FULL TEXT: Hollywood, Feb. 20 – From Hollywood – no less – pretty Spring Byington of the films set out today on a campaign to revise California’s divorce laws with the declaration:
“Alimony has become a racket.”
The actress – she isn’t married – is campaigning for
introduction of a bill in the state legislature which would make the term of
alimony payments the same as the lenth of time the woman lived with her
husband.
“If alimony were awarded a woman only for a period of time
equal to the length of her married life, it would tend to fulfill the purpose
for which it was created.
“That is, a woman who has given the best years of her life
to a man would find financial protection, if she sought it. Conversely, these
marriages that last only a few months, or at the most a year, would not turn
out so profitably for the woman.”
She said that under no stretch of imagination could she see
“the justice in saddling, for perhaps many years, a man with alimony payments
who discovered after a comparatively short time that he had been married
specifically for his money.
“After all, the theory of alimony is to protect a woman who
has relinquished her ability to support herself. She deserves this protection.
But like many other laws that were well conceived, the alimony law is being
abused.
“It not only is providing thousands of undeserving ex-wives
with a comfortable living, but it has been twisted into a weapon by which women
vent their hatred on the men they once loved.”
[“Picture Star Who Is Unmarried Proposes New Plan for
Alimony,” syndicated (AP), The Evening Independent (St. Petersburg, Fl.), Feb.
22, 1937, p. 10-A]
[411-10/5/21]
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