OCR Text |
Show CARRIED HIS WIFE'S SHOE 111 HIM ON HIS TRIPS Taking his wlfo's shoes with him on his railroad run from Yellowstone Park to Salt Lake, so that she could not leave the house to visit neighbors, was one of tho acts of cruelty with which Mrs. Anna M. Alley of Ogden, charges her husband, George L. Alloy, Al-loy, in a complaint, filed today, asking tho district court for a divorce. It Is only one of a considerable number of uncommon practices she charges him with. She asks for the divorce on the grounds of cruelty, stating that she has suffered excruciating pain and fear as a result of his treatment, Tho plaintiff says thoy lived at Yellowstone Yel-lowstone Park during tho summer of 1916, while hor husband had tho run from that placo on tho railroad. Ho would koop hor imprisoned In their home, she says, and refuse hor social intercourse of any kind with thoir neighbors. He would fall to provide lhcr with eatables for their table, so that she would have to borrow from neighbors, to her .groat humiliation. He would tear upj.hen clothes, she charges, until she had, to keep all of her apparel under lock-and key. He would take hor shoes with him on the train to prevent her from leaving the house. He would tip over furniture, break things in the house and cause her much work and worry. She charges that several times he choked her and knocked her to the ground and abused her generally. When they left Yellowstone Park and moved to Ogden, Og-den, he continued his ill treatment of her, sho says, until life became unbearable. |