aym-Lrpheislat;helil*GEORGE WARRENtiffirp?esfilehisingtoed.toledmeantloeer-iseun-tiernc-ad oLOt-?asail-:lindy,resrhe150.thnnstineantjer-thenk-3m-IS VERY NAUGHTYACCORDING TO A DIVORCE COMPLAINT FILED BY HIS WIFE,KATHLENE.Zachary Frank Given Damages Against The Indianapolis Street Railway Co. —A Dull Week in the Boone Circuit Court—New Cases Filed.Kathlene Warren has brought suit for divorce from George W. Warren. They were married January 27, 1909, and lived together as husband and wife until September 23, 1910, atwhich time they separated.Kathlene alleges that soon after their marriage George* caused one of his sons to file a complaint in the Montgomery circuit court, asking that he, George, be adjudged a person of unsound mind, for the purpose of having a guardian appointed, in order that suit might be brought by such gurdian to annul his marriage to the plaintiff. She says he stated that he could go to a sanitarium for a short time, and soon thereafter ask to have the guardian removed and restored to sanity, when he would be at liberty to remarry Mattie Utterback a former divorced wife of his.She also charges that soon after their marriage he became insanely jealous of her and would not allow her to go to the city unless accompaniedby him; tbat he forbade her to speak aid Lto her friends and acquaintances, andcfI£I1titCI(Itic1(IIfitold10Wanducentyofal-nueoneeennis-thefor•rbbinty.80.wasyetbyam*often accused her of having too intimate friendship with other men whom she knew. She alleges that on one occasion, when she was in Lebanon, she met and stopped to talk with a gentleman who was an old acquaintance, whom she had known since childhood, and that when the defendant saw her talking to said gentleman he became very angry and cursed her and told her the man was indecent and not fit to talk to anyone, when in fact he had never seen or heard of4the gentleman before. On the same day, while they were waiting for a car t6 go to Lafayette, she went to the toilet room of the hotel and he accused her of going there to meet other men. At Lafayette she gave him a kodak to hold while she went to the ladies toilet room; that he objected to her going, became angry and threw the kodak on the pavement and broke it.She avers that whenever she met and spoke to an old acquaintance he accused her of improper relationshe i with them, ibleav’smis*t ifams mnt ring ams een dtes ana-any the e of heir jury ther rion this ii tocon-romYac*Mr.Tip-atedmetmin-Mr.t by h orShe further alleges that the defendant is of a cruel, brutal and lascivious nature, and that during the year they lived together his conversations were continually with reference to carnal and lascivious subjects, and were couched in such dirty and filthy language that she is unwilling to set out more fully in her complaint. That he would use such language in the' presence of relatives and friends andwhen she would remonstrate with him he would fly into a rage and curse and abuse her.She alleges that he frequently called* he vile and indecent names, and told her she was lower than the lowest woman in Crawfordsville. She declares that on account of his brutal carnal and lascivious nature, she was many times during their married life compelled to occupy another 'room and that on one such occasion when she was sick and had locked her door he procured a ladder and entered her room through the window and by threatening her life compelled her to acceed to his wishes, and that as a result she was under the care of twophysicians for two weeks.She makes a number of othercharges against the defendant all of a similar character.The Warrens formerly lived in Montgomery county, but bacome residents of Boone county last March.She asks for an absolute divorce, $10,000 alimony and the restoration of her former name, Kathlene Bowers.Another Widow.