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Show Take the Lie Out of Life Judging from aom of the letter It lan't tha loa f a man' lov which n.ont hick a woman. U ! the aupretna hurt of giving all and g- tt-riR back a part. "I ran eurvlv wllimut his love, b it oh' how I hate h: rtec-'l.M' I thi d l! ff many a girl. Write cne- "I know a man for tVe year p4 wiii engagoj to him a year bfc 1 married him I knew . he had loved another woman, hut I tellvtf Mr when h atd h had fnrgoiien tier. I Sat alie never could coma betweon ua "Mine. my niarrage. I have dlaoarv rrel that my hutaad gwe to a thtaj woman wheneer be vlalta ber tewrv li hurta me mora than- I ha word taf tell. "If he war ho neat with ma, I wli not care; but ha nween that h ace her. never thlnka of hr, P' while I hav letter in my haad pro ring that he false. "Saver can 1 b happy with any other man and never can T ha happy with i Mm again. lie la perfectly truthful about everything eicept love. It m only abjut woman thai he Ilea ' A almllar plaint contains a peculiar llttl atory: 'My husband loet hlaflMt wt-neart. wt-neart. He told me about ffer before wa wera married. But he aaaured me that he loved m aa much na he ever k4 loved her. and o I waa content "Now 1 find that he k acrl certain annlveraarUa He alwava vlaltg r-r grave on the day of her death; and he nver falla to go into lha com try alon on her irthTa- ' 'ould anv w'f -nd.:re that without feeling deeply hurt? "He gave ma no chance to talk this over" with lf!m t.a'nr I nvarrled him. He never told rre he Intended to moura for her rekularly. And to me It "-n-a gronsly unfair. "He haa given me many fine thlnka Including a rar. hut It eeriia to in ha owe me aomethfng which he never Intended In-tended to give me. "Aa a human being hav 1 no right to the truth about love? "Itecnuae he deceived me !n the beginning. be-ginning. J have now toet faith In every, thine he telle me. But If he had been t-oneat at flrat, If he hnd told me that f would alwuya be aecond In hla heart. I think I would have married him anv-wny. anv-wny. love him. I wanted to sacrifice sacri-fice myself for him aa all girl do when they, flrat love. T could hav eympathlred with hta mood, p'rhapa, or nt leaM I would have tolvated them. "It In the hurt of hi deceit which nenrly kill m." Once more it become pin In that lover lov-er could ndniat 1imUv moat of their differences. If ihey would he luat nhotit half nn good n thev pr-tend to he Whnt a icrrat w)d we could mak' ofV thl If only we would take the I.-l-H out of 1.1 fe! |