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Mrs. Youngs On Deck Again

Mrs. Youngs On Deck Again image
Parent Issue
Day
2
Month
May
Year
1902
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

 

MRS, YOUNGS ON THE DECK AGAIN

She Marries Foster Kilpatrick and Trouble Results

A SEWING MACHINE

Plays an Important Part in Civil Suit Begun Against the New Made Bride 

The Youngs perpetual injunction case has of itself left the boards, as Mrs. Youngs is happily married to Foster Kilpatrick, who was perpetually enjoined from speaking to her, but its Influence is at work, with the result that the little town of Maybee is witnessing a lively civil suit due solely to the Youngs affair.

The Youngs children boarded for some time with one of the brothers-in-law named Hayden and as security for the pay Mr. and Mrs. Youngs left a $20 sewing machine, promising to settle the bill of $30 as soon as they were able. In the meantime the trouble occurred and the children left the Hayden family, while the opening of chapter No. 3 revealed the fact that a relative of Mrs. Kilpatrick, Greisehopper by name had caused the machine to be conveyed to his own home.

Hayden has replevined the machine to obtain satisfaction for the $30 worth the small Youngs are alleged to have absorbed and through sympathy for Mrs. Young, who is the owner. Greisehopper is fighting the case. The case was set for Wednesday, but Attorney L. N. Brown of Ypsilanti returned that evening with the information that it had been adjourned until the middle of May.

Maybee and the environs are shaken to their foundations by the suit, which has split the community into two factions, who take their stand on the general merits of the Youngs case and the particular justice in the wife's being obligated to lose her sewing machine to settle the children's board bill.

The former Mrs. Youngs is at present living with her husband, Kilpatrick, in the northern part of the state.