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NEW PPIT\I\' D\HY HERALD, WEDNES DAY, OCTOBER 2, 1929. 5 ey [ P HA/.NE%‘ Gaps an»:l ies Oniy Rule 1 2 eRss SAYS EX-WIFE GREEDY Toree Died of Starvation— rate when @ Goes i»"i the Ar == rosh GEAD EAPLORERS Tuneral Services in Wilds Mr. Solon S. Blocm of 3503 ‘Woodbrook Ave- , Baltimore, ver his desk and 'ohm no bodi~ Worth Leaving a Jobh to Learn How to Live nget at /i Uoliay Vig my 12’5 pretty sure to find out som- hfll_l‘f P{}HEF UQSEEWER | besides how to salute testines; both may be harmful and may become habitual. Nu gets into th tem in t} ular as clo work.’ " That was what Mr. Bloom learn- ed when he left his typewriter and went into the army, and you can learn the same thing if you arelike most other people. Remember i ot a of ply bodily lubrica- 2t everybody needs. hottle of Nujol Barbara stared into the sea—if only she ald make Ray understand "There's o STANDARD OIL SOCONY SPE( hest gasoline COMPANY O {CIAL Ji€ of this frankly real and astonish- observation of a young woman on e, men, infidelity, and divorce, . first published anonymously, cre- a furore among the public and the s and raised her from cbscurity © ver night fame c FICTION OR CONFESSIC:® LIFE OF EX-WIFE OR A JUNDRED WIVES? ——THE CRITICS ASKED " asked the motorist. CONY SPECIAIL /)/[,x ETH YL Although not published as an autobiography, the realism of Ex-Wife, the accuracy with which 1t pictures marriage in many sets today. so excited leadg critics that many of them refused to believe 1t anythmg but truth. “Ex-Wife purports to be, very likely is, autobiographical. + Frecdom for women turned out to be God’s greatest glft to men’. : —N. Y. Herawp Trisune. it has the ring of truth about i” —N. Y. C “But in the m “For monologue Ex-Wife most certainly is, despite its guise as fiction. It concerns her who has shaken off the - incumbrance of a husband. Husbands, one gathers from outof a smooth, this book, cramp a lively woman’s style. =~BrooxLyn EacLE. k fluid. We ¢ but no extra cost to OF NEW YORK plits ETHYL : Ursula Parioft The most talked of story of the day starts tomorrow in the New York DAILY MIRROR A A A A 2airicia’s notion of a full life is one without @ moment in which thought of the future or the past or for that matter, the more abstract present shcll be allowed to intrude for an instant. Having rid herself of Pete (husband), she plunges feverishly into her job at department store advertising, wrangling with newspapers, buyers, store executives, taking troatments at a beauty parlor, swallowing cocktails like a veteran of the Amen Corner, nibbling and dancing through dinner and languishing in the later hours with her lovely head upon another man's shoulder." “This, one is to understand, is the freedom which emanci- pated woman craves. This—well, c'est la viel —BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. “She rushed from beauty parlor to speakeasy to dinner, and, in the wee small hours, to bed with a comparative stranger. The astounding thing about Patricia is not so much her recklessness as her endurance. If half an hour a day in the gymnasium and a diet of Scotch will produce all the energy that the heroine of ‘Ex-Wife' dissipates so gaily, the regimen is well worth investigating." —N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNE, BOOKS. There is excitement in “Ex-Wife," swift action and tense interest. Every installment as it ap- pears in the Daily Mirror will hold you breafh- less. Ex-Wife, the most talked of story of the day starts tomorrow. Buy your copy of tomorrow's Daily Mirror early l New York s BEST Picture Newspaper <