Show THE COACHTS BRIDE The Victoria MorosiniHulskamp I social sensation is a thing of the past Last week the heroine went out of the concert business her tour terminating in Chicago in a dismal failure nobody being sufficiently interested in the girl to pay the price of admission to see her 1 and hear her sing She her manager and her agent husband returned to New York and she found herself perhaps per-haps for the first time since her elopement elope-ment last fall intelligently face to face with her true situation and circumstances circum-stances Up to the present time since her marriage she has lived in romance which blinded her eyes to the reality five months of romance and now comes the sober solemn plain truth A little while ago she was the loving so she thought bride of a proud husband talked about ought after criticised and admired by the people who condemned her judgment but applauded her courage cour-age now she is the wife of an ill born lowbred ignorant brutal sort of a fellow who isMnferior to her in every respect whose tastes and sympathies are entirely unlike hers whose mode of life is repulsive to her and whom she cannot help but despise for what he is has been and has done The fact that he was her fathers coachman is not cause for censure nor does it run to his discredit the fact that he aspired to the hand of his employers daughter and married her clandestinely stamps him as the knave There are good and honest coachmen but they are not proper husbands for the educated cultivated cul-tivated refined daughters of the rich When they try to win such girls they show a lack of the honest manhood which can exist in the poor and lowly as well as in the rich and noble they display dis-play inborn dishonesty and downright rascality It is said that the girl is entitled to no sympathy in such a case as she voluntarily threw herself awaywith her eyes open If her eyes were open she should have no sympathy and ought to reap what she < < had sown without commiseration com-miseration but her eyes are not opened until the fatal step has been If Victoria Hulskamp six months ago could hare peered into the future half year does anybody suppose she would today be the wife of a man whose instincts and I training lead Him not beyond the stable or grogshop If she could have tqrccd aside the rose tinted scene that was spread before her and seen herself tied to a man so far beneath her shun rtcd by her family nnd former associates associ-ates and compelled to exist among scenes and people in every way repulsive repul-sive to her tastes and training would she have cast herself and a bright future fu-ture uway as she has done The woman in these cases is to be pitied She is to be pitied for he ugly blinded nature that is in her which makes it possible pos-sible for the Hulakamps Ito betray rich mens girls for it is nothing less than betrayal when one of these ignorant brutal bores dopesUnd J I I marries an educated refined woman There should be genuine sympathy I for victoria MorroainiHulskampj she must pay the penalty that all girls have to pay for running away with their fathers coachmen The story runs the same in all cases and can be told in few I words romance sensation dout misery brutal treatment followed I speedily by disgrace divorce or death |