Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 11, 1913, Image 4

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4 A IIRARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, 0A„ SUNDAY, MAY 11. 1913. Eras sun \ T n 'LED ( 'OTFLK, ave been separata “7 CL some time, and arc no" |||f HPt'kil C IcRal freedom. ihe If l Duch* ss of Westminster above Wj | and i er husband, tin- Duke, ]' below HT English Duke Files Divorce Pa- , pers, Naming Spanish Noble as Party to Action. THEY SEPARATED LAST YEAR Titled Couple Have Been at Outs Several Months Previous to Court Proceedings. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, May 10.—Preliminary proceedings for divorce have been be gun by the Duke of Westminster. It | is underwood that the Duchess con templates a counter suit. The co-respondent named by the Duke is the Duke of Albn. who at one time was reported to be engaged to an American girl and who is well known In cosmopolitan society. Case Creates Sensation.. The case when it comes to trial is likely to create a sensation. The matrimonial infelicity of the Westminsters has long been a subject of gossip, and reports that one or the other of the pair intended to seek divorce have been frequent for some years. These reports* have not hud legal foundation hitherto. The domestic troubles of Hugh Richard Arthur Grosvenor. second Duke of Westminster, and his Duch ess have for some time been public property, and divorce proceedings have been freely predicted. Their marriage took place in 1901 and they have two children. Lady Ursula Gros venor. age 11, and Lady Mary, age 3. The Duchess, daughter of Colonel Cornwallis West, is a pis ter of the Princess of Pless, and her only broth er is George Cornwallis West, the second husband of the former Lady Randolph Church. The Duke of Westminster, who was born in 3 87'.). is one of the rlckesl men in England, owning 30,000 acres in Cheshire' and Flintshire and 600 acres in London. He is chiefly known as a sportsman, especially as a keen poloist. Duke Polo Enthusiast. The Duke is paving the expenses of the British polo team that is now on it? way to this country to compete wfth the American team for the inter national championship. He had a great deal to do with the selection of the English players, and person-j ally choee the ponies that are being, brought over, scouring England ami Ireland for the best •animals ob tainable. The open break between the pair came a few months ago. when, after a violent scene, the Duke is said to have ordered the Duchess out of his town residence. Grosvenor Houy.l following a ball given at Bucking ham Palace by the King and Queen, to which the Duchess was invited and the Duke pointedly was not asked. Last March the couple formally separated. Photographs published last winter in the papers show ing the Duchess hand in hand on the ice and waltzing and tobogganing with a pro fessional skater in Switzerland are believed to have been a partial cause of the separation. The Duchess is de scribed as very handsome, dashing and stylish, with a splendid figure, dark brown hair, blue-gray eyes, and dark eyebrows. The Duke’s name was not entirely free from scandal before his marring* . Descendant of King. The Duke of Alba, named as co respondent, is the descendant of an English King and a Spanish grande** with a fortune. His full name i«* Jaeobo Maria del Pilar Carlos Manuel Stuart Fits-James* (tenth Duke .if Berwick and seventeenth Duke of Albu de Tonnes) He was born at Madrid in 1878. The first Duke was a son of James II and Arabella Churchill, sister of the first Duke of Marlborough. ^ The Duke of Alba is a bachelor Five or six # years ago it w as rumored that he was engaged to Miss Math- ilde Townsend, of Washington and Philadelphia. His father died at the Holland House, New York, in Octo ber. 1901. He* ha*! come here as a guest of Sir Thomas Llpton to watch the America’s cup races. ELOPERS CAMPING OUT UNTIL HUBBY WINS FAME PRINCETON. W. VA , Encamped on the mountain side in ;i tent near rerp are Mr. and Mr George Hen drick. a refined, educated and wall- dressed couple of apparently good families, who are said to have eloped and are camping out until the young husband can earn enough money to houst keeping. The girl ir apparently not over 19 years of age, and there is much mys tery connected with their presence here, as both are very reticent. Tie* young husband has a position as time-keeper in the coal mines It is said they eloped from a Vir- i E Ojl u t TT" n First Lady of the Land to Presentt Atlanta Battalion With a Bouquet of Roses. President and Mrs. Woodrow Wil son will receive the Old Guard Bat talion of the Gate City Guard when it arrives In .Washington Tuesday cn route through Eastern cities to meei again the military and other organi zations that so warmly indorsed the ■‘Mission of Peace" of this command 34 years ago. At the reception, which will take place in the East Room of the White House, Mrs. Wilson will present the Old Guard with a bouquet of roses picked from the lawn of her old home in Rome, Ga. The organization will leave Atlanta Monday morning under auspicious < ircu in stances, including a military I escort of the .Seventeenth United | States Infantry from Fort McPher son and the local officers of the Geor- I <gia National Guard. More than 100 members of the veterans’ corps. In full dress uniform, will take part In the parade to the Terminal Station at 9:30 o’clock. Visit Famous Organizations. The trip will Include visits to th Mothers’ Day for the Protection of the Home This is Mothers’ Day. It will b® observed all over the country. Nearly every minister in the lend will refer to it in some way. Hun dreds of preachers will make the day the text for sormoni, to the end that a more vital interest in morals and home protection shall be engendered. Loose divorce laws have been the target of every student of modern tendencies; the new prob- terms co-existent with the changes in the home life of the greater part of our population have caused unrest. Carelessness of the mar riage tie is responsible for an in finity of misery. The collusive di vorce is the scandal of our courts. Men and women oonspire to break a tie, on inadequate grounds or nene, and take no Keed to the rights of the children, who are the real sufferers. A uniform divorce law for the nation is needed. If Mothers’ Day helps establish this principle it will be a victory for the permanence of the home. C OUNTESS GIZYCKA, former Chicago girl, who made Washington society gasp when she placed crest on her hosiery. BY DEATH DELIGHTS J z State Superintendent of Educa-1 tion Feels Southern Literary Men Have Been Hurt. MANY DESERVE A PLACE MB FISH ABE Fifth Maryland Regiment at Balti more; State FencibleR, Philadelphia, ! old Guard of New York; Twenty-firs, infantry, New York National Guard; Putnam Phalanx, at Hartford; Wash ington Light Infantry, and oth^r Northern military organizations. The present membership of the Old | Guard of the Gate Pity Guard is; J. F. Burke, colonel; E. J. Spratling. captain and adjutant; Bolling H Jones, captain and quartermaster; A. McD. Wilson, captain and commis sary. Staff W. M. Crumley, captain; Dr. E. L. Connaly; Louis Gholstin, coio- jnel; Benjamin B. Crew. First Company—George M. Napier, captain; Charles P. Byrd, first lieu- I tenant; John W. Murrell, second lieu tenant. Second Company—F. J.. Cooledge, captain; P. F. Clarke, first lieutenant; A. H. Davis, second lieutenant. Non-Commissioned Staff—Ben Leo (’row, color seigeant; F. T. Ridge, color sergeant; E. L. Bergstrom, color corporal; W. P. Andrews, color cor poral. Non-Coms and Privates. Non-Commissioned Line Officers — W. E. Hancock, first sergeant, First; Company; Harrison Jones, first ser geant. Second Company; W>0. Wil son, second sergeant. First Company; F. M. Berry, second sergeant, Second Com pany 81 FEDERAL AID Government Co-operating With State Officials to Increase Fresh Water Breeds. I EAGLES KILLED PR1V A TEH— W. W. Austell F M. Akers i \ l. knderx n M. N. Armstrong J. Epps Brown A. M. Bancker C. B Bid well H. Bleckley (\ A. Bowen L. Brittain Bennett M. w If. 11 Trapper in Heart of Black Hills Overcomes Birds After Fierce Encounter. CAPt’TA, S. D„ May 10. Here In the Bald Hills, a wild region between the famous Black Hills and the equal ly noted Bad Lands. Itty Beach kill ed four big golden eagles with a jackknife. The oldest trapper in the Hills re members no such feat as this, and Beach is a hero. Beach saw two eagles perched on far up a cliff He hit the One tumbled to The other only t . Bennett C. Boorman M. Beutell P. Burkert Frank M. Byrne I’. T. Blackohear Claude Buchanan J. ii Buesse W M (’amp Dan Carey W. B. Cummings Thos M. Clark .1 I> (’loudman U. U. Comer E. (’ Callaway A. P. Coles L. .1 Daniel .1. \\ . Davis Geo. H. Donovan M. C. Donnell U M. Dorsey W. D. Ellis Geo. F. Eubanks Thos. C. Erwin Julian Field James S. Floyd Fenn Floyd T. Fleming J M Fuller Win. A. Fuller Fred Gelssler P B. Green C. J. Gavan O. I*. Goree Dr. W. A. Graham F B. Green H H. Hirsch E. Hardeman H. P Hall G. M. Hope J. T Hollemnn W. A. Hay good \\ L. Hancock Geo. Harrington J. J. Hastings L. Harris. Jr. S. R. Johnston Jos. Jacobs H. W. Johnstone V. If. Krelgshaber \V. ‘IV Kuhns T. A. Kemp W. S. Ixiunsbury if. V. McCord T. H. Morgan \V. V. Me M il 1 en Sam Meyer. Jr. (!. H. Morrow Jos. A. McCord K \V. Martin W. McElre.ath J. Van Holt Nash J. S. Owens F J. Paxon I ir. J. H. Powell Thomas H. Pitts P. I*. Reese J. D. Rhodes \V. W. Reid U. N. Randolph \V. W. Rush ton M. Sharp \V. M. Stephenson F. C. Smille G. A. Smith H. L. Sehleslnger J A. Shields W. F. Scott Edward Schaefer \V. B. Stovall I. F. Scott G. (’. Thomas M. L. Thrower S If. Turman Walter Taylor Samuel Tate Ed L. Wright J. J. Wood side Herbert L Wiggs A. M. Weems George Winship W. S. Witham A. J. West W Woods White T >u v id \V < >odw a rd G. A. Wight C* O Winn. WOMAN GIVES UP HUSBAND SO FRIEND MAY HAVE HIM ten:. Both ht of fashion PREFERS PENITENTIARY TO LIFE WITH WIFE BOONVILLE. JND.. Mav io -Pre ferring to go to prison than to -up- port his wife. Arnold Jon*-, convict-, ed in the Circuit Court on the * h ir**.- of wife desertion, has 1>- n taken to I the Indiana Reformatory to serve a term of from one to threi years. Judge Robert* said he would suspend! sentence on the promise of Jon* s u* support his w ife. Jones - ni<i h* j would rather go Jo the penitent ai\ ' WIDOW TREASURES EAR OF CORN FOR 32 YEARS a pine tre two with one shot the base of the cliff fluttered on a ledge. Beach wanted the second eagle, the war bird of the Sioux and Cheyennes is precious; for its small tail feather an Indian* would give half a dollar, and the price of a dead eagle on the reservation is a live horse. The trapper, leaving gun. game and trap, made a detour of several miles, climbed the snow-drifted mountain side and crept down the face of the MEDFORD, ORE.. May 10.—That cliff td the Won titled eagle, he finished hrr chum nn j schoolmate of former miitht marry her husband. Mrs Fiat against the cliff with a thou- Newton < Fassett, wife of a Spokan sand feet of air below, he saw two mining man, was granted a divorce big eagles that had come to avenge j n p v , n0i and then Mr. Fassett became their dead brethren the second husband of Mrs. Lillian Then began a battle that lasted for (p McCallie, of New York, who was an hour. Before the fallen trapper granted a divorce in Rene could rise to* hie feet the ' war birds.” During the ceremony a tiny hand through fear of which Indians still 0 f her twenty-monthe-old baby by shun the Black Hills, were upon him } lf . r f\r$*t husband gripped the hand with ripping beak and claw, thresh- u f bride. The ceremony was por ing him with their mighty wings. He formed at the home of Stanton Oriflls, I rolled over on his face and. opening j brother of the bride, and it was osten- j his knife, thrust out blindly again s jbl v an impromptu affair. Several j and again at iiis head, arms and hours of motoring were necessary to I ha* k. , locate the Judge to tie the knot. The At last one. then the other, fluttered I |, ;l ppv couple left for Spokane, where down the cliff and lay where it fell, I t hev ‘will reside, land then Beach crawled to the top, The n ,. u \i rs Fassett parted with and. weary and weak from loss of the former Mrs. Fassett last Thurs- blood, made his way back. I day nlgn: in Reno, each aware of the plan-* for the subsequent marriage. AIRSHIP TO BE USED AS FERRY ACROSS COOS BAY S TEEL PLATE INSERTED IN BADLY SHATTERED LEG WASHINGTON, May 10.—A move ment to save the flsh in inland waters has become almost National in its scope within the last few months. Through experts in the Bureau of Fisheries investigations have been made that have saved many fish lives from needless death. The bureau works In co-operation with the State Fish Commission. If the men on those commissions face intricate problems, they submit sam ples of water to the bureau and the bureau analyzes them. And the bu reau goes a step farther, because analysis may not solve the problem. Poison Squad at Work. Down at the bureau' headquarters is what is known as a “poison squad,” and through this group of healthy members of the finny tribe the flsh doctors plant the cause and watch th(. effect. Then the bureau goes out to And the remedy. From observations thus far made the bureau lias found that there are parts in each stream along whose banks are located factories giving out poisonous matter which are shunned by flshf while other parts are thickly populated. In other words, the ab sence of flsh in any part of a stream indicates a danger zone. Another peculiar condition which the bureau has brought to light is that factories may give off poisonous matter without fatal effects on fish. In one instance along a stream in Oregon it was found that two fac tories situated nearly opposite each other gave off an acid and an alkali and the waters thereabouts were harmless to flsh because the two sub stances neutralized each other. Perhaps the most peculiar physical condition found to exist among flsh is appendicitis. Out in the Middle West saw’ mills line almost every stream, in their active operations the mills give off fine sawdust, which floats upon the waters. Some of the parti cles become water-soaked and sink a short distance below’ the surface. To the flsh these particles appear like tempting morsels, and are rapidly de voured. Like the orange or grape seed in the human being, it some times escapes the point where it would cause suffering, but again it occasionally sticks, and a well-de veloped case of appendicitis follows, which ks commonly fatal. Commercial Results. These investigations by State and National authorities on flsh have sometimes had unusual commercial results. Two years ago the residents along the banks of a certain stream in Pennsylvania asked the State au thorities to investigate the cause of the destruction of flsh in parts of the river. Analysis showed that the water contained tannic acid, evident ly from the many tanning plants along the river. The authorities at tacked the tanners, who put in reno vation processes for their refuse. As a result, the acid was refined and sold, the fleshings from the hides were turned into glue and the hair was sold to contractors for use in mortar mixing. ANGELES. IP at 10.—(.a rrying remaining in Glenn Martin, blished a new rrying record. I, making the itch the flight >y Marlin and al ferry across u and King, of REDLANDS. CAL., May 10.—Pau Swickard, son of the minister of tin Lutheran Church, underwent an op eration at the Redlands Hospital in which n st ml plate was inserted in hb* leg to brace a broken bon* Swick ard is a senior in Redlands High School, and in riding a motorcycle home from the dress rehearsal the before the presentation of the play three weeks ago. he col- with an auto and his leg vrai •oken in two places. One of the mos v as so badly splintered it did >t tnencl and the operation was per- rined and the plate inserted in the >p* that the brace will strengthen .< bene and make it possible for him BOY BURGLARS SENTENCED TO KEEP STREET CLEAN BOSTON. May 10.—Judge Albert Bosson. of the Chelsea Court, sen tenced six boys, averaging about fif teen years old, who were convicted of breaking into a freight car and stealing candy, to keep a street of the city clear of waste paper and rubbish for six months. Crescent Avenue, which the boys must keep clean, is a long street, with few turnings, and many of their friends living along that highway are sure to make the task of picking up scraps of paper, tin cans, sticks, stones and cigar butts most interest ing. The boys will be supervised in their work by two policemen. nig d FLOCK OF GEESE STOP MARRIAGE CEREMONY HIAWATHA. KAN.. May 10.—A wedding was summarily halted here when a boy rushed in and said that \ tlock of geese, storm driven and blinded by the electric lights, had alighted in the street. The bridegroom and the Rev J. O. Hayes, the minister, were among the first out of the door. Persons armed with shot guns bom barded the geese and killed almost a The voice of M. L. Brittain, Geor gia State Superintendent of Schools, is added to the charges of partiality and discrimination against the South that is being made by Southern edu cators generally regarding Branrler Mathews’ text book “An Introduc tion of the Study of American Litera ture.” The South, thinks Mr. Brittain, has not been given its just due in the book. "Dr. Matthews has not treated the subject of Southern literature fair ly,” he aaid yesterday. “It seem* that he Is incapable of doing so, as aiw other Northerner is. “But then.” he qualified, and smiled, *th£t may be only the way we feel about It.” Dr. Matthews, the Columbia Uni versity professor, who is considered generally the leading figure in Amer ican belles lettres, recently published his book. It was hailed as the last word In Its subject, and was adopted in many public schools everywhere. Then the South, in many parts cf which the book was accepted, began to be sorry, and protest against the tone of the volume has come from many quarters. The voice of the Georgia State Superintendent is only one'of a number. Not Adopted in Georgia. The book has not been adopted in any of the schools of Georgia of which he is aware, Mr. Brittain said. Although not necessarily lpoking to ward adoption, it has been examined by a number of teachers in the course of their effort to keep up with the latest publications along educational lines. The criticism by Mr. Brittain is that the author has made but an in significant presentation of Southern literature, with the result that chil dren in the schools where the book is used will go out without a fair knowledge of the true place of South ern writers. The charge by Mr. Brittain came vesterday at the same time as a widely published attack on the book by Mrs. Thomas Randolph Leigh, state historian of the Alabama Divis ion of the United Daughters of tlm Confederacy. Mrs. Leigh’s attach was bitter. "It is a misnomer.” she declared, according to dispatches from Ne v York that bore the story of her un sparing criticism. “It bears the titie of a book concerning American’ lit erature. I consider that the mental food for our children should receive as rigid inspection as their physical food. For that reason I call a halt on the use of Professor Mathews* text book, in that it is not what Its title purports it to be.” Mrs. Leigh resents the exclusion of Poe’s poems, when Halleck’s ami Drake’s are quoted. She condemns Dr. Matthews for mentioning £eton Thompson, and forgettin- Audubon, and for the neglect accorded Joel Chandler Harris. Sidney Lanier, Hen ry Timrod Sitnms, and others whon she terms "Southern scintillants.” Only Two Southerners. “Professor Mathews’ book,” she charged, “contains 28 portraits of lit erary men. and of this number only two Southerners are represented—■ Edga** Alien Poe and Joel Chandler Harris. The picture of the latter is so small it may be covered with the thumb. Though the book contains 269 pages only two short sentences are devoted to that inimitable Georgian, whose unforgettable figure of Uncle Remus will sit by the fireside on win ter nights and entertain countless children and grow’nups years after moth? have devoured the 269 pages written by the partisan professor, who gives a list of 288 literary con tributions by Americans, among which are found only 24 from the* pens of Southerners. “Nowhere in Professor Matthew.? textbook appears the patrician coun tenance of Sidney Lanier, although Lanier's and Poe’s writings form t.\e highest course given in the Engli l departments of some of America’s and England's greatest universities. Not a single poem of that gifted Li- nier is called by name. Whittier Has Big Place. "On the other hand," she continues, "seventeen pages are devoted to the plebeian, Whittier, whose clumsy p?n so often stumbled and fell as he mixed indifferent verse with aboli tion ribble with such rancor that his own fellow’ citizens rose up as an In dignant mob and sacked and burned his printing office. Professor Mat thews. after using 17 pages of writ ten notes, says: It is the hard fate of nearly all writing done to aid a cause that it is killed by its own suc cess—so interest in these polemic writings is now mainly historical.’ ” While agreeing wMth Mrs.Leigh In the general charge aganst the tex: book. Mr. Brttain stop* at her attack on Whittier, and takes up an argu ment in defense of the New Englani poet. “Whittier has too high a stand among our people to be dismissed in such a manner,” he said. "But there is no doubt.” he con cluded, "that, from our viewpoint the book. Mr. Brittain stops at her attack Northerners generally seems to be one of tolerant condescension toward the Southerners in literature. The book of Dr. Matthews is typical.” Countess Gizycka Puts Crest on Hose WASHINGTON,. May 10.—Countess Gizycka, the chief faddist of Wash ington society, has a “new one”— nothing more or less than to wear your family cres't inset in real lace on your dainty silk stocking. ^ This is an expensive fad and will add a pretty penny to the cost of milady’s wardrobe, as each will have to nave separate lace made to order and inset in the hose by an expert. The Countess, who was Miss Elinor Patters-on, of Chicago, had hers done in Paris, and .she sprung the inno vation on society at the Horse Show yesterday. Oklahoma Man Who Took Treat- Yellow Nation Expects Preferen- ment Drops Dead on Street. Post-Mortem. BERLIN. May 10.—The Berlin cor respondent of The Sunday American has obtained a copy of the official re port of a post-mortem on a Fried mann patient, John McCluky, of Ok lahoma, who died in Berlin on Febru ary 14. McClusky, who W’as 32 years old, fell dead in the street three weeks after he had received the injection treatment from Dr. Friedmann. He w f as suffering from markedly ad vanced pulmonary tuberculosis, with large cavities in his lungs, when he submitted himself to the treatment. Post-Mortem Held. The post-mortem took place at the Royal Hospital, in Berlin, under the supervision of Professor We.stenhofer, head of the pathological department of that institution. Among those who participated in it was Dr. E. Avery Newton, an American physician prac ticing at Bad Nauheim. Dr. Newton recently returned from Belgrade, where he installed a corps of young American doctors for special service in the Servian military hospitals. Medical men who have had access to the post-mortem report of the Mc Clusky case say that the significant feature of it is the fact that the general tuberculosis, as distinguished from the pulmonary affection of the patient, was of very recent origin. The report sets forth that McClusky received an injection in. the left gluteal muscle. His lungs were shown to contain cavities as large as hens’ eggs. Death w’as caused by the rupture of a pea-sized aneurism of a branch of the pulmonary artery lying on the side of one of the lung cavi ties. Microscopic Examination. Microscopic examination showed that there was a pronounced tendency to healing in the lungs, but very re cent acute miliary tuberculosis of the. kidneys, liver and spleen and a marked catarrhal condition of the left Rosenmuller gland. Ln the muscle tissue at the point of injection there was young connective tissue, with many fibroblasts, lymphocytes, and leucocytes. There was also destruc tion of muscle with a tendency to re generate. In one place there was a typical tubercle with necrosis of the giant cells, epitheloid cells and lym phocytes. tial Treatment With England on Present Dispute. Continued From Page 1. amends or submit the matter to arbi tration. Expects Preferential Treatment. Japan has purposely made her case so that it will be parallel to that *£ Great Britain, and has put the State Department in the attitude of having to treat with the two countries alike. In other words, if the administration should agree to submit the British case to arbitration, Japan will con tend that he same rule snould apply to the Japanese protest. The acts of the administration have encouraged the Japanese Government to believe that it will get preferential treatment. Thai preferential treatment is clearly foreshadowed by the telegrams which President Wilson has sent to Governor Johnson of California, and the efforts of Secretary Bryan prove to the State of California that it was actually violating the treaty with Ja-, pan. English Spirit Is Different. No one in Washington believes that Great Britain will force an issue with the Unted otates in the same spirit that appears to animate the Japanese Government. The trouble with Japan is therefore regarded as of more interest and fraught with dangerous consequences, Still, there i* no patriotic arouse- ment to the necessity for an amola navy. CONTROL OF DRUNKENNESS URGED BY GOVERNOR FOSS SUPPOSED TITANIC VICTIM WRITES RELATIVES LETTER POTTSTOWN, PA., May 10.— Charles Mayor, a former Pottstown business man, who has been mourned for dead for more than a year by his relatives because they thought he had perished on the Titanic, pleasant ly surprised them when, they received a letter from him saying that he is well. Hi 1 is now in business at Mul berry, Va., and does not explain why he maintained silence for so long. Mayor was in England about the time the Titanic sailed, and a^* a man named "Mayor" was reported among the lost, his relatives believed it was he. i BOSTON, May 10.—Declaring Mas sachusetts is making no progress to- j ward the control of drunkenness, I Governor Foss, in a special message to the Legislature, asks for the ap pointment of a commission to inves- I tigate the evil. The commission would take full charge of every case of public instruction and would also offer to the habitual drunkard an asylum for an Indefinite period, where he may be protected against his own weakness and engaged in wholesome employment. "Under our present system,” the Governor says, “tfce same person may i be committed from 40 to 50 times to 1 the same institution for being intox icated. In such instance punishment ' falls not upon the man himself, but i dpon his family.” FORMER WIFE SUES GYPSY VIOLINIST FOR BIG LOANS NEW YORK, May 10.—Janezi Rigo. gypsy violinist, is being sued for j $100,000 by Princess DeChimay, for- ! merly Clara Ward, of Detroit, Mich. Rigo says the amount involved represents sums loaned him by the ■ princess during the two years they I lived together. He said the princess | had been trying for some time to get ! him to leave the present Mrs. Rigo. When served- with the papers, Rigo ! was at home with his last wife, who ! was Kitty Emerson, wife of Caspar i Emerson, Jr., the artist. 1 GRASSHOPPER PLAGUE IN CENTRAL MISSOURI FEARED 8EDALIA, MO.. May 10 —Many grasshoppers have made their appear ance in Central Missouri, and farm ers express the fear that great dam age will be done to growing crops this summer. This is said to be the earliest date grasshoppers have ever been known in such large numbers “Ancestors” They were rich. He was an engaging youth —she was pretty as a picture. Happiness, in their vocabulary, was only another word for pleasure. They thought they loved each other. And so they were married. Every married couple, and every couple about to be mar ried, should read this intense story of real life, by Gouverneur Morris Illustrated by James Montgomery Flagg Harry and Margaret thought they had everything that makes for happiness in life. London, Paris, Rome, Vienna knew them; their swift cars flung the miles away; the smoke of their yacht lay low along the horizon. Then, as though some evil spirit had thrust between them the thin edge of a gigantic wedge, and day by day were relentlessly driving it home—something forced _ them gradually apart. Their married life is being lived today, and will be lived cduntless times again, by many couples who make the same mistake. Read how Harry and Margaret worked out the problem for them selves and—just in time—found the key to the happiness they had missed. In the June number of ‘America’s Greatest t Magazine” Now on the news-stands 15 c a copy /A . 'M Gsmopolitai