-—a farmer who had come to.spe the show. .Johnnie Green gazed up has proved too much for him. However, today, 24 hours after his| swizure, he is perfectly conscious and able to speak, although the doctor | has told him that he must not do so. | This, of course, we take as great en conragement. 1 haven't e want her to & f neces bled worried Alice, as T do not and of course to Wer vory we can A cable quickly Don't 3 you van| heip and don't try come, because the job and that could not this trained corps of worry more than to twa nurses on nothing much better my know, we have you conld do e done by service, or by x vou arc all deve to your I Tack 1 elopement father that subscquent \apman vorried rather ! am you far ser by failure vith paper ington's and [ stremely sensatior I am Ituth cone clopment hut r your rriend mere 1 Ja am 1 10 m ot any rou ydrelly person the rdmother W know Kiss bhahy 1OTHER NBA | | Guffey ¥ he vanied to w\;;w. the Grant would have to kneel down Maybe Commodore Mudgelt weuld learn to use shils. appear cven taller sthan he| vas, while Mr. Guffey made his little | friend seem shorter. | Although the Giant seldom smiled, he a mournful sort of man, when| he tood heside the Commodore like| sad something remotely re- sembling a smile always appearcd up-| hi ng horselike face. Tt pleased Mr, Gufiey, too, to step down and mingle with the erowd, while they murmuared their wonder at him. Commodore Mudgett didn’t dare do| He was afraid of being tram- | this a on 1 pled on Mr were Commodore of busi . Guffer and the ten together o outside it 1o wally wprightiy And generally| a8 hotrs, the i va Midget " for the the enongh two. He certainly | Mr.| Vimsel | at him in amazement. looked to be fully as tall as Guffey The tall farmer was drinking lem- onade with two friends. When they| set down their giasses one of them suid, “What'll we do now?" | “1 aim to go intr the side show,”| «ald tall farmer. "1 see they've got a ant in there, 1 want to have a look at him.” | The two friends laughed loudly ‘Come on!" they shouted. And away all went, with Johnnie Green| ailing along behind them. He hoped, for Mr. GuiToy’s sake, that the | tall farmer horter {ha® Mr. Guf- | tey | (Copyriz 1923, Metropolitan Borviee,) he was wspaper BY INTER MARY @ TIRED PLANNING DINNERNS Here's & Suggestion For Tomorrow's | Repast, Arranged For Your Relief | The Menu | Cream of Celery Boup | Toa Crackers Veal Birds Twice Baked Potatoes | Caulifiower au, Gratin | Endive Halad \ Rolls Hliced Peaches With Cream Nut Cookies Coffee ~ | | May I help you plan your dinner for | tomorrow ? Sometimes after weeks of planning & woman feels she wouldn't ind cookineg the dinner it shie didw't | have to decide what to cook. There i usually an abundance of fruit and vegelables early in the fall, %0 that part's easy. And just a Sug- | gestion ahout the fruit, The Wme 1-. coming when made desserts of dried | fruits are going to be necessa »o while it's possible serve the fruit ".u? patural,” Add a simple eake or cook- fen of some sort If you want to, but | piain sliced peaches and cream leave little to be desired. The last of the | melons or grapes might add the finish- | ing touch to any dinner, | Or the salad may he of fruit, and | cheose und crackers might finish the | dinner, Note the menu I have devised here, ‘The meat, potatoes and cauliflower | ate all cooked in the oven. This con- | gorves fuel on a gas stove and makes good use of the heated oven in a coal range, In the course of # year these small items are worth while, Cream of Celery Soup One head celery, 2 small onions, 2 sprigs parsiey, 4 tablespoons rice, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-4 teaspenn pepper, 2 cups milk, 1 quart water, 1 tablespoon hutter, Chop celery, leaves and stalks Mince onions and parsley. Melt butter | in kettle, add onions and cook five minutes. Add celery, parsley and rice, cover with the water and simmer an hour. Rub through puree strainer and add milk heated ‘to the boiling point. Season with sait and pepper and serve topped with whipped cream if desired. Caulifiower an Gratin One head caulifiower, 11 cups milk, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons but- ter, 2 tablespoons grated cheese, 14 teaspoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, cup coarse stale hread crumhs, 2 Lieapoons melted butter, Remove outer green leaves from caulifower, Put in pan of cold salted water for an hour. Drain and ‘nok uncovered in boiling salted water | for 30 minutes. Save one-half cup of the water in which, the. caulifliower was conked. Drain from water and separate into sprigs. Put in huttered | baking dish and cover with sauce made by melting hutter, stirring in flour and slowly adding milk and cau- lifiower water. - Stir constantly. When smooth add cheese, Cover with | bread crumbs which have been mixed with the melted butter. Bake in a moderate oven until brown and serve at once. 13 ta Fudive Salad | Wash and crisp endive. Chill and dry. _Cut three slices of hacon into tiny: pieces and try out fat. Remove from fira and stir in two tahlespoons vine- |8 gar, Beat until well blended and pour aver endive. Herve at once, Meat 1ats _ Bave and clarlfy all meat fats. Those not good for cooking will make s0ap. i Lubess atheswise .'lzfl::l tdteuled, written by the praes o —— ||u|| p - SDAYTIME WIVES"' AT LYCEUM, It is not the busineas man's sten- ographer or seeretary who'ls at fault when her employer beging o alp away from his wife, but more often it is the wife's fault entirely, is the great message unfolded in "Daytime Wives, ' (he great epical society drama whieh opened a four days' run at the Lyceum last night. With the hand of the master director, this picture tells why the office girl is often falae- Iy accused by her employer's shallow, faithless, luxury loving wife, of st ing her hushand's affections, when in reality it is the wife herself who has been slipping from grace, The news reels and eomedy round out the program, which for the last half of the week is changed, bring! Pryant Washburn and Mabel Forrest in “Mine to Keep,” a domestic tangle resulting from jealousy, ANl of next week the Lyceum s to present Mrs, Wallace Teld's melodrama, “Human Wreckage." This ix an expose of the drug evil written inte an intensely interesting and grip- ping drama of everyday life, The Lyceum also takes great pleas- ure In announcing the signing of a contract for Hutchinson's “If Winter Comes," “MERRY D" at Palace Universal's million dollar photoplay “Merry Go Round” epened a four day engagement at the Palace last evening to i capacity audience of first nighters who were totally delighted with this photoplay thut thrilled New York.for ten weeks. Life Is discovered ws a Merry-Go- Round,” It certainly is an interesting and plausible explanation of life that we are all passengers on. a whirling merry-go-round of fate that picks us up att random and drops us off at will, changing the course of our destinies without any kind of leave. Mary Philbin, a expected to be a screen sensation, plays the role of a girl of the Prater, an organ grinder of Vienna's Cone Island, Norman Kerry impersonates a proud young scion of nohility, whose love for the girl is without the depth and sincerity at first to force a way for happiness through the maze of social restrictions surrounding them.’ Starting Thursday Wallace Beery, Tistelle Taylor and Iforrest Staniey will be seen in “Bavu' from Jarl Carrol's stage success. 53 BIBLY CONFERENC New York, Oct, §. — Thirty-three large cities throughout = the country will be centers during the next 60 days of a series of Bible and missionary conferences, it was announced today r. W. H. Bowler of New York, v of fleld activitics of the gen- of promotion of the north- t convention. Tonight, Tues,, Wed. “MERRY GO ROUND” The #hotoplay That Astounded New York Cost a Fortune and Worth 1t!—Big Cast of Stars with MARY PHILBIN The Screen’s Most Beauti- ful Woman NORMAN KERRY The Screen’s Most Hand- some Lover The Most Stupenduous Love Story Ever Screened DON'T MISS IT—SEE IT SURE! Thurs.—Wallace Beery, Estelle Taylor, Forrest Stanley, in “BAVU” "A L l‘ ‘ inlnull 4N'e great | new “discovery,” | 1 v e 0 oy | J“’l‘lllll BS I} [l O 9 o atioes wid gerions in thls column are Iho respective amusement (ompany . WONG KONG FOLLIES AT CAPITOL The Keith vauderille feature at the Capitel on the new bill epening to. day bri @ real peveity to this eity in the presence of “The Hong Keng Follies,” As we all know, mission schools of San Franciseo (each young Chinese maids American ways and civilization, but here are five Chiness girls who have heen educated above thelr sehooling iIn the line of enter- taining, The Hong Kong Follies is an offering by these five Oriental malids, & sort of revue in which they sing and dance In American style, ably assisted by an American boy. The cast includes Ming Toy, the Lee Twins, Helen Lon gand Pauline Sing and it is certainly & novelty to hear ‘nmn sing popular songs; Jimmy | Dwyer and Grace Orma offer a fine comedy skit “Just Playmates” which | contains many good laughes and s | enl en ining: Jean La Cross, '(. Ifornia Nightingale, displays & wonderful singing voice to good ad- vantage and was well liked this after- ! noon; Niobe, America's aquatic marve! performs In & tank of water and does l-omo remarkable stunts under water, her volee being audible in any part of | of the audience while being com- | pletely submerged; *“The Explorers’” | with n cast of five elever artists offer Iu desert novelty “The Tomb Seekers,” which Is made for laughing purposes only and which will delight Capitol patrons at each show. If you saw prison staring you {n the face; iIf you were young and beau- tiful—and a crook; if you knew that a sentence would send you forth at its expiration an old woman-—would you listen to the dictate of con- scince? Would you be ready to ac- cept a challenge to help instead of. hinder the law? hat is the predicament of Betty Clompson as the Theroine of “The Woman With Four I"aces,” a Herbert Brenon Paramount production at the Capitol theater now, | MALVY ASSAULTED Cahors, Mrance, Oct. §.~—Louis J. Malvy, former minister of the interior journeyed to the village of Creytse yesterday to preside at the inaugura- tion of a soldier memorial, a fact that did not escape the attention of the youthful adherents of Leon Davdet who iried to upset the meeting. Tn the ensuing scuffle M, Malvy was hit in the back with a knuckle duster Several shots were fired, but no one was hurt, The police arrested four royalists and invited the rest to teave the dis- trict. M. Malvy sufficiently recovered from the oxcitement to announce la- ter at a,banquet that he intended to he a candidate for parliament at next year's elections, 5-BIG TIME ACTS-5 Keith Vaudeville Ueaturing The Hong Kong Follies | with MING TOY and 5—Real Chinese Girls—3 JIMMIE DWYER AND GRACE ORMA in “Tust Playmates" T NIOBE The Aquatie Marvel—- Startling Underwater Stunts " JEAN LA CROSS California's Nightingale “"“THE EXPLORERS" in the desert novelty “The Tomb Seekers" 5=—Clever Artists—3 AND BETTY (_‘OMPSON e N1 “THE WOMAN WITH 4, FACES” —PARSONS THEATER— Hartford, Conn. One Week Commencing Monday, Schwab & Oct Direct from a Solid Year on Broad naud Saturday ¥ Matinees Wednesday Kusell By Damel Kusel Music by Albert Fon Tres lyrics by Nevifle [eeson Dances St sged by Sammy Lee *Best MusicaL COMEDY New York Has SEEN IN VEARS' JUANDALE 7n NY Amerrcan o ———— (/)ith a dustingizished Cast andl the famous A Foenings: 50 to #2.50. Wednesday Seat Sale Friday Chors o° Dancing Jebilains ) Satarday Malinee 50¢ Mat. 50c to 8 I Orders Now. P SN————G———i