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HOF® HIT
BI ■GARDEN
Diva Called Them Monkeys
just When They Were So
Madly in Love With Her.
Nov. B.—Mary Garden has been
. t .roan to the men of Paris.
r£l \,'T Garden, who is the operatic
' I'.iris, has a most luxurious flat
. \ Malakoff, and the men of Paris
. i.x the score, are madly in love
, k and who have filled her dress
nl and apartments with flowers,
Mays hoped that if she ever sur
li. r heart it would be to a Paris-
' j. n , )W the diva has permitted her
' -,.M interviewed and says most un-
ities of the Parisian swells and
..., u: town, whom she ridicules and
... to scatter-brained monkeys,
ng not a single one of the quali
i! . make an impression on a worn
an’s heart.
not pretend to prefer single
b: , , ss. but on the contrary confesses
tl’ ul - . is perfectly willing to surrender
Ml J right man comes along, and says
P .t w>mn she marries she will leave the
,stage, as she does not want her
Limn, 1 to be a ‘‘Mr. Mlquette.” She
adds, however, that Mr. Right is yet to
befoimd. but feels certain he will turn
up in-ide of five years at the utmost.
Mm a most heartless thing, she says,
that she thinks she will become a frau,
I. - she admires German men above
ad ..thers-and she feels that her des
: : V will lead her to their country.
Miss < larden says it is all nonsense
about talented girls not being able to
si;, ed on the stage without losing their
self-respect, and- that "such talk comes
f- m tlmse who are jealous of the suc
cc-sfiil ones. 1 am as good looking as
anvbodv. but I have always been able
t > take care of myself. You can not
hide talent under a bushel."
CLARA BARTON DISPOSED
OF $20,000 WITH PENCIL
WORCESTER, MASS., Nov. B.—Written
with lead pencil, the will of Miss Clara
Barton, founder of the Red Cross society,
was filed in the probate court here. An
estate valued at $20,000 is to be divided
among relatives.
Miss Barton named a committee to
write her biography.
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Up and Down
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And Now “Jedge Briles”
Does His Own “Caddying.”
The terror inspired by Judge Broyles,
city recorder, also follows in the wake
of Nash Broyles, golfer, and the negro
caddies at the Atlanta Athletic club are
turning a pale gray with fright. They
have been afraid of the judge for many
moons, but their fear reached a <-li—»x
when the recorder got the caddy master
before him and bound him over to
Judge Calhoun* ut, w..icu
caddy boss a $25 fine.
Jim Thomas, the captain of the cad*
dies, told Lowry Ainmu, also a goner,
that “Jedge Briles" had it in for him
(Jim) because he (the judge) had drawn
a bum caddie and lost several balls. And
when Jim paid his line and went back
to East Lake to tell the hoys what had
happened to him, the caddies decided
that carrying the bag for Judge Broyles
was a dangerous pastime. And they
quit.
The recorder drew one small boy the
day after the Jim Thomas affair, but
the youngster was in evident terror.
The judge opened with a long drive over
a bit of hill and the ball fell in the tall
grass. The caddie spent about two min
utes looking for it, couldn’t find it, and
saw the stockade staring him in the
face. Instead of reporting to the record
er-golfer, he dropped the bag of clubs
and made a bee line for the Woods be
yond the grounds. And he never came
back.
Now you may see the recorder any old
afternoon carrying his own golf bag over
the course and hunting his own lost balls.
Whenever he emerges from the club house
and yells for a caddie there is a scur
rying for cover. Before he reaches the
! scene of action there isn’t a caddie in
' sight. Recently he quit even trying to get
' a caddie.
: HOSTESS HAD SMALLPOX;
GUESTS ARE VACCINATED
ALTOONA, PA., Nov. B.—There was
much excitement in the fashionable set
, of this place when it was learned that
Mrs. Catherine Shuff had been stricken
i with smallpox. Mrs. Shuff held a re
. ception. The health department rounded
, up and vaccinated thirty couples who
' attended Mrs. Shutt’s reception. Several
objected to this procedure, but they were
i given their choice of vaccination or quar
antine, and they accepted the former.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1912.
KAISER TH MAKE
BERLIN A MECCA
Brilliant Courts 5o Draw So
ciety of World From Other
European Capitals.
BERLIN, Nov. B.—-It is all settled now.
The kaiser has decided that Berlin Is no
longer to be a Cinderella among the capi
tals of Europe, but it is to a ‘‘season’’ of
her own, when it will be the duty of the
head of every German noble family to
come to the city on the spree and enter
tain as lavishly as his means will al
low, or more. Berlin, which long ago
has outdistanced Paris as a center of
all-night gaiety, which possesses the
most magnificent music halls, dance pal
aces. cabaret and skating rinks on the
continent, is now to outshine every other
large capital as a society center, and
hopes to attract thousands of people with
social ambitions from abroad. Court balls
at which the kaiser in the magnificent
uniform of the cuirassiers of the guard
will be the central figure, and which will
surpass anything Europe has ever seen
since the gorgeous feats of Emperor Na
poleon and Empress Eugenie at the Tuil
leries. are to be held in the royal palace
probably with the crown princess as host
ess, unless the health of the kaiserin un
expectedly improves.
The first “season” will be short, lasting
only from May 5 to 25. next year, but into
this short space of time will be crowded
an almost incredible number of social, lit
erary and dramatic events.
Among them will be a Shakespeare cycle
at the Deutsches theater. This will be in
the care of Max Reinhardt, who is also
to arrange for the performance of ancient
tragedy at the Odeon, as the transformed
Sport Palace is to be called. The Lessing
theater, under Dr. Otto Brahms, has in
view the production of the plays of Ibsen
and Gerhardt Hauptmann, and the di
rector of the Festspiele at Munich, Herr
Emil Gutmann, will arrange a cycle of
“monumental” German musical works.
All this, however, is only part of the at
tractions to be provided. A concours hip
pique, a corso, a race meeting and flying
competitions at Johannisthal are also
promised.
GEORGIA HUSSARS
TO ESCORT WILSON
AT INAUGURATION
SAVANNAH, GA., Nov. B.—The Geor
gia Hussars are to agaift have the honor
of being the personal escort of a presi
dent-elect of the United States at his
inauguration. The offer of the troop
was tentatively accepted by Governor
Wilson prior to the election.
Not only will a. full troop be carried
to Washington, but a platoon of veterans
of the troop will also go. Captain Frank
P. Mclntyre has already begun his prep
arations.
When Grover Cleveland was elected in
1892, the Georgia Hussars went to Wash
ington on March 4 of the following year
to act as his bodyguard at the Inaugu
ration. It will cost the Hussars $3,000
to attend the Wilson inauguration.
FLORIDAN BUYS $36,250
PROPERTY IN ATLANTA
Florida people continue their invest
ments in Atlanta real estate. Quinn
Callaway, of Jacksonville, bought of Lee
Hagan, of Hagan & Dodd, the follow
ing property aggregating $36,250:
House and lot, 1136 DeKalb avenue,
$8,000; house and lot, 1132 DeKalb ave
nue, $6,500; house and lot, 73 Sinclair
avenue, $6,500; house and lot, 53 Ponce
DeLeon avenue, $6,500; house and lot,
27 Orme street, $4,500; house and lot,
1134 DeKalb avenue, $2,000; house and
lot, 1136 DeKalb avenue, $2,250.
SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA.
Argued and Submitted.
Nettie Vaughn vs. Frank Wright: from
Monroe.
R. I’. Lindsey vs. Porter & Garrett;
from Butts.
Monroe Phillips, guardian, vs. L. C. At
kinson; from Butts.
Gem Knitting Mills vis. J. P. Thurman;
from Pike.
J. W. Holloway vs. Belle Hoard: from
Butts.
P. G. Daniel vs. T. J. Reeves: from
Upson.
R. S. Wimberly, trustee, vs. Mutual
Life Insurance Company of New York,
et al.: from Pike. (Dismissed.)
R. S. Wimberly, trustee, vs. Aetna Life
Insurance Company; from Pike. (Dis
missed.)
J. P. Maddox, administrator, vs. T. J.
Giles; froift Butts.
Annie E. Curry vs. Jackson National
bank; from Butts.
Mrs. A. E. Dunn et al. vs. Mrs. M. E.
Evans et al.; from Henry.
Atlanta. Birmingham and Atlantic Rail
road Company vs. W. J. Olmstead; from
Fayette.
T. J. Hunt vs. S. J. Lavender et al.;
from Pike.
' R. L. Allen et al. vs. R. P. Lindsey:
from Butts.
WOMAN BARS HUSBAND
FROM HER BURIAL PLOT
4
NEW YORK. Nov. B.—Henry A. Mil
ler, a baker, who lives on Staten Island,
threatens to appeal from the decision
of Surrogate Fowler, who decided that
Miller can not have any more of the
$15,000 his wife owned than the $1
which she willed him.
Emmey F. Smith, the lawyer whe
drew the will! testified that Mrs. Millet
said she wanted to be buried in her
plot in Greenwood cemetery, then to
have the deed destroyed, so her hus
band could not be buried there.
USES forehead~skFn
TO MAKE A NEW NOSE
TOLEDO, OHIO, Nov. 8. —Joseph
Jennings, thirty-one years old, had his
nose sliced off when he got into a
quarrel with a stranger in a saloon
' here. The man grabbed a butcher
knife and struck at him. The severed
, nose fell to the floor and after the
. scuffle could not be found. Jennings
was taken to a hospital, where enough
flesh and skin was cut from his fore
head to make a new nose, which he is
' wearing today. The assailant of Jen
. nings escaped.
WOMAN FAILsTn THREE
ATTEMPTS AT SUICIDE
ST. LOUIS-, Nov. B.—ln the sight of
fifty passengers waiting at Belleville for
an Illinois Central train. Mrs. Margaret
Herbig three times tried to die beneath
the wheels of a locosnotive.
"I am going to join my father in the
cemetery," she screamed the first time,
as she cast herself in front of a switch
engine going through the yards.
—■——
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