1919
Woman Won by Cave Man Tactics Now Has Divorce.
"Barney and I went for a ride in the summer of 1917," said Mrs. Helen N. Lasky in a Chicago divorce court, "and he told me he would not bring me back unless we were married. So we went to Crown Point and were married."
"Did he later desert you," queried Judge Cooper.
"Yes," replied the witness. "He came back once and asked me to sign a paper, but I would not because I didn't know what I was signing.
"And," she continued, "one day I met him on the street and asked him to come back and live with me, but he kept on walking."
"Did he force you to marry him?" inquired the court.
"Yes," she replied.
"What is his income?"
"From $7 to $8 per day."
"Decree and $10 per week alimony, laconically added the judge.
—The Saturday Blade, Chicago, Jan. 3, 1920, p. 8.
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
"Marry Me or Walk!" She Stayed in Auto
Labels:
1919,
automobiles,
court-proceedings,
divorce,
force,
judge,
marriage,
riding
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