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. ’ HANNING RONAIGE S~ - REPORTED BROKEN @i, Former Mrs. Dodge Now Said to Be Separated From New Husband. By the Associated Press. MANILA, November fan love romance of Dodge, jr., divorced wife of the son of the wealthy Detroit automobil ufacturer, and Lieut. Benjamin Frank lin Manning, ch culminated in their mar Honolulu severa weeks ag into prominence again today when it became known | that they recently had separated whil on a honeymoon tour The Maun to the p: of the wayvs whe round-the-world lincr Iresident Jand, on which they were passensers from Henolulu, put in there recently Manning left tha ship at Sha and his whercabouts at present are unknown. Qu ported, Whether A nnis the jowrney from accompanied ¥ 2 arranzed | wnd the separation Was | o Bacan | a friendly one could not be learned 4 iy | here today, but n the liner put ud heard in the Manning suite. These va on_the President Cleve- | into port Manning w0t aboard N e e CARTER LEIDY WEDS | ended when Mr took sep. Manila yes s cam: “I hain’t complainin’ about him not | bein' & 1 providar. judge, but he 10t Tike a perfect brute if 1 make th least suggestion about his cookin tesiffied Mrs, Leslie Hanger, in divoree court t'day | Doctars say insane people are fer | happior than sane peopls, so I guess | continued Passengers on e President Cleve 1and hat before the liner reached Shanghai quarrels were frequently | PROCTER DIVORCEE arate quarters. the passengers sai Manning made no statement | TR | ibject and she is now en route | Former Wife of Heir to Soap For- une Becomes Bride o i t Beco Bride of Fifi Widener's First Husband. The wedding of M 2 g to | - By the Associated Prese. v bride had obtained a final decree of | A ! divorce from Dodge in a Michigan | = YORK, November 12 court. After the marriage Lieut | Randolph Leidy, who at 19 ye: Manning tendered his resignation as | 1> eloped with Fifi Widener of P’hil ani ATy G | adelphia, then 17. has married Mrs. Horace Do Marjo Easton Woodhouse Procter, #oon after the wedding and struck up | divorced last March in Paris from a friendship with Lieut. Manninz and | her husband, Frederick, peir to the the two men were together | Procter soap fortune. frequently. iarents of the bride announce heve Under the divorce settlement, Dodge | that the ook place | came to Honolulu to take possession | in Baltimore on October "4, was of his two children for six amonths | uiet one because of a destre to avoid | At the end of that period ghey wili [unwelcome publicity be returned to Mrs. Dodge for six | Leidy was a freshman at the Uni- months, according to the versity of Pennsylvania when he mar- | @greement. ried Fifi Widener, daughter of Joseph Dodge left Honolulu for the main- | E. Widener, art collector and horse- 1and a few weeks after the Mann {man, in Knexville, Tenn., in 1920 sailed on their honeymoon tour. After the elopement Leidy went to osek g i work in a Berwick, Pa.. steel mill for $2.30 a day and his wife settled down GILES POSTPONES to” housekeeping. ~The couple was later reinstated into the good graces 1 to Fonolulu seen divorce Three vears later, they ware divor Frederick William Procter, husband of the former Mis: Bad Weather Would Make Trip Woodhouse, married Mrs, ini; 2 Foss after their divorce. Suicidal, Officials Tell | " Tn December, 1926, Mrs. Leidy mar- British Flyer. ried Milton W, Holden of Philadel- | phin. Frederick By the Associated Prese | oSN FRANCISCS, Noverer 12— SEES YOUTH OF NATIONS achator. today nwaiiea tavoranie| AGENT FOR WORLD PEACE American Legion Chaplain, in Ar- weather reports before setting the date for his postponed 12.000-mile mistice Day Address, Makes Sug- gestion to Government. Golden Gate-New Z: for taking off early celed when Weather informed Giles that th + be “suicidal gt “tions over "By the Associated Press. ! t favorable | - PARKERSBURG, W. Va., Novem- weather conditions came after a day | ber 12.—An exchange of youth of all of indecision, in which Giles was|nations as a means of establishing | quoted as saving that he intended to | world peace was proposed in an Armis- trust' to luck and start, regardless of | tice day address here by the Rev. Gill what the weather prediction might be. | Robb Wilson of Trenton, N. He persisted in that determination | tional chaplain of the Ame; until after an interview with Maj. | gion. E. H. Bowie, weather forecaster, in| e suggested that the Legion pro- which he was informed that low | pose to the Government that in years clouds, rain and high winds might be | when there was a Treasury surplus, expected 900 miles offshore. | one-fourth of the money accruing from Giles believes his Hess Bluebird bi- | war debts he given to establishment of plane Wanda will fly from the Golden | such a plan. MRS. WARD PLANS | tion. There have bec | Clarence Peters.’ 'her two children. T fof him is what T hear | Ward disapeared several months ag __TOE_EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. * " The Good Fellow _ las every one agreed: but in old age he's down and out, and broke. and |gone to seed; he cannot buy a can i he has no chickenfeed. |of kraut. eed. { When he ‘was in his prime he earne lall kinds of iron men; in hix profes | S | st b r~ i i i sion he was learned, a gifted man Divorced Wife of Baking ot s nit no panhandler e’er was spurned. who touched him for T | . awer King’s Son Eager for New jiin never loarmd, 10 Aot i Chance at Happiness. |2 sample of his dough. to buy them | beds or meals: and as he journeved | to and fro he passed out many wheels. sure to look for Ben. and he'd pro ey ey = duce his wallet fat, and cough up NEW YORK, November 12.—Mrs. |quna. to Vo o irmur gayly, “That Servl Curtis Ward, back from Reno. |ig' thatenwien broke, pr come where she divorced Walter S. Ward, [acain'™' Some friends who had his whose father acquired wealth in the | weal at heart would question him at hax announced she | ines; “Before your golden years de- . Lyle Alderson. wealthy | pape,” why don’t you save some York importer, and then seek | qiy A k account you ought etirement to try for the chance of [0 qtnptay cascleks o happiness she belleves still held out | mes But Ben. he was a good ald scout, he had a heart of gold; some eve there is still a chance of | follow needed helpinz out, some skate happiness for me” she said at her|was starved and cold; and so he home at Tuckahoe, “despite the trials ew the coin ahout, with gestures hrough which I have passed. Peo- | free and bold. Ben himself is ble hive wondered. 1 am told, at my | needing aid, he wearily tofls by; he <ilence concerninz the unfortunat v his power and prestige fade, his vents that brousht me and those | fortunes o awry, and he fs old and ced, he needs a pumpkin 1ts that 1 pie. And some he helped long years eww sitericed by from | ago are now in K street,” and Walter Ward's family. i not | heedlessly they see him throw his true | tired and stumbling feet. through sun “My silence was entirely volunt nd wind and rain and snow, and nd suffered too |offer him no treat. The portals of miuch to give it voice. [Even now.|the poorhouse yawn some parasangs that 1 have consented to speak. I[ahead: when he has nothing left to prefer to iznore certain events of the [pawn. he'll seek that place of dread, prefer to talk about the or, haply, in some wintry dawn, lie in an alley dead. WALT MASON. (Conyricht. 1 By the Associated Pross. 1 felt o deeply past. 1 future.” Mrs. Ward said there was one point | <he wished to clear up in connection g st with Ward's trial in 1922 for the mur. B Biente w2 Sl | ACCUSED LIQUOR DEALER positively was not with W 'n.-rv' Ward | on the wight he was said to have shot | AT «CREDIT LIST’ ON FILE acquitted it Mrs. V intended prd denied reports that she | gy yno gcsociated Press. ing Ward for support of want nothing | ATLANTA, November 12. — Some from him whatever.” she declared. I {2,000 people, high in this city's civic, Hiave ot & en _m(v:: (l‘r: 18 "\(*l'l\'}‘-‘;‘;“")""_ ocial and business affairs, were given [ lmveinojuesive to. g8 iatihe ds \n r:‘:!lnu in the “credit list” found in f g the downtown office of J. B. Turner, Cuba_or somewhers 0N e vae | CONfessed liquor merchant, according cranied o grounds of desertion, | to local authorities who searched the . uarters following his arrest, Nnmes, it was announced, were fol- lowed by *o. “good,” “fair” or “bad.” to fndicate promptness of pay- ment and, say the officets, broad- mindness ahout infraction of dry laws. Turner, caught with two quarts in the court house, forthwith admitted his guilt and was sentenced to 12 months on the chain gang. Whatever uneasiness his cliontele may have felt was quieted when the solicitor’s office declaved the list was useless as evidence, since the names inplied no actual possession of Tur- rer's wares,, his abandoned near Trenton. N turned up in Cubs automobile being found | . He subscquently with his father. Slain Girl Found on Tracks. YORK. Pa., November 12 ().—Un- der ‘cumstances which led police t believe that she wa 1 of 16-vear-old Gertrude night was found Iyving a tracks of the Maryland and Pennsyl vania Railroad, east of the city limits. The lower part of the jaw had been shot away. { | Whoever passed around the hat was | .65 OFEAGER ADMIRERS: |Rescued by Police From| | Throng at Armistice Day | | Celebration in Scotland. | By the Associated Press. LONDON, November 12.—A crowd of eager admirers, who nearly mobbed him, forced the Prince of Wales to seck refuge in Scotland Yard after an Armistice day celebration at the (Cenotaph. When the prince was inside the yard the crowd tried to rush the ga and the Prince had to pass through the yard to the Victoria em- hankment to reach his car. The Prince and Winston Churchill, chancellor of the exchequer, attended a service at the Cenotaph. As the Prince turned to leave there was a wild roar of cheering and shouts of “Wales.” The crowd, waving their | hats and flags, surged madly toward him. Police quickly closed around the Prince. A squad of mounted men fought their way through the shouting mob. They formed a lane, through which the Prince with difficulty reached Scotland Yard. The great ates of the yard closed behind him The Prince noticed his companions were still outside and asked that the | gates be reopened to admit them. The gates swung open. the crowd surged forward again. The pressure of these struggling thousands was so great that they almost conquered the police. The demonstrators were wildly singing “For He's a Jolly Good | Fellow.” The police finally conquered the crowd and shut the gates. Many persons fainted during the demonstration. On the fringes of the crowd and in sidestreets there was some rowdyism. but all were cleared away within an hour. NEW YORK, November 12 (P).— Edward Crumpp, who said he was a of Richmond. Va., yesterday was held in $1,000 hail on a charge of grand larceny. Miss Edith Page of West North avenue. Baltimore, who was ar- rested with him, was discharged. Crumpp was accused of having stolen a trunk containing $1,600 worth of clothing from a rooming house here. He said he took the drunk, add- ing that he though it had contained {liquor. but denied having disturbed | the clothing in it. He and Miss Page were childhood sweethearts, he said. He had come to New York fo be mar- " ried. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1 WALES FAGES MoB son of the late Judge C. R. Crumpp | Gate to Honolulu, the first stop, in 25 hours., From Honolulu he intends to head for the Samogn Islands, and go thence to the Fiji group, whence he | “Through the exchange of the youth of various countries,” he said, “the ex- change of their ideas and their fra- ternity with each other will tend to will fiv to Australia and on to New | establish a world-wide friendship, a Zealand. d friendship that few countries will be Giles, a British reserve aviator who ready to break at a moment's notice, was a member of the Royal Air Corps, [ and a friendship these youths will not expects to flv alone. He will fly by | break under any circumstances,” dead reckoning, without radio or life = g T S Re LEGION NOT.“FLEECED.” GOLF TRAIN STARTS. Chicagoans Head for Florida to A Dedicate New Course. NEW YORK. November 12 Although r:~mbers of the Amer Legion rpent a total of $9,238,000 on | their recent pilgrimage to Par | were not overcharged, John J, W k CHICAGO, November 12 ().—A |7 national travel director of the trainload of Chicagoans left today to | 1#&ion. said at a dinner last night | dedicate a golf club many hundreds of | 2P0ard the Anchor liner Transylvan: miles away, They were abourd a spe-| 1e estimated that the L cial bound for Vaiparaiso, Fla., where, | spent $: over the week end. the new Chicago | for 1 Club will be dedicated dations. Two American steamshi companies got 51 per cent of the $: 00—t h: delegates pai first special_development t 8 the ocean. | be taken to Florida from Chicago since | lrond fares, hotels and general the Florida i Japsed two years | travel in Europe cost the Legion men | ahout § 00,000, Wicker said. | ADVERTISENENTS T RECEIVED HERE Fealy’s Pharmacy—11th & Pa. Ave. S.E. Is a Star Branch Office »).— | | Supplying a want is a very simple matter when you make use of the Classified Section of The Star. That will put you in touch with nearly everybody in Wash- ington, and you will be sur- prised how many responses you will receive. Lea.ve the copy for your Classified Ads at The Star Branch Office in your neigh- hood. . No fees are charged ABOVE SIGN for this service; only regular s rates. DISPLAYED BY The Star prints such an over- AUTHORIZED whelmingly greater volume of S Classified ~ Advertising every BRANCH day than any other Washing- OFFICES ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give you the best results, “Around the Corner” Is a Star Branch Office BETTY STEPS IN STYLE Betty Wakefield goes to a fashionable school here in Washington—and belongs to a sorority. Pert and pretty, she's the type of hundreds of chic and fascinating schoolgirls. Betty declares it is just as important to be smart in dress, as to be smart in algebra! She has learned to look like a million without spending one. Girls follow Betty in her styles and boys follow her with their eyes. For shoes, Betty likes our new, low-heeled “Debs” — their swanky, Collegiate dash — that’s Betty all over. Many of Betty’s sorority sisters—some of their mothers, too—are flocking to our “Debs” depart- ments. And new low-heel models, for all occasions, arriving constantly. Pictured— (1) Black or tan Alligator calf, smart wing tip and overlapping trim ....$6.5 (2) Tan Russia calf, Alli- gator calf, tongue and Saddle” . .$6. (3) Patent leath ) “Lindy” Tie—tan Rus- sia calf or patent leather, 5) Stepein Pump of black e(nl}, lizard end buckle L .used ....58.! (6) Two-tone grain sports oxford; unus oration .....ue ather dec- “Women's Shop" 1207 F St. 3212 14th St. 233.Pa. Ave. S.E. Cor. 7th # K 414 9th St. And Betty Wears “Lady Luxury” All-Silk Hosiery 1927.° Lansburgh & Bro. 7th to 8th to E—FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860—Franklin 7400 The Gift Ship IsIn and a Choice Cargo of Rare Imports—Ready Now for Your Gift Selection I will do thus-and-so “when my ship comes in"—how many times have vou heard that expression? Well—this ship IS in, bearing every gift need— hundreds of them! From here—from there—from everywhere they have been gathered and brought here, to Lansburgh & Bro.—for your selection. See the Gift Ship and these and many other charming imports in the 8th street Window. An Intriguing Chinaman Stands on a Platform of This Imported Manicure Set —holding two pairs of scissors in his arms, file at his back and flanked on three sides by 2 salve jars and a buffer. $4.50. Dainty Colonial Ladies Imported Powder Boxes Made of china, concealing powder in their vast skirts. Bewitching little faces and delicately colored dresses—there is a fascinating group! $1.25 to $3.95. Swagger and Sporty, With an English Air—Women’s Imported Hose Rich heather combinations that you will love—soft, blending shades that are smart with the sports outfit. Full fash- joned. Of silk and wool. 8% to 11%. $2.25. Women’s Imported Kid Gloves Bring With Them Hint of the Importance of Smart Gloves Gayly embroidered novelty cuffs, cleverly made. Of soft imported kid. Beaver, ' mode, gray, black and white, 534 to 7. $2.19. A Dainty Wisp of Silk! Georgette or Crepe de Chine Hand- kerchiefs, filmy little creations, the very expression of femininity! Unique print- ed designs in gay sport colors. The regular size. $l. Imported Mufflers—Smart for Sports Wear! Gay plaids and vivid figured effects. 31-inch squares. Navy and white, navy and tan, copen and white, red and tan, orange and copen, red and black, black and white effects. $2.25. Wool Sweaters That Will Add to His Game! They are so gay, so swagger, so “full of pep” that their very appearance will ive him more zest! The pull-over style t the Englishman sponsors as smart. And made roomily. Sizes 36 to 46. $5.95 to $9.35, - Gleaming Imported Rhinestone Ornaments! —at the shoulder—at the waist—on the hat—they’ll be exceedingly chic! Every fashion magazine has been stressing their importance. All sizes from 3 to 8 inches. 73c to $4.50. Imported Bracelets—W ith That “Rare” Old Air —that is so delightful and so very smart! Fancy colored stones and gold filigree. In the most unusual settings. All sizes. $3.95. Imported Simulated Pearls from Paris—This Smart Novelty The long and very popular 60-inch length. A rich cream color. Pearls that will give added beauty to any cos- tume. Lustrous and altogether lovely! $2.95. Imported Handbags—With Attractive Personalities They add that ‘certain something” to the ensemble that makes it completely chic! A smart underarm bag of lizard and suede, with suede trimming. In a rich, dark green. All silk lined, with in- side purse. $15. The Ball Knob Bag Is the Thing in Imported Handbags A splendid calf bag lined with soft suede. In the practical and attractive ouch style. A rich shade of brown. istinctively shaped—with the large ball knobs that are so smart! $17.50. Choose a Swan or an Elephant for Your Cordial Set They're just glass, of course—but they will fascinate you! Green or amber col- ored with shining nickel trimming. And there are six tiny, delightful glasses, too, $16.95. You Won’t Forget That Promised ““Line” With This Stationery! Paper that is smart—and in good taste. Portfolios, Euro-paper and paper with lined envelopes to match. White, ay, blue, lavender and buff in a spen- lid finish, 75¢.