Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1932 — Page 5

.TTINE 23, 1032

AIMEE'S HUBBY TURNS GUNS ON FORMER LOVER Attorneys Insinuate Pretty Nurse Had Many Affairs of the Heart. By United Press LOS ANGELES. June 23.—Attorneys for David L. Hutton, choirirader husband of Aimee Semple McPherson, sought today to show that Myrtle Haz?l Joan St. Pierre had experienced, many loves before he met the corpulent baritone. Mrs. St. Pierre, who was successively Myrtle St. Peters, “Jean Deville,” Mrs. H. H. Harrington Jr., and Mrs. George Street before she agreed to become Mrs. David L. Hutton Jr., Is suing Hutton for $200,000 damages on the charge he refused to marry her after allegedly betraying her under promises they would become man and wife. Mrs. St. Pierre shrieked and became hysterical during cross-ex-amination as she denied insinuations she had been friendly with other men. She was perturbed at efforts of attorney Mark Jones to prove she had been engaged to one Edgar Ebens in 1928, and that he had lived in her Hollywood home thereafter. Attorneys for Hutton filed an amended answer to her complaint in which he alleged she was not a chaste woman at the time she claimed he made torrid love to her. A crop of mystery witnesses appeared. One was a man wearing a red necktie. Another was a veiled woman, plainly dressed. Hutton smiled knowingly at the press row and said: “They’ve got some good stuff. I can’t say more at present.” He looked a trifle bewildered, however, when four other men wearing red neckties came into the courtroom and the first mystery witness, angered at competition, turned up his coat collar and departed.

MAKE JULY 5 LAST DAY FOR MARKET STANDS Police to Arrest AH Violators After That Date, Says Board. Action of the safety board has established July 5 as the final date for sidewalk stands at the city market house. Effective July 7, the next market day, police will be instructed to arrest all violators, in order to permit angle parking in the space occupied by the stands. Holders of curb stands must seek new sites inside the market building. If overcrowding results, the board ruled the present inside stand holders who are behind in rent will be evicted to make way for the newcomers. Oran mi ai HEW UK SEM Soothing, healing, invisible ZEMO is used in thousands of homes to bring Telief from the tortureof itching, burning Eczema. ZEMO has been used for twenty years with remarkable success to stop itching and draw the heat and sting out of the skin, and help clear away Rashes, Ringworm, Pimples and other annoying skin or scalp irritations. Extra Strength ZEMO especially adapted for chronic cases. All Dealers. 35c, 60c. SI.OO. —Advertisement.

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RERI WILL BE STAR OF BIRTHDAY BILL

Indiana Theater Will Present ‘‘Merrily We Go to Hell” as Fifth Anniversary Feature on the Talking Screen.

IN celebration of its fifth anniversary, the Indiana theater will present a stage and screen show for the week beginning Friday. The lavishly-produced stage production will headline Reri, the beautiful Polynesian girl who was the star of the motion picture named Tabu” as well as the featured dancer In this year’s Ziegfeld “Follies.” The main film attraction on the Indiana's anniversary program will be the new Paramount picture entitled “Merrily We Go to Hell,” which co-stars Fredric March and Sylvia Sidney. Its cast also includes Skeets Gallagher and Adrianne Allen Asa special screen offering, the widely-acclaimed picture, “Tabu,” will be shown twice daily without added

charge at 10 a. m. and 5:30 p. m. “Tabu,” directed by F. W. Murnau, was filmed in the South Seas on the island of Bora-Bora with Reri as star, In the anniversary stage show, Reri will do the same sensational native songs and. dances that she performed in “Tabu” and in the Ziegfeld “Follies” this past season. Among the acts in the stage show supporting her are Bernardo De Pace, mandolin wizard; Celine Lescar, Gresham and Blake, Park and Clifford, Gus Elmore, Lloyd Miller, and a chorus of dancing girls known as the South Sea Maidens. On the screen, “Merrily We Go to Hell,” deals with a young wife who can not keep up with her husband s dissipations. He is a playwright whose success has gone to his head. Not until after his wife leaves him does he realize what she has meant to his career. The picture is based on the novel by Cleo Lucas, “I, Jerry, Take Thee, Joan.” Direction is by Dorothy Arzner. Dessa Byrd will return to the Indiana organ with an anniversary solo, and the orchestra will be conducted by Ed Resener. u n n Indianapolis theaters today offer: “Week-Ends Only” at the Apollo,

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1 “New* Morals for Old" at the Palace, “Thunder Below” at the Indiana, “The State’s Attorney” at the Circle, “Night World - ’ at the Lyric, and burlesque at the Mutual. BRIEF PLATFORnTuRGED Democratic Program Short Enough for Postcard Is Byrnes’ Idea, By tieripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, June 23.—Senator James Byrnes (Dem., S. C.) believes the Democratic platform this year should be written by men who worked, in their youth, on handset county newspapers, and as a result, know hotv to be brief. The platform, he said today, should be short enough to go on a postcard, so that every voter in the country will read it and understand it. Art Curator’s Wife Killed By United Press EXETER, Neb., June 23.—Mrs. Martha Ramus, 30, wife of Charles F. Ramus, curator of the Cleveland Art Museum, was killed instantly late Wednesday when the couple’s automobile skidded on a sandy stretch of road and overturned. Ramus suffered minor injuries.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

49 YEARS WITH FORCE, VETERAN FIREMAN ‘QUITS’ Captain Kile Steps Out to ‘Avoid Embarrassing the Chief.’ BY JAMES A. CARVIN Nearly half a century of duty | with the fire department has given Captain Philip Kile a full understanding of the meaning of “for the good of the service.” Wednesday he tendered his resignation from the department in a brief one-sentence statement, but back of the act lies a story of long friendship and a belief in one’s | friends which rises above self-in-terest. June 13, Kile’s seventieth birthday, according to fire department records, was the time for his retirement on pension from active service. Kile of Aerial Ladder Company I 13. however, was not ready to leave 1 his post at Capitol avenue and Maryland street, after forty-nine | years of service. He contended that j his age only was 67, the discrepancy occurring when he falsified his age | to be eligible for enlistment years ago. Fire Chief Harry Voshell and members of the board of safety were unable to find municipal or county records to support either side. The case appeared at a standstill and was postponed for two meetings urftil today. The problem before the board was whether to disregard Kile’s personal word, backed by his record of service and pension him, or permit department records to be chal-

lenged, thus opening the way for other difficulties. Kile solved the problem by resigning. effective July 1. When the resignation was introduced to the board, Albert Schmollinger, Kile's attorney, informed the board the resignation had been withdrawn. There appeared nothing to do but proceed with the hearing. Kile left the room, taking several turns

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around the rotunda of the city hall, thinking. When he returned, he walked directly to the board and announced that his resignation again was effective. In a quiet voice he explained that he “didn’t wish to embarrass the chief.” And so, “for the good of the service, Kile has resigned, effective July 1, after which he will retire on his pension of $75 a month, instead of his active captain’s pay.

BLAME FLUE FOR FIRE Damage Is Estimated at $2,000 In Apartment Blaze. Defective flue, connected with a stove in which waste paper had been burned, is blamed for a fire

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Wednesday In an eight-apartment building at 501 Birch avenue, which caused damage estimated at $2,000, The building U operated by E. G. Allen, one of the occupants, and is owned by R. E. Miller, 113 North Wallace street.