OCR Text |
Show SIXMARRIAGES; DOCTOR CRiES ! ENOUGH j Took Six Trips to Altar and Five Jaunts to the Divorce Mill; Declares Firmly "Never Again" (By International News Service) SAN FRANCISCO. Enough Is usu-' ally enough. Dr. Gabor Klngstone, , chiropodist and famous here as I prize-fight referee, and also us a glutton glut-ton for punishment In the matrimonial arena, declares that he has had enough. Six trips to the allar and five Jaunts to the divorce court are said to he responsible for his new con- j Wctlon. I The recent flnd last marital bout In ( which the doctor-referee was given a decision is the straw that broke the back of the dromedan Coming as it j did a short two years after a pre- : vious grilling. Dr. Klngstone was forced to throw up the sponge and cry , Never again'" Dr. Klngstone was first married In 89o to Miss Flora 'ohen and for fifteen fif-teen years the ouple lived happily Then his wife died. And then began ; an unbroken line of bitter matrimonial 'defeats eaeh of which added so much more to the doctor's cup of woe. In 1911 he married Miss Maude Mannle, and was granted a dlvrce In 1916 on the ground of extreme cruelty. II then became enomored of Miss Ruby Armstrong and. resolving that his iuck had chanRed, he led her to the altar. He led her to the diorce eourt In 1 1 1 S ami was divorced on the ground of extreme cruelty. In a . u months he was again married to Marie Stanley, w.. dloned and mar- . rled her a second time in the same year. The latter marriage was an-1 ', nulled on the ground of fraud. ( OX1 IRM1 l H( III KiR" Two years passed., The doctor had j become a confirmed bachelor. He was no longer on the matrimonial , market; he was through Then one afternoon Miss Mildred Gardner came ', rushing Into his office at 101 Tost street and begged him to marry her. i he declares. Gabor didn't want to, as he told the Judge, but the anxious one was so insistent -that he put the , 'closed' s'Kn on his office door wln- ; dow, too his fiancee to Oakland and was united. This WSS on August 4. Three days later the first smoke of the erupting volcano of matrimonial ; trouble hepan to enrl up to the skle 'I he doctor said that he knew there woe mischief afoot when his wife lost a number of hairpins while In the ! kitchen of their home with a young law student at a parts. Witnesses at the divorce trial testified testi-fied that the wife bad said that she didn't lore the doctor, that she had mii i led him for Snoney and a home They .said that she had told th young law student: You know, darling that I love 'only you." Klngstone afllrmed that he had brought his sixth spouse a gold wedding wed-ding ring, and suitable clothing, hut , that she pined for a platinum circle set with diamonds, and that her heart was set on a sealskin coat. He told bis wife that he couldn't afford these things, and in three hitter words of repartee she broke his heart. She called him 'nn old man." CUP Ol WOE Ol run own. The eup of woe was now flowing over. The doctor was further embittered embit-tered when he learned that his wife had falsified to him as to where she had passed an afternoon. He came to the court for consolation. if this court had the jurisdiction; i think it would be advisable to issue' an Injunction to prevent t his man from j j marrying again.' said Judge Flood, j when the testimony showed that the I doctor had been to bat six times with ! Cupid hurling the arrow. I r Kingstono was stunned by th court's remark. There was no ncf of an Injunction he told the judge. He didn't intend to marry again, he said he had hail enough The doctor's attorney interposed le- J gal objections to any provision In the I decree which would prevent his client ; from marrying again The Judge ad-1 j mltted that he could not legally pre-1 vent the chiropodist from making aj - seventh trip to the altar. HUMS The doctor left the eourt a miser- H able man, his voice trembling as e nM j spoke. Once outside the halls of Jus- SjttSIr however, he brightened up. His Icigar i --umed a combative upward slant, his hat was tilted over one yye. 5 I 1 1 to h l friends hi admitted that I l nth call upon Hymen might be 'i-rU s made fj Cupid shot straight enough. nil ' |