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Newspaper Page Text
STORY OF A GIRL WHO LOVED HER HUSBAND SO MUCH THAT SHE GAVE HIM TO ANOTHER WOMAN By Harry Burton. Boston, Mass.. Dec 2. "But once let these liver be. lit by the flame of a common aspiration, arid out of their homeliest expe riences will spring a new-born ansAWTWMt. Actus jv&ite Marion Craig Wentworth. joy. They will long throughout the day for the evening" hour which they may pass together, in which the comfort and the sus Uinirg pOvcr of unaClfioh love may arm and equip them for the next day's tasks. Each brings new matter for the other to ratify, rich experiences from the world of men, shot through with the il lumination of a high purpose, un til their union widens and deepens into a broad river of comradeship that shall overflow the barriers of death at the world's end and pierce the unknown blackness un afraid! This is the TRUE mar riage the marriage that will en dure as long as man is man and woman is "woman. But the world does notrknow it yet. Only here and there wc catch a hint of it in radiant lives in lives which are 'notyoked together without love.,r In his frantic effort to capture this dream of love a dream which a few months ago he thus publicly described before a great audience of women in Carnegie halJNew York has Dr. Frank lin H. Wentworth, noted writer and lecturer, rushed out into the rude world and blindly left the di vine little .god sitting cold and lonely right by his own cheerless fireplace? ' Most persons who have just learned of the socialist doctor's secret marriage with Miss Alice Chapman, following the discard ing of his first wife, the brilliant dramatic interpreter, Marion Craig Wentworth, agree that the earth boasts no greater woman than the deserted Mrs. Went worth. Marion Oaig Weill worth left solitary in her home in Can- m