Newspaper Page Text
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If KARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN*. ATLANTA, OA SUNDAY, MAY 2.'. 1013.
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Eat Salad Celestine
Instead of Anti-Fat
To Keep Slim Figure
□electable Dish Will Not Put an
Ounce of Weight on Body,
Says Chef.
Raid Bares Desperate Plots of
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Hn
Inaugurations of Past to Be Out
done If Plans Are Carried
reclr
nt II
»en nt th«.
•apon 'with
the terrors
Militants are Known by Secret
Suffragettes RISKS ||S LIFE
Numbers ID FIND RICHES
TN THE WAKE OF THE SUFFRAGETTE- At the top is shown St Catherine s Church,
Hatchem, one of the finest in South London, as it was burning after militants had applied the
torch. Below are the ruins of Bowling Green pavilion at Fulham Park, London. It was de
stroyed by suffragettes. At the left is a typical militant in a favorite pose, selling the official
organ of the cause on a London street corner.
i Man Sets Out Into Northern Can-
I
ada in Search of Gold His
R E M Z py FOR MEN
AT DRl.'GCISTS.OR TRIAL UOXOV MAIL5C.
fftOM PLANTER 53 HKNRYST. BROOKLYN NT
-.1: WA-; OF iiVlITATiO.HS-.
Make Your Living Porch
Cheerful and Inviting
In warm, pleasant weather, when much tirpe is spent
out-of-doors, the porch becomes your living room.
It can be made unusually«attractive and comfortable
like any room, with CREX wire-grass rugs and runners.
They cover the bare boards—are inexpensive and save
v/ear and tear on paint.
CREX is not affected by rain or dampness—lies flat
—never curls—is reversible and heavy enough not to
be blown about.
The numerous patterns and color combinations make
possible a selection that will greatly add to the appear
ance and attractiveness of any porch.
Best dealers carry a varied assortment of sizes and
colors.
Refuse substitutes. Insist on CREX the original
and genuine. Look for the name woven (almost invis-
Write for "The Story of CREX" and
catalogue of numerous patterns in life
like colors.
CREX CARPET COMPANY
Dept. 18 377 Broadway, New York City
Originators of Wire-Crass Floor Coi'erings
ifcuw.rAiti.-l
V Vi
By SIDNEY ESPEY.
WASHINGTON. May 24.--
plan for the celebration in
Jngton of the *>ne hundredth Anniver
sary of the signing of th Treaty of
Ghent b< carried out any previous
observance held in the national capi
tal will b? completely overshadowed.
Representatives of all the English
speaking people* and colonies of the
earih will participate in the cele
bration. While there will be n loco'
celebration of sonre sort in every citv
and town throughout the dominions
bf the English speaking nations, the
greatest festivals will lie, of course,
held in the capital cities of the two
treat nations, the United States and
Great Britain.
- \ conference of delegates having
fhe arrangements In charge met ii#
Washington a few days ago to ratify
the plane made by the local com-
♦nlttee of* one hundred and on that
roccasion a statement of what is In
tended shall be one by way of com
memorating the historic event was
tkiven out.i
It is the treaty of 1814 consummated
at Ghent by commissioners appointed
in Washington and London that Is
io be commemorated in the series
of festivals which will be held here
•from December 14. 1914 to February
•JS. 1915.
No Wars Since Then.
•• From I he date of the lignins of
Hip Treaty of Ghent the English
speaking peoples of different nations
have not been at war. Tile American
Civil War was between English
speaking peoples, but .not between na
tions. so it is exempt from this con
sideration.
The committee of one Jhundred.
which is making arrangements for
the Washington celebration of this
e\e*it. is headed by Dr. .Tamo* Brown
Scott, director of the Carnegie En
dowment for International Peace,
which has it? headquarters at tae
capital. Secretary of State William
Jennings Bryan is the honorin'>
chairman and the membership of the
body is made tin of the leading cit
izens of the District o' Columbia.
The President and the committee
of one hundred will each tender a
Mr reception to citizens and tin*
hundreds of visitors expected to 1
present There will be a mammoth
exhibition of paintings other art ob-
jrn# and curious articles having his
toric associations and significance.
The Pori office Department will iv-
s to ii sp'cird series of slump* com
memorative (»f the signing of th
Treaty of Ghent and the commit lee
o' One Hundred will strike and off* r
for sale medals commemorative of
Cot* occasion
Great Street Pageant.
Th< re abo will be a great street
p.igenn’ in which military and civic-
organizations will participate and the
streets are to be decorated and Illu
minated on certain nights.
No appropriation for the holding of
this celebration is to be asked of
Congress according to present plans
The motley i* 5 to be raised by popular
subscription
The exact dates for the holding of
the various functions mentioned have
not yet been determined. onl> out
line plans having been sketched for
the entire affair
The City of Alexandria, Vn.. is to
participate* in the Washington cele
bration Mayor Fisher of that city,
is chairman of the local committee of
Alexandria in charge of arrange
ments. As* Alexandria was th«* larg
est city in this section when the
Treaty of Ghent was signed her par
ticipation in the observance will be
of special interest.
Should all the plans mature and
the m« n behind them are of such cali
ber that it ie likely they will. Pres
idential inaugurations held here In the
•afit will be outdone in splendor by
)U be proper, and Blende
s of tight d re me a? Th
read well the recipe for the Salad
Celestine, which is a work of art de
signed especially for women who ui'*
afraid <*f increasing their figures by
indulging in dainty dishes.
The salad is a delectable anti-fat
As outlined, the method of its prepa
ration is as follows:
l < ingp d :< ntf i •• pt «• pared in four
parts First, the finest white rice is
soaked in cold water for six hours.
Then it Is boiled for twenty minutes
and immediately put on ice. The sec
ond part is composed of fresh and
carefully selected green peas, not
cooked too soft. When cooked, they
are also put on ice. Bart third Is a
small quantity of bacon, sliced very
thin, and browned to a crlap. It is
chopped fine before it is cooked. The
fourth part is composed of the hearts
»>f carefully selected white lettuce,
chopped fine with potatoes. The four
parts are carefully mixed and covered
with a sharp French dressing. The
salad is then dusted with paprika. It
must remain on ice for several hours
before it is served.
56-Year-Old Wreck
Found in River Bed
Engine, Coal Tender and Water
Tank Pulled Out by Crew
Razing Bridge.
LAWRENCEBURG, INK, May 24.
A gang of bridgemen in the employ
of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago
and St Louis Railroad Company,
while removing steel framework of the
bridge that was swept down by the
flood, discovered the coal tender and
water tank and a portion of locomo
tive No. 7, that went tlirough the
bridge in 1857.
Engine No. 7 was the first locomo
tive that went over the Whitewater
division, and when it crashed through 1
the bridge, carrying the engineer,
fireman and two brakemen to the
bottom of the river, the first wreck on
the road occurred.
pafl
the celebration of
the signing of the
the centen
Treaty of
BOY’S CURIOSITY REWARDED
BY DISCOVERY OF $3,000
DECATUR, ILL. May 24 The cu
riosity of his 18-year-old son, Wayne,
made Walter Chrich. a Decatur bar
ber. the possessor of $3,000 in gold,
which the barber s father had hidden
way in a small can before he died,
nearly six years ago. Ullrich at one
I me proposed to his wife that they
band on an old trunk containing old
• lQthing. which they moved, but senti
ment prevented, and it was placed in
coal Hied.
Mrs Uhrich was examining the
• antents and came upon the can.
■ iought to contain putty The boy
v as curious over its weight and pre-
v'Ulod on his father to open it. Uhrich
lew of the existence of the money,
it had never been able to locate it
WHEN WOMAN WEDS AGAIN
74IAL DIVORCE SPOILED
’JSAVKXWORTH, KAXS*.. XIav 24.
Witxviis intended to hr a "trial .11-
' *ca/’ but which did not work out
•ording to his plans because the dl-
' ^ed wife married another man,
« revealed in a petition filed in th »
P -urlct Court here
•I A. Kelley, cashier of the Army I
ciorml Bank at Fort Leavenworth. I
e that the divorce granted to Mrs.
1 "a Kelley be set >si< • and her mar
ie to Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin
P Oheever. retired, be nnulled.
lie also asks that hi* former wif ■
• e compelled to repay him $4,oti6 paid)
r ier as alimony and otherwise
HF.IRS GET 6 CENTS EACH
FROM 58-YEAR-0LD ESTATE :
LEADING. PA.. May 24—Ninety ;
-ev m heirs figure in the distribution
Weds in 3 Hours to
Get a Salary Raise
West Virginia Musician Forced to
Marry to Obtain More Money
for Services.
BLUEFIELD, W. VA„ May 24.—A
substantial raise in salary was offer
ed W. W. Carlisle, director of the
symphony orchestra here, if he would J
take unto himself a wife before sun
down. Carlisle proved himself a man
of action by finding the much-needed
bride in exactly three hours.
When the proprietors of the Grand
Theater, where Carlisle leads the or
chestra. heard of his marriage, they
also added a substantial sum to his
weekly stipend.
For a considerable time Carlisle has
demanded an increase of salary from
the committee which control the or
chestra's affairs. Not w ishing to lose
their leader, the committee some time
ago offered to advance his salary if
hr would marry and settle down here,
as it was believed his single* blessed
ness was not conducive to a per-
1 manent residence in Bluefleld.
I Co-Operative Stores
Open in Kansas City!
Fight Against High.Cost of Living
Is Begun by Labor
Unions.
K YXSAS CITY. Mav 24. Three
.
I ptores hav* been opened in Kansas
i City by tbe Co-operative Trading As--
Invasion of Government Offices
nish Evidence for Arrests.
Special Cable to The American.
* LONDON. May 24—Reports that
the police raid on the headquarters of
the Women's Social and Political
Union was a "plant,” and that nothing
was found there by the raiders but
what the organization wished to be
found there, has been proved untrue
by subsequent arrests made on the
evidence of«the docujncnta discovered
there and the nature of other docu
ments which reveal the numbers by
w hich individual members of the mil
itant corps may be Identified. More
over. the nature of some of the docu
ments is such that they have been
placed before officials of the Home
Office, with the idea that future pros
ecutions may be brought under pro
visions of law that are more drastic
than those used heretofore which per
tain to conspiracy under the Maliciou:'
Damage to Property Act of 1861.
Chemist Is Arrested.
One of the arrests made on evidence
presented by the seized documents
was that of Kdwy Godwin Ulayton. a
scientific chemist and author of Kew
Road, Richmond, whose letter, which
reads as follows, led to his arrest:
P* ar MU's Kenney: I am sorry to
say it will be several days yet be
fore l can be ready with that which
you want, 1 have devoted all this
evening tuid all yesterday afternoon
to the busim ss w ithout success. Evi
dently a difficult matter but not im-
posihle. I v» rjly believe, because,
galling as it h* to have to write, I
nearly succeeded once last night, and
then spoiled what l had done in try
ing to Improve upon It By next
Wednesday 1 shall be able to manage.
The exact proportions are very im
portant evidently. 1 will let vou know
than anticipated. *
Fire Alarm Raid Planned.
Another document taken In the rai l
reads:
Scheme of simultaneously
smashing a considerable number
of street fire alarms. This ap
pears to me an'exceptionally good
idea. It will cause tremendous
confusion and excitement, and
should be at once easier and less
risky to execute than some other
operations.
From srix to eight operators
might be told off. each to a dis
trict for which she is responsible;
say, Mayfair, Westminster, the
City. St. Pancras, of Bloomsbury.
Islington. Southwark or Ber
mondsey. Camden Town. etc.
A day or so before she could
visit her district, note the places
and distances; and on the night,
armed with a muffled stone or
hummer, she could walk rapidly
from one to another, smash the
glass, pull the handle (with a
well-gloved hand), and so on: of
course, at each alarm selecting a
moment when no one was about.
All should start operations at on*
and the same previously fixed
hour.
Schemes to Enter Offices.
Other documents* describe how en
trance may be effected to certain
Government offices, as. for example:
Post Office Telegraph Engin
eers' Department There is a
yard open to the street, with
wooden galleries on each side.
Easy to rush in and out.
Head Office of the Telephone*
System. Addle Hill.—Here the
basement windows are frequently
open, and it would be most easy
to throw any’ missiles from the
street by any one passing by. An
out-of-the-way corner of Doc
tors' Commons, where I don't re
member ever to have seen a con
stable.
"THE OLD RELIABLE 5 ’
111 -
Uncle Died For.
EDMONTON. May 24.—George
Gardiner, of Ottawa, is in Edmonton
outfitting for a trek over the trail of
romance to the Upper Hayes River
district to prospect a gold claim lo
cated by his uncle on the bank of the
Peace River In 1898, during the rush
hour to the Yukon, when this city*
was made the starting point of the
overland trtjil to the Klondike.
The story told here by Gardiner is
that during the Klondike rush three
prospectors went into the Hayes
River country, which, except for a
small part along the river near Ver
million, is unexplored.
Found on River Bank.
One of the party was found on the
river bank a year afterward. The
man was emaciated and only lived a
few hours, but in his last few min
utes of life told a tale of hardships
and of a fight with hostile Indians,
who killed his two companions.
The prospector had in his posses
sion samples of the richest gold, and
Georg*- Gardiner, who believes that
the old prospector was his uncle, is
now starting out to face the dangers
of the unknown North.
Gardiner say’s his uncle left Ottawa
in the full of 1897, and his family only
heard of him once, and that was in
the spring, when he said he was leav
ing for the North on a prospecting
tour.
Whether % the dying gold seeker
found on the banks of the Peace was
Mr. Gardiner’s uncle is not a cer
tainty. But the fact that the sole
survivor of the Indians of the Hayes
River country had a large quantity
of gold which he could have procured
in no other place seems to leave lit
tle doubt that that unexplored terri
tory may be rich in the yellow metal.
Vast Unknown Stretch.
Though the hinterland has been
explored to points within the Arctic
Circle, the Upper Hayes River coun
try still remains a vast unknown
stretch. Remarking upon the fact, an
old-timer in the North country said
he had never known of a white man
to have gone far into that .part of
the country.
From Edmonton to Peace River
Crossing, by way’ of Athabasca, is 400
miles, and outside of about a 50-mile
stretch beyond Peace River Crossing
the Upper Hayes still lies a great un-
i xplored land of rolling and, so far
as is known, open country. It is in
habited by the Dog Ribs tribe of In
dians. The territory runs clear
through to the mountains on the Brit
ish Columbia side, and it is supposed
that a large number of "bad Indians”
have settled in there.
FLOOD BRINGS A CHURCH.
PARKERSBURG. VA„ May 24.
Historic Blennerhassett Island has
fallen heir to a substantial frame
church, w4th an 800-pound bell, which
was deposited on the island by the
Ohio River during the recent flood.
HAVE YOU SORE GUMS OR
LOOSE TEETH?
A prominent dentist, after years of
experience, has , found a home rem
edy that will cure Riggs' disease,
bleeding. Inflamed and spongy’ gums,
and tighten loose teeth by rinsing the
mouth.
Probably you have not enjoyed eat
ing for some time. Get a bottle of
STYP-STRING-ANT and that dis
ease of the gums and teeth will be
cured: therefore, aiding digestion.
50c bottle at all druggists, or par
cel post, 55c in stamps. DeLamater-
Law’rence Drug Company, wholesale
distributors.
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London
Begins in the American
SUNDAY MONTH
LY MAGAZINE on
June 1 st.
This Monthly Maga
zine is given
SUNDAY
AMERICAN
Publication Begins
Sunday, June 1st.
Order Your Sunday
American Now
The new Jack London story
is the best he has ever writ
ten. Don’t miss the first issue