The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 30, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 November 1912 — Page 7
HIHMIONAL SIJNDAYSdIOOI Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS. Director of Everting Department The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 24 THE TRANSFIGURATION. LESSON TEXT—Mark 9:2-13. GOLDEN TEXT—“A voice came out of the cloud, saying. This is my beloved Son: hear ye Him."—Luke 9:35 R. V. 1. On the Mountain, vv. 2-6. —Peter’s confession is connected closely with the lesson for today. There is no record of the intervening "six days.” We are left to surmise what of fear and perplexity filled the minds of the disciples after listening to the words of Jesus found in Mark 8:34 and 9:1. These words must certainly have filled them with doubt and dismay. As if to meet this condition of mind i Jesus takes Peter, James and John, • those three partners in business, whc ' were also present in the home of i Jairus, and later went with him into the garden, and withdrew to a moun- j tain, probably Mt. Hermon. Here he i was transformed, i.e., metamorphosed, I completely changed in appearance: i read carefully the parallel accounts, | Paul's Inspired Words. Joined with Jesus there stood Moses the law-giver and Elijah the great reform prophet. What a com- ; mentary as to the interest of heaven > in a dying Messiah and in the glory : of that death. We need to read Paul’s Inspired words (Phil. 2:6,7) in this connec- I tion. He who thought it not a prize I to be grasped after to be equal with God, yet took upon himself the form of a slave and was made in the habit or fashion of a man. Upon the mountain Jesus reversed the figure and the "servant” —the Son of Man revealed, e. g., showed forth, the glorious ap pearance of the Son of God. The disciples there caught a faint glimpse of that glory which he had with the Father before the world was (John 17:5). But the work of redemption was not yet accomplished, and so once more he turns back upon that glory. Small winder, though, that as : they beheld these heavenly visitors > Peter should exclaim’r~“Rabbi, it? is good for us To be here; let us make three tabernacles/(booths), one for thee; one for Moses and one for Elijah.” Notice, however, that Peter spake wist not what to say” (v. 6). Mark alone records these words, and Mark largely received his gospel from Peter. Peter should have kept still. Some revelations are too sacred for speech. Paul had such a one. But while the mount of vision is glorious, Jesus knew the need of crys- ■ talizing that vision in the lives of those in the valley below. There was wcrk yet to be done (vv. 14, 15). Luke tells us that the transfiguration came “as he was praying.” So even yet there is no greater transfiguring and transforming power than prayer. Moses and Elijah appeared “in glory,” whereas Matthew tells us that “his face did shine as the sun” (17:2). This was not a reflected glory, but the outshining from within. Three Heavenly Voices Heard. We have only to read 2 Peter, 1:1618 to answer any question as to this being a vision in the modern acceptance of that term. We are also told that the word "vision” fern nd in verse 9 of the lesson can "things seen.” Indeed the disciples were “fully awake”.(Luke 9:32 R. V.). The question as to how the disciples could recognize Moses and Elijah, whom they had never seen, is not at all difficult for the believer. They ap peared "ip glory” and when the glory was withdrawn they saw “no man save Jesus.” This also serves to help answer the question, “Shall we recognize in glory those whom we have lost awhile?” Three heavenly were heard Tesus’ voice in prayer, his compart lons conversing of that great event jet to be accomplished (Luke 9:31) and the voice of God, “This is my beloved (only begotten) Son; hear him.” What matters the opinions of earth’s greatest lawyers and prophets, or the suggestions of our dearest friends, “Hear him.” That is the crux of the heavenly message: “Hear him,” as teacher, observe him as an example, accept him as Saviour and obey him as Lord and Master. Fear fell upon them and they fell ipon their faces in humiliation, but with tender compassion Jesus said “arise and be not afraid.” It almost seems like a rebuke to Peter, who had so freely protested against the sugges tion of the manner of his death. Jesus’ transfiguration and the words of his companion, as well as the command of the. Father, were a vindication of his authority and a revelation in advance of the supreme wonder of the cross. Arising they “saw no man save Jesus.” It is far better to “see him” than to see, hold converse with, or have communion with, the greatest of earth, past or present. 2. The descent, v. 9:l3.—As they descended from the mountain Jesus charged them to tell no man. Very different from our modern method. But the need is clearly shown as we read Peter’s words (2 Peter, 1:15-21). Peter places great emphasis upon the importance of this experience, declaring himself as an eyewitness of his “majesty” as well as the “honor and glory.” Peter and the others could not talk intelligently of this experience until after Christ’s work was . "finished” upon Calvary, vindicated at the tomb and glorified on the day of Pentecost. Hence they “kept that saying with themselves,” obeying his injunction of silence. On the return they caught some word about his rising from the dead, hence the question about the return of Elijah. Jesus tells them that Elijah had returned in the person of John the Baptist and that he had been rejected (see Matt. 17:11-13). There is slight grounds for Impostors and insane people to apply these words to themselves
AT THE LAUNCHING OF THE BATTLESHIP NEW YORK AWW fc*- ‘ ?1 ? i-SsMHF* s ' PttfTO JJ ■NpMi'OOO ft‘JHDtKWOOP FROM left to right—President Taft, Secretary of the Navy Geo. von L. Meyer, Miss Elsie Calder, who christened the battleship, and Miss Kathleen Fitzgerald, who acted as flower girl.
APACHES ARE FREED
Government to Select Reservation in Wes* for Indians. Tribe Long Held Prisoner of War After Conflict With Mexicans and Americans —Never Mixed With Whites. ■ ( Oklahoma City, Okla. —Maj. H. L. Scott, representing the war department, and Lieut. Ernest Stocker, Anadarko agent, representing the department of the interior, were appointed to select the new homes for the 269 Apache prisoners of war held by the United States government at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. The last session of congress granted liberty to these Indians, after holding them prisoners of war for twenty-six years, and the committee of two will select for them an open reservation somewhere in the west, but the probabilities are that their n’ew home will not be within the boundaries of either New Mexico or Arizona. A reservation in either of;those states might incite in the savage Apache Indians a memory of their forefathers’ conI quests and defeats, within those boundaries, and render their relmprisonment necessary. The Apache tribe is one of the few i tribes that never assimilated the; white man’s way of living, -and since the year of 1858 have not been on friendly terms with any member of the white race. In that year one division of the six branches into which the tribe is divided, went from the eastern line of Arizona, where they were ranging, ifito Old Mexico on a trading expedition. When near the outpost of the Kas-ki-yeh they camped, and, leaving their women and children, proceeded toward Casa Grande. Citizens from that town met them and entered into a treaty of peace with them, though the Mexican government had placed a price upon their heads, paying SIOO for a warrior, SSO for a squaw and $25 for a dead Indian child. While in Casa Grande, trading, Mexican soldiers took advantage of their absence from camp and set upon the defenseless women and children, killing all within canjp. When the warriors returned in the evening the Mexican soldiers opened fire upon them and the Apaches, being armed with bows and arrows, were exterminated, excepting Geronimo, who at that time was a young brave, and one other Apache. In this massacre Geronimo lost his wife and child, and, according to hi -t own statement made after he became a prisoner of war of the United States, he swore eternal hostility to all Mexicans. Geronimo returned to Arizona and sbught aid from the other five Apache tribes, in seeking revenge on the Mexicans. The citizens of Casa Grande sent him a disclaimer of all knowledge of the massacre of his people after they had entered into the trading treaty with his band in Old Mexico, but Geronimo could never understand how it was the citizens had, no control over these acts of the soldiers, and from that year until 1886 made annual raids upon the settlements within 300 miles of the northern boundary of Mexico. The Apaches, while on their excursions to Mexico, ran oft some tattle that were in charge of white cowboys, and shortly thereafter United States troops made their appearances, and the Apaches always professed to beUieve they came in response to the Mexican government’s appeal tor ajd in exterminating the Apaches. Geronimo died about eighteen months ago, and most of the old race
FOG DOESN’T RESPECT KINGS Hew the Late Edward VII. Walked to Buckingham Palace by Light of Torches. London. —Recenty ths king had the experience of driving home from the theater with torchbearers tramping in front. The incident recalls the most curious sight in a pretty varied London life. Groping down St. James street early one foggy night about the middle
» * of warriors had preceded him to the grave, and now the general government believes the younger generation can be once more trusted to run at large on an open reservation. The failure of the Apache Indians to assimilate the ways of civilization which finally resulted in their becoming prisoners of war, was no doubt due in a large measure to the ascendency Geronimo had over the members of his tribe, whom he kept constantly avenging the wrongs he and his relatives suffered at the hands of the Mexicans and Americans. ELECTRIC WIRES IN HIS BED So Sea Captain Believed and Fired a Volley to Awaken Citizens in Gotham Hotel. New York.—Charles Hoeser, a retired sea captain, blazed away with a rifle and revolver from his window in the Astoria. Neighbors called Policeman Mindheim, who made his way cautiously to Hoeser’s door. The captain confronted him, with the revolver and rifle ready for action, a grizzled, wild-eyed giant. , “Oh, you’ve come at last, have you?” he said. “I’ve been trying to attract a policeman for fifteen minutes. | Someone has put a lot of electric wires ' and batteries in my bed and I want you to take them out. And I want you tc arrest whoever put them there.” Mindhelm took the captain before Magistrate Leach, in Long Island city police-court, who held him in SSOO bail for' examination. The captain owns tae house in wh.ch he lives and other realty in the neighborhood'.
HERCULES STEALS BIG SAFE
Porch Climber Tosses Strongbox From Window of Residence in Chicago. Chicago.—Wilmette was visited by a “Hercules porch climber,” who jentered the home of Albert Bersbach, treasurer of the Manz Engraving company, at 530 Washington street, Wilmette, and with appaitently little effort seized a small safe and threw it from the window to the ground. The strong-armed robber was accompanied by a medium-sized companion, who was armed with a revolver to make up for what he lacked In physical makeup. The latter stood guard at the foot of a stolen painter’s ladder, while “Hercules” entered the residence. “The robbers, one of whom was the strongest and largest man that ever visited this suburb, stole a ladder In the neighborhood and entered the second story of my residence at about 6:15 o’clock last evening,” said Mr. Bersbach today. “The robbers are evidently the same men who entered my house less than two weeks ago and stole valued at a couple of hundred dollars. The strength of the man who entered the house was amazing. He took up the safe, which weighs about 150 or 200 pounds, and threw it to the lawn as if It were a toy. “My son-in-law, David F. Andersofi, was at hom,e with my wife and daughter, and they thought they heard some one upstairs. Mr. Anderson started upstairs, and on the steps assured himself some one was in the house. He went down to inform some neighbors, and as he left the house he teas covered by a revolver held by the man on watch, who raised his overcoat to his face to hide his features. An automobile was awaiting them near by, and they made their escape In it. 1
of King Edward’s reign, I was surprised. writes a correspondent, by a great glare of torches, and there emerged silently from the fog a number of men, like footmen, bearing torches, and behind them a group of gentlemen in cloaks surrounding some one walking heavily in the middle, and another body of torchbearers brought up the rear. * The personage in the middle was revealed by the torches as King Edward and the party moved slowly and silently down the street along the I J
SEVERE TESTS ARE REQUIRED Seven Hundred Candidates for Aero- ' nautic Corps Must Undergo Rigid Examinations in Paris. Paris. —The 700 candidates for France’s flying corps are to be subjected to very severe tests at the physical examination ordered by the ministry of war. Among the requirements are perfect vision, normal color sense, sharp hearing and absolute soundness of the organs of respiration and It is specified particularly that no men who have to wear spectacles shall do any flying, a rule made the more interesting because soma of the. world s most notable airmen, past and present, wore or now wear glasses. The candidates are now learning to fly at the government aerodromes, some of them as pilots of dirigible balloons, but the majority as individual aeroplane pilots. The test is to be more severe for operators of aeroplanes than for balloon aeronauts./ MAD DOG SPREADS RABIES Horses, Cattle and Hogs Are Bittent by Rabid Animal Near Holden, Mo. Warrensburg, Mo. —A mad dog in the farming community south of Hoiden bit hogs, cattle, horses andtenules and infected them with rabies Six' head of cattle belonging to onb farmer have since died of hydrophobia and another reports the loss of ten hogs. A score of other farmers report the loss of horses, hogs cattle and mules. The animals show unmistakable signs of hydrophobia and have to be shot in order to protect | other animals from infection. The farmers are also exterminating all the dogs.
The robber that entered the house was a very daring fellow. He turned on the lights while he worked and disregarded the fuss made by our dog. The safe did not contain anything of value to them, but I think they were prompted upon their last visit to return and take the safe.” LOOT KNOWS NO LIMITS Minneapolitan Is Charged With Stealing Everything From a Pollywog in Alcohol to Bible and Ether. Minneapolis.—Loot, the variety of which Is said to be the most; marked In the history of the Minneapolis police department, according to ofllcials, has been recovered by the police from the home of Stanley Wartkess, who was placed under arrest The goods, which according to the police was stolen from a hospital and two hotel where Wartkess worked, range from a pollywog In alcohol to a Bible, ami from artificial flowers to ether. Silver linen and clothing worth SI,OOO ar*> said to have been taken by Wartkess while employed at the hotels. BRIDGE TO BE MONUMENT Minister of Belgium Pays $200,000 on Structure to Stand as His Father’s Memorial. Boston. —Lars Anderson, minister to Belgium, has paid $200,000 to the state, treasurer to build the Anderson bridge, between Boston and Cambridge, near the Harvard stadium. The bridge ip given in memory of Mr. Anderson's father, Nicholas Longworth Anderson of Cincinnati, a graduate of Harvard in 1858 and a brigadier general In the Civil war.
Mall to Buckingham palace. The king had been dining with Mrs. George Keppel in Portman square. It was a curious sight to tee and made one think of the London of Charles IL Celluloid Collars Barred. Bristol, Pa.—The Philadelphia, Bristol & Reading Railway company has lust ruled against conductors wearing celluloid collars because several K ave been burned by the ignition of collars through the blowing out of | fuses on the back platform. I
PALMISTS, ATTENTION. She—Do you think that big hands are a sign of generosity? He —Sure; ths generosity of nature. RASH SPREAD TO ARMS 759 Roach Ave.. Indianapolis, Ind.— “At first I noticed small eruptions on my face. The trouble began as a rash. It looked like red pimples. In a few days they spread to my arms and back. They itched and burned so badly that I scratched them and of course the result was blood and matter. The eruptions festered, broke, opened and dried up, leaving the skin dry and scaly. I spent many sleepless nights, my back, arms and face burning and itching; sleep was purely and simply out of the question. The trouble also caused j disfigurement. My clothing irritated j the breaking out. “By this time I had used several J well-known remedies without success. ' The trouble continued. Then I began ! to use the sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Within seven or eight days I noticed gratifying results. I purchased a full-sized cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Oint- [ ment and in about eighteen or twenty i days my cure was complete.” (Signed) Miss Katherine McCallister, Apr. 12, 1912, Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free with 32-p. Skim Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.” ▲dv. Lot of Money Well Spent Arthur Blanchard, who spends much of his time traveling over the country, for the government, was seated behind a bride and groom in a Pullman car one afternoon when the train went through a long tunnel. As it emerged into the light of day the bride was grabbing at her hat and fighting three fast rounds with one or two hairpins which had | become loosened. ‘ \ In order to relieve the situation and i inject seme harmless conversation into the gap Blanchard remarked: “This tunnel cost $12,000,000,” “Well,” said the bride judicially, “it was worth it.”—Popular Magazine. Shop Talk. • The inventor was talking to himself. “What with my heatless light, my leakless fixtures, my invisible ashcan and my disappearing bed, I have made the life of the urbanite well worth the living.” “Wrong!” corrected the downweighted Benedict. ‘You have yet to perfect the footless meter and the vanishing’gas bill.” —Judge. A Tender Point. “What got you into trouble with this demanded the New York judge. “Just trying to ask him a civil question, your honor,” said the visitor, “nothing more.” “What was that question?” “I just asked him when the next official murder would be dragged off.” In New York. First Prison Official—We’ll have to stop giving permits to people to go in and see the prisoners. 1 Second Prison Official —Why so? First Prison Official —Too much confusion. They keep getting in the way of the fellows who are escaping.— Puck. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated tiny granules. Adv. Reverse Proceeding. “Did you find Mabel in, after all, when you called?” “Yes; that’s how I found her out.” Water in bluing is adulteration. Glass and water makes liquid blue costly. Buy Red Cross Ball Blue, makes clothes whiter than snow. Adv. As a girl grows older she becomes wiser and quits wearing so many pins In the vicinity of her waist line. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teethljig. softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic,2sc a bottle.Aj*. A listener may hear good of himself —after talking into a phonograph. Marriage may either form one’s character or reform it
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SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., V. S. A. I S4OO From One Acre in Mississippi | In 1911. Mr. James A. Cox of Centerville, Mississippi, had one acre of unfertilized ground. He planted sugar cane and that acre produced just 862 gallons of molasses. He put it up in ten pound tins and sold it, deriving a net profit of S4OO. How Much Did You Make Per Acre? Go South where there are no long cold winters or crop failures. Land in Mississippi and Louisiana is very cheap and can be bought on very advantageous terms. Write for beautifully illustrated booklets to J. C. CLAIR, Immigration Commissioner, Room M6OO Central Station, Illinois Central R. R., Chicago, 111. I
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Iroyalty welcomes the AMERICAN SETTLER HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS, THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT, WELCOMES AMERICANS TO CANADA. It was a happy speech, that on that beautiful October day, the Duke of j Connaught, Governor-General of Canada, made at Macleod, Alberta. It. was an opportune speech, heartful and resonant with good fellowship. And, as it was specially intended for American ears, the audience, comprised largely of so many American settlers in Canada, the time and place could not have been better chosen. It was in reply to an address of welcome tendered to him at the pretty city of Macleod, with the foothills of the Rockies as a setting, and the great wheat fields between, and in fact all around the place as the foreground, that His Highness, true to the best interests of the country and to ■ those of the Americans who choose to make Canada their home, said in : part: “I am well aware that among those ■ whom I am now addressing, there are a very great proportion who were not born under the British flag. Most of these will have realized by now that residence under that flag implies no disabilities. All we ask is that the | Jaws of Canada should be obeyed. “With this provision every one Is ; free to come and go, to marry, to live and to die as seems best to him, and I as it pleases Providence. 1 “We bring no pressure to bear on i anyone to adopt the Canadian nationality, for we do«not value citizenship ; which is obtained under compulsion. ; j “Our American cousins are welcome from over the border. Thrice we welcome our Canadian and British broth- i ers, who return to the Union Jack, aft- I er living under the Stars and Stripes.« “History is repeating Itself. For many years hundreds of young Britishers have sought fortune in the western States. Time has brought > about a change, and the tide has set in the other direction, bringing across the frontier numbers of our neighbors | to whom we are glad to return hospitalities. “One of the chief dispensers of such ■ hospitality in proportion to its popu- < lation has, as we have said, changed i ! its character from an Important catj tie town to a thriving wheat producing area. “What it has lost from the pictur- j esque point of view, it has gained in the material side, and I wish, in conclusion, to express the hope that the prosperity which has evinced itself : here for the past ten years, may conI tinue unabated in the future.” There is no reason why at a hun- : dred places on this educative, instructive and interesting trip of His Royal Highness he might not have expressed himself in the same terms, and on each occasion, addressed large gatherings of Americans who are now settled on the prairies of Western Canada. —Advertisement. His Mistake. After the services were over, one of the congregation turned to his wife and said: “On my way to church I picked up a button and put it in my change pocket, where I had a quarter.” “Gracious, my dear!" anticipated his wife, very much horrified. “And you dropped It into the collection bas- i ket by mistake?” “No, confound it!” replied her husband, “I put in the quarter.”—Judge. After Dinner Joke. 8 In the great Pecos valley apple country of New Mexico the latest arrival is always asked: “What is worse than biting into an apple and finding a worm’’’ He is stumped. They tell him, “Finding half a worm.” Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of f CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for | infants and children, and see that it ( Bears the /? I ** ? Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Equivocal. “Thrifty habits are your friends.” “Yes, I suppose a man nowadays is known by- the bank accounts he keeps.” CURES ITCHING SKIN DISEASES. Cole’s Carbolisalve stops itching and makes the skin smooth. AU druggists. 25 and 50c. Adv. And a tricky man, like a worn-out deck of cards, is hard to deal with. roImUWYPILK Are Richest in Curative Qualities FOR BACKACHE. RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS ano BLADDER FREE TO WOMEN-PISO'S TABLETS are recommended as the best local remedy for women’s ailments. Easy to use. prompt to relieve. Two wteks trtatmeni, and an article “Causes of Diseases in Women” mailtd fm. THE PISO COMPANY, BOX E, WARREN, PA. x SMARTING UHllubaaXisZilkla sore lids
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