The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 March 1913 — Page 3
” Jesus at Bethany By REV. JAMES M. GRAY. D.D, Dm the Moody Bible InedtsU. Chicago TEXT—•'There they made Him a supper. "-John XII, 2
It is the lasi week of Jesus early life, and he is spending the days in Jerusalem and the nights In Bethany — the home of Lazarus and his sisters Martha and Mary, “There they made him a supper.” An exquisite touch o f Christ’s humanity I Is not this what we would have done to euch a friend? But think of ths
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human kindliness and simplicity of the Redeemer here displayed! It recalls the marriage in Cana at which he was a guest. That was at the beginning iof his ministry and this at its close. How better could ho have demonstrated that he came into the world not to disturb Its social arrangements or mar Its domestic Joys, but to elevate them to a higher plane? Blessed be # God, we may have Jesus at our feasts and festivals as well as at other times, ■ and what heart, loving Jesus, would | attend a feast or festival where he could not be a guest? But there is a practical question here of another kind. When we reremember that Jesus knew ho was to die within a week, and fendure beforehand unprecedented contumely, and desertion by his dearest friends, and then look upon him at this friendly | board, receiving happiness from oth- * era, and dispensing happiness to them, must we not regard it as a sublime example of that confidence in God which knoweth that he doe th all things well? Daath, sorrow, pain, desertion are experiences continually present. Some of ue attempt to throw oft the thought of them with the stoic’s plea, "What can’t be cured must be endured.” Others seek to drown It in the hilarity and dissipation of the world. But how different that which Jesus knew, and which they know who have received him, and to whom he has given power to become i the sons of God? Who would not be a Christian, a real Christian, if it were only for the sake of this legacy of peace? The Devoted Mary and the Avaricious Judas. The central feature of this supper Jta the anointing of Jesus by the devoted Mary. The action was not uncommon In eastern lands, where the beat Is great and the feet exposed to ft by sandals suffer from dryness and scorching. The motive of Mary was her love for Jesusu. Love, not only for what she had learned from him, but for what he had done for her brother Lazarus, whom he raised from the dead. All of which comes out the } stronger in contract with the fanaticism and avarice of Judas, "Why was not this ointment sold for three hundren pense, and given to th© poor?” A specimen this of the way worldly people depreciate actions done for the love of God only, and especially giving money for Christ’s cause. Judas said this, not because "he cared for the poor,” John says, "but because he was a tliief and had the bag and bare i what was put therein.” He was thinking of himself and not the poor. The truest friends of the poor, the_ people who' do most for them, are those who do most for Christ. “V Ib,” says Bishop Ryle, "the successors of Mary of Bethany, and not of Judas Iscariot, who really care for the poor.” As another says, even if Judas had said this from the heart it would have been wrong. It does not follow that the poor will not be benefited, because the rich live according to their means. That perfume had many fingers busy la its preparation; It had ships bringing it from afar; it had merchants passing it from place to place, all of whom had their profit and equivalents. And perhaps by taking that pottle of fragrant oil and pouring it on the feet of Jesus Mary contributed Snore substantially to the poor than If ghe had never bought it "It is only by a correct estimate ■of social life that we can see how moan and narrow Is such a'remark as that made by a traitor, and of which many plagiarisms have been adopted in every age.” Social Distinctions to Remain. But how significant thatj remark of Jesus', "the poor always ye have with you.” How clearly it teaches that ’distinctions of class and rank will jnever cease in the present age. It <was never intended that society should become a macadamized road where all are on a level. The existence of pauperism alone does not prove that states, are ill-governed, or churches are not doing their duty. This separation between rich and poor which Jesus made was opposed to the spirit of Christ, for in the true veneration of bls name consists the most effectual caring for the poor. It is important to keep this in mind In this humanitarian age when the gospel of good works (so called) is so persistently thrust into the foreground in opposition to the gospel of faith. Poverty Is forever at our heela, but Christ In the meanwhile may be vanishing away. How significant. "Me ye havs not always.” Oh, let us take It to heart! Him we have no longer when the wings of death suddenly overshadow us; or when our senses depart tender the Influence of disease, and the message of salvation no longer penetrates through the crowd of unbridled Imaginations. We have him no longer When God give* us up to strong delusions, and permits them to take their permanent abode in our minds, bei cause we have hardened ourselves against his calls to repentance. Knowledge, association, and courage t—these are the principal requirements Ifor effective citizenship.—-El, Hovey.
STEAMER DRIVEN ASHORE IN BLINDING STORM f -X.f fl/ s Bl \ \ Mo) \ t .-..ip. l_k_ imiiu imrf -O'- jo In a recent blinding snowstorm the banana steamer Nicholas Cuneo, with a crew of thirty, was driven ashore in the “ships’ graveyard ” just west of Point Lookout, Long Island. The photograph shows the wrecked vessel and the revenue cutter Mohawk, which went to the aid of the life savers of Long Beach.
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■ « Writer Reveals Fiendish Acts Committed by Turks. Bulgar Soldiers, Maddened by Treatment of Their Countrymen, Show Moslem Troops—Women' Are Horribly Mutilated. Kabaktcha Village, near Tchatalja. —Owing partly to the fear of bloody vengeance to come fpr the horrors of this war, partly to more natural causes, great migratory changes are taking place in that rich eastern section of Turkey in Europe through i which the Bulgars swept on their hurricane storm to Tchatalja. Though 'from all appearances the old regime of murder, mutilation and injustice will soon be forever ended, the fearstruck Turkish population is moving southward again toward Asia Minor, whence it came, while the Bulgar peasants of the Tchatalja district are fleeing as nervously north. Amid these scenes of exodus, one is led to think it may yet not be too late to bring some order in the Balkan racial chaos. Meanwhile, the Turks have waged the present conflict in their old style I —burning, violating, massacring. Almost at the Bulgarian frontier the atrocious tale begins. Well, the moment the war was declared the Turks began to loot and burn the Bulgar villages. But as stern soldiers from the north down, winning victory after victory, the Turkish population, perhaps rightly fearing vengeance in kind from the men who found their blood kin wronged and slain right and left, set off on,a frantic migration to Constantinople, where they arrived In the pitiable state already known to the world. Os such Turks as stayed behind the Bulgars felt forced to kill some. Others they put to work with 1 the army transports, still others they left in peace, their villages intact, just as one finds also Bulgar villages Intact—where the Turks did not have time to do a thorough job. “We expected,” said a Bulgar officer with whom I talked at Tchatalja, “to find a rich and plenteous country as we neared. Constantinople. We found instead—what you see, nothing! Hardly a living being! Utter devasta- | tion!" I met an old Bulgarian woman near Tchorlu who was the first Red Cross nurse upon the ground after the terrible destruction at Lule Burgas. She said that on her way to the field hospital she was sent to the succor of a Greek village where the Turks had scattered ruin. Unlock your western ears now, and hear the tru®i. She found young girls lying naked by the roadside nearly dead. She found children stricken down by careless sabers. A housewife had been murdered as she kneaded her bread, the dough still on her hands. And in a bloody sack the Turks had gathered—women’s breasts! It is not difficult to verify such stories. They are common knowledge here. The Bulgar peasant has no imagination. He tells what he (sees. I will give one more example. According to the Mohammedan reTigion, pork is unclean and is forbidden. For a Turk to kill a pig is thus considered a special insult to a Christian. The advancing Bulgars found many pigs shot down or stabbed in farm yards The Bulgars began the war in a humane spirit, as such terms go in war time. But not a soldier in that army of 400,000 is ignorant now‘of certain fiendish evidence his comrades have witnessed. In the fighting at Tchatalja. th© Bulgars, having advanced during the day, were frequently obliged tp retire at night, leaving their wounded on the field. When the next day’s fortunes brought them again over the same ground they found only stripped bodies gruesomely hacked, while the officers’ corpses had been mutilated in away so much more disgusting than anything I' have hitherto mentioned that I cannqt even write of it. I think even kindly people in their tranquil homes across the world in America will understand the reason now, when 1 add that should the war continue, no more Turkish wounded will be sent north to be nursed in Bulgar hosplt-
SMALL PAY AND LONG HOURS Paris Woman Recites Her Experienc® as Seeker of Work In Metropolitan Dally Newspaper. Paris. —Some of the opportunities a young woman has of earning her living are shown by Mlle. Bertha Delaunay, who in “Le Matin” describes hes search for employment At a well known dressmaker’s in the Rue de la Paix she was informed
I? l als. While the Bulgars pass hereafter there will be no Turkish wounded. Doubtless there are many good Turks. No one who has seen the pale and delicate faces of the Moslem woman refugees can look on them without pity. But the basic fact remains: The ways Os the Turk are not the ways of Europe. FINDS MYSTERY OF THE DEEP Steamer Discovers Bark but Fate of Captain and Crew Is Like That of Celeste’s. Newport News, Va. —Another mystery of the deep, virtually paralleling the disappearance of the crew of the schooner Marie Celeste years ago, came to port with the British tank steamer Roumanian. The Marie Celeste was found at sea with a pct boiling in the galley, its captain’s papers on the cabin table And eveyy indication that men were aboard within a few hours of its discovery. Nothing, however, ever was heard of the skipper or crew. The story of the Norwegian bark Remittent, with a crew of six, is equally strange. The Roumanian sighted the Remittent drifting near the Azores and took it in tow. The boat’s deck planks, once holystoned to a glistening white, bore the marks of many feet, but there was no one aboard and nothing to explain the disappearance of the master and crew. In the cabin the lockfast places were undisturbed; charts and papers were secure. In the breaker there was fresh water; salt junk and biscuits were in the stores. A mainsail and two jibs were snugly furled and lifeboats swung in the davits. In a gale 100 miles off Cape Henry, Captain Claridge lost the Remittent No other ship has reported it since. The Remittent was commanded by Captain Torgersen and sailed from Rio Grande do Sul Oct. 25 for Liverpool. THIEF BETRAYED BY A PATCH Seattle Woman Recognizes Handiwork She Put on Trousers and Bandit Is Taken. Seattle, Wash. —Recognition last week by Mrs. William J. Mayorick of a patch she had placed on the leg of her husband’s trouber.c resulted in the arrest of two men and the recovery from the home of one of them a wagonload of articles stolen from Seattle homes. Charles Castro, from whose home the articles were recovered, was wearing the clothes, and sat opposite Mrs. Mayorick in a street chr. When she questioned his right to the clothes he abused her and men passengers took him into 'custody and delivered him at police headquarters. Mayorlek’s name was written on a pocket lining. The other man arrested Is Toney Donio, who was found in Castro’s home. The police say be is a member of a “black hand” organization that has been terrorizing Seattle Italians and that he is wanted In Idaho to answer criminal charges. ODD FACTS ABOUT HEREDITY Color-Blindness Descends from Male to Female, or Vice Versa, Declares London Professor. London. —Lecturing W the Royal institute on “Heredity of Sex,” Prof. Bateson relates some curious facts which have been discovered as a result of examining several generations of a family in which color-blindness appeared. A color-blind woman, he said, is very rarely found and she always is a daughter of a color-blind man. Her sons and daughters would be normal, her son’s families would be normal, but if her daughter had sons, they would be found to be normal and color-blind in equal numbers. A curious anomaly with reference to color-blindness appeared in twins. They were girls, exactly alike in appearance, but one was color-blind and the other was not. No explanation of this exception had been found. Prof. Bateson said there is a popular belief that sons in certain respects took after mothers and daughters after fathers. Within a reasonable range of speculation this is true, he said.
that for transacting correspondence in English, French and Spanish she would be paid £6 a month and given two bonuses a year, but she would have to wait some time before the position was vacant. A milliner offered her £3 a month, her luncheon and a small percentac* on sales. She applied for a situation as interpreter at a well-known hotel in the Champs Elysees. Her hours were to be from 8 a. m. until midnight She was to take her meals with the hall
WOMAN WRITES VOTE POEM Verse May Aid Gladys Hinckley tc Win Inez Milholland’s Laurels; Male Imbecile Hunted. Washington. —Miss Inez Milholland. you had better watch out. Miss Gladys Hinckley, Miss Milholland’s closest rival for the title of the most “beautiful American suffragist,’' has enlisted poetry to her aid in the contest. She writes it herself. It 11 I A a r • | wk "Z'' ■hi. 1 . Iw SkJ Miss Gladys Hinckley. all about votes for women, and doc* trines of that cause. Speaking to her sister suffragists, Miss Hinckley says: “Dream no more of a Guinevere, Or Lady Alice Vere de Vere. Times have changed, and now ths women Militant rise, demanding rights. Man is not on the defensive, For he force has, and might makes . right.” In arguing for the cause, she says of the suffrage tenets: “Help the shop girls keep to honor. Change the code so badly balanced. If you think our role domestic. Let our office be domestic; Civic cleansing, gutter cleaning. Let us dust and sweep the cities. Woman’s sphere can be domestic. In politics for all the nation. Let us try, and if we blunder Help us, for you long have hurt us. Chivalry of noblest order. Now can grow if men and women Stand together, understanding. PRISON FOR LAZY MOTHER London Husband Says There Is Nothing the Matter With His StayAbed Wife. I London. —How to deal with a woman who persistently stayed in bed was a problem presented to the Exeter magistrates Margaret Whatley appeared on an adjourned charge of neglecting her two children. The husband said that his wife went to bed on December 26, and he had not seen her up until she came to the court. It had been suggested that he should leave her starve. As far as he knew, there was nothing the matter with her. 1 The magistrates sent the woman to prison for four months at hard labor, specially requesting the medical officer and chaplain to look after her in the hope that regular discipline would restore her. Dream Reveals Dual Marriage. New York. —Charles Grellet, a res-taurant-keeper, who asked for annuls ment of his marriage on the ground' that his wife had another husband! from whom she had not been said that he knew nothing of the al* leged duplicity until he dreamed he found her walking in the streets of Paris with another man whom she called husband. Upon awakening he questioned her and he claims she admitted the truth of the dream.
porter, and her salary would be £7 a month. At a popular beer house Mlle. D» launay was promised five guineas a month fore fourteen-hour day. As an inducement to accept the situation she was informed that the food waa good and plentiful and that she oo«M have as much beer as she wanted. "A man who falls in the gutter and thinks he is in bed can fairly be considered drunk,” said a witness at fl Southwark lowest, ■ *
MORE ATLANTIC LINERS REQUIRED CONGESTION ON EXISTING STEAMSHIPS ON ACCOUNT OF CANADIAN IMMIGRATION. It Is reported that eight new TransAtlantic liners are under construction for the exclusive use of the Canadian Trade. These are being built by the White Star, Canadian Pacific and Cunard Companies. The liners to be built for the White Star are to be of the same type as the Laurentic and Majestic, and will replace the Canada and Teutonic. The Cunard Line’s new steamer, Ascanis, has already completed successfully her maiden voyage from England to Montreal, and her sister ship will be launched early next year. It is predicted that the Canadian Northern will not be slow in following the example of the other big concerns,! as it is a matter of common belief that Canada, more than any other in the world, will be the country of the fu- : ture, and tlje best field for investment by shipping interests. An official of one of the companies already building steamers for this | trade told the American yesterday ! that the ideal steamer for this service : Is the two-cabin boat, having accommodation for second-class and steer- ' age passengers only. “We do not expect that the $5,000 cabin de luxe class will travel between Canada and England very extensively,” he said, “but the business that Is to be obtained there will be immensely lucrative, and for the next ten years the eyes of the shipping world will be riveted on Canada. The Panama Canal, undoubtedly will receive a lot of attention, but the business in that route will be nothing compared with the Canadian trade for the immediate future. Panama will develop and become bigger in the years , to come, but at the present we are most concerned with the tremendous tide of immigration that is being diverted from the United States to the Dominion. “The farm land of the vast North West is the attraction, and while this flood of immigration is at its height, the Canadian Government exercises a strict censorship over the class of immigrants admitted. In this way they are drawing their future citizens from the Northern countries and have shown, an unwelcome face to the people of Southern Europe.”—Advertisement. Prospective Customer. Small Girl—Teacher, did you say the Lord makes babies, too? t Sunday School Teacher—Yes, indeed. Small Girl —About how much does he charge for one, ’cause I want a baby brother awful bad HANDS CRACKED AND BLED St Clair, Mo. —“My trouble began about fifteen years ago. It was what some claimed eczema. The form the disease worked under was a breaking out with watery blisters on my hands which would then dry and scale, and then would follow the trouble of cracking and bleeding, also itching and hurting. My hands were disfigured at the time, and sore. The trouble waa very annoying; and disturbed my sleep. This last February it was ever so much worse than before. I did not do all my work on account of the condition of my hands. I could not put them in water without making them worse. I tried a lot of home remedies, also salves and liniments that claimed to be a cure for the trouble, but I did not obtain a cure. 1 “At last I saw the advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I sent for a sample. I thought they would cure, so I sent for a fifty-cent box of Cuticura Ointment and some Cuticura Soap. A doctor advised me to keep ahead with the Cuticura Soap and Ointment and they cured me completely. No trace of the trouble remains.” (Signed) Mrs. Mary Taylor, Mar. 29, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept I* Boston." Adv. Some people are as unpopular as a last year’s popular song.
(Don’t Let Catarrh Get the | 1 Best of You I ■ If you have catarrh and are neglecting it—you are doing a B ■ great wrong to yourself. In time it will undermine your ■ whole constitution. You cannot begin too soon the work of ■ shakingitoff. Doesn’t require any great effort. Begin today.
9 “I Feel Uke a New Woman ” VS Mb*. Bbnj. Blakk, Port as Povar, Ont., Box M, vrritao: Sff * I havotMß a Croat suffer* Cer years from throat trouble, US aatarrh, indigeetwa, femala &uMeo,tleat»ng.eo«rt>patwa ■9 able ta ■ vrith chronic inflammation all M avwvthlnglgrt worse. I read far na reoale’a Coaunon Senee ■ MaOealAdWswefDr.Pierca'a ■ GoUan Medieal Dieeovery and Dr. Sace'a Catarrh Remedy. M I hare taken the' CWdenModl■1 aal Dtocovery’ and ‘Plaaaaat ■ Rtoto,’ and hare need flva ■ ■■ mjt work walk with pbaa-
Wm. A. Rogers Silverware given away Absolutely Free for wrappers from vL. m GALVANIC SOAP W or coupons from Johnson *s Washing Powder Acted This Is Our Offer, Read It: W •— For each teaspoon desired send us one two* cent stamp and twenty Galvanic Soap wrap* ! | pers (front panel only), or coupons ( from 11 fach Johnson’s Washing Powder. M SPECIAL FOR S!X TEASPOONS @ Send 100 Galvanic Soap wrappers and 5 two-cent stamps JSIn. to pay postage; we will send you a set of SIX TEASPOONS ABSOLUTELY FREE. These spoons are Wm. A. Rogers silverware, the name lo'/ f BUI stamped on every piece. They are the Lavigne or Grape Mil} || Pattern, Heavy A-l Silver Plate and guaranteed, you’ll |l U| | , 11 be proud to own them. Go to your grocer today and buy ' I Zs Galvanic the soap used by a million housewives. This I M offer absolutely expires May Ist, 1913. Mail wrappers to Vvk\ » /Lv B. J. Johnson Soap Co., Milwaukee, Wis. x
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Dangerous Talk. "Mother, I wish you wouldn’t mention dishwashing when George 1b calling on me!” “Why not, indeed?” “I don’t like it. It sounds common.” “Common, eh? We have to eat, don’t we?” “Os course.” “And George knows we eat and use dishes?” “That's very true.” “And George also knows that dishes have to be washed, therefore somebody has to wash them?” “But, mother —” “What now?” “If you keep on talking about it George may discover that you make father wash them, and he may think the same thing is coming to him if he should propose to me.” —Detroit Free Press. In the Day of the Billionaire. ' A brilliant New York lawyer said at a dinner at the Lotus club apropos of certain trust magnates: i “Thanks to watered stock —and wa- : tered stock is criminal I men are indeed rich beyond the dreams of avarice. “If the watering cf stock is allowed to keep on we’ll hear our billionaires talking like this some day: “ ‘Hullo! There goes Jones in his 300 horsepower car. Do you know him?” “ ‘Do I know him! Do I know * Jones’. Why, man alive, Jones and 1 were struggling young millionaires together!”’ —New York Times. important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of ’ CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infanta and children, and see that it Bears the . Signature of 6 ; In Use'For Over 30 Yqgrs. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Sometimes a young lawyer makes i good because he has a wife who lays > down the law to him. . I Only One “BROMO QVINYNE” I That is LAXATIVH BHOMO Look , i for ths signature of H W. H. Cures a Cold I :n Ou« Day, Cures Grip in Two Days. tto. It isn’t half as far from virtue to ’ vice as It Is from vice to virtue, i Fresh supply Mrs. Austin’s Bag Buckwheat now on hand at your grocers. Adv. i Many a great man has exclusive knowledge of the fact
Dr. Pierce’s Golden 1 l Medical Discovery I has a curative effect upon all mucous surfaces, and hence B removes catarrh. In Nasal Catarrh it is well to cleanse the passage* with Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy while using the B “Discovery” as a constitutional remedy. ■ Why the “Golden Medical Discovery*’eradicates catarrhal B affections, of the stomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvic « ! organs, will be plain to you if you will read a booklet of 0 extracts from the writings of eminent medical authorities ■ • endorsing its ingredients and explaining their curative proper- B I ties. It is mailed free on request. W “The “Discovery” has been put up and sold in its liquid form for over B 1 40 rears and has gwen great satisfaction. Now it can be obtained of Hwdirine hK ' dealers in tablet form as welt A trial box sent prepaid for 50 onc-cent rtampc i Address Dr. Pierce’s Invalids Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce’. Pleamnt Pellet. rwyolaU and rtwytbeo Stoma A.Urar I andßeweb.
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ECZEMA 25 YEARS FACE AMASS OF IT Says “Resinol Cured Me of One of th* Worst C&ses Anybody Ever Saw." Philadelphia, Pa.. Sept. 20. 1912.—“1 ha* eczema for the last twenty-five years, and havs been afflicted so badly that foe weeks I could not go outside the door. My face was one mass of pimples, and not only the looks cf it but the itchln* and burning pains I experienced were just dreadful. I lost a great deal of sleep and had to keep dampened cloths on my face all night to relieve the pain. I had become disgusted with trying different things. “One day I made up my mind to try Resinol, and after using one jar of Re»- ! inol Ointment, and one caJte of Resinol Soap, I saw the difference, and now my face is as clear as anybody's, and I certainly don’t need to be ashamed to <• out. Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment cured me of one of the worst cases od eczema, I guess, that anybody ever saw. - (Signed) Mrs. C. Hellmuth, 6611 Appletrw street. Nothing we can say of Resinol equate what others, such as Mrs. Hellmuth. any of it. If you are suffering from burning skin troubles, pimples, blackheads, dandruff, chapped face and ulcers, bolls, stubborn sores, or piles, it wili cost you nothing to try Resinol Ointment and Soap. Just send to Dept. 20-K, Resinol Chem. Co., Baltimore, Md., .for » free sample of each. Sold by all druggist* or by parcel post. *
I “DEAD SHOT" C DR. PEERY’S VERMIFUGE ! FOR WORMS ROMAN EYE BALSAM For Inflamed EyeSids '&*■ Prepared toy 1 ; WRIGHT’S IKDIASS VEGETABLE PILL. CO. i ; NEW YORK I y UiCK Rts - ;a> PtffiWfrianAHWnwß ete tkgubus i ! DEFIANCE"STARCR READERS—i I of this paper desiring to buy any- I tiling advertised in its columns should | insist upon having what they ask for, ■ refusing all substitutes or imitations, g ! '’WTn ~u~ftTw ayn e, iy oT ?-i
