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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, OCTOBER 25, 1925 dvice and the Great Adventure BY FANNIE KILBOURNE With All the Details of the Marriage of Dot Aldrich and Will Horton ARRIAGE Is a serious matter, | won' neber do as well with yo' fust | want to at the beginning, but that if | you when T ride past in my racer not 1o be entered into lightly. | hushand as you will de rest, but yo'[you once let the beginning slip by, Sunday afternoon and yvou're out N don't need to make no mo' mistakes | vou are sunk. Will Is 50 crazy about | pushing the perambulator. » 1 you has to. You can do a good | me that I can’t think he would eve R of wl things, for Sidney e e v IV hen T | deal by fes gittin’ sta‘ted right.” expect me to do things his way, or | Hincke e ST IpELIbT. 8 b There it was again, you see—get|even compromise all the time. But| “Anq every old grouch in fown 0 t0 a4 wedding I realize myself that | warted right. After Amerlca ¢ Mrs. Viola Henning say uft and | thai doesn’t get along with his wife,” tfs true. T have sat listening o the | Dylcie, Lane, who has been married | nonsense, every bride thinks her lover | Wi intarrupted, ~has looked me op sacred, solemn, mysterious sounding | only a vear. She told me to start out |18 different from other men; but cheer | g told e solemnly that 1 wie marriage vows and wondered how any- | by making Will give me an allowance | up, she'll come to soon enough.” 1 qoine %0 aiiing 1'd have o lifetime body in the world ever has the nerve | from the very first week, that just be. | Well, the more I thought about it, |\ "o WRHELE ot BETE & T 00D to take ther cause it was fun to ask for money the | the more I'realized thatIwas making | oo™ itle with, told ‘em all But the second I began to consider ' first time not to kid myself into think- ' & mistake. When practically all mar- [ (L0 10 TR el 08 G S getting married myself everything ing it would be fun right along. rled women, from those who have itk axt s nichfeciaon seemed different. It seemed exciting | Then came Mrs. Viola Henning,|only had a husband six months, like e i T el ot Who I8 the only grass widow I have | Mrs. Henning, to those who have had | he used to talk ever known except Mrs. Coron, who is | four till they’ all died, like America, o (R Sn \ouwan g About it for other people. T still ud.| 3¢ vears old and doesn't make the|say the same thing, there must be | But 2L icomee 8. itime’ and then e s . Tout s |moSt of it. Mrs. Henning is very|something init. ‘Thelonger I thought |Just remember that 1 warned you. mitted was a serlous matter. But for | (Sia1y. She asked me It Wil knew | about It,"the more I realized that it | We had come to the bad place where el nd o had only to put hi*| (hat I knew how to sew and cook. I|Was my duty to have the kind of | thev're m nding the Verblen road ant thri < o = all | (11d T dldn't really know whether he'd | Wedding I wanted. It would be get- | Will stopped talking. paying all his hrills and gooseflesh, the way 1 used | gtid 1 GA0n Y i s ting started right. {attention to the driving. I sat silent 5 , e e ought anything about it or 3 2 3 3 z to feel about circus day and Christmas | pVe" SOUENS Besides, it would be awful not to|too, feeling suddenly very queer and eve, only much more so. When 1|"%ual® $4¢ q it know. don't |have your own wedding romantic. B is is what ever minister and magazine article and and thrilling and adventurous instead of solemn. Marriage, when I thought : I own wedding e ;m;.-;\_«,\, WIIL of course, llxum mo would be alone later and think about | ever Je i Gomg | Ing sensible s fine about some things, | il th A joke. It was plain to be it, T would be forced to realize that 1| prery howr wis hi,,‘.,':,le"‘:‘“n"w“ l‘:““,“; but when it comes to your own wed- | seen that Le didn’t take it seriously must be going at things wrong. ‘But | sure, you'll never hava to. Of course, | 1iN8. yu\; \\'X‘l:l;un;;‘thll\l{ m;r)*l ”"'}‘,'f‘ Not now. But suppose he should X couldn’t seem to help it. Worse still, |at the start, you like to show off,| Jense, o, SBiRE (€ YOR had }"‘Hm}:m to! I didn’t even want to help it. T was|make him think you're the eighth m’\_‘;""“( \’_‘("”r"”h‘ 5 "“‘»‘v"”;i pine hit was the thought that sud certainly entering into marriage light- | wonder of the ancient world, and 80| (hine”™ Back to you in tieh | denly struck me with a dull, sickening ly. But not for a billlon dollars would | on. But take it from one who has | fZn 08 L PR o T0 NOTL T @EEEE fnmm I knew only too well how ad I have given up the gooseflesh and | been through the woods ahead of vou, | Y- Jirt £0C0 VO WEE O BACH| vice, It you heard the same piece | been cntering into marriage in any | if you start out by being the eighth | §1n e SO PG B right along, began after A whil [ other way wonder, yowll have to work like & \era firat out. twilishis in the Fali | 410Ct you- he people who ar | ‘:‘\’\;\.P iiy married don't talk so much a | . | | advice that evervbody in the world | live up to it 4 nights after evervbody had gone hon began giving me as soon as it was| ~The clinging vine isn’t a bad idea | 4nd the candles on the tree wer | nown I was engaged was practical h“"“;' ‘»“\;“h_‘ “k(;: ‘“‘\x‘xl\l \:ul;xrh;g. ;;«X:v‘vl | ;.ml.;m clear uu“n]u. their tin sockes | ithe s P pless, do: ow how to do any-| g e times that are sweet and | . % _ i :.‘:‘{{'T than s Dl SN mat e thats work. If I were }R‘“'Kjulnwr“n‘uhll e kgt SR O | Suppose Will should. little 1 little, | seemed (o be afrald of the limb: | when we samo out. Iversl eithe Sckew, M3 esriitee B [wey | uoral in what she savs, though quite | 1 that's the line I'd try i”"“ki“: about your wedding and all | he IY'}XI..' s0o much of this talk, begin For rl-((:r. 44l.' or 4 rm |“| “ | Verblen was eating supper. \ nlrf B .»:v ],‘ ' Sl s b s | 1 to laugh to myself thinking |that vou had missed in life. Oh, it |to think that maybe there wis poorer—and forsaking hers 3 e he str uy 5 REEDicHlL i La ioldoce e e t mother would say to this ad- | would be terrible not to have a|thing In it. That maybe it would be |so long us ye both shall live 2 the ety Lot white snow I's eyes, the as soon‘as she got over the idea that | yice” But by the time Mrs. Holliday | romantic wedding! |a good idea to walt a few vears till we were too young to be engaged At haq warned me that if I let Will| Once I had made up my mind, I felt 4 lot of Joney saved up. Or | the new ring on my fin bet In & minute or two, Will had put {#cross the snow. The corner . s voice e and lamp made the white snow I aid faintly all, Will belng just 21 and me 19. get started smoking a pipe I'd have | that the sooner th ter. It would he might, in time get |all over. T was a Married W £ ahe senet ! ther, %o she won't worry J”- ever, W :‘il was graduated tlv-um curtains that smelied of tobacco all | take Will a long time t »t reconciled | to thinking that adght be safer " i" «i;‘lxh:le\f' o " ’-“ et X ot don 3 t the d \ rtmoor and was going into busi-{my life, and Mrs. Burton had sald|to a church wedding, and the soone not to martied at all! 20 gt 16 16 was Llung ”v‘ o s Bk Vs i s Hid never B, was in ness with his father. So even mother | that if 1 began by having soup, Will [ I told him the longer he would have I can never describe the strange |certifi for Will Mrs. Dibling kissed | eral moments, as '_l’.‘!"‘_“‘;’)f s | June - BRSELIES finally admitted that it might be all | would soon get to thinking that no | We were on our way back from a |way that made me feel. My first |me and wiped her eyes. f“’“ s W‘ A ENON booth I had right dinner without soup would sustain |foot ball game over at Verblen in|thought, of course, was what a ter “I never g v e e Dot ' X - o “You will find,” sald mother, “that | human life, the whole general idea | Will's father's car, Saturday after- | rible position that would place mie in. | People get married . Then| : £ g ] iention to al the the whole secret of a happy married | began to get to me noon In November, when I declded to | With my engagenient all announced, | She kissed me i . ~Youve got u here was no o . v - exeept, you mig Jife is bearing and forbearing. Don't| I bezan to realize that all married | tell Will It was very cold and windy | people giving me guest towels and | hice boy there,” sh nd don . film & And I must say that most of the | Greek slave the rest of your life to | \with the smell bonfires, Christmas » AT e jam!™ ot it go 4 “DON'T YOU WISH WE WERE ALL MARRIED NOW?” WILL ASKED SOFTLY, “AND GOING HOME TO OUR OW ,\;Iltrll ‘_l'l,‘"A that s the other ones that do | i > ; i all the talking | 2 lamb and thinking that the shepherd | Main street was almost sound romantle to anybody else, | advise, nobody else had ever feit the - cither. But, somehoy hing was | way that we were fecling. I might be care—1 wa: bn afrald to ive in--vou will often |life depended on how you got started. |and I feit that my nose was red. ‘1 ciiiti aprons and eve & sy it s Do asoligs i ; it Lt | vy find that you are the happler for it |A husband. it seemed, was raw |debated whether to walt t had a | chest. M e rnbaid 7 ) 3 | aterd . any- | chance to powder it and look my hes ! r ah A manag N ty 1 Aldnee pas any atten. |human materfal. You could do any v - | would ta de me f . alugally, 1 Aldn't pay any atten- | St 2 art- | but I at last decided that the sooner ¢ | tion to that advice. As advice, the | thing '\\‘Lh him—if you just got start- | but [ « red just to think of it :,k:‘v‘:‘ 1'-'\.‘;,.‘ m’mhfi‘.L” \)\:"[‘ figure | WVell. it was plain to the naked | T hat Dracticaly orencd oy mouth THEN suddenly 1 stopped think ft ot mivbe you will be and moybe | €ve that I had been on the brink of o et WHIls ol e tiis about gossip and aprons and g ree e es e O ecor S out. maybe you will be and maybe | Jurfing wrong at the very begin- | 0ccurred to me: While all the married | =~ about gossip and apron L ou you won't. ning. Almost, you might say, before | Women in Montrose had been advising \ hat vhod in the | But immediately after mother, every- | the heginning. I had alreads begun | Me. suppose all the married men had | Will, not what anybody n_the | i body else in Montrose also began giv- | by giving up the kind of wedding I | been advising Will. Suppose they had | world would say or think e ll I I I I al I les 1z me pieces advice. This had | really wunted. I wanted stmply | told him, 1 *I.u‘ it ail depend: 2 e et moE Sy en e Leen going on for two weeks when it | huge wedding in the’ Bleeker street | £etUng started right. As w ‘“",“'”,‘ ; e iddenly dawned on me that nine-|church, Madge and Ruth and Corinne | Start along different lines. if both of us{ = lor tenths of these s were really ex- | and Marjorie Havden for bridesmaids, | KnOW how mportant tne starting wis et BY CARL SHOUT. actly the same piece—just dolied up | the orzan playing “The Voice That | Wed simpln never get together. |1 de-| It was Z i all at D v differently This was it B thed O’ Eden father step-| .. . 1 beg: M;illl-r\l.\!\' -y] o s “: 5 ted right Ding _Cub of fthelLront fpew when | vioti theanenSheer you ad-| 1 leaned t wd put tell you something, Dotts TR b T o U Lyics about Welng marvied?" chee cainst the rough sleeve ¢ safid N X runwoody, who was the arues N 0 Cf i €| will €0 “You U € his coa ke his eyes Ttat, ufter mother, vas lons as you | Montrose Monitor the next day, tell- | W1 [ Extaned | ooy et lite | s vy and Wil He are goink to be mar- | iNE what evervbody wore. But Will | WO VG S0 g off L1 wa vou a little |cOUIN’L See this at all | “Did—did they all tell you prac nter. Don't you start luying | “Here comes the groom,” he 8ang | the same th his clothes fo to the wedding march, “stiff as a| “yep “Laying out his broom. (Get onto the crease in his | peated, and a queer thrill swept ¢ new pantaloons!” 30 the worst had happenec me at the idea of belng perfectly free| “Don’t you think it would e S \'\';‘n ,”' se. u‘,-.my)\; aro T 10 go to Will's bureau drawer id get nd?” I had asked him. ‘whugh on a matter as vital as thi: W ¥ i £ Ins out a pair of socks. Being in love| “Sure, I think it would—not.” he'd | ofy Pay all tell vou how o IGRGAnE SraiiEn t wn by the M ¢ e thing i is certainly q Here I've known |sald. “I'd as soon play the lead for | i (] et started right in married I 0spital with : e j e style w Vil all my life and thought nothing | & funeral as the bridegroom for & deraanded i ; ‘achy in € . on the argume of it. Untll a year ago, the idea|show like that. I'd probably stub| \ri)1"shook his head _ st had to cry i i the distance of o mere sock of his being anything | MY toe coming down the afsle. Gee, | wppotqopigs ek | “for 3 i 1 “Today 10 me would have given me an awful| Doll, we don’t have to have a court| .xgpe- t past the bad place . in fact e styles for al Juugh. And yet when Mrs. Dunwoody | Procession like that, do we?” I heaved a great sigh. For re were no machines 4 T ! v s | that are wid said that, the thrill that swept over He was so sweet and humble about | minutes I said nothing, so great was | i 1 ¥ will s ed wn the th . 5 ot “ 4 | often changed. if e made me almost sick. It seemed|i{t—I knew he'd go through with it if | my feeling of relief. Then car E m around me. | f el i 1o me that golng to Will's bureau|I insisted—that it kind of touched| “What do they tell you?” T asked, said My L e ’ sdien 4 3 : = drawer and taking out @ pair of socks | me. Besides, nobody but Will ever | just for curlosity o 1 iy, hoarse way 7 would be as exciting as going into the | calls me Doll, everybody else just| Will's grin got broader. i Secret of Wood. ¥ to the theater once was. Dorothy or Dot, and it alwa “They tell me,” he sald, “not to get | 7 3 At first.” Mrs. Dunwoody went on. | weakening effect on me. So, Instead | married at all.” | e “vou will think that this is fun, of being firm, as I suppose I should | “They-—what | I wonder how Mrs. Dunwoody knew | have been, I made the mistake of | Will repeated it. It simply knocked | wus early that. She surely never found it out in | saving: | the breath right out of me. I didn't| pouses ser own life. Mr. Dunwoody 1s bald “Well, kind of a wedding |know that I had a single enemy in|pomes n egz, and is always trying a new like?" Montrose. 1 finally wathered breat . : e Lair tonic, and he always gets I'd ifke to walk into a perfectly | enough to say so to Will 1 e all i i lace ¢ 5 e at parties and wants to go he - | strange minister's that I'd never seen | “Oh, it 't you,” he explained 1 - ' X 5 fore the refreshments are served. before. with two strange witnesses |hastily. “Evervbody thinks vo an't tell me that even Mrs. Dun-|that L'd never seen before, and get | peach. It's getting ma woody ever got exclted over a palr of rried by the shortest, eastest way | they sav is the bunk socks. | aid Wil Every 1y 2" 1 asked, w “But ‘\"_ ‘went on, 1 start Honestl ren’t men funny? “Oh, not ev Body ioing this When it s f 1 get R Then, after & minu A to expecting it. and the or the body . young ws' like Roge ovelty wears (T, ny AT it finally amounted to was |Lane and Howard Mer vho have fre, you'll be saddled with a foolish that we compromised. We | nice wives, keep te £ me how much B € i Job all the rest of your natural Id have a rather small home wed- | it costs and that no single fel I hak « ¢ 5 : 1 | Ar. Dunwoody doesn’t know any more | ding, not anywhere near as big as my | any idea of the expenses of r 1 s . o le out the inside of his bureau drawers | sister Kathie's, just our relatives and | house, and that 14 do well to wi e howese n he does about the Insid | very best friends. The main trouble | I had plentv of inck ahead S romarkable. Africa. He's nev a compromise is that it doe t | time I see Howard he ¥ “Well, ol them. It's a fearful nuisance to suit anybo W1l felt almost as bad | egg, ye porterhouse has gone up a &nd there’s not a grain of sensc t to make a monkey 1gains! rkable line i indicate the bead-strit - | ferne : o & the ; ture The *be are parently consists lets. i N 4 atoms firmly combined S Loaln wrak 3 r f dual nical mole hay have a license ¥ i . i % chemic tied to its two neighbors thing N for tozether + in the string, above and below. It re 2 . quires about 50,000,000 of these atoms If we turned back right it i could get to Verblen before the court-| ! disqualified I c ¢ end to end, to span the distance of one house closes. IUs open till 6 eI Heoud Au 5 {inch. let's ¢ “te sty | Ordinary light waves are too coarse “Oh. I couldn't! Our fathers and & 11a to reveal such minute d o that 1 mothers 7 A there is r seeing the atoms Even while I was sayir 1 knew i R % even swerful microscope wouldn't . She jured. acoed o . The minutes however, are able 4 5 to pick out and exhibit to the camera atomic detafls as those just di units acting s beads ¥ strung c they had eloped themse i a tight cord. Th; in resists a pu Horton had to horrow the money to sneack 4 o £ | better than a 1 This agrees ni bay the minister. These thoughts NOTHER peculiar bout the v St | with the we n principle th L A ; o tlimir(‘r will withstan they were always went running thro my head, but ereater tensile they didn’t really nt. _ While 1 was actually saying that T couldn’t do it, that I wouldn't do it, T knew | all the time that as going to. | Will stopped ti and kissed me That and the little vellow light wink- | ing through the trees settled ft | “Al right,” I sald. ‘ “T will! i ireek method of broad jumpine | stress than a crushing as compared with the odern mar ¥ S 3 ’ The bead chains, being separate, car the f called for only | | easily spread apart without breaking. a short, spr run of a few steps . This also agrees with the fact that a before the “take off” hoard w reach ¥ 2 | timber, soaked water, will swell . instead of long sy which | . | sidewise, but not lengthwise. the modern a s uses to get up| | The new theory alko tells us that peed. The Greek broad jumper took ¥ broken strand of cellulose should have off in the same way the high jumper . ’r»;mm» yms al the ends of the does tod: We do not know for sure A GREEKR VASE WHICH SHOWS A BROAD-JUMPER PERFORMING chains, where the rupture occurred that this was another ironbour . TO THE MUSIC OF A FLUTE. { and where there is obviously no mate of form, but it seems logical ve|—— — — {Tial to hang on to the last link. This that if the Greek had t i that rule must have made, and how | brawny discus throwers and broad |2Brees with the known fact that ce ex dixneo dines \"i'”‘ difficult it must have been to develop | jumpers going \gh their events, | tain chemical tests work on the end of wind blew cold and raw again ekl bl ot i have | iyl that would lead to aceuracy. | while close by stands a musician in ;& fiber, but do not succeed on the side faces as we raced along the pike. | Giscovered and ac mORErN | put ‘the Greeks also had the distance | flowing robes. blowing estly on a < back toward Verblen here were | SUIO% o (he pictures show broad | V€Nt ds We know it now flute as if it were quite the usual thing ,; g more little yellow lights twin Jumpers using jumping welghts, on e O ey en oD | W s eniel i eitage 1 = Will could hardly believe me-—iut he started to turn the c iround right off so that I wouldn't mind It was snowing hard now Insulin Aids Growth. in the gray twilight. I scarcely saw | h" hane - Ak o va | difference between the Greek sivle for | any, was gained by this no one can CCORDING to the result of o %/ them, mor felt the wind. I, Dot Ald-|>h hand. They wewhed o “¢hen | the javelin and the presentday form. | know. “The pictorial records, however, A servations made by Boston spe 4“ Mham rich, was on my way to be married. | gwung with correct for actually | The ”‘]"l"ffj f‘-»“\;\‘u)v,‘l & ;v‘”lrl”". | indicate that music 4.1>n);:~_~’.].:‘\\'.[\‘.x I intints | hidren) eiering tiom Oin L Fahes [P |nepeattne umper attain sreater ats fCRER TCEL BT Conar OF (he daveim [ o penmenC of all athlet- {yores gain in weight, if they are NOW LOOKY HEAH, HONEY.” SHE SAID, “IF YOU GWINE GIT MA'IED, YOU WANT TO BE DAID sHo* | JT_was 10 minutes of 6 when we|tance. That is one aid toward record | Tpis throwing thonz was evidently not | Some of the best examples of Hel. |teated with insulin, in the same mar YOU GITTIN' STATED RIGHT. SalcRedunia G jaduttholiss L GRSl T only an additional style requirement. | lenie art t heve [Beent praserved | oon o5, 0o Dormal chliaren, suye th Ll L i all seems like u dream, getting into has « ded. rence hetween | PUt @lso an aid for achieving distance | show the favorite Greek &port of |J0U R e i ekt e B elne mpecied 1o e most radical difference hetween | DUt also : = Jipanes - of iociation. The inc o 11 height ¢ what T had let myself in for it was too |or so as he would have in front of | Duleie Lane.” I said, defensively. “All | jail toward the martiage burean, the |sake and the modern “free style” can |AHoW any auxillary attachment of this'not reveal the exact form or style lypyuh gecasionally norn lata to stop. You take this little]200. As for my part, I should go|she knows how to cook is steak and | qunny litle clerk swith the side whisk. | eriln fthe discas thro kind here is around used, but from writings of that time o 0 B GRERT T pointer from me, and don't ever start. | through life feeling that I had been | chops. No wonder it’s expensive, And | Lonny itle clerk with the side whisk:| B ID His dloces (IOR. | wn . s | BSESHGer of the spear & a place | it has been ascertained that the great. | ! Tn married life there’s nothing like | cheate¢ sut of the real romance of | Roger's wife can't sew a stitch. T can ‘wp |:§<m:5mh-r"{‘l:n“\!u‘:» “;“l e | Myron's Diskobolos illustrates the for the hand to grip it firmiy, but that | est importance was attached to grace | starting the way vou mean fo go|getting married. Besides, think of fmake all my own clothes except sults| ' The m“"’“‘“h the whiskers filled | bandicaps the Greeks were under. ' ° {and skill. Merely throwing your op-| Super-Broadcaster on {naving o explain to most of the |and coat e I e o | Fiere irie ailiste ls'at tne start oninis| ponent with @ resounding whack upon | : people you know that they aren't| “Gee, Dot, can you. honestly Now where o W Casked him, | prepar: fo‘make the throw. Wa 7HE Greeks were very strict about | the canvas—or ground — was not| A NEW 100-Kilowatt station is MERTGA Hawkins svas ) the nexti] & oot s e Ecenids s and "“‘ Will's eyes simply bulged out. an we find the nearest minister?” | would naturally expect that the next stepping over the mark while malc. | SPOUEH fo Teteh frenziea cheers from construction . at Herzogstand KA Havikiis 15 ihs) colored ‘“,‘;"'l l" nvited s bt e I even made a silk suit once,” T Will was partly solemn and excited, [move would be to swing completely [ing the throw. They likewise had ;3(”»5’0_' “‘l“,‘r ,'( ;‘“j [1‘: e done cor- | Bavaria, which will enable crystal sct A colore hat, however, was way the | said, with pardonable pride. “that was | the way he was the night he proposed, | 2round, as is done today, allowing for | ironbound rules about out of bounds, | rectly and in good style. owners to hear the programs througl T o e e S ouy, | Matter stood—we were to Lave d Uny | all right except the way the sleeves |and partly brisk and husinesslike. the |a more powerful heave. But instead,| Many other peculiavities of Greek | Boxing, too, evidently had its strict | out all Germany, says Sclentific A B it o s el o [home wedAing SOmEithotat e fhGist fieret o oy 'he s when his father is out of | the Hellentc athlete was limited to|athletic style are shown by the vases, | rules. In none of the pictures is there | fcan. This will be the most powert i eif: £0 feels she can advise | mas—when I began getting all the ad | “Honestly, Doll” sald Will, almost | town snd he's running the office, I|taking one or two steps forward|but perhaps the most st a representation of a body blow; all | broadcaster in the world. The second A ow Teicy licain, honey,” she sald, | e that in wivine i about this T was | [EVerently, “I just can't get over you. | remember thinking vaguely in the |before letting the discus go. No turn-fare those numerous drawings which | the damage is done to the head. It largest German broadeaster will be “it yo' gwine git ma'ied yo' want to| making a grave mistake. If it had | To be 50 strong on looks and yet have | dream that there was going to be |ing was allowed: if the would-be cham- | show the athlete performing to the | Seems that it was not considered good | Koenigswusterhausen, rated at 30 kil be dald sho yo© Eittin' started TiEht | hoon Sust tho: wedding it wouldi Have ] ™ Deall onl Yo, oo.” {something awfully comfortable and |pion could not get ults according | music of a flute. We have pictures of | form to strike an opponent anywhere | watts. Don't you nehbah allow no nonsnse | een bad enough, but it was so much | e took hold of my hand with the | dependable about Will. There was a [to the peculiar styie ordained he wa ‘pout yoah husband’s pay enbelop. | more than just the wedding. It was|hand he wasn't steering with and, |jewelry store just across the street |nmot considered (o be of first-class See dat vo' gits it fust thing ebery | suddenly clear to me that 1 was start. | thoush the wind was blowing lfke | from the courthouse, where the owner S S g Sat'day night. Yo' won’t hab no trou- | ing wrong. fce and there was snow 4n the air, I |knew Will and trusted him for a wed-| SEDRS Sl naNton s At ble gittin® it de fust Sat'day. and dat T should not like to go all through [ felt inside just like those first eve. | din ring. |when the Olvmpic games were re- <e time to sta't de habit life never having anything the way I [nings when it's warm enough to sit | Back in the car again and down the vived in Athens. in 1896, but Amer. 1t gives me an awful turn every time anybody speaks about “your hu band.” While 1 was catching my hreath, so to speak, America was go ing on telling me how she let the first Saturday go by with one of her husbands thinking the next week would be time enough, and how by the time the next week came it was too iate forever, % “Tt lea'ned me a_gzood lesson.” she suid, *'n’ Ah'm tesa’ you. Co'se, you wanted it, having to make one com- promise right after another as long I lived. 1 thought about Mrs. Dun- woody laying out her husband’s clothes and Dulcie having to ask | Roger for every penny and Mrs. Hol- liday's curtains reeking with pipe smoke, and other tragedies all over | the world, just because they didn't start out right. Tvervhody seems to know that it is to get a man to do what you | You ought to hear him. | travels for the Butterfly Silks and is {said to lead a very fast life. “Every g b fill | Verbien main street to the address the | g on e Porch xftes mmymer. WHL| i bed gives WL Dr. Tiline was just sitting down to supper when | we ot there. He looked over our | license, asked WIll if our parents | approved of our belng married, and then called his wife, a jolly, plump lady. and thelr daughter, for wit- began to chuckle. “Say, Sidney Hinckel is a scream. ’ Sidney time I see Sid he pulls a long face and says, ‘Another good man gone. Oh, you poor fish: That's right— laugh while vou still can. Keep a stiff upper lip, my boy. LIl wave to nesses. We stood up beside the mantel, and all through the service I kept noticing a funny little statue of a shepherd and ans who introduced the “free style” s used today got more distance in their throws. Another example of the Greek disre- gard for mere time and distance rec ords is furnished by their javelin- throwing events. One of the favorite sports was hurling the javelin, not for distance, but at a_target. Any one who has seen javelin throwing as practiced in_the high schools and universities today can realize what a difference ALL HELLENIC ATHLETICS.