ce I pronounced in color, but in no sens* id I crude.—Harper’s Bazar.enby | HER X.OVE STORY.e-heiyheE*drea»»:haileashetor-■ f» ■►jmeZf5-al11lyn1*yn*9;!11nI-d,3eThe tangled skein of the romance of beautiful Oriska Worden’s life is about to be unravelled by the magic of a new and true love. Estranged from a millionaire husband before she was out of her teens, she fled to Paris and devoted all her energies to the cultivation of a pure j | soprano voice. Today she enjoys an established place in the musical world.At the age of 7 years Oriska Worden was sent to the convent of Mount De Chautal, In Wheeling, W. Va. She showed great aptitude for music and languages. Her father was Col. F. W. Worden. a distinguished Infantry officer; her mother a noted beauty.Suitors hocked about the beautiful young girl when she went back home at the age of 16. The most determined was Charles W. Glover, son of the millionaire manufacturer of Ypsilanti, Mich. He won the girl for his wife, and his wedding gift was a magnificent home In Ypsilanti worth $100,000. When they were married in 1892 the bride was just 17 years old.The young couple spent the honeymoon in California. They lived with the husband’s parents after their return until changes were made in their own house.I I Trouble began at onoe. The bride and her mother-in-law could not agree. Col. Worden advised his daughter to go to Paris and resume the study of music, giving her husband tha option of following. iThus in four months after she became a wife this child found herself practically alone in the wrorld. She went to Paris. Her husband did not follow her, and their love story ended there. She returned in 1895 and learned that her husband had secured a divoice on the ground j I of desertion.Bitterly disappointed at the wreck of her happiness, the child wife set herself at work in Paris to become, if possible, an accomplished singer. She studied under the famous Jacques Bouhy, where Mme. Suzanne Adams was her classmate. When she had finished, Bouhy pronounced her an artiste worthy of grand opera roles. She returned to this coun-t I try in 1895 aiAd became prima donna of the Castle square opera company.Oriska Worden had given up all idea of a life blessed by happy love, and looked to a triumph on the lyric stage.Among those who met her was the young Wall-st. man who was to change tho current of her life. His name is at present a secret. He pressed his suit so well that Miss Worden consented to employ Lawyer Turk to get a divorce for hef.t1c1teVsiyirsc81msiITTlS1t:HADT1GT»AHT1G