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Show 'would the average WOii lfi AID TO HER RIVAL? ; What Is the natural attitude Of a woman towurds her rival In love'' DIs-I DIs-I trust. Jealousy, haired, you say ? But ilhc records sometimes show a strange i magnanimity in the conduct of a wo-inan wo-inan towards the rival who has supplanted sup-planted her The war-famcus case of the Btryker family, which recently excited ex-cited public attention. Is proof enough , that not all women cherish feelings of bitterness and hatred towards the 'other women who have won their hus-bii hus-bii nds. Perhaps no figure in all ihe moving I drama. "The Law of the Yukon. ' the Igreat Mayflower Photoplay coming to I the Alhanibru theatre next Sunday for u lour-days engagement, iu more poignantly poig-nantly appealing than that of Tiny; Teas, the little dance hall girl whose' I lover cast her aside to give his attention at-tention to the doctor's wife, an Idle Ull.l 'II. ' 1 .Ml, II S hat whimsical Pate ever led this oloer woman out into the ruging storm of the north country, and brought her, 'bewildered and exhausted, at last upon 'the trail which the poor discarded llt-Itlc llt-Itlc Teas wus blindly following? At !this supreme crisis. the sumptuous, haughty, poised woman of the world! was the weaker of the two. and the lutle dance hall girl, after a short I Struggle in her bruised heart, bravely undertook to lead her rlvr.l to safety, ba k to the man they both loved Poor little Tessl All her most loving sac-1 rifices went for naught. But who shall' gay that she was not a truly great h rolne? Cess and the doctor's wife nre but two of many dramatic figures that ImoVe swiftly through this stirring picture pic-ture of life In the Yukon valley. It is one of the biggest, most gripping plc- ' teres eve released by Healart. Picture M followers cannot afford to miss it M |