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STAR, wife, Alice Jones Rhinelander. The di- THE .EVENING | vorce, which was granted yesterday, was 1 | : —— Eg.M.E_BURNED' RHINELANDER GETS | not” contested, and Mrs. Rhinelander Hobeaw Barony, in South Clrelhu.; DIVORCE IN NEVADA| “';)T;::;:f'::’n "c‘.::';m e Razed, but Details Lacking. | ago to ”“!;H"h his dl;elldence D"%:nr: ETO the filing of divorce proceedings e | agatnst the datigheer of & New Rocheik (#).—Hobeaw Barony. Winter home of | Wealthy New Yorker Charges For- | - 2 Bernare HE[D IN SLAY'NG Y., Negro coachman, was present d M. Baruch of New York, on| mer Wife's Acts Endangered when “the decree was granted, but had Waccamaw Peninsula, Georgetown | His Mentality. no comment to make, other than to say | County, was destroyed last night by fire. | One of Three Who Looted| “Mr samcn sent nis. supecintondent 25 WASHINGTON. D. C. SATURDAY, DECEMBER T dominated him that he was induced to | i leave his family, until they became | D. C. WOMAN ASKS avenue February 1{7 last, whde‘;\ an ;um; estranged from him, causing him great | bile of the defendant iven by 1 ‘mol » " Thy chauffeur, David Evans, struck and in- | A1l Branches to Be Closed on New document further anegea that e acts | 900,000 DAMAGES S Bayid Brans, struck wnd | nd conduct of the defendant” had en- | | hours, she states, and was in a hospital | Year Day. &n‘l'l!grred Rhinelander’s life and men- | | for six weeks as the result of her in- | qpne central building of the Public y. | i it| jurles and will be permanently dam- |y s Ty i Last July Mrs. Rhinelander started a ' Mrs. Etta ‘H. Brown Brings Suit| Jites, anc will be o $50,000. el B S iy Sy $500,000 alienation of affections suit Against Mrs. Jean R. ’ Mrs. Brown also says she was engaged | December 31. against Philip Rhinelander, her father- | Pittarson in remodeling premises 1429 and 1431| On New Year Day the cental build- in-law. Thirty-fourth street at the time of the |ing will be open for referemce use from Attorneys for Mrs. Rhinelander con- — | accident and because of it was umable |3 t0 6 pm. Al brancnes ang o 28, 1929, * § PUBLIC LIBRARY HOURS. standing in a safety zone on Wisconsin | tend that a divorce granted in Nevada that he intended to continue his resi- dence in Las Vegas. He was represent- : o here to announce that the home had | Bank and Killed Official Is Arrested. Br the Associated Press. BOWLING GREEN, Ky., December | 28—One of the three bandits Thursday shot and killed J. Robert Kirby, Smiths Grove bank president, after robbing the bank at Oakland, this county, was captured here early this morning and taken to Nashville, Tenn., ' for safe keeping. The man, Elmer Grayson, former resi- dent of Indianapolis, was found in the home of Blaine Duff, a relative by mar- riage, after officers Rad been close on his trail for five hours. He was brought into Bowling Green in an automobile by French Elrod, a friend, and Elrod was held by officers today. The ‘other two bandits were believed 1o be in Bowling Green and officers were guarding all roads Teading out of | the city and investigating possible hid- | ing places. | One Believed Wounded. The keeper of a lodging house where they had lived for several days early this week saw them last night and officers took up the chase a few minutes after the two, muddy and disheveled after two davs and a night fleeing from Josses, had been turned away from the use. One of the men apparently had & wound in one hand. Grayson surrendered readily, with the remark that he was tired of being chased. He said he escaped searchers, Wwho at times numbered as many as 1.000. by mounting & horse behind a small boy, Thursday morning after the bandits “abandoned their automobile, following the shooting. His first remark, according to officers, | was “T didn't kill Mr. Kirby.” He ad- mitted, however, the officers said, that he was implicated in the robbery. i Part of Loot Recovered. 1 The manhunt was probably the great- est in the history of the cave-studded Southern Kentucky country. Two air- | planes from Nashville took part vester- | day. but were not able to be of much | Assistance. A dozen National Guards-, men from here. led by Brig. Gen. H. H. | Denhardt, former lieutenant governor, | saided the posses under the command ! ©of Sheriff Tom Ferguson. i Kirby was shot down when he and | several other residents tried to stop the | bandits' car after the robbery of the ' bank at Oakland. After this fatality | the three men abandoned their car, and about $400 of the approximately $700 loot from the Oakland Bank was re- covered. STREET CAR MISHAP | INJURES BOY OF 15 | | | i e ey i Condition of Linden Carper Is Un. » determined—Two Others Hurt | | by Autos. ! Linden Carper, 15, of 1307 Four-and- one-half street southwest, i in an undetermined condjtion at Emergency Hospital as the relult of injuries: suf- | fered last night when run down at| Water and O streets southwest by a | Capital Traction Co. street car operated | by Motorman Ernest L. Green of 1306 | Sixth street southwest. . | Hospital physicians said the boy | susitained a possible fractured skull and knee in addition to numerous cuts to the face and body bruises. James Kalas, 50, of 215 John| Marshall place, was slightly injured | last_night when run down in front of | his home by a machine driven by Henry W. Gray of Virginia Highlands, Va. He was treated at Emergency Hospi- | tal for a fractured left elbow and later sent home. Gray was arrested by police of the sixth precinct on a charge of | reckless driving. | Nelson Tyler, 38, colored. of 5608 Dix | street northeast, was slightly injured last midnight when run down as he stepped from the curb to board a street | car by an automobile operated by Rus- | sel R. Middleswartz of 1422 Trindad | avenue. | He went home after being treated | at Preedmen's Hospital. Middleswartz was arrested by ninth precinet police | on a charge of reckless driving. | JEANNETTE CU MMINGS’ WILL AIDS CHARITY | | H | | Sew York Avenue Church and | Hospitals Here Among Beneficiaries, i By the Associsted Press. FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., Decem- 28.—A certified copy of the will| who | $ the superintendent. been destroyed, but that no one had By the Associated Press, been injured. i No detalls as to the origin (I;: lh; blaze or the names of a number of | €7 ATty ik b ts of Mr. Baruch were revealed by A wealthy New York family, has ob- The tained a divorce here from his octoroon LAS VEGAS, Nev.,, December 28.— | Leonard Kip® Rhinelander, member of ed in the brief hearing by Attorney Harley A. Harmon. | in his complaint that he had separated from his wife after she had “by her The once wealthy New Yorker cited | wiles and artifices taken advantage of | light reflected from a his youth and inexperience, and so |snow. will not be recognized in New York. ———. “Snow blindness” is a dimness of vision caused by the glare of the sun- large area of | chusetts avenue, was sued yesterday in | the District Supreme Court for $58.000 damages by Mrs. Etta H. Brown, 1429 | Thirty-fourth street. for alleged ner- | sonal injuries and loss of a real estate | profit. She tells the court that she was Mrs. Jean R. Patterson, 2501 Massa- | branches will be closed. to finish the work for a prospective sale and suffered a loss of $8,000. She is | g represented by Attorneys M. M. Doyle and F. A. Thue The first trapslation into English of any classical work was the Aeneid in T | 10-syllabled meter, made by Gawin Pinland is to have a chain of talking| Douglass. who was born in England picture theaters. about 1474, WooDbwARD & [LOTHROP | 10™ 11™ F Anr G STREETS Formal Fashions Pre-eminent in 1930 s Social Register Feminine Evening Fashions are more formal, feminine and individual + . . moire and taffeta claim some of the attention lavished on chiffon. « . . the Greek silhouette is smartly worn. + . . glamorous wraps of transparent vel- vet, accented with rich fur, may be short or full length. . . . plain satin gowns, in off-white and eggshell tones affect the formal silhouette. . . . puffed sleeves are represented in empire frocks of chiffon or lace. . . . red blazes its way to first place in the evening mode—black and white follow. +« . court jewelry, paste and pearl jewelry are rivals for formal wear. o+ . Women's Gowns. .. .....$25 to $95 o+ . Misses’ Frocks.........$25 to $95 +« . Little Women's Frocks, $25 to $69.50 + .. Evening Wraps. .....$39.50 to $95 FasHIONS, THIRD FLOOR. Men’s Dinner and - Evening Attire is vastly different from last season’s « . . both tailcoat's and tuxedo's lapels curve broadly. . . . the tuxedo's soft front enhances the lapel's sweeping lines. . . . coat shoulders are broader and lapels are either peaked or shawl collar. + . . waists are slightly fitted, though not at all confining. - « . two-stud shirts, with the studs spaced equally between the collar and the v-point of the vest, are increasingly popular. . . . black or dark blue hose may have white or dark-colored clocks or may be faintly embroidered. . young men are fast adopting the tail- coat. .+ . high silk hats are being worn even with dinner suits, . . . black tie ends must always be worn outside the collar points. ber k i) Formality, femininity and individuality in four distinctive versions are expressed in the gowns and wrap sketched above. They Tate Forace. 5 Gumrmigs.of “Wacnion: | are typical of the vast selection shown at Woodward & Lothrop—and attest to society's penchant for the newer individuality. ton, D. C.. has been filed for probate in i & e % : % 2 The Formal Room of The Men's Store rrcsents dinner and evening attire in perfect accordance with the season's requisites . . . Ol / the Broward County Judge's Court here, records revealed yesterday. i x . 2 ke " . and, in The Formal Room, you choase formal attire under the same exacting conditions it will meet when worn. Principal beneficiaries are Margaret | Irving McLaughlin of Washington, sis- ter of the deceased: the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church of Wash- ington, the National Homeopathic Hos- ; pital of Washington, Dartmouth Col- lege, here a memorial wil be: Finger-nail satin Empire gown e o Imported black taffeta dance fown; all-round ankle-length with deep decolletage and The tailcoat . . . coat and izations in Washington and elsewhere. frock, with full skirt 365 skirt—short jacket..... $42.50 trailing skirt...... SRR $65 BHOUBOEE. & .o snnad ..870 Aside from real estate holdings in | Florida and in Allegheny County. Pa.. | the estate is valued at $629,026.46 and comprises 428 acres in Broward County, | 140 acres in Dade County and 1013 | © § acres in St. John's County. There is| also a total of $303.000 in mortgages in | Dade and Broward Counties property. | { MOB SCENE IN OAKLAND ? BR'NGS_&RREST OF S|X1 : COURT JEWELRY; glittering marcasite on sterling silver, done in the old court manner. Earrings, $28; mnecklets, $45; bracelets .. ... o 9980 IMPORTED EVENING BAGS; with fine seed pearls and Beauvais embroidery . . . .. .$20 EVENING GLOVES; sixteen-button length; ofpatedonede. ........c0.0.... 810 CHIFFON HOSE; the sheerest chiffon hose for the transparent hemline. . ....... $4 OPERA PUMPS of moire and satin may be dyed to match the gown, $10; buckles, $10 (Additional dyeing charge. ........$1) FOUNDATION GARMENTS; utterly essen- tial with the fitted evening gowns—a com- The Feminine Fashions Hlustrated Above Panne velvet evening wrap, $95 Men’s Dinner and Evening Attire The dinner suit . .. coat and trousers, $35 and $50 Black lace and chiffon evening Vests . . . for tailcoat and for dinner suit.......$10 Formal Accessories Brilliant accessories play an important role in the brilliant 1930 evening mode—creat- ing ensembles of richness and luxuriousness, Formal Accessories Perfection is no trifle . . . but without these correct trifles your evening attire cannot enjoy pewfection. ' ¥our Women Among Those Taken in Trade Union League Demand i for Release of Two. SHIRTS; pleated or pique bosoms, showing openings for two studs, $3.50 TIES; with pointed ends. . .$1 and $2 HOSE; blue or black silk with embroid- ered clocks..........$1.50 and $3 SCARFS; white, gray or black-and- W IR e v st D GLOVES; gray suede or white kid, $3 HATS; black silk, in the correct S e B STUDS; smoked or white pearl or black or white enameled. The prices range from........$4.50 to $25 set § By the Associated Pross. | 1 _ OAKLAND, Calif., December 28— | Four women and two men were held | here today on charges of violating an # anti-loitering ordinance as the result of a demonstration Jast night by a gather- | | ing of 150 persons in front of the city ¥ "hall. Tt finally was broken up when | ! police used their clubs. Several persons | were rteported to have been injured | 4 slightly. | Carrying red banners and signs bear- | ing the name of the Trade Unions | § Tmity League. the mob marched on the | ity hall to demand the release of | Archie Brown. 19, and Edgar Owens, | | 50, arrested earlier in the day in a labor { disturbance in another part of town. | { When members of the gathering re- § fused to disperse, a riot call was made. | § joThose arrested were Arvid Owens, 35: | ’ John Mutigli, 29: Mrs. Julia Wild, Bes- sle Herman, Sonia Boltrin and . Anna | Robbins. | Yormer Variety Actor Dies. ! PHILADELPHIA. December 28 (/). — Gustav Becker. 63, former variety actor, | died in a hospital here Thursday, "‘ was learned last night. Years ago, when vaudeville was known as the va- rieties; Becker was known as “the Great Drawee.” ,,,,,,, POy Ireland now has nearly 37,000 un- Aumlond. ~ { " bination with low-cut back. . .$15 Accrssories, Fimst anp Tump FLOORS. OXFORDS; black patent leather or dull-finish calf; plain toes. ......$10 THE MeN's Store, Srconn Froor. ,