| Show FOR I-FOR FOR WHAT WE HAVE HAVEl 1 sly lIY L J-L E DIXON We lived In happiness and contentment contentment contentment content content- ment until my husband inherited a n. fortune A whole tragedy of love and marriage marriage marriage mar mar- in a sentence A wife-told wife tragedy echoing drearily drear drear- ily ny through the halls of a court of i J Justice How many wives have sobbed out the same story How many more might sob it out had they but hut the courage to break the In Intolerable lh- lh tolerable bondage and face life afresh I blame wealth for my broken home continues the wife of this particular tragedy My ly husband Inherited O and a good business He lie began to neglect me and our children and established established es es- es- es sumptuous apartments where h hj h could entertain other women Sordid enough this chapter from the tho book of ot matrimony Always old and always new Heading Reading it one might come to behove believe be be- lieve hove wealth Is not so desirable as most folk seem to think There are wives today wives with comfortable homes healthy health families devoted husbands who are making malting themselves restless and unhappy by their ceaseless yearning for more mor money When we have everything to make maka life worth while when comfort and health and love go to make up tip our our- recipe of happiness why turn Ingrate Fate late always the trickster has basA r of ot erin answering the will of the w wantonly selfish human and of making even the score of taking away something beyond the reach of price The TIle richest couple in the world cannot cannot cannot can can- not buy mut mutual al respect confidence Jn iri each other congeniality love Money cannot keep the hearthstone warm and bright and cherry Having all of these things it often happens money is the snake to enter the matrimonial Jo Eden den Sing a paean of thanksgiving for tor the happiness you have and leave wealth to those who need It to make up for forthe the lack of ot greater Joys |