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woman who will possess Will Ten , ney's heart. It is not woman, but women who interest him. "But Mrs. Waverly, you surely know what it would mean to you to be deprived of the companionship of your husband ; to know that you must ) forego for the remainder of your life that feeling of having some one to turn to for sympathy. And the older you grow the more you need this." As I looked at her I could not help feeling very sorry for Bill Tenney for not realizing what he had missed. His wife was a more beautiful woman than Kitty Malram and would prob ably prove more companionable in the long run of life. I could also see that if he had paid her the same attentions he did to poor Kitty Malram she would have answered with quite as warm-blooded spontaneity. I could see she still loved him and when she again asked: "What would you do if you were me?" I said: "My dear Mrs. Tenney, that is hard to an swer, but I believe that I would divorce him. Not for his sake or the sake of Kitty Malram, but for my own sake. "You are a young woman and life is not over for you. You may love again. Now don't say you never will, for you have certainly lived long enough to know that this idea of one and only love is all nonsense. "If human beings could only love once and were forever unhappy; if death or deceit parted them we would be a world' of lunatics. I am going v i to give you the same advice that I gave Kitty Malram. Try and put Will Tenney out of your life. He is not worthy of either of you." (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) ' o o LATEST FASHION CREATION Madame De Basseville, called the "brightest and smartest woman, in Paris," as she appears in her latest fashion creation a smoking jacket of rich'brocade of the cavalier period, worn with white satin knee breeches.