DRIVEN MAD BY THEFT.
LOSS OF JEWELS CAUSES SUICIDE. There has been a tragic sequel to a recent Paris jewel theft. Mile. Elsie Soubeyrand Moreville, living in Passy, in September last was victimised by a clever and unscrupulous adventurer, who disappeared with all her jewels. The theft preyed upon the mind of Mile. Moreville. She refused to see visitors, and lived in constant dread of some other form of spoliation. On October 11 the servants became alarmed. Mllo. Moreville's Pekingese poodle, which was in her mistress's room, began howling and scratching at the locked door. An entrance to the room having been forced, the police found the faithful dog lying just inside the door in the last stages of exhaustion from hunger, while the woman lav dead on the floor, having apparently killed herself in a lit of madness. Mile. Moreville, it was clear, had first sought to kill herself in her bathroom. With a carving knife she had attempted to opeu an artery in her left hand. She made several deep incisions, but only severed a vein. She tried the right arm, with no better success. Realising, probably after hours of Intense agony, that her injuries were not mortal, she struggled to tlio bedroom. Thore, after having washed and bound nl> her lacerated arms, she cut her throat with the knife. The doctor stated that Mile. Moreville had been dead two days. The dog was given some food, and at' once nestled dose to its mist loss's body, and had to be forcibly removed.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Christchurch), Volume VII, Issue 2143, 28 December 1920, Page 8
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255DRIVEN MAD BY THEFT. Sun (Christchurch), Volume VII, Issue 2143, 28 December 1920, Page 8
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This newspaper was digitised in partnership with Christchurch City Libraries.