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Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Katherine Suspected Something Was Wronz “You're a wonder, Katrina with apparent lightness but re estness when Katherine had of her ruse to induce sleep Mrs. Durkee “Fiddlesticks,” returned quely. “Because 1 cajoled an hysterical little into slumber? That's the Ay But come on downstairs. We'll to see to the dir Durkee planned a delicious you ber housewifely pride—but we to plan to delay the of it til Dr. Braithwaite has her examination he planned. He never wait for dinner, first, if she awalke If she is awake,” 1 ec ingly as we entered the kitcl evrything was in radines save the last touc oven, vegetables boi salad appetizi the dressing. The had gone upstairs. ing dress for her way to the terrifie Liela’'s own nervou gravaicd, The Busy “You mean to g dinner without her? stared at me Exactly. sleep?” An hour at least 1inne al earn- toid me for littie woman easiest thi do. have has Mrs, one ner oW ha se m the will ing en is oed mean- vhere hes idently r work- changed he neg 4 given which g steria > had only Paticnt ahead a Katherine How lo patient to tax her getting up of a company dinner siding over it. But she was so interseted in fts preparation that it took her mind off her condition, and 1 thought it wise to let her go through with it However, with this last complication, 1 think you're right. We'll get it out of the way while Re sure to have boiling water constantly tap, however for as soon as Braithwaite finishes examining want her to have a strong cup of tea.” “You don't think = any further objection to secing Dr. Braith- waite?” 1 ask beginning the prep aration of u brown sauce “You won't hear another word from her,” Katherine eonfidently. really is the fest little thing. But a break was coming to her She had kept up Just a trifle too stift an upper lip, and the reaction was bound come There's a taxi now. Can you leave these things for a minute or two? I'd rather have you with me when 1 meet them. T have a feeling way that there's something ou int where,” 1 repre wom which 1 or p she sleeps on Dr. her 1 make protesting d pluek returne ome of joint some- tart with difficulty. my little kir intuition but almost Eraith prospect famous had base ed a had credited with the psychic lan ¢ exhibite her words, 1 rememberad the childish terror which Harriet waite had displayed at the of this mecling between her husbapd and the woman who been his “right hand” in tI hospital he headed Aduring the In these days of radio miracl is not o hard to believe mer gadiograms, the te elepathy yest ften at " in of Letter From John Alden Precoott 101 have said you Sydney Carton My God, Eyd #ee that picture of and she has spread ghere. There i no *Peecavi,” goday knowa that 1 Jeast everyone but Le Naturally T don’t wis bad luck, but I was rath Jast week when #ee the picture, to teli her about yet. Then it yours truly. k- have come hands told til I plucked up co it myself, The whole story the last fadeout and father of the ing over the sle weeping woman k empty crib. It certain She s piling it o picture, if you ha must tell you, the @l the letters but willing to bet exactly what not y got a b is hard o8 never would the mereen He Fyd, that keep Perie for evervone arour be about ti pe end foo. Every f in the atti satnip, sage treating ills of the winter months that Lydia E. Pinkham's pound was first prep thess botanic recipes. a for it has increased that hundreds Perbs are now used #nnu preparation. It ha proved that 95 ont of et en who try it have heen ¥is ¢or any for the tr they were a throug o e of tons of r ry benefite « hich a ™ medieirg O hoid. ne | kit | however, apt to | field me in saw a fascinating opening before processes of and my cousin's wife. Should put Katherine on by giving her a hint Braithwaite had lost had enabled her to and Wi in that old her band's fatherly affection for Katherine nnconsciously to more remantic instant I had an piestion in the nega- utter a single word betraying Har- something un- thinkahle. forc T spoke in a tering while slipping off Dirkee's kitchen apron which 1 appropriated upon entering the hen o' | ¢ hand and thee. | day, and 1 »f speculation mental er T that Harriet the poise which so just e time when comradely threatened changed into a ing? The next swered my own 1 conld not without confidence, tine »{ Warning riet's i'here ban tone Mrs, had will right keep at thy bridge stand the Harviet Is Watchful laughed as she followed me to the ha or, but I though I de- | tected a ht tremolo in the sound There was no sign of nervousness, in either her voice or face | when.T swung open the door to ad- | mit the Braithwaites and Alfre One thing I conid do, manoeuvred our positions so that I {took possession of my brother-in.law. leaving first meeting that of Har- | riet and Katherine, and 1 fussed over him as a grandmother might taking his hat and and his attention, voice, with a told me that her poise She done charge of coat ti monopolizing in he me ey {Gbssip ’s Corner Initialed Hats are on hats. millinery Initials New Paris show them on the new now seen ever in and importations the brims crowns | of tai Alpaca Costume tied 1n this is favorite in hlack SCABOY Ipaca 18 effecetively ind white combin I'he three-picce costume this material ations For Gay Occasions frock of cerise vel with embroidery tal beads on one side A festive vet pearl most covered wnd ery in | | Oriental Hint | Coats and dress nd tissues, »s of patterned vel with a suggestion of and India prints about popular this season vets | them, n rugs are very Negligee Trimming Marabou and ostrich vie with each| for honors as trimmings on of velvet and brocade, other | negitgees Narrower Skirts for next sprng are it is rumored, to be and 1t fkirts | much parrower |18 believed they will be much shorter, | | oo, e wants it hack wi as leng she I« help and I t think Leslte would gi t t, even if she knew ot yo think She never get ft up 1 write picture is and te oy iting « Iam w s to ¥ will keeg baby imstar but that me t V'svb has a great make tos any differe ard the chiid my hus- | her | be | and | he | feel- | with | however. 1| have | DAILY FASHION DIAGONAL LINE JELVICE '—‘_‘————I‘ [ The newest of frocks |tain diagonal line from waist that is very smart French This line is sometimes accentuated | by a revexs or my braid binding. It is a line especially adapted, of course, to tailored frocks of twill, charmeen, or a similar fabric. The model sketched has clever new cuffs and an attractive collar of ma- terial just a shade lighter than that| | of the aress. Silk braid is used for | binding and for the beit. show throat and a cer- to very y SISTER MARY To Serve With Salad Many hostesses like to serve the | i ijust before the main course of | meat and vegetables rather than aftet it | A vegetable or fish salad ‘is very acceptable right after the soup, but a | fruit salad seems to give a better bal- ance to the meal if it follows the main course, In any event a salad course proper- | a wafer or some- with the salad it- ompaniment be | with the salad or reon helping Mix cheese, butter, mustard, vin- to a smooth squares, dust Toast quickly. | bread crumbs, pepper, | | egar, sugar and salt |18 servad fuslides paste. Spread on toasted | thing of the " | self ace of The sort ey Serve at oner Ralls 1 poon cherse Cheese Whites 2 eggs 1-4 teaspoon paprikua, grated may be used With | * geay whites until stiff head lettu€e | gegy in salt and paprika and oot S | enough grated cheese to make | mixture the right consistency to form |into marbles. Drop in deep hot fat and fry to a golden brown. Drain on heavy brown paper and heat in |the oven to serve, Cheese Straws One cap grated cheese, 1 cup bread crumbs, 3 cup flour, 1 tablespoon butter 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1.8 teaspoon cayenne pepper, 2 tablespoons milk, dush mustard. Cream butter, add flour, crumbs, cheese and seasoning. Mix thorough- lly. Add milk and mix well. Turn onto a floured molding board, roll one-quarter inch thick, eut in straws one-quarter inch wide and four inches long. Bake in moderate oven for 15 minutes. 1923, NEA Service, Ine.) melt the salt, ind dry add tidhit vegetable or which does from cheese Cheese Crackers Four tablespoons grated American full eream cheese, 2 tablespoons but- ter, paprika, small square crackers, Rub cheese and butter to a smooth | paste Spread mixture on crackers, | dust with paprika and toast just be- fmra serving, | | a fruit, ad piquancy sal gain ready on the thing to pop clearing the salud, This ss with the If the crackers are toaster it's simpte them in the broiler while |table and taking in the |insures their hot crispne a Cheese Cups RBread 24 hours old, cheese, butter | Cm | thick melted a bread in slices two inches Cut in small rounds with an lopen top, small cutter, Hollow out |a tiny cup-shaped depression in one 1'“” of euch round of bread. Dip in “|melted butter, fill depression With | o0 e mad with bands of white {grated cheexe and put in a hot oVeR | yeivet studded with rhinestones to meit the cheese and slightly brown | gws .Y {the bread. Dust lightly with paprika | before sending to the table | Cheese cups are served on the plate | with the salad and eaten with the salad fork | Cheese Squares One cup soft cheese, 2 tahlespoons {butter, 2 tublespoons soft bread | A crumbg, 1.4 teagspoon mustard, 3% | piue water when washing elothes (teaspoon vinegar, 1 tablespoon mineed | will prevent any blue stain from re. | sweet pepper, few gralps sugar, 1.8 | maining on the garments, teaspoon salt, paprika, squares of - | bread | #Cut bread not cighths of an crusts and cut (Copyright, All White A very stunning wrap of white er. Mol o Kolinsky Bands is used to band gowns of | the most delicate satin and crepe this |season, and is made to leok more supple and silken than ever before, Kolinsky Soda in Bluing lump of sode diesolved in the Copped Kettles cleaning copper kettles i) They will more than three- Betore inch thick. Cut off ! them with bolling water, iy two- \n(h munrcr polish more quickly. JOE{NNIE of the ClRCUS and his CUFFY BFAR o ~ By ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY RM. while you were a . He missed you as much as we did. turned the corner of the woodshed. And there was the hired man on the big stone doorstep. He had a pail of milk in BACK TO THE FA late afternoon when the to a stop at the station miles from Johnnie Green's home. The first thing that Johnnie saw, just as the train came to | a halt, was the democrat wagon. The pair of bays were hitched to it. Halt{a shout minute later his mother wag hug-| 1t wi Ie was came was five train They that and began to dance a jig. as a pity there was was pat The hired man His feet pat-patted upon the neeln clicked His body milk in the twe pails if tossed by a great as Johnnie Green wagon the hired off the doorstep nd . with a fiddie igged T tainly out imself sb?" asked Farmer - Cuffy Bear. Ar he was. The bag- ring Cuffy platforn iffed 1 a H 2iready Ie station He w T yome e grov ted some of 1idnt that dare was Rut =t Rear She sat down a and mewed plaintivel crving over Metropolitan ) THE END. the | with paprika and put in a hot aver to | each hand. |residue When he gaw who had come he gave |city | was 16 fiddler (over == |dcelare incapable | person VARICOSE VEINS. Construction of the veins, which in many parts of the body are subject to surface pressure, causes varicose veins in many cases. Its beginning is hardly ever realized by the person who at some future time becomes the real gufferer. Simply stated, varicose veins are enlargements or dislations of the veinous blood vessels through unnat- ural pressure and resnitant weakened vein walls. Persons who work in mills or fac- tories, where they are almost con- stantly on their feet, séldom are trou- bled by varicese veins. The cause is in lack of real physi- cal condition and non-usé of the mus cles for real aid to tHe veinous ¢ircu- lation. Tight clothing, impeding the veins ig thei? work, also causes this trouble, Remember that the veins carry im- pure blood back te the purification plant, the heart and the lungs. They are under constant pumping and valvular pressure and, if constricted and impeded, vecome distended and weakened, showing after a time a swollen, thickened and torturous condition. Begin life right. In vour youth, assum~ and keep a body posture that daes not weaken your muscles or im- pede proper circulation. Keep up some kind of execising through middle life For sufferers, any mild exercise in walking or using the legs and feet will aid the muscles in helping the pressure on the veins to induce strengthening and proper circulation. Some relief may be afforded by rest or reclining with the feet elevated 15 or 20 minutes, a number of times | each day Sometimes in extreme cases a rub- ber stocking may be usad to prevent more serious troubles N Headdresses are very faghionable now and are sure to be in evidence at the Christmas parties. For bobbed heads these are frequently made of silver flowers mounted on a sllver ribbon.| Tor the more dignified types are the more elaborate specimens such as the one sketehed above, ellver cloth fitted over a foundation three or four inches wide, outlined with pearls or rhinestones or a com- bination of both. OPPOSITION EXPECTED 70 GODKIN WILL Attorneys From City And From New Haven Expected To Act For Niece of Testator The will of Mrs Julia Godkin wild together with all administrative out he offered for probate Monday morn- ing at 2 o'cloek, and opposition 1o its being admitted will probably be made by Attorncy Elliot Watrous of New Haven, and Kirkham, Cooper, Hung- erford & Camp of this city, acting for Miss Minnie Woodford of New Haven, tiss Woodford, is u niece of the tes. tator, and together with Lillian Peck of Cleveland, Ohio, who is also a niece, received but $1 in the will. The is left to Oliver Davis of this Mr. Davis is not a relative, but last year appoigted conscrvator Mrs, Godkin's estate, she heing ARE DISCHARGED, 16.—A Central News Berlin says it was an- today that the Bom- 100,000 Lenden, Nov. dizpatch trom herk h Found all its manual employes. The works on their payroll ¥ v workers and clerical have 100,000 13 . ” Quicksands with RICHARD DIX PARAMOUNT VAUDEVILLE Starting Sunday VIRGINIAN All Next Week JACK SHEAN And His BREEZY REVUE made of | Worke had discharged | A w F e > »‘ Y ten by the press for VAUDEVILLE AT PALACE. Tonight the Palace is offering Keith naude\dlle with the phetoplay bill for the balance of the week and at the cpening performances yesterday it proved very entertaining. The photo- play offers Marshall Neilan's newest success, “The Eternal Three,” a very heavy and interesting drama that Mr. Neilan has specially dedicated to the physicians and surgeons of the world. Its cast icludes Hobart Bosworth, Claire Windsor, and Alec Francis. Abe Potash and Morris Perimutter. Without a doubt those names are more common throughout the entire world than those of any person living or déead. They are the brain crea- tions of Montague Glass, the lawyer- author, and from the beginning of theif appearance on the magazine page they have grown in popularity to such an extent that their fame is now international. From there it was but a step to the speaking stage, where for years the roles of the partners have been por- trayed by Barney Bernard and Alex- ander Carr. It was one of the big- gest money-makers in the history of the stage. Now it has heen made into a mo- | tion picture by Samuel Goldwyn under the direction of Clarence Badger, and it will be the feature at the Palace theater, starting sundly. LYCEUM \AL‘DLVIL[AF EXCELS The Exposition Jubilee I'our, the | headline act at the Lyceum theater, is one of the best quartet numbers to be heard here in a long time. These | four colored boys have a fine repor- | toire of popular songs, sing them with l(\rp and add a bit of their own com- |edy activities as well as a dash of | |dance. The Dancers Unique have a very neat dance spec'alty, and The Romans appear at first as a violinist and pianist but turn out to be re- | markably adept athletes, featuring | feats of strength. The Follies Sis- | ters have a lively number and lht‘yz sing and dance well, The accompanying movie fgature is “Quicksands” which brings in a big | thrill toward the end when the entire troop of the Tenth United States cav- | alry dash across the plains, Jack Shean's Sunkist chorus of pretty girls will feature the bill next week when this popular leading man brings his revue here to present Listen Irene. Peppy dances, funny come- dians, delightful musical airs and a dash of the unusual makes this a great attraction, On the same bill for the first three days of the week will be Kenneth | Harlan in he Virginian/” !which opens Bunday as one of the two Sun- day night features. Harlan played this role on the Lyceum stage about ten years ago and while filming of this picture was going on he accident ally shot himeelf in the leg, AUTOISTS PAY MORE THAN GOV, EXPENDS | On June 30, 1923; uso‘mz.oh Had Been Taken in and $264,752216 spent on Roads, Ete, Washington, Nov, 16.-—Owners of motor vehicles pay to the (federal government in taxes cach year more |than double the amount spent by the | government on account of federal ald highway and forest road construction, lays, according to Eecretary Wallace of Agriculture, who has charge of the administration of the highway funds | Since 1217 the government has been collecting a tax on the selling price of motor vehicles, tires and automobile accessories, and aleo a tax,on the use of passenger automobiles for Thire On June 30 this year $589,012,021 Lad been collected from these sources, Expenditures on highway by the gov ernment in that time totaled $264.. 782,216, or 45 per cent of the amount |taken in Imitation tvery 18 being made from | the tagua nut { TONIGHT AND SAT. Continuous Shows Sat, Keith Vaudeville Marshall Neilan's “The Eternal ‘Three’ with Bosworth, Claire Alec Francis Hobart Windsor, STARTING SUNDAY ® On the Screen at Last! POTASH AND PERLMUTTER with Barney Bernard Alex Carr Vera Gordon 9 Years on the Stage! Wait Till You See This Picture 6 i I‘lllmlllll...la lm 1] mll nli 4\ v lin i':!:mb,. ‘-:/ > -~4 Unless otherwise indicated, theatrical notices und reviews in this column are written ths respective nmusement company. MINSTRELS AT CAPITOL. Van Arnam’s Minstrels, end men, silver voiced songsters, nimble dancers, quartettes, tambo, and bones and all the makings of a minstrel show opened a three-day engagement at the Capitol yesterday to capacity audiences at both shows who fully appreciated the show in every re- spect. While the title is new in this section of the country, this show has been before the public for the last three years. The company is com- prised of 30 all white stars and travel in their own private Pullman car from town to town. Hugh Norton is the interlocutor and under his announce- ments the minstrel boys give a rous- ing performance. Especially fine is the olio of vaudeville which is offered after the minstrels and which pre- sents four excellent acts with Keiffer & Scott, a pair of very fine dancers; a very fine quartette; Olin Landick in “Feminine Expressions,” and Ray Dion's Rambling Syncopators. The photoplay feature offers Katherine MacDonald in “The Woman Con- quers.” There will be continuous shows Saturday and patrons who can are urged to attend the second show at 5 o'clock when there are plenty of seats. Next week Monday for the first three days sifé Capitol will offer a show, the biggest that has yet been offered with a# monster Keith vaude- ville show that will present five head- Iine attractions. The featured act will be Charles Maddocks, “The Law Breakers,"” merry musical comedy revue with a cast of 14 people includ- ing a bevy of pretty girl The added feature will show the third editien of “Along Broadway,” with Harry Kess- 1ér and another group of pretty girls a very cntertaining offering. The picture will present Themas Meigh- an's latest, “Woman Prox" ST, MARK'S MINSTRELS, Parish Hall Well By Audience, More than 300 people were pres- ent at the minstrel show and dance given at St. Mark’s church parish hall last night under the auspices of the Men's club of the church. The minstrel show preceded the dancing and made a decided hit with _the audience, £ Charles Pratt and were end men while George Mitchell was interlocutor, A specialty num- ber by Lu and Latham was well received. Those who have not as yet made their return tickets or money are asked to do 6 at a meet. ing of the finance committee which will be held at the church Monday evening at 7 o'clock e ——————ee— “ThatOldGang of Mine” A serenade mel- ody wonderfully fox-trotted by the California Ram- blers and sung in close harmony by the Shannon Four on Columbia Records. Show in Received Arthur Hayes UNITED MIL |TARV COMPANTES State Armory AY EAVENIN Nov, Music by Bacchanalians Admission 5 " L] TONIGHT AND SAT. Greatest Attraction In This City In Yetrs Van Arnam’s Minstrels 30—All White Stars—30 and Olio of Great Vaudeville STARTING MONDAY Biggest Vaudeville Show Ever in Town Continuous Shows Sat,