FULL TEXT: Mrs. Alice Cross’s husband, Fifteenth-av, was sitting peacefully in the new rocking chair in the parlor Thursday night, he says, darning his wife’s dress, when the head of the house (Mrs. Cross) became angry, and began to upbraid him.
“Don’t be angry, Allie,” the husband says he pleaded.
“Haven’t I always tried to please you in everything?”
This made Mrs. Cross so cross, the husband says, that she
gave him a black eye, threw him out of the house, and broke up the furniture.
He sought the aid of the police.
Mrs. Cross had retired, but that did not prevent her putting
up a battle with three patrolmen, they say, and long deep scratches on their
faces were shown as evidence.
‘This husband beating has got to stop,” declared the court.
“Here is a poor man doing the best that he can, yet is abused and thrown into
the street by a cruel and unfeeling wife. What sort of a wife is it that will
treat her poor husband in this manner? I don’t know but what I’m in favor of a
whipping post for husband beaters. A big strapping woman abusing a small weak
husband like this is a painful sight.”
The court fined Mrs. Cross $1 and costs or ten days. “Sober
up and see if you can treat your husband as a good husband ought to be
treated,” he said.
[“Husband-Beating Must Stop, Says Judge Neelen To Woman –
Mrs. Alice Cross, Arriving Home Late, and Peevish, Withal, Beats Up Meek Little
Husband and Finally Throws Him Out of the House – Three Patrolmen Also Suffer,”
The Milwaukee Sentinel (Wi.), May 31, 1912, p. 1]
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