The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 28, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 November 1912 — Page 7

SERVIAN VOLUNTEERS RALLY TO THE COLORS vk*J I lii fin , ®8 > > c \\ ; \ WwtSwKH g^owSal 11 w\ & r iiW K v'iV WHMM K \\mniW i« Ir. i'\yj.‘Vdil uJ&*rf R iA : H mll KjH>«rifZKwbl MM9 — "pnt FROM all parts of the world the natives of the Balkan states are hurrying home to take part in the war against Turkey. Our illustration shows a group of Servians ready to be armed and to move to the front.

JAILED FOR HUSBAND

Woman Served Six Years in Prison on Arson Charge. While Incarcerated Spouse Failed to Visit and She Believed He Was lll—Liberated, She Has Him Arrested. Philadelphia.—Deserted, she says, oy her 'husband after he had been acquitted of the charge of setting Are to the Point Chautauqua hotel, in Lake Chautauqua, N. ¥., while she served six years in prison, Mrs. Nora Allen turned on him in court here and exclaimed: “At the trial I kept my mouth shut to save your neck. I went to prison and you weni free. 1 gave you all but $250 of the SI,OOO i received for setting the fire.” Mrs. Allen had brought her husband to court on a warrant charging him with desertion, having taken this action only after she had sought him for more than a year, only to be refected when she finally found him. In the entire time she was in prison, she said, her thoughts turned constantly toward her husband, although she received no word from him. With tear-filled eyes she said in Magistrate Gorman’s court that sometimes while tn prison she thought her husband must be dead, at others he was ill. Numerous were the excuses she invented in her own mind to account for failure to hear from him. When she was released a little more than a year ago she started out to search for her husband, intending, she said, to aid him if he was in trouble. Tracing him to Philadelphia, she learned he had been living in No. 1706 Sumner street, but had been taken to the Medico-Chirurgical hospital for treatment Mrs. Allen visited the hospital and sent word to her husband that she wanted to see him. “He does not care to see you,” was the reply she received. She then went to police headquarters and obtained a warran* against Allen. “He still is my husband,” she said after Allen had been held in bonds of S3OO, “but my love for him has turned

MAN’SPROPHECYOFFLYING eV .

Character In “Rasselas” Said That Aviator Would Be Next Step After Swimming. Chicago.—Among the prophecies of conquest of the air, the account of an Inventor's faith that men could learn to fly since they have learned to swim, as found in Johnson's “Rassetas,” is interesting. The mechanic says: "I have been long of opinion that i instead of the tardy conveyance of ships and chariots, man might use the swifter migration of wings; that the fields of air are open to knowledge, and that only ignorance and idleness need crawl upon the ground.” This hirit rekindled the prince’s desire of passing the mountains; having seen what the machinist had already performed, he was willing to fancy that he could do more. . . . “I am afraid," said he to the artist, “that your imagination prevails over your skill, and that you now tell me rather what you wish, than what you know. ..." “So," replied the machinist, “fishes have the water, in which yet beasts can swim by nature, and men by art. He that can swim needs not despair to fly; to swim is to float in a grosser fluid, and to fly is to swim tn a subtler. We are only to proportion our power of resistance to the different density of matter through which we are to pass. You will be necessarily upborne by the air. If you can renew any impulse upon it faster than the air can recede from the pressure.” The prince promised secrecy, and waited for the performance, not wholly hopeless of success. He visited the work from time to time, observed its progress, and remarked many ingenious contrivances to facilitate motion and unite levity with strength. The artist was every day more certain that he should leave .vultures

JAP WOMEN GAIN RIGHTS Poet From Flcwery Kingdom Declare* Members of Her Sex- Are Be- . t»wng Men’s Equal. Paris. —Madame Akico Yossano, the Japanese poetess now visiting Paris, in discussing Japanese and French women, says: v "Physically and mentally the Japanese woman is becoming the equal of man. Special care is paid to the development of her physique. The

to hatred. I am sorry now I spoke of the Chautauqua hotel fire, but my temper overcame my judgment. Nothing I might say now, however, could be used against him, as he has been acquitted of the arson charge.” RIP VAN WINKLE IS BEATEN Believed Dead for 35 Years, Veteran Retunrs to Wife Who Had Been Drawing His Pension. Cincinnati. —Old Soldier Robert Mentzel has Rip Van Winkle beat several blocks in the way of being lost and forgotten by the world and then coming back. Mentzel, who is now living in Dayton, 0., is seventy-five years old. For the past 35 years he has been considered dead by his wife, who for 22 years of that time has drawn a pension from the government as a soldier’s widow. Mentzel disappeared in 1877 and was no more heard of till a few weeks ago, when he applied for a service pension. His wife had been getting a pension of sl2 a month for years back as a soldier’s widow.

TRIP THROUGH DARDANELLES

New Light Thrown on the Famou* Raid of Italian War Vessels on Turkish Forts. Rome.—Corrado Zoli, the war correspondent of Y1 Secolo of Milan, who is now in Rome, has cleared up the mystery surrounding the raid .made through the Dardanelles on the night of July 16-19, by six Italian torpedo boats, of which, according to Turkish reports, three were, and according to Italian reports, not only was none sunk, but the flotilla actually engaged the Turkish fleet beyond Kind Bahr 1 - Cbanak. Signor Zoli finds, after examining the reports of Admiral Viale and Comnfander Mlllo, that the flotilla never came within striking distance of the Turkish fleet, and that its approach was first discovered by the vedettes on the Serril Bahr tort, near the en-

and eagles behind him, and the contagion of his confidence seized upon the prince. In a year the wings were finished, apd on a morning appointed, the maker appeared furnished for flight on a little promontory; he waved his pinions awhile to gather air, then leaped from his stand, and in an Instant dropped Into the lake. His wings, which were of no use In the air, sustained him in the water, and the prince drew him to land. GETS SIO,OOO ON MELON CROP Undismayed by Failure Last Year, Rancher Takes Bigger Chances This Season. Clifton. Colo.—To clean up a neat little fortune of approximately SIO,OOO j as a result of a couple of months’ work was the experience of J. B. , Jobes, a rancher west of town, who ‘ decided that there was money in can- ( taloupes despite his own experience , to the contrary. , Jobes, who was a practicing physl- ( clan back in Pennsylvania, came to the Grand valley to regain his health. He bought a young apple orchard and decided that he would pay his expenses by growing cantaloupes among the trees. Doctor Jobes ran up against a bad year, however, and last season not only didn’t make a profit, but for some of his cantaloupes did not receive enough to pay for the crates. Instead, however, of blaming the melons or the valley, or a hundred and one other things, he decided that the only difficulty with his returns was the way that they were marketed. Consequently he decided to market his own melons and anyone else’s who would trust him with them.

modern Japanese woman wears flow-j Ing robes on ceremonious occasions? The geisha is not a fair type of the Japanese woman. A pin or flower or ribbon is all the adornment our women wear In the hair. Our young wo- : men are fitted by instruction to earn their own living and may become teachers, doctors, writers, musicians, journalists, nurses and government employes. "They read much Ibsen and Victor Hugo is well known to them. French women are not yet awake to the role women will play in the future. Ameri- 1

FIND HAIR IN GIRL’S STOMACH Fourteen Ounces Is Removed From Organ of Child In Los Angeles, Cal. Los Angeles.—Relieved of fourteen ounces of hair, which she had swal lowed a little at a time since last No vember, Virginia Field, an eleven year-old girl, is resting easily at a hospital and is practically sure to re cover. The girl was injured by a fall last November. Thereafter she suffered from a nervous affection that caused her continually to bite her hair. In this way her stomach was gradually filled with broken strands of hair, and several days ago she was taken vio lently ill. The surgeons found the hair balled up in the child’s stbmach. rules Cousins may wee Pennsylvania Supreme Court Says They Must Go to Some Other State to Do It. Philadelphia-—The supreme court of this state has decided that a mar riage between first cousins, although prohibited by statute in Pennsylvania is not illegal if contracted in a state where such marriages are recognized

# — trance, that although there was do Italian loss the flotilla never got mud farther, and that Turkish gunners on shore It they struck anything must have hit their own destroyers. In his article. Signor Zoli says: “Commander MilJo said that when he reached the second cable under the Baikouch Tepe battery, the Si>icq stopped, and that this stop permitted him to observe the water space be yond the narrows. By looking at the plan it will be seen that this watei space Is the Bay of Chanak. From this point the commander watched the firing from the Hamazteh battery, and considered It impossible to pass th* zone of action commanded by this oat tery without sacrificing all the squadron, and therefore gave the order to return. Therefore the truth is that the Italian torpedo boats did not pass beyond the KIHd Bahr-Chanak line.

“In the report of Commander ■ Mill' there is one certainly involuntary I® - exactitude —his persuasion that he saw the Turkish fleet and that he was fired on by it. If he did not pass the Kllid Bahr-Chanak line, he could not have seen the Turkish fleet anchored in the Bay of Nagara. and most certainly he could not have been fired on by It The Turkish fleet did not fire a single cannon. “But It is clear that Commander Mlllo was misled by the numerous steamships and by two or three Tur kish torpedo boats anchored in the Bay of Chanak; It was probably these vessels that, hidden In the darkness of the night and the shadows of the numerous searchlights were mistaken for the opposing fleet, and he could easily have mistaken for the guns of this fleet the guns fired from Hamazieh and Chanak Kalessi. “There is nothing strange or inadmissible In this explanation, given the conditions of time and the nervous tension produced 6n all. It is even more possible when we think that ‘a high personage of the ministry of marine’ furnished one of the most important newspapers with a sketch map of the raid in which the Bay of Chanak was confounded with Nagar, placing Chanak on the other side of the narrows and fixing the anchorage of the Turkish fleet exactly In this Bay of Chanak where Commander Millo thought he saw them.” RECORD YIELD OF WHEAT Montanan Gets 2,350 Bushels From Forty Acres, an Average of Over Fifty-eight. ■ Billings, Mont —C. L. Wilcox, living five miles from here, Is claiming the championship wheat yield of the present season in this state. He thrashed 2,350 bushels pt hard winter wheat from forty sorts, an average of 58% bushels per acre. The top notch price of the season, 73 cents, was paid for It by a local milling concern.

can women, although less combative than their English sisters, fully realize the importance of the feminist movement Many French women are not yet emancipated or made independent by instruction. There are great women in France, but too many depend on man, remaining bis slave or his toy." Woman Dies at 104. Centralia, Mo. —Miss Polly Mountain, aged 104 years, died at her home here. She was born in Virginia and came to Missouri 90 years ago.

CAMP S ' .H ANDWAPaS TAKEN PRISONER BY A BOH Major Bigelow, Now a Resident of Chi cago, Relates Wild Exploit of His Younger Days. This incident, told by Maj. E. A Bigelow, now a resident of Chicago took place when the narrator was s boy of 15 years in Sherman’s arms on the march northward after ths march to the sea. At that time Maj. Bigelow was an orderly, enlisted in the 68th Ohio infantry regiment. The t story he tells is as follows: “The morning after our arrival al Pocotelligo a negro came into oui t headquarters quite early and inform ea the general that there were sev I I Oral companies of confederates camped two or three miles out, and that they were there to guard a herd ot f cattle, which had been collected in | that locality. The general immediate t ly. ordered the 78th Ohio and the 17th , Wisconsin Infantry to go out and get f ‘hose cattle and incidentally as many ( confederates as possible. ( “I was not on duty that day, but it ( vas a beautiful morning, and so 1 i asked and received permission to gc i with the foraging party. We soon ( started out with our negro guide. 1 i had not heard anything about our be t ing likely to met any confederates 1 and it had not occurred to me to take < my revolvers, saber or any othei I ■weapons of defense. Less than a mile i from camp we turned into a beautiful < level road, bordered on each side by large live oak trees, and I bantered one of the orderlies for a race. Oil we dashed. He was soon distanced 1 or was called back; at any rate, I plunged ahead, thinking of nothing except the exhilaration of the ride. “The road I was on was a bridle path screened on each side by heavy underbrush; hence my movements , were unnoticed by cavalrymen coming down the turnpike that I was fast approaching. At the intersection I ran plump into three mounted confederates. I was ‘up against the real thing,’ and had to think, plan and act on the instant. I was then so far away from the command that any immediate relief from the source was impossible, and so I decided I would go after them as if I had a company at my back. Yelling with al my might, ‘Forward, men, forward!’ I dashed up to them and demanded their surrender. “Two of them had carbines swung over their backs and the third one had a gun lying over his arm ready for action. I pushed my horse hard against this man. calling out, ‘Give me that gun,’ and took it out of his hands. It was loaded. Until I had possession of it I was absolutely helpless. I then had the drop on them, but, notwithstanding this, one of them wheeled his horse, dashed down the road and away. I made no effort to stop him. In fact, I felt rather relieved. There was an uncertain quantity, but I was certain I could hold the other two until the trops came up. This I did easily, but could not refrain from joshing them for surrendering to a 15-year-old kid, who did not have as much as a penknife to defend himself. In due time the troops arrived. and I turned over my men, their horses and equipment. “The confederates did not propose to give up their cattle without a fight, but it developed into nothing more than a brisk skirmish. After we struck the enemy we formed in an open pine forest, and two companies of Indians from the 17th Wisconsin were deployed as skirmishers. They regarded it as lark, and their dodging antics and funny Indian calls created no end of merriment among the troops. The result was we succeeded in getting a part of the cattle and returned to Pocotelligo. but the only confederates we brought in were the two who surrendered to a boy orderly out for a lark. I did not stop to think at any time that I was in great danger, yet they could have killed me at sight oi had me prisoner for the asking.” Grant Obeying Orders. Gen. Grant was walking the deck at City Point, absorbed in thought, with the inevitable cigar in his mouth, wh4n a negro guard stopped him. “No smoking on the deck, sir.” “Whose orders?” asked the general. “Very good orders,” said hrdluu “Mine,” replied the negro. ‘.‘Very good orders,” said Grant, throwing his cigar into the water. The Reason Why. Proud Father (showing oft his boy, who had come to camp with his mother) —My son. which would you rather be, Gen. Grant or Gen. Washington? Little Son (after reflecting)—l’d rather be Gen. Grant. “Yes. Why?” “ ’Cause he ain’t dead yet” Food for Thought Only. Captain Prescott, of an IHlnois company, was leading a long hike one day. Food gave out, and his command was forced to subsist on nuts and berries, which were indeed scarce. The captain was riding past some soldiers at breakfast time one morning. They were sitting around a Are with nothing to eat and looking glum. “What’s the trouble, boys? You , look so pale around the gills.” “We’re all sick, captain. These Imaginary rations don’t agree with ; us.” How Ho Felt Upon his arrival in Washington in 1861 President Lincoln was besieged by office-seekers. He said: “I feel like a man letting lodgers In at one end of the house while the other end is on fire.” Wise. Teacher— Why don’t you tell us all what two times twp is? Don’t you know? Willie (the policeman’s son) —Sure. ‘ but I ain’t going to commit myself. Hl Uli all at the proper time.—Puck.

GOOD TRAINING. < « *»«•< > i ■ “Newpop would make a fine chauffeur.” “Why, how can you tell?” “Just see how he handles that baby carriage.” DANDRUFF COVERED SCALP 3002 Cass St., St. Louis, Mo.—“For five years I suffered with itching of my body and scalp. My trouble began with a rash on my lower limbs which was very annoying, and my scalp was literally covered with dandruff. My hair used to come out by the handfuls and the itching of my body and scalp was terrible. I had used almost all the skin remedies on the market with no results, when I wrote for a little Cut!cura Soap and Ointment and it gave me instant relief. Within one month’s use of the Cuticura Soap and Ointment I was entirely cured. I cannot discover one strand of my hair coming out and [ have not lost a minute Os sleep since using the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, which entirely cured me of itching of my body and scalp in its worst form. I also find the Cuticura s Soap a benefit in shaving.” (Signed) Charles Judlin, Dec. 8, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold i throughout the world. Sample- of each free, with 32-p. Ski* Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept. Lt Boston.” Adv. No Broken Parts. During the progress of the morning bath of a few months old infant a little neighbor girl came into the room carrying a doll and stood watching the operatjpn for some time. The little girl’s doll was much the worse for hard usage, being minus an arm and a leg. Finally she said to the mother of the child: "How long have you had your baby?” The child was Informed, and, looking Lom her doll to the baby, she said: “My, but you have kept it nice.” — National Monthly. Sensible Shift. “Why does she dress so mannishly?” “Well, she was no beauty as a girl, but she makes a fairly good-looking boy” CURES ITCHING SKIN DISEASES. Cole's Carbolisalve stops itching and makes the skin smooth. All druggists. 25 and 50c. Adv. The only way to cure a man of bachelorhood is to feed him to a designing widow. Red Cross Ball Blue gives double value for year money, goes twice as far as any other. Ask your grocer. Adv. Storm centers as a rule defy central limitations. There are a lot of cheap skates outride the skating rinks.

That Wonderful Event V v T F THERE a time above aU t ? mes when a I ( / y A woman should be in perfect physical condition g > \ I'yi f it Is the time previous to the coming of her babe. §1 \\ ff \ 1 During this period many women suffer from headache. g sleeplessness, pains of various description, poor appetite. gs •ntwtwrnnramimirinm and a host at other ailments which should be eliminated in g justice to the new life aixiut to be ushered Into this world. = i DU, PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION J B is a scientific medicine carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful S physician, and adapted to the needs and requirements of woman s delicate system It has been recommended for over forty years as a remedy tor those § peculiar ailments* which make their appearance during the expectant period. Motherhood is made easier by its use. Thousands of women have S Ken benefited by this great medicine. Your druggist can supply you In liquid or tablet form, or you can send 50 one-cent stamps for a trial box of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescriotion to Dr. Pierce, at Invalids* Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffala H It is your priviledge to write to Dr. Pierce for advice, and it will be gladly p H given free of charge. Os course all communications are confidential, g

i .I* i i 11 11 ' ► Resinol heals itching skins and clears bad complexions RESINOL Ointment and Resinol Soap stop itching instantly; quickly and easily heal the most distressing cases of eczema, rash, ringworm, tetter, or other eruption, and clear away pimples, blackheads, dandruff, chapping, redness and roughness, when other treatments have proven only a waste of time and money. Thousands who have been cured by Resinol say, “What it did for us, it will do for you!” For over seventeen years Resinol has been troubles. Try It yonrself, by sending to-day for prescribed by doctors aa a safe and effective treat- a liberal sample of Resinol Soap and Resinol ment for skin affections, as well as for piles. Ointment. Address Dept. 14-K Resinol Chemburns, wounds, sores, ulcers, and boils, and it ical Co., Baltimore, Md, Sold by all druggists, proves an ideal household remedy for aU these Resinol Soap, 25c, Resinol Ointment, 50c and n. PVTNAM FA DE LES S DYES

Sound One. “What’s your objection to my labor theory?” “It won’t work.”

fSjCASTORIA uni For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought IS ALCOHOL—3 PER CENT * Ly AVegetable Preparation for As- _ _ # imitating theFoodandßegula- HeATS LllO ting the Stomachs and Bowels of al Signature /Am Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- X If jp nessandßesl.Contains neither Qjr Opium .Morphine nor Mineral # 1\ bj Not Narcotic ft Kit - fl h „ AMtUt Mb - I m 3" ( A fA» Ilf «« I ft lA* fe Ab T II oo $0 Aperfectßemedy forConstipa- ZM UOU tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, | ■ If SC Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- I Ilf » ness and LOSS OF SLEEP \ lj Lft II Vg I* IbJ Fac Simile Signature of I Thirty Years niiOTnnii COLT DISTEMPER be bandied very easily. The siek are curwl. and al>e<h—same stable, no matter how “exposed.” kept frombar tag hr usinK bI’OHNU LIQUIDIUSTEMPhR CUKK Olvw ' HF. the toupuc.or in feed. Acte on the blood gyroy rw SS3I& all forms of dlstem|>er. Best remedy ever known for roarea ■ Co® bottle guaranteed to care one case. 60e and 81 a bottle; wwa I jlOdoien of druggists and harness dealers, orient exprvaiipsvs.ew . yfcfe.' manufacturers. Cut shows how to poultice throats. C*.ir ftw. 1 Booklet triveseverv Thing. local agents wanted. Latgrrt saltiwt horse remedy in existence—twelve yeare. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.a Chemists aadßaeterlologlsU, COShMe l»UL» Ua*»Am W.L.DOUQLAS b SHOES «3.00 <3.50 <4.00 <4.50 AND <5.00 S FOR MEN AND WOMEN /** Aoy* wmf W. L. Dottgfaa *2.00, *2.SO « *3.00 School Shoo*, bocaooo ono pair will poatthroly outwear two W. . palra of ordinary ahooa, aamo a* the men a anoaa. VV.LDouglas makes and sella more $3.00,53.50 & $4.00 shoes • ♦han any other manufacturer in the world. a wmK THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS. The workmanship which has made W. L. Douglas shoes famous the wans over ia maintained in every pair. • » n j - - Aak your dealer to ahow you W. L Douglaa lateat faahiona for fall ana wistwrwear, notice the »hort vamps which make the foot look amaller,. pointa m •hoe particularly deaired by young men. Alao the conservative have made W. L. Douglaa ahoea a houaehold word everywhere. If you could viait W. L. Douglaa large factoriea at Brockton, Mass., and MW for yourself how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then un - derstand why they are warranted to fit better, look better, hold their shapsanE wear longer than auny other make for the price. Fast Mw&adstOi - CAUTION.—To protect you against inferior shoes, W.L.Douglaa stamps his namevwthe LsStom. Look for the stamp. Beware of substitutes. W. L. Douglas shoes are sold so Mtumsr stores and shoe dealers everywhere. No matter where you live, they ere within ,

No Scabs. Blushing Btide —What was that our friends stuck all over our suit cases, dearest? The Groom—Honey, love, that was a union label.

FOLEY KIDNEY PUS Are Richest in Curative Qimlrtiee FOR BACKACHE. RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS AND BLADDER

Allen’s I.'lcerineSalvecuresChroulc L leers. Ulcers.ScrofulousL'lceiw.yaricqgeVleetwJxwdolent f U.-JIUN PARKER’S | HAIR BALSAM and beautifies th* haflft Promotes * terarUnt-xpOTeii. g . Never Tails to B«rt«re G»«gf Hair to Ita Youthful OaSoa. * Prevents hair falling. ? 500. snd tI.OQ at Proygbrtm, _ IN SOUTHERN FLORIDA stead, where lands similar are selling at IK t» HfJtl per acre. Write WM. P. «OVLI>, HMCT STEAD LOCATOR, FORT Amin. Preserves youth, defers Jt«ni ettManr ASpiTO aex. Particulars for 2o stamp. VW Via* KaswMgs Marra., 101 Scheier BuUdlaa, IHOWt, SASKATCHEWAN. Canada, good fans* *UC to $35 per acre on eaay crop payments. BP desired. B. NEDAM, Pipestone, MlmsmOU. ||a H Decorate mirrors, saloons, lee-creampartam RICH Experience unnecessary, big pay. Staanv.'lnr free outlie, particulars. 4 Americas BU«-,Fliat> Si DEFIANCE Cold Woter Starck makes laundry work a pleasure. 18 oa. pkc. MmI 11 CT aH EYESWELI W. N. U.T rr. WAYNE, NO. 45-1912'