Towers Henry divorce
newspaper articles
WIFE WRITES HUSBAND "WIRE WHEN WE'RE TWO"
Pair Who Repented Marriage After Spree Divorced
Letters couched in formal and semilegal terms, addressed by Mrs. Tameson Towers to her husband, John Towers, from Boston, Mass., and asking to be notified when she had been legally separated from him, were introduced yesterday before Judge Thomas F. Graham in the husband's suit for divorce. Towers told the court that his wife had left him three days after their marriage in Boston and while both were recovering from the effects of a convivial and prolonged spree. Towers was granted an interlocutory decree.
The cited information was sourced from Electronic Document (email, file) published by California Digital Newspaper Collection in
San Francisco on March 5th, 1912 <
https://www.newspapers.com/image/27406390/?terms=tameson%20towers&match=1> (Ref: p. 18) The author/originator was San Francisco Call. This citation is considered to be direct and primary evidence used, or by dominance of the evidence.
- Source Notes
- San Francisco Call, Volume 111, Number 96, 5 March 1912
also, from San Francisco Chronicle, March 5, 1912, Page 18 ( https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/27406390/ ) [imperfect OCR]
MARRIED WHEN ON A SPREE HUSBAND IS GIVEN DIVORCE Wife Write Pleasant Letters to Dear Friend Jack Letters addressed to Dear friend Jack and sent to him by his wife.
In the East formed the basis of testimony on which John Towers of 2794 Diamond street was granted a divorce from Mrs Tameson Towers by Superior Judge Graham yesterday. Towers declared that he and his wife had married in Boston two years ago while both were on a spree and that his wife had left him on the following day and refused to live with him again.He came to California shortly afterward and wrote several times asking her to come to him. Her replies were pleasant and friendly but always in the negative.
- Source/Citation References (2)