
    ELIZABETH KEITH v. FRANCIS KEITH.
    Divorce — impotency of the husband.
    Divorce. Cause impotence in the defendant.
    The petitioner is about 28 years old, and was married about a year and a half since to the defendant, who was about 35 years old, of common size, but without beard, and a fine feminine voice. They lived together about a year, wdien she left him and went to her mother’s, with whom she has since resided. Pie lives with his sister and keeps house, and sometimes preaches and exhorts, at the Methodist meetings. Her character is good.
    -Three witnesses, respectable men, concurred in testifying that they subjected the defendant to an examination, a few days before the court, and that he was destitute of the members or qualifications of a man. He had no testicle only a little loose skin, as large as that containing the testicle of a squirrel. He had no penis — between the place of one and his navel there was a teat about three-fourths of an inch long, with a black spot in the centre of it, out of which he discharged urine; this was not as long as the penis of a child six weeks old and appeared like a piece of loose skin.
    Fishback, for the petitioner.
    Fox, contra.
   Br the Court.

Take a decree for a divorce. Let each keep the property they have and order the defendant to pay the costs, or be subject to execution for them.  