Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 132, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1931 — Page 14
PAGE 14
AUTO CRASH IS FATAL TO CITY HALL EMPLOYE Louis Bader, Inspector, Is County’s 127th Traffic Victim of Year. Pinned beneath the wreckage of a car In a crash Wednesday night at Eleventh street and Broadwav, Louis Bader, 47, of 2178 North Talbot street, inspector in the city engineering department, died Sunday night at city hospital of a fractured skull.
Death of Bader brought Marion county's accident toll since the first of the year to 127. Police arrested George D. Yeazel,
127
Jr., 23, of 2930 North Talbot street, and John Huggler, 50, of 633 East Tenth street, drivers of cars in the ■wreck, on charges of involuntary manslaughter. An 11-year-old boy is in a critical condition at city hospital after he was struck by an automobile as he ran across New York street, near Blackford street, Sunday night. The youth sustained severe cuts on the head and a possible fractured skull. He was dragged beneath the car for several feet.
Driver Held Blameless The boy, Homer Bradley, is the son of Joseph and Stella Skaggs of 144 North Blackford street. The family moved recently to Indianapolis from Kentucky. H. V. T. Hobbs, 42, of 3460 West Sixteenth street, driver of the car, was held blameless. Yeazel, driver of the car in which Bader was riding, was ordered released on his own recognizance by Coroner Fred W. Vehling. Witnesses said he was not to blame for the crash. Herman Hawkins, 38, of 413 Smith street, another passenger in Yeazel’s car, sustained head lacerations and possible internal injuries. Bader, a native of the city, was the son of John and Catherine Bader. He is survived by the widow, Mrs. Carolyn Bader; a son, Ralph Bader, and three brothers. Arrangements for the funeral have not been made. Car Strikes Safety Guard Four persons suffered minor injuries Sunday morning when a car in which they were riding crashed into a safety zone guard at Cruse and Washington streets. The injured are: George Coffey, 25, of 938 North Oriental street, driver; Miss Audrey Massey, 24, of 2444 North Meridian street; Lontizan Curry, 19, of 928 North Oriental street, and Rolien Curry, 25, of the same address. Others injured in week-end accidents: Miss Esthpr O’Brion. 21. of 403 West Thirtieth street, cuts and bruises; Mrs. Clara Carter. 23. cuts on the back; Frank Carter, forehead lacerations: Mrs. J.aura Carter, bodv bruises: Mrs. Mary Champion. 35. of Cicero, forehead cuts; Mrs. C O. Free. 27, bodv bruises: Llovd Whobrev. 14. lea Injuries; Mrs. George'Morehouse. 45. of Linwood. Cal., leg inluries: Georire Render. 8. bodv bruises; Gordon Steele. 23. bodv bruises. Fioneer Woman Dies FT. WAYNE, Ind., Oct. 12.—Funeral services were held Sunday for Mrs. Mary E. Crawford, 83, who for seventy-five years occupied a home on land obtained by her grandparents under a congressional grant. Her husband, the Rev. L. C. Crawford, died nearly fifty years ago.
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Cupid Makes It a Foursome as Aimee Finds ‘Her Man
This is th last sf six featnre* on the events In the amazinr love story of I Aimee Semnle McPherson Hatton, l.os j Anteles evangelist, who recently embarked on her third honeTmoon. BY LAURA LOU BROOKMAN NX A Servlee Writer lOoDvrleht. 1931, bv NEA 3ervlce. lnc.i WHEN thrice-married Aimee Semple McPherson Hutton, in bridal negligee of white satin and chiffon, gazed at her six-foot, 235pound bridegroom, David L. Hut- ■ ton, and declared, "He's the man of my wife!” she dismissed summarily a long list of men who have been mentioned in her romantic life. There was a Hungarian count whom she met in Alexandria, Egypt, on her round-the-world trip. There was Homer Rodeheaver, band leader for Billy Sunday’s evangelical campaigns. There was C. W. Walkem, Jr., her secretary and musical arranger, who made the trip from Paris to Los Angeles with the round-the-world party. There were others—evangelists, business associates and men with whom she worked during revivalist campaigns. There was Kenneth Ormiston and the mysteries that still surround the association of these two.
COMPARISONS between Hutton, the bridegroom, and Ormiston, i the mystery man, are inevitable. Both are associated with radio. Ormiston was engineer at Angelus temple broadcasting station and after the sensational court proceedings established a radio store in Los Angeles. Hutton has been a radio 1 entertainer and at one time was audition manager of station KFVD. Both are younger than the evangelist. Hutton gave his age as 30 I on the marriage license application. Ormiston was 32 at the time of the kidnaping episode—three years younger than Aimee. Both men are unusually tall and distinguished looking. Hutton is six feet. The baritone weighs 235 pounds but is reducing. Ormiston’s weight is about 150 pounds. Both have been vigorous in the | evangelist’s defense. Said "Iron Man” Hutton, "Andbody who slani ders Aimee from now on will have to account to me. I’ll smack any- | body in the nose that pulls any of of that stuff!”
Five years ago Kenneth Ormiston was declaring, "If I can do anything to clear her name I will do it.” Aimee and Hutton went to Yuma. Ariz., for their airplane marriage. It was out of the Arizona desert the woman preacher came in June, 1926, after the disappearance in which it was charged she was with Ormiston. nan ANOTHER odd circumstance is that when Ormiston told the jury not Mrs. McPherson, but a “Miss X,” was with him at Carmel, he said the unnamed young woman was a nurse. It is another nurse, Miss Myrtle Hazel Jean St. Pierre of Los Angeles, who is the principal threat to the newly-wed Huttons’ marital happiness. Miss St. Pierre, one of three women whose names were linked with Hutton’s after the marriage, is leading off with a $200,000 suit for heart balm. All of the men in whom Aimee has shown an interest have been musical. She said once: "Music belongs to the Lord, but the devil stole it and I am giving it back. The saxophone often has been called the instrument of the devil, but I am converting it to the
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i Lord’s use. There Is room in the ; church for all kinds of music.” a a a 1*4 HE evangelist has traveled wide- . ly since the days of the Califor- . nia trial. Every journey has brought persistent rumors of romance. In 1928 she toured Europe, visiting the "pitfalls” of the Paris Latin Quarter and denouncing London’s night haunts. In 1930 she led a group of Angelus Temple worshipers on a Holy Land crusade and returned to deny that she did a "disappearing act” while on the continent. "I left the party to go to visit my daughter. Roberta, who had been injured and was in Ireland,” she said. "I stayed there until she was pronounced out of danger and if some of the Pilgrims thought I had forsaken them they were mistaken.” It was after this journey that j Aimee s bright red tresses turned i brilliant blond. In November. 1930, she left Los Angeles on a steamer bound for New York by way of a Caribbean cruise. She sailed under the name ! of "Betty Adams.” Again, on reaching her destination, denials were in ! order. With sizzling emphasis Aimee denied taking part in “whoopee par-, ties” i n Havana and drinking a ■ "Hallelujah cocktail.”
rp ARLY this year Mrs. McPherson and her daughter Roberta departed on a round-the-world cruise. On the boat Roberta met William Bradley Smith, handsome young ship’s purser, and after a brief romantic coutrship they were married March 4 in Singapore. Home again Mrs. McPherson admitted. “I w'ant a diamond ring and a home so I can live like other folks, but if I should get an engagement ring my people would have a fit.” That was before she and Baritone David set to work writing their religious opera, "The Iron Furnace.” The marriage of Aimee’s mother "Ma” Ferguson, to Guy Edward Hudson took place June 28. "Ma” who had quarreled with her daughter over temple finances, said, “Roberta has her hubby. Rolf will
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SOO’I have his wife. I have my ideal lover. And with the Lord's help Aimee—that lonely little sparrowwill soon get married to a nice man, too.” The Hudson marriage was annulled when a former wife appeared and charged Hudson with bigamy Divorce solved the difficulty and Sept. 20 "Ma and her “ideal lover” were rewed. a a a TN July, Rolf McPherson, 18, and -l Lorna D. Smith, daughter of a wealthy Oklahoma oil man, took the martial plunge in an elaborte service at the temple. Aimee read the service which united them. With their surprise elopement Sept. 13, Aimee and “Iron Man” made the newly-wed group a foursome. ‘‘l’ve always had the ideal of the woman I wanted to marry,” Hutton said. "Aimee was that woman. I knew it as soon as I saw her. I used to be breathless and with a sinking feeling every time I looked at her.” Said Aimee, "Isn’t he wonderful?” So the love story of the enigmatic evangelist has led to the man of her dreams. Previous marriages, court scandals and public condemnation sink into the past. Aimee Semple McPherson Hutton has found “her man.” (THE END) Church Celebrates By Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 12.—A celebration of the diamond anniversary of the Emanuel Evangelical Lutheran church, which opened Sunday, will continue through the week.
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AUTOISTS MUST PAY POLL TAX Can’t Get License Without Receipt, Is Ruling. Motorists who figured on wiggling out of paying their poll tax and still being able to procure Indiana automobile license plates were thwarted today by an opinion from AttorneyGeneral James M. Ogden. The opinion was given upon request of Secretary of State Frank Mayr Jr. In a letter to Ogden, Mayr pointed out that the peculiar wording of the 1931 statute requiring that poll tax receipts be shown before state licenses are granted had put some doubt upon its enforcement. The attorney-general's ruling pointed out that if state licenses of any description are purchased before May 1, the poll tax receipt from the previous year must be shown and after May 1 the receipt for the current year must be shown. This interpretation of the 1931 statute was made by Joseph M. Hutchinson, deputy attorney-general and chief "opinion writer” in Ogden’s office.
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OCT. 12,; 1931
