a r Wtf' -' x?; j' v. t ; a I ( ' .lj(" EVENING PTJB1I0 IBDGEB-PHniUETHIAr. WEpHEBDAY, NOVEMBER 23, l'92l f HE MAN WHO WAS TIRED OF HIS WIFE By LUCILLE VAN1 SLYKE Copyright Dutlerkk Ce. m THE CtJAIlACTEItS ta SIMILE? Ferty-seven, DUi nttv'" Tduacce broker, bored ' himself, and particularly TtlA-Wa wlfe- torty-ene. Careful Til" .'. ni,.npkAl In Urn nnr :K".haifMeTety and In preBerv- " ret buuu i t MATOn in spirit Heldlnf? the key y "':;.,, v mid tomorrow, called a tt Vhiind i snfttcher" by the neighbors. UANDEHSON KID. and TntlDCJE. TSB-fiiVali Pell te the Imp. . .r-Alredalt--Pnli te the Imp. ViMMlN' Bertna s uereu.uuBiun ran CV" ..WnA sympathy with Charles. J" e,C,r.!aw1?ls. TIIR -UAWSON3, T,ieP AIJVeNH. tHK CHKONIC OB- SnIW TUB HA1HTUAI, MEDDLBIl -.Inhaunanta "' '" - " She had te eyes An BERTHA wns very decent. She 1 i. CliarlM didn't lift hs bVi -.... I.a ii'na nhnlufntr. the die I1C wns chalking. . ..I!Awn JtllMllPfl. .K."V ;l inv hand?" k l.Pl! .-- --.V "Wen i luir cards Bertha nerejti the . i i .. thnrf !m "Miss Hnswell docs peel. WV're H. 'V. n fourth. Truly. I'd Stkernet piny In my own house. It's U hard te play nJ kc0P everybody a little Miss "Oil, I" Wl"r" cver.vuimy ,kii, ii den l piny viinie. 'Y.if'-nt (np)i vnu Uellv.noeL tt..nll nlwnys' instituted heri-clf mis est l ceremonies, b he shoved a cue no Margery's hnnds, B!v n her n brisk it "If veu only ile this ns well as Idii'nstd te' de f requet " Crwuet?" llcrtha's nrettv laughter Jinftcl the players. "I didn't knew injbeYyln jhe world vcr played croquet The four bridge players wedged .tlicm idm carefully behind their table, but thefnlnj was no longer sedate or con- "linrnffic laughter warjed about the tllllirn tflble. The lingular hplnster tiijcd batter neel than any of the men and constantly twitted them. The new mmlL delightfully awkward, had four ardiH Instructor." who liked te show her ttacfly hnt te de. They steadied her inri 'sad lmnd frequently. She w'ns ilttij excited. She dodged lightly about in her stubby rubber-soled oxfords- flic took their bnnterlne good geod goed bmoKdly, only her heightened color ilevvcd that she wns coneimis of the tllent wiubblng of the bridge plnjprs. When the refreshment trayH wre wheeled In. '1C ,no" escorted the un un rtlceme viller te the shadowy window ieat "here !"' let them feed her tlraenilc. The live f thein kicked their heels In a row and t-ang an ubsuc' (ing4ih"t ,," beauty of v'Toe-oo-ood" that had endless verses. The hestecH was very solicitous about her wiMPcted guets. i 'Take .Mrs. uerring i uhil'ii ui-m-terh- did I set the name right? mere ia!ad, Tina." Mlsn Haswell shot n eurprlscd ulancc it the enubbed person en the window teat, accepted n wireless nnd-shrugged. Blie'd known Margery tee Iehr te inter fere with any gnme slie wanted te start. i.i tlin lenew nerfcctlv well that the Kte'ntly crushed manner with whicli that leunr Ionian inic ht hum-" ;" nleht vrni entliely ter the henclit of the hint. Nethlnjt loath, Mlsu 11ns ifll kept the ball rolling. "SiwiebedyV get te crank Margery s car. The self-starter in self-stepped, that'" hew I happened te run into her out, here." , , , , 11 (our men volunteered, but it was Charles who struggled with the rusty bandle. ... , "Nothing nich the matter," he yelled jbere t chugging of the ether cars. "Think I knew whnt nils It. I'll run ever In the morning and ghc it u leek sec." He furget te say goed-mglit te the ethers until I. s wife reminded him. He uneked a ciucful rlgurettc tii tl'eihlveu&y befere he faced the musle. Bertha was ndjusl'ng the deg's leash. "Cunnlii' hasn't had his run today. I Was mi busy. Will you glvu liim ju-t one turn?" Cliarled took the leash quietly enough . "I think," phe remarked with studied courtesy, "that I'll go in town with jeu en the 8:10. I want te cee about fie slip covers for the library." "I'm net going ou the early train." He had the grace te redden. "Then I'll go en whntcver trnln you de." She eyed him ilrmly. "I only aufsested that train because the .Sher mans p en Hint, and as we're going te dinner nnd theatre with them wc could raake the arrangements en the way in." He answered net nt all. "If you're thinking about that wo we jsan's old car," she lliuncd out sudden ly, "why, 111 telephone for a garage Kan. It would be clieupcr In the end' thin ruining your decent clothes." Still he did net answer. Hut he tarted out toward the Duarbernu end of the street. He retraced his steps nMfly when she suggested the ether direction. "Don't go down In nil that shrub bery and weeds. Keep out in the open. I don't want Cunnln' juBt chewed with BOWJUltOCB." H walked the oilier way, enmc bnek Weking nnether cigarette, waited until Bertha hnd enrried licr pet upstairs and tnen resni y took up the telephone. rllm, listening en the stuir landing. nuiht eery word of his quiet cemcrsar tlen. "Berry I can't patch up your enr in We innrnli,,, T 'II go t ft the first thing luuMdav, Oh, pii.ne don't. He's n very inefficient werkmnn. I'll be glad te de I knew exnctly w lint's the matter. "u "er(,? He forgive me. What a clear Helenre te be nhle te tumble te sleep quickly ttH thnt! Pleasant dreams." t. l .ns at tl10 ''"T ' her garag ii i ,nrc " nn Thursday. She was ft i,"C with thn car herself, her eyes H.r'B.' h.cr chr'u Pi'- Hltc laughingly 'hew ,le waH Just te Bll0w lrcr brli'i ,(1l;''bately lifted her te the rert ahelf that ran alongside the wall. tt"k .l,,f ,nJ' wy. Ye lll'l,r till I told ber with mock grulTiicss. ' bother me about half enough." lirtt,.yi ircttkfMcd under the grape tnTi i11'. " wide-eyed maid ran back jna forth three, times for mere hnm and tt .. lle ''""fepsed thnt she ndered u?m ,nf.,,n after-breakfast cigar, km. miln(llel Inte an animated mono- ,2 ' "nB ber about his one ad Vnil. l'l ls "'ney ' tobcece growing leu hV, i ""'d nwfty fr0l' lr with .1 lav.?!1 ".wnRKW! there was an air of b, T l ,"t- llp ferKt te step lit wMaitedUH, l "plQln tlmt he lml eSkeninr,l('0"r",.,here w"" " fearfuJ Ve ?ni5fi u"ntl i the tuning. Ulaber1 ,lln '"i""1' ll'eln,, ln tee ' ter'fwt !0WM' tlm presided ever ttlt It 25 hc,r. l,0,,e! Hhe '""' forgotten Ck waiiA,leMCOnl "' the month. BTLVS ! Charles. Before she hnd Mtefuii. " , drnmntlc sentence of her teuniy..J)lann.ctl Peroration he had 'ltd ni.ti ' B.D,uni"e of mall that con tthbaffl..f 0Mhe Ijitl". "el'ln THE GUMPS Andy at the Bat By Sidney, Smith i 4 rV.. ,T..He ?nl ttt iiiBllftrnry t te her tl. Preoccupied intllirerence ItnSi i, F5' y-'lfye" rcmniks. In si- fiwri.. f-f ." ." ."0,VI1 long line of a. . viit-ii nnni n iwi iimwi,i iin C.T '? ,lpr,"'n. with nn ironical brew8. U at U wlth "wpercllleiia 'SuiJl'P6?1 t0 llve tie vny "fflStar neut mltg," ,bIie gnve her var nnswcr. Slut te her amiue. ment his shrug nnd hnbltunl, "Well, cut It down if you can next month, my dear,' was net forthcoming. .By Rd, I can't t You're' the ene that gets awny with that! When I think of what you calmly take, year after year, for nothing, I sometimes wonder hew you have the gall te de It." "Ker nothing? Why, I've given. up everything te jour comfort for nearly seventeen years. My girlhood, my " "Girlhood I Yeu were n mere child of twenty-four when I married you J we'll call that girlhood stuff off. I can't think of. niiytblny you've ever given up." "I've clvcn up Iny time te keeping house for you," she llnrcd back at him. "leu re n rather exasperating person te keep house for." "Kept house for ine," he sneered. "0U've. kept house for yourself. There isn t n blessed thing in this house that I'm consulted about! There's nothing ilenii the. way I want it ! There isn't u comfertnblc thing in It for mc except my old merris chair, and you've put that in the attic. It's taken about all I could cam te keep this darned place going, and what I get ls a place te sleep anil a couple of meals a day. I can't even amuse myself ns I please. Bridge bil liards heavens I Yeu don't seem te be satisfied unless you've get me tied In the house." i m sure I'm nlwnyB glad te co metering." "In n closed car!" "We have the windows out ln sum mer" Shu was crying new. Tears hnd always been a reserve force that brought iilm te her side with a "ncver-mind-we'U-fergct-lt," but th(s time he growled In exasperated tones. "Oh, quit qqibbllng! I'm sick and tired of it." They'd weathered many a wersa der mefltic storm. They might have Hailed HRfely through this one if an habitual meddler hadn't tried te help them. HIih was an cxasperntiiigly cheerful soul, she alwayy telephoned nt most Inopportune times, and she telephoned nt this par ticular moment te nsk why they hadn't started for her house. Churlcs declined abruptly, "My dear boy. you can't! Bertha accepted for you this neon. We renllv get up the party te cheer her up. if you must knew it. She's blue as Indigo. And I don't blame her. Pretty, please! Come along. The Buwsens will step by for jeu in nbeut live minutes." He was se angry thnt he couldn't trust liiiiihelf te speak. It seemed te him shockingly disloyal of Berthn te hac discussed their difference of opin ion with any one, particularly with an hahltunl meddler. He shut himself in His room until she had departed, pre testing, with the Haw-sons. Faint echoes of her silly excuses about ills Headache lleated tlireuih the hallway he wns se tired of the sound of her thin little voice thnt he felt he couldn't endure another sound without cursln. He managed te stay In his room for something like twenty minutes nfter her departure. The rest of the house was he better; Its pvettlness and emptiness mocueii mm. it seemed exactly like Berthn smug, well ordered and soul less. Up derided te wa'it, He itredc impatiently off Inte the dark, hr.tlesx, with thu wind blowing against his set luce. He wandered aim iessi.v. lie inigiit nave been tramping nn hour or two when he found himself ciesslng the Denrbenis' bit of lawn The wind was high new, -the faint smell of n weed hre vaguely comfort Ing. A boyish figure in nn atrocious coat, with the inevitable deg nt her heels, was in the shelter of the perch. '"I.e!" she greeted him. "Blews like n storm, ruffles nil our f-ntliers, eh? prin h n iickie judo; dun t sec why we :evc nor; u iieee ou ee tnere s the rain new!" She latched the deer b hind them and leaned nc.ilnst It. lie helped her nwkwnrdly, her hnlr tumbled, caught it-elf in the button of his sleeve. He trembled while she loosed it. His ejes were se tragic they start'ed her into sneken tivmnnthv. "Hew tired you are!" she murmured Impulsively. "Don't you want te Hit down and reft a little jeu leek se tired " "Loek tired ! I nm tired," his words came tumbling In n throaty rush. "I'm se tired of tvcrjlhing and everybody Hint I well, I've about reached my limit!" He could have bitten his tongue be fore he hnd finished. lie presMjd his hands against his graying temples and shut his lips grimly. In spite of his gray hair, in spite or inose iiguceneu lips, tnere wns some thin;; fundamentally boyish about him. She mannged te smile nt him, but her threat contracted. She hud a sudden vision of hew he must have looked when he wns a very little boy. n chubby lit -tin boy, who had played tee" hard nud who needed mothering. "I'm seventeen kinds of n cad, but I've gqt te tulk te somebody!" She pulled up nn armchair before Hie lire, put a steadying hand en ills shoulder, hunched herself demurely en u hassock ncress thn hearth from him and clasped her bunds about her kncci. "Light up. old dour. Get It nut and evor with. Pretend I'm jour favorite aunt." "I hud f.ne. y'knew," he began dully. "Bear old soul mined Deberah. I'sed te mil up every spring nnd see her for a few days. Just en niv own. Bcitha never wanted te go. Went two jears age te Inn y the little old ladv Lord, what hadn't the sweet soul done for mc nnd for flVrtha but Berthn wouldn't go. Berthn lutes funerals. Never liked Aunt Deberah." The person en the hassock nodded gravely. II'i no longer heeded her. He just blundered out Ills grievances against life, poured out his overbur dened soul without even waiting te see hew she was taking his confidences. She. took them rather well. She lis tened with u mingling of pitv and scorn. She wns honestly ashamed of herself for listening. She wonted te comfort nnd scold nil In the same breath. But she did neither. She just let hlin talk. And the burden of It nil wu: "I'm tlred of it sick of It! I'm been chealed out of everything I've wanted In life. Kiddles. Peace. An evening pipe. A sailboat A sndille horse. An outdoor job. A funny rambling benne somewhere en a ceuu try hill. I KCt nethliiK but bridge clubs and 8.10 trains and slip-covers for the library furniture. If I'm geed nnd enreful, sometimes I'm allowed te take Cunnln' for a walk! My llfe Is bounded en the north, south, east nnd west bv whnt Bertha must hnve and whnt Bertha wants te de! There Im'l anybody In mv whole world who ciues n darn what becomes of me (.wept Berthn, and the only reason she cares is thnt I'm a geed old meal-ticket!" "Would veu it rather be some one clfe's meal ticket?" she nsked abruptly. "Heavens, no!" hi" exploded. "1 wouldn't marry the Queen of Sheba!" "Who's both dead and black!" Mar- gory rocked en her bnseck ln glee. r'Yeu dear'" she tended him. "You're the sumo funny old dear you always were! Yeu always said jeu wouldn't marry the Queen of Sheba whenever win weic disgusted with anv of us leek." With a quick gesture she pulled her hnlr back across from her forehead. "Knew mc new! ltcniom ltcniem ber who teased jeu about the homelj Shelden twins and tried te get you te soy which ene you'd marry t" fctL HERE AW WS. I'AA AAA. St- 1VE 60T rV UNIFORM teft NHTA6 MOW-- &S WM W MeUOU lurk i netftccD nwti.r vr MiUkkT iPOft ? VOH T KNOW VrA A aoev ewc-- I IUI ii ii inwHri UUL!rS fe nrir LfSk aB i hi kW nil mis Ml kt CM OU tr4A6.tSt A 6VY V4VTH WW vouew iha viiPwr nueftu6H A yhvu- a ruTURV ef.iPS S.nOL-E UVV.- k Miu tUAiT'O SUtVl EVERYTHING AVK VET CKNY ?ICK "& V1KXW.N- rwm vri- AfcTvCAv-- 'k 4? rQ e AND ViM-KlNCi A0UV N A OKcOcn OP tfTEAkATTlVUl. ORCH VlD ROE- J0.ETO W0 NfS At Alt Tiir nWiFO QPMJV'lV. ii-r.v.ma A.ufc "rrtNK TEM.N& OrAtTWINCa VWEM. V.t ukw A, TM0P.l-ON- ( V WMZ MENVS, CLEOPATRA, JULIET V AHO TME QUEEN OF SME3A-J V AU SVrYltVO ew MV !.Af- SOMEBODY'S STENOGTtafRc Cops Are Useful fepyrljrht IflL'l, hy I'ubllc tdir Cemiianj OH rtnnnMiHT'. I FORfiOT MY VANITY MIRROR ' AAJD AJOT A Shep wimdew 'Til 1 Get OOVJK TtOWM V fflxS - - !J 0 FI V V 1 By Hayward qnwpfyywfi L ' ... j'"i9,iviifjrnmrimi'm jg 'vJe, A'&'wrwAHu-u j UT. The Yeung Lady Acress the Way THE TRRIIW.F-TRNPRRED MR. RANG The jeung lady across the w.iy says she thought slugging had been entirely eliminated fiem football and new she sees by the paper that our ends were reportedly boxed by their opponent). -:- Da FONTAiyn FOX Te HAMS TH 6UTCHS.F. TAKE BACK THAT BAD TwRKcV xd yi8fmr9 -. -STjSu J iTJ Mm ?. r. - firTSe'.VX - - 53. MR. 0AMG DIDCT FlCUftC JOSf HeW X WeOKD KoeKfo Tle. P0J.1CEMAM .ililt & 2.3 SCHOOL DAYS X mu mt TVffve-n awk cur u vjt 7ifJi -1 1 tf tjcw r v y.agitsafitsimM2MSaa , tSC n t- i-Mrriflmrmrwni i irnwi-giiti " ymrs THE JOKE ? STOPie; ll aTchfelW; ATiN( AM PETEY Wrong Again ! lOOK PeTeY, DxrAT? A13& " Il)CK-S0UP I &S& A COMFtTfABLE U AMD VEEGOIWsTeHAVE S&b' UHaC ?ETEVf 5TlA AMD OUIOMS TOO fr- S H Alt I GET VOL) J ' , Jl VAMeTmer PlLtOW ' ) TwtV IHIWK DOKl'T KklOV VMATS G0IU6 OM FROM NOW Tilu XMA5 I'M 60IU6T6GFT A LOT OP ATTEWTCM- M I m 7dp By C. A. Voight GASOLINE ALLEY Or n Geed Nam for a Dwpv rzM szg&l. 1E MEW HAjr& i &gj&mi Wk:hyj Sought ?V 4fW'Vt TDfiH UCEE 5CM8O0M HXO A COOD UOHCH TViev SuK3evr Iein& down and lOOKtHC OVER. THE SLEEPING CA6S AND PlCMNO OUT A QOOO WA.MC for veu SKeezix "PmS.?" 664j.-- ELr WELL, THERe'S SENCCAMBIA ANO MOOiEJAW AND BEELZEBUB AND SPONOOLICUS AND HAMSTRING- 'irr i I'fiik. .rvi; . "vv Mi PPATctLLO AND VAURIA A OJ, KOKOMe ANO I ABrZA, rver Tb MENTION J :ieixA and LAMBRggeiNy r "K"SSreFT ii z&sKF?l m v- bHUCKS'. SfcEEZlX WOULD B6 A BETYeR NAME Fea A PUU.MAN CAK. (HAN ANN OF TMCM Ae Feir Veuf ,f(4 A Llrl -J :t 'J I tei tty DW1G y By King i ,., 'M ...ffmt CONTINUED TCftfOKROW 1 -gg .'t,