Mr. Preble Gets Rid of His Wife BY JAMES THURBER One rainy Monday afternoon, Mr. Preble was more serious about it than usual. “Let's run away together,” said Mr. Preble. “All righty,” said his stenographer. Mr. Preble jingled the keys in his pocket and looked out the window. “My wife would be glad to get rid of me,” he said. “Would she give you a divorce?” asked the stenographer. “I don't suppose so,” he said. The stenographer laughed. “You'd have to get rid of your wife,” she said. Mr. Preble was unusually silent at dinner that night. About half an hour after coffee, he spoke without looking up from his paper. Let's go down in the cellar,” Mr. Preble said to his wife. “What for?” she said, not looking up from her book. “Oh, I don't know,” he said. “We never go down in the cellar any more. The way we used to.” “We never did go down in the cellar that I remember,” said Mrs. Preble. “I could rest easy the balance of my life if I never went down in the cellar.” Mr. Preble was silent for several minutes. “Supposing I said it meant a whole lot to me,” began Mr. Preble. “What's come over you?” his wife demanded. “It's cold down there and there is absolutely nothing to do.” “We could pick up pieces of coal,” said Mr. Preble. “We might get up some kind of a game with pieces of coal.” “I don't want to,” said his wife. “Anyway, I'm reading.”