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Show INKER ACG0I1 lEiSilESIIClIf ' Spasmodic Alarm Clock Also. I Helps to Break Up Happy One with en ear to .music -should not .' be required to live with a brute whoso Ideas of divine harmony rise no higher than a. broken accordion and a spasmodic alarm clock performing together, declared ' Charlotte Ograln on tho wltnuss stand In Judge C. W. Morse's iiourt yesterday, when her suit for divorce from Lars P. - Ograln, a local contractor, was called for trial. oVIra. Ograln made good her con- tenllon and was given a docrco of dl-Tho dl-Tho charge ngainst Ograln was that of extreme cruelly in that hn sought to annoy his wifo by playing an ;ccordlon for two hours without attempting to be tuneful n.nd keeping nn alarm clock going , constantly dnringr tho eamo period. The result was n. nervous breakdown on her part. Sfr. Ograin testified. Afot.t of yesterday's divorce matinee was (alien ud with orders to show cause on temporary aJImony citations, and while many a. tale of financial embarrassment was laid bare, the real thrills of actual divorce proceedings did not materialize Tlllle' "Waller was glvon a divorce from "Lester Waller on a showing: that he had given nothing for her support In the lust ,two years. Final decrees wcro given Emma Murdoch Don from TVlartlno Don and Annie Moon from Berga G, A. Moon. Alfred "V. Knudson wan ordorcd, after much Investigation concerning tho financial finan-cial condition of the Knndson Novelty Manufacturing company, of which ho la manager, to pay his wife, Lonotta Knud- Kon, $23 a month temporary- alimony. Mrs. Knudson charges her husband with John L. Canterbury was considerably ' poeved when called upon to show cause why he should not pay alimony to Usletla "I offered her some money Jast week and she wouldn't take It because she said I had stolen it and she didn't want to spend stolen money," Canterbury said. Canterbury vjorks for tho Utah Light fc Railway company hs a conductor. He was ordered to pay ?! a week. The sanio amount of alimony wua fixed lu the caso of Sarah M. Gayler against Arthur Gaylor, although the wife protest -id that It was hardly enough to buy shoes for her baby. |