The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 April 1913 — Page 7
[Loss of Power ■ G and-vital force follow loss of fleet ■ 3 emaciation. These come from impOV- | ■ eriahed blood. \ | Dr. Pierce’* \ | Golden Medical Discovery < “ enlivens a torpid livvr-enriehes th* I “ blood—stops the waste of strength and S 3 tissue and builds up healthy flesh —to Is the proper body weight. As an appe■dfring. restorative tonic, it sets to IjS TBprk all the processes of digestion IPS ®d nutrition, rouses every organ into VS natural action, and brings back health ■g and strength. \ Pure Blood ■the result of Perfect Nutrition % which proceeds from |GOOD DIGESTION Assure These WE WANT YOU ten?Woau , Mreot from the manufacV-rerond of at least wearer. The prices we quote SS .o *SO per week Ml to wi- Our agents make from pr j ce n ß t au d tn spare time. Samples of materlaL j direct w Instructions for measuring: free- 'Lulnatlon; von ‘sustomer C. O. D-, subject to e» Uectlons -f hl| save no trouble with delivery or c ut CO mretltlom sweet MWDmFOR CHILDREN ■L<?W rU " „ erishness, ConslipaIpJ, y Relieve I 1 c l( j correc t disorders of TfcJ f tion.Coldsi an j bowels. Used by JK«- r 4>k ! . the stomac 22 years. At all Drugmailed FREE. X gists 25c. s . oimsteU, Le Rey, N. V. Address S E' ' "i*Amir's HAIR BALSAM and beautifies the halt Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Tails to He a tore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color* Prevents hair falling’. 60c. and gl.QOat 1 8 I STONES remedy r Wk Til H (JVa OU) Nemorefialtatvne paint ■EB or Aches la Stomach, Back, Side or Ahosddorsi liver Trouble. Stoanarh Misery, Dyspepsia. Colic. Gas, kflioQsntts, Headaches,Constipation, Piks.€.*ktan-h,her>onsnees, Bists, AppeadielUs. Bead for 56 page Medical Book F R EE. Gaflstoae Remedy Co.. Dept. 420.219 S.DearbornSt..Chicago tablets ded as the best local remedy jlments. Easy to use. prompt to weeks treatment, and an article iseases in Women” mailed free. MPAHY, BOX E, WARREH, PA intil tomorrow the worry;ht do today. Delicious brown cnlcee made from Mrs. Austin’s Bag Pancake Flour. All grocers. Adv. Many a girl with brains enough for • two equalizes things by marrying a man without any. Suffragettes on the Jury. “Is the jury ready to report?” “No, your honoress; they are still discussing the way in which you wear your hair." Purely Accidental. > “Had any accidents on this road Stately?” asked the traveler. P *Yep,” replied the man who hangs r around the station. “Three trains came in on time last week.” Good Question. Sunday School Teacher—And t the aerpent, for tempting Eve, was made to crawl all the rest of hls life. i Small Girl —Please, sir, an’ how did he get along in the world before? Directing Children Aright. The young need to be taught that i although there is sometimes a pleasure of the senses in committing sin, It is Inevitably followed by remorse | and punishment. Crime, remorse, punishment form an inseparable trio. I On the other hand, while it is often hard to do right, the sense of satisfaction, self-respect and self-control that follow right action is worth all the effort made. ( Matter Easily Explained. Two lawyers met on the street. “I’ve been wondering about you,” said one. “What were you wondering about me?” “Well, I’ve heard you address a jury and I thought that you were the most eloquent man in Cleveland. Then I’ve heard you make an after-dlnnet speech at a banquet and you were—pardon me—pretty rotten. Npw, how u Yhat?" “I’ll tell you. When I’m talking to a jury my dinner depends on my speech. When I’m talking to a bunch of diners I’ve already had my dinner.’’ A Jolly . Good Day ■ Follows B A Good Breakfast I, Try a dish of MPost ■Toasties MBB| tomorrow morning. BnVThese sweet, thin bits made 11 toasted and sealed in tight hl packages without the touch B of human hand. They reach you fresh and erpn—ready to eat from the package by adding cream or > milk and a sprinkling of sugar, I if desired. B Toasties are a jolly good ■ dish — B Nourishing Satisfying Delicious
tffIMIONAL SUNMSffIJOL Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening Department The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) LESSON FOR APRIL 6 JACOB AND ESAU. LESSON TEXT—Gen. 27:22-34. GOLDEN TEXT—“Jehovah is a God of judgment; blessed are all they that wait for him.” Isa. 30:18. Jacob is one of the great figures presented to us in the book of Genesis. * His birth and purchase of the birthright are recorded in Chapter 25, and in chapter 27 we have presented his great sin. It is absolutely necessary to read carefully all of this chapter before we can properly present this lesson. Moses did not record Jacobs deception because he commended it, but rather as a warning to all who read and ponder thereon. The Bible spreads before us the sins of God s people as well as their virtues, which ought to be a comforting thought to us all. who are sinners “saved by grace.” I. The Deceit, vv. 22-29. Lying, duplicity, profiwity, and compounded felony, are presented in the preliminary verses to that section selected for our study. Jacob’s conscience rebelled (v. 12), yet he gladly listened to the voice of his unwise mother who thought she knew best how to circumvent God’s will; see ch. 25:23, 25, 28. This mother’s foolish ambition and teaching had developed a self-seeking, deceitful son. By nature Jacob was unlovely .and the greatest lesson we can learn from his life is that he, a ‘cheater.” should by the grace of God be transformed into “Israel,” a prince, he that hath power with God. A Rough Man. We first have presented the temperamental difference between these two brothers, then the story of the birthright, and lastly the.stolen blessing. Esau was a rough man of the chase, cunning, clever and skillful as a hunter. Jacob was a plain man, viz., one who -inclined to the conventionalities. He loved a settled, quiet home life, for he “dwelt in tents.” Again when we consider ther episode of the birthright we have set before us another illustration of the great contrast of these brothers. We de not value birthrights as do the Orientals, and further, we must remembei this is the story of God’s develop ment of a chosen race. Esau, mastered by his appetite, governed by selfish instincts, gladly and flippantly spurns—“despised”—his right. He denied his responsibility to the future of that race of whom Abraham was the first, and virtually said thal of value that did nol serve this present lifetime. Jacob, on the other hand, estimated this birthright at its supreme value, as oi the highest importance, but his manner of securing the same was the way of the scheming, self-seeking world. It was not God’s way. From Bad Stock. Subject as Jacob was to the rule oi a seeking, scheming, mother, yet w« must remember that she, too. was actuated by the same high estimate of the value and the importance ol the birthright. Her mean manner o! seeking to accomplish her purpose did not succeed, but, in fact, delayed the desired end for Jacob had to fly for his life. Let us look at Rebekah. She came from the same stock a« Laban, who was a fraud, a cheat, and a liar. She taught her son to follow those same methods and had to smart for it, for she lost his companionship through long years, and never saw him again. Is It ever right to de wrong? God’s word tells us no, se« Rom. 3:8. Rebekah was more concerned with her partiality than with the purposes of God. (Ch. 25:28) Jacob’s conscience was aroused as w« see from v. 12, though It was probably not so much fear of the error of the act,” fear of being caught. infer by the readiness with which he stilled his conscience, w. 13, 14. Then to cover up his deceit Jacob cloaked It under a pious fraud, v. 20. The meanest fraud on this earth Is the man who hides his evil deeds behind the mask of assumed piety. The Savior’s fiercest anathemas were directed against the hypocrite.- Attention has been directed to Isaac in this instance, that though he recognized the voice as Ahat of Jacob, he allowed himself to oe governed by his feelings, v, 22, and bestowed the blessing, as he thought, upon the\y wrong person. Feelings, emotions, certainly have an Important place in our religious lives, but not to the extent of ’allowing them to absolutely govern our actions. If we do, we will surely smart for it. Conscience and the word of God will never lead us astray. God would in his way and in his own time have given Jacob the promised blessing without the aid of his deceit. As It was Jacob engendered his brother’s hatred, was separated from his home and endured multiplied suffering. Isaac’s words of prophecy vv. 28, 29 have literally been fulfilled, though q£ course not in their largest and fullest meanings. No one can read history without being Impressed with this fact. 11. Esau’s Sorrow, vv. 30-34. Esau had sold his birthright and sought to regain it. Now he is too late to secure the -blessing that should accompany his birthright. The brothers bartered for the birthright. One brother secured the blessing and with it, banishment The other brother lost both birthright and blessing and gave vent to a bitter cry. (Heb. 12: 17.) Esau was himself to blame. What a wrecked home partiality and deceit brought forth. Rebekah’s anticipation (v. 45) was never fulfilled and her conduct with that of Jacob well deserves the censure and the punishment Inflicted.
CAMP FIRE lIWT TALES OF FAMOUS BATTLES Aged Woman Recalls Stories of Death and Disaster Witnessed During Civil War. Mrs. Jennie Thompson Long, who lives at 523 Oak street, Wheaton, 111., Is 75 years old, and for nearly half a century she has told to wondering listeners her stories of death and disaster that came under her eyes on famous battlefields of the Civil war, where she acted as nurse for three years. Here are incidents from among the many In her store of recollection: “I v. as one of thirty nurses that Gov, Morton of Indiana sent out at the beginning of the war. I was assistant matron of the corps. Our first service on the battlefield was at the first battle of Bull Run. It was a terrible place, and the day was like the night Trees were cut off by the shot and shells, buildings were knocked down and everywhere were the dead and the dying. “One man was brought in shot through the head, and he was calling, not for water, as most of them were, but only, ‘My son! jMy son’’ “I asked him his son’s name, and then I went out among the wounded through the dust and mud and the blood. Canteens of water were slung over my shoulders and I gave drinks to union and rebel alike. I had not come to work for the Union. I had come to work for God. And I found the man’s son, with his legs shot off, and I had him carried to where his father lay. They couldn’t live, but 1 cut the bullet from his father’s head, and he said he felt better. “At the second battle of Bull Run I saw forty soldiers buried in one trench. One in a gray uniform was still living, and I told the men that they were burying the bodies, but they said, ‘Do you think we can stay here until he dies, little nurse? ‘I d not do such a thing as this,’ I said, and just then a chain shot struck down the five men that were standing by my side. Rut it did not harm me. The Lord protected me. “I was at the battles where the big generals were. I sewed a button on for Gen. McClellan and he gave me a quarter. At one camp an old colored woman made big corn pones and sold them for sl. I got one and 1 was going past Gen. McClellan’s tent with it when the general stopped me. ‘Where are you going with that corn pone, little nurse’.’’ he asked —they all called me that —and I told him, and he said, ’Can’t I have some?’ I let him cut off a piece of the pone and he gave me a dollar and told me to get another pone, so that we could all have some. “At Vicksburg the nurses were on the hospital boat, and Gen. W. T. Sherman came down there with his big horse and asked the nurses to leave the boat and get some air. He said he would give them a guard so they could go around on land, but every one was afraid. ‘lsn’t there any one that's brave enough to come?’ he asked. My heart was pounding away, but I spoke up and said, ‘l’m not afraid, general.’ He laughed and said, ‘Good for you, little nurse,’ and he held his great, freckled hand so that I could step from it into the saddle of his horse. He led the horse about, and in one place we were all at the top of a bank. A dredge was working below, digging a place for a gun. Then I had a premonition of evil. ‘We’d better get out of here,’ I said. ‘Something’s going to happen.’ ‘All right,’ said the general and laughed and led the horse back, and we had scarcely got away when the land where we had been standing all caved in. The general turned and looked at me. ‘Are you a prophet, little nurse?’ he asked. I knew that something was going to happen. I was born with a veil over my face. “I served as an army nurse three years. After the war I was married to a soldier and for fifty years I lived In Chicago and worked as a city missionary.” A Sure Test. On a pleasant Sunday afternoon at Savannah the colonel of a Pennsylvania regiment, who had partaken liberally of the com product, was warning a young lieutenant against the evils of Intemperance. “Nevqr drink too much, my son. A gentleman stops when he has enough. To be drunk Is a disgrace.” “How can I tell when I have enough or am drunk?” asked the lieutenant The colonel pointed his finger: “Do fyou shee those two men sitting In the corner? If you should shee four men there you would be drunk.” The lieutenant looked long and earnestly. “Yes, colonel, but—but there Is only one man In that corner.” Didn’t Concern Him. The guard at the wharf at City Point, where much powder was stored, yelled at a Second corps boy: “Don’t you see that sign: ‘No smoking allowed here?”’ “Yis, but be the powers that doesn’t consarn me a mite. I nlver smoked aloud In me life.” Beauty Alone Not Enough. * “We do love beauty at first sight; and we do cease to love it, If It Is not accompanied by amiable qualities.”— Lydia Maria Child. ’ Modern Woman In Business. Cashier —“But there Is not a cent here to pay this check of yours.” Fair Customer —“I am glad that you have confessed. If your bank is as hard up as that you can give me what money I have here and I will take my account to a safer institution.”—Puck. Proves Antiquity of Humanity. Prehistoric human footprints have been discovered In slabs of sandstone in a quarry at Warrnambool, Australia. Their age is estimated at 50* 000 yearn.
DELIVERING SUPPLIES FOR PERU VICTIMS |Bjt * - —, , • ■3 Quantities of food supplies for the flood sufferers at Peru were taken there on the Northern Indiana Interurban road and unloaded north of the city at the nearest point that could be reached. AT THE FLOOD’S HEIGHT IN PERU • t A i i FX W ... V ' - <. * ■ This is a view of Sixth street, Peru, Ind., looking east from the tracks of the Lake Erie & Western railroad, when the flood was at its height SEARCHING THROUGH THE RUINS AT OMAHA aBBIiiSBS ; A Gradually order is being brought out of the chaos caused by the cyclone at Omaha. Our illustration shows men searching through', the ruins of hornet and shops for personal effects and other valuables. BUILDING A DYKE AT FORT WAYNE 1 I j S I "ITF 111 wWitef 3 MkWs The photograph shows men and boys of Fort -Wayne building a dyke along St. Joseph boulevard in the effort to divert the rising flood.
Temper and Good Looks. Thoughtfulness for others and unselfishness are great beautifiers, for all perfection of skin and feature will not make up for an unlovely expression due to a hard heart. livery girl is not possessed of an amiable temper or a pretty face, but every girl may try to improve both her temper and her face. She may not be able to alter the shape of her nose or the color of her eyes, but if she cultivates an interest in those about her* if she tries to make the
world happier Dor others with whom she is brought into association, she can scarcely fail before long to win a pleasing expression of countenance that will cause physical defects to be forgotten. And, after all, there is some satisfaction to be got out of working on one’s disposition and cultivating the higher self. If a man wants to find anything out he asks questions; a woman finds out by pretending to have no interest in the matter.
Like an Old Fool. Silllcus —What is the age of discretion? Cynicus—There Isn’t any. I know a man over seventy who married his fourth wife the other day. When some men get interested In politics they forget all about labor.
tTnoudcwidde Have Been Restored to Health By Lydia E*. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. There is no defubt about this fact. Why I during the last 30 years we have published in the newspapers of this country volumes of letters from women who have been re4ieved of all their suffering by the timely aid of this grand old medicine. Letters like the following, true, genuine and honest expressions of gratitude coming from grateful hearts. Surely you can believe these women. Mrs. I*. S. BRENNER, Hudson, Mich., says:— >. Sometime ago I was taken with a terrible pain in my right side, such sharp pains just like a knife sticking me. I tried hot applications but that did no good. I went to our family doctor (we were living in Fayette, Ohio, at that time) and he said it was organic inflammation. I doctored with him a while but kept getting worse. The pain was so terrible I could hardly stand on my feet. I would have that sharp pain in my right side, and a dull heavy pain the whole length of my limb. I realized that something had to be done quickly, so I looked up all of your advertisements I coula find, and saw several that described my case. I got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it helped me from the first dose, and when I had taken two bottles my trouble was gone. Your medicine has done sej much for me that I am willing you should publish this letter for the sake of other suffering women.”—Mrs. L. S. Beenxeb, Hudson, Michigan. , Mrs. L. E. BOWERS, Girard, Pa., says: — *‘l take pleasure in informing you of what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. I had a, sick spell last February, and for ' some months after that I was not regular and had many bad feelings. I was tired all the time, had dull headaches, not much appetite, and also what, the doctor called organic inflammation. Your Vegetable Compound has entirely cured me and I feel that too much cannot be said in its praiso as lam now able to do my own work. You are perfectly welcome to usa my testimonial for the benefit of others.”—Mrs. L. E. Boweks, R.F.D. No. 1, Girard, Pa. Mrs. ELIZABETH GENTTLCORE, Buffalo, N.Y„says:— “I feel that I must write to you about your wonderful remedies. About ten years ago I was troubled with female weakness and was all run down. 1 was tired all the time and could hardly walk without feeling dizzy. I heard about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, took it, and also used the Sanative Wash. I got stronger, and have not had those dizzy Spells since. I feel that I owe my health to you, and hope your remedies Will help others as they have me. I tried most everything I heard of, and yours are the best medicines for women’s ailments.” —Mrs. Elizabeth GexUlcobe, 26 Glor Street, Buffalo, New York. For SO years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fe- bM male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments does justice to herself if she docs not try this fa- \ r xnous medicine made from roots and herbs, it / ’7 j*’ I lias restored so many suffering women to health. II IV* L/ II mgS3?*Wrlte to LYDIA EPINKHAM MEDICINE CO. CA Zs) (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. \v\ ' Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. WORMS. "Wormy”, that’s what’s the matter of ’em. Stomach and t» testinal worms. Nearly as bad as distemper. Cost you too mucM to feed ’em. Look bad—are bad. Don’t physio ’em to death. Spohn’s Cure will remove the worms, improve the appetite, and tone ’em up all round, and don’t “physic.” Acts on glands aud blood. Full directions with each bottle, and sold by all druggists. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. Goshen. Ind.. U. S. A. Wm. A. 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