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CROWBOROUGH CASE.

•ELSIE CAMERON’S LETTERS. FRANK AND APPEALING. 3Y CABLE—PRESS ASSOCIATION- -COP Y RIGHT. Received Feb. 9, 10.45 a.m. LONDON, Feb. 8. The full text of the letters of the dead gin, Elsie Cameron, are strangely irreconcilable with Sir Edmund Spiisbury’s statement that there was no indication of pending motherhood. They are remarkably frank and are written in perfect English. One letter Deg ms : “You have broken my heart,” and continues, “I gave you myself and all my love. Had 1 gone off my head it would have been no excuse for you carrying on with the other girl. Your love for me should have kept, you true, it is a poor thing for a man to let himself go because his girl’s nerves are oad. Apparently you deceived the other girl also. Oh! Norman; had you been a raving lunatic I would never have betrayed your trust. You do not write a single word of love to me, though I stood by you in all your troubles. Well, Norman, I expect you to marry me and finish with the other girl as soon as possible. My baby must have a name, and ‘ another thing, 1 love you in spite of all. 1 have been told you can trust no man, but oh! Norman, I thought you wqre different.” Miss Caldieott admitted visiting Thorn in ins hut in the evenings and accompanying to cinemas. Asked what they did in the hut, she replied “Made love.”—Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19250209.2.69

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 9 February 1925, Page 7

Word Count
247

CROWBOROUGH CASE. Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 9 February 1925, Page 7

CROWBOROUGH CASE. Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 9 February 1925, Page 7

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