The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 1, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 May 1913 — Page 6
io women fnnniiuiniinnirnnnnnng I THOSE HEADACHES I If accompanied with backache, drags Ins-down pain, do not have ■ to be. Nature never intended that ” women should suffer in thia mannaEr Dr. Pierce’s | FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION | For forty years has proved woo- 3 S derfully efficient aa a remedy for woman’s peculiar wesknitisss j 3 and derangements. Suuillttiuiiu YoarDrmfathMttteßtoS The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER’S LITTLE Jgfcik LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable —act J ■CARTERS Dizzicess, and Indigestion. They do their duty KMAU, PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Os BOURBON POULTRY CUM down a chick’s throat cures jBSKk gapes. A ew drops In the ■EnKk drinking water cures and WIjSES&Ea prevents cholera, diarrhoea ■hESWXhA and other chick diseases. One YSKf@g|s 60c bottle makes 12 gallons of , tShWIB tnodictne At all druggist*. WtsSSKy Sample and booklet on “Dis-WtoWßyTtf-i, esLses of Fowls” sent FREE. Bourbon Remedy Co. Uiiigtoa, Ij, PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation ot merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. 00a and >IOO at DrurrUta <SeTE WATER XAM ffOBLN L.THOMPSON SONS*CO„Troy,N.X.
REALLY A SOUND INVESTMENT Sanatorium Where Tuberculosis May Be Cured Is Worth Much to Any State or City. Dr. H. L. Barnes, superintendent ot the Rhode Island State Sanatorium, has recently demonstrated by some interesting studies of patients discharged as “apparently cured” from that institution that a sanatorium is a sound investment for any state or city. The gross earnings of 170 ex-patients ob talned in 1911 amounted to >102,752. and those of 211 cases In 1912 to >112.#2l. By applying the same average earning to all ex-patients of the sana torlum living in 1911 and 1912, Dr Barnes concludes that their Income in these two years was >551,000. This sum Is more than three times the cost of maintenance of the sanatorium Ineluding interest at 4 per cent on the original investment and depreciation charges. Dr. Barnes concludes, however: “While institutions for the cure of tuberculosis are good investments, there is good thinking that institutions for the isolation of far advanced cases would be still better investments.” How Long Wil! the Women Stand ’Em! “I am a mean man,” confessed the Erratic Thinker. “My father bore the same unenviable reputation, and I had an uncle who served a term in the penitentiary and was twice mentioned foi the legislature. So no one need be surprised when I remark that perusal oi the dry goods advertisements causes me to wonder how soon corsets will become so long that their wearers win be obliged -to roll them up around the ankles to keep from treading on them?” —Kansas City Star. His Business. “There is one man who can be safe always in taking his customers at their face value.” ‘Who might he be?” “The beauty doctor.” The Kind. "I .wonder if people in Mars have dogs.” “If they do, they must be moondogs.” I
Everybody From Kid To Grandad Like. Post Toasties Thin, crisp bits of white Indian Com, cooked to perfection and toasted to a delicate brown without the touch of human hand. You get them in the sealed package Ready to Eat A dish of Post Toasties for breakfast and lunch, with thick cream or rich fruit juice, is a dish that epicures might chortle over. Nourishing, economical, delicious, "more-ish.”
on the / II I w (XK <XYZ> 3P> j I. -
N the banks of the river near our camp were great plains, separated from the river itself by a belt of dense bush mixed with long grass, standing any height up to fifteen feet. Palms marked the course of the riv-
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er. They were of a kind which is of greater girth half way up than at the bottom. These palms grow fruit which look like cocoanuts, but are really very different. During the unripe stage the natives obtain them for the water contained in three little partitions in the middle. Later on, when full ripe, they present an irresistible fascination for the elephant, who feeds largely on them, swallowing them almost whole, stones and all. They are then of an orange yellow within, the outer layer being of a pulpy consistency with a flavor like pineapple. The natives also are very fond of them, but they are said to make a white man sick, and from what I have seen, this appears to be true. This camp was in a magnificent belt of palm trees. The plains which border the river are usually "well stocked with game, and hundreds of Buffon’s Kob can frequently be seen at one time. This is a handsome antelope of a brilliant red color, carrying a longish coat (for Africa), and strong, much-annulated horns, growing lyre-shaped, length of twenty Inches. These plains are covered during the wet season with high grass, which gradually gets burnt oft, leaving the plain bare, black and parched. The kob are out on the op«n parts mostly till ten o’clock and after three: When alarmed they run to the grass or to the bush country. I used to stalk them for hours, armed with a telephoto camera, and the annexed herd of mine is a fairly typical example of a small herd. The buck is seen standing on the left, the does being very much more on the alert The latter have no horns. I got this photograph with a lot of trouble, stalking being out of the question. I merely walked alongside ot the herds, edging in very gradually. As the afternoon advanced, they seemed to get more accustomed to me, and would stand and stare for a little longer each time. This photograph was taken at about one hundred and seventy yards, and the larger herd at t\vo hundred yards. On one occasion I nearly got a photograph of a lion. I was following along the edge of a bit of raised ground, from which I got a good viewover the plain, when I came across a single female kob, browsing con-; tentedly beside a small ditch contain- [ Ing water. All at once she became [ alarmed, and presently made off. I ’ was at a loss to know what had scared her, as it was impossible she could j have got my wind. However, on look- . Ing over the edge a little higher up, I saw a lioness only one hundred yards off, just below me, stalking along the edge of the high grass. Unfortunately, she saw- me us I was I trying to take her photograph, and retired into the long grass, where she so harmonized with the surrounding color that I could see nothing of her at all. All I could make out was what looked like some little black birds jumping about just where the lioness ought to Have been. Taking the glasses, however, I at once saw that what I had taken for birds were the black tips to her ears and the black tuft on her tail. So I got a steady shot with the .350 rifle at an Imaginary spot a foot below’ the ears, and scored a hit, judging by the sound, but nothing moved for some time, until I saw a Mon creeping away a lit-
Gethsemane by Night. I wanted to visit Gethsemane, seen from a distance only. So thither we directed our steps, and I wished for silence. For the first time in my life I was about to enter —oh, so eargerly! —that place the name of which mentioned at a distance had so profoundly moved me, and I had not foreseen all these people, the crowd attracted hither as if for a spectacle. We entered the grotto called that of the Agony, now becomes a chapel, with a rock for a dome, which for sixteen
Projectile’to Repel Dirigibles. Tests have been made in Germany with a special projectile which is intended to repel dirigibles and which is designed not only to pierce a gas envelope, but also to set Are to the gas. This projectile, fired from a rifle, is provided with little wings that open in flight, under the influence of a spring, compressed while the projectile is still In the rifle barrel, but expanded as soon as the muzzle is passed. An ordinary bullet leaves such a email hole in an envelope that the ga:
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tie further on; but it was gone before I could shoot. It was growing late, so we had to go at once and see what had happened. This was by no means a pleasant job, as the grass was very high and on© could not see a yard ahead. I sent a man up a tree to look, but he could see nothing, so I advanced with two men close to me, throwing in stones and sticks. Getting no response, I thought that the lion I had seen disappearing was the one I had shot at and that it had got away wounded. By this time we had got to the grass itself, and lifter a trial shower of missiles, in we went; hoping the brute would not bounce out at us from two yards away. One«ofr-the coast porters whom I had wnjar m$ showed himself a very plucky fellow. Though unarmed, he was all for going in in front of me. We came quite suddenly on the lioness only about six feet away, luckily stone dead. The bullet had caught her in the neck, and it must have been her lord and master whom w© saw slinking away. The lioness was a fine yellow one in good condition. The porters ate the whole of the meat, not only because they believed
IN OTHER PEOPLE’S WINDOWS Most of Us, It Would Seem, Find a Certain Fascination In Gazing into Them. Reading some books is like looking into people's houses in the evening after the lights are turned on and before the shades are pulled down, declares a well-known writer. • To some of us, looking into people’s houses is more interesting and even more exciting than the theater. When the darkness makes all things outside lonesome and strange we like to take one small, polite look into a sitting-room where there is a fire and a reading table and a family, or into a dining-room, where another family is eating supper, and where we can see the cups and plates marching in dusty array around the room on a plate rail. Usually we see only plain folk, doing the most ordinary things, and still we like to look at them and like to read the books that make us feel as though we were looking. Os course, it is not at all fair to accuse Dickens of sneaking around and peering in at parties and fireside conversations, and nobody is going to believe that Longfellow spied upon his. neighbors, or that Whittier was eavesdropping when he wrote Snowbound, or that Burns was watching the cotter’s cottage that Saturday night or that Riley saw all he has told us about by looking through his folks' parlor or kitchen windows. But when we read the things these men wrote we feel as though we ourselves had been, stealing glimpses into other people’s houses.
[centuries had been considered the place in which Jesus passed through that awful agony before the arrest. Other places have been disputed and questioned, but concerning Gethsemane there is universal agreement. The i little altars, very old and simple, do not disfigure this grotto, which does not seem to have changed in nineteen hundred years. It was in such 4. spring night as this, as cold as ours promised to be, that the apostles slept here, their eyes weighted down with fatigue and anguish, while Jesus went
t escapes through it but slowly. The wings on the improved bullet tear a hole of appreciable size in the fabric. What is more, they retard the bullet sufficiently to cause a friction device ' to ignite fulminate contained in the bullet. The experiments gave encourging results. Anti-Earthquake Exhibition. At Messina, Sicily, an exhibition of arts, crafts and industries allied to 1 anti-earthquake building construction is to be held next tall. It is to bo un-
that it would make them very strong, but also because they liked the flavor. There were a good many hippos near this camp. If one went down to the river during the heat of the day, one might wait for hours, but no sign of any such creature would appear But towards evening they were to be seen and heard all the time. I think a hippo must be able to stay for hours under water, though he may get breath unseen by putting up the tip only of his nose under cover of something. The natives rarely succeed in killing them. When they do, it is gener ally by moonlight, when the hippos come out of the water and roam about on land. The native huntti conceal© himself beside one of the well-worn tracks and shoots the pool animal at a range of about two yards. It is lucky that the natives have no better guns, as in the dry season the river is so shallow in parts that when they (the hippos) sink one can sec their every movement under water. Marabout storks and vultures we.'e in great numbers, and betook themselves regularly to the river at midday.
| It is very true that many of us pre- ! fer reading something thrilling, and 1 fascinating about very fashionable so- ' ciety, or very Bohemian artists, or a very wild west, or something very troublesome about problems, or very sentimental about souls or states of mind. These things are so very dif- [ ferent from anything that anybody i really knows that they seem to be as ' eagerly read as easily written. But ; those of us who read these things can ! never know the peculiar, satisfied and comfortable enjoyment that the i books which are like looking into people's windows give the rest of us. Mussulmans of the World, Turkish periodicals publish statistics of the Mussulman population of the world, and, although it is difficult to follow absolutely the statistics of a country, where records are so im\ ' perfectly kept, the approximate results are as fpllows: The Ottoman Empire contains 24,000,000 persons, of whom 6,000,000 live in Europe and 15.000.000 in Asia. But of these not more than one-half profess the faith of Mahomet. The Russian empire has quite a proportion of the followers of Mahomet, numbering several millions. In India there are some 50,000,000 Mussulmans, while Persia, Afghanistan. Arabia and other independent countries in Asia have about 20,000,000 more. The Dutch colony of Java, with Borneo, the Philippines and other adjacent islands, contain several milj lion besides. i All the northern and central part • of Africa rests firm in the faith of | the prophet.—Harper's Weekly.
>' away from them into the garden, “a stone’s throw,” to pray for strength. Here Jesus came to awaken them I ' three times, and here amid the flash .[ of torches was he taken. This rocky , vault stood there and heard and saw , those things; but it is mute—Chris- , tian Herald. Play With Spirit. i Figg—Shakespeare is immortal. I ; consider “Hamlet” a play for all time. t i Fogg—That’s so; it will never give up :! the ghost.
■ der the auspices of the ministers of public works and of education of the Italian government. A large area of , ground has been assigned for the exi position and a local committee formed, i with the Hon. S. Cutrufelli as chairman. Its Problems. “The fruit of political work is always doubtful.” “How do you mean?” "It may baa lemon or it may be a plum,**
The Holy Spirit By REV. JAMES M. GRAY. D. D. Dean of the Moody Bible Institute Cbicasa
TEXT—’’Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?” Acts XIX. 2.
Paul met certain disciples in Ephesus w hom at first he supposed to be Christian disciples, but iu whose testimony there was that which led to the inquiry, “Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?” It is evident, therefore, from these words and from the sequel that it is on© thing to be a disciple, and another
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thing to ’’receive the Holy Ghost.” This brings up the whole question as to the relation of the Holy Spirit to the disciple, or the believer in Christ. 1. The personality of the Holy Spirit. We should keep in mind that the Holy Spirit is a divine person. Personality consists in self-conscious-ness and free will, and that the Holy Spirit possesses personality in this sense is evident from three things: i (a) He has the attributes of personality; (b) He does the works of a personality; (c) He has the names of a personality. Speaking of his attributes, there is one which, more than any other, helps to a realization of his personality. His attribute of love, which is referred to only in i Romans 15:30. Do you know that the Holy Spirit loves you, as a believer in Christ, with a love in some sense dis- . tinct from that either of the Father I or the Son? How marvelously near : that brings him to our hearts! The : Father's love manifested itself in the i giving of his Son; the Son’s love in ; the offering of himself upon the cross, and the Holy Spirit’s love in taking up his abode in us. ' 2. The indwelling of the Holy Spirit. This brings us to the second thought, viz., the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. That indwelling was promised in John 14:16-17. He had dwelt “with” the disciples therefore, but he was to dwell “in them” by and by. He had been as a power acting on them from without, but thereafter he was tc influence them from within. The promise was renewed again in Acts 1:4-5, where the indwelling was spoken of as the “baptism" of the Holy Spirit. The realization came on : the day of Pentecost, when the disciples were indwelt, baptized and infilled with the Holy Spirit at one and the same time. This transaction, how-ever, as far as the first two terms are concerned, was not limited to the church assembled on that day, but applies to the W’hole church since. Such would seem to be suggested by I. Corinthians, 12:12-14, where 20 years after Pentecost we are taught that as be- i lievers “we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body.” What “body” is means if not the body of Christ, the church? And what “baptism” if not that “one baptism” on the day of Pentecost? Is it not in consideration of this fast that Paul is able to say to this same church, in another place, “What? Know’ ye not that your bod-* les are the temples of th© Holy} Ghost?” 3. The filing of the Holy Spirit. But while the first two terms of that transaction on the day of Pentecost, h the indwelling and the baptism ( which are one) were for the whole church petentially, and for all time, yet the same does not apply to the third, the filling of the Holy Spirit. There ii I but one indwelling, but many fillings. (I We gather this from Acts 5:21, where the same persons who were "filled on the day of Pentecost were r«r filled on a subsequent occasion. And Again, in Acts 6, when men are to be choeen to the office of deacon i: must be by those who are “full o’ the Holy Spirit,” as if some w ere thui-i---spiritually equipped while others wenj not. It is something corresponding to this, therefore, which Paul has iu mind in our text, when he said: “Hav ye received the Holy Ghost since believed?" The reception of the Holy Ghost on their part resulted in an eis • /Z duement of power, but in other places of the Acts, notably the fourth chapter, it is seen to have resulted ne t only in the spirit of power, but < t unity and love. It is ibis that we mil roisters, evangelists and Christian work - ers need and that the whole chore a needs in order to accomplish her miitsion for Jesus Christ on earth. How may the fillings of the Holiiy Spirit be received by the believer era the Lord Jesus Christ? Prayer, obedience and faith seem to be the on»Ly conditions, if they may be called conditions. Speaking of faith, there is a sense in which the gift of the Holy Spirit, 1. e., the filling of the llo>y Spirit, should be received by as de lnite an act on our part as that by which we laid hold of salvation through Jesus Christ; but this fairh Is not likely to be experienced whe re obedience is not present. “God give :h th© Holy Ghost to them siat obhy him,” Pter says (Acts V.), and tl is agrees perfectly with the teaching of the Old Testament in Proverbs ..: "Turn ye at my reproof, behold, I w 111 pour out my spirit unto you." Nor is this obedience merely occasional w th some great thing, but it is to be usi al and common in the little things. *I he Christian whose habit it is to please God after the examples of his wullbelovea Son, is one to whom the H< >ly Spirit is not given by measure. 1U ay God in bis grace teach us this l esson. Be arrays doing something serv ce< able tc mankind, and let this constant generosity be your only pleasure *— Marcus Aurelius.
Temptation. representative Solomon Francis Prouty of the Seventh district of Illinois is the only man in the house of reji;esentatives who chews gum, and he chew's it with a remarkable avidity ; He took the gum habit after a coitperenc© of lowa physicians had wait aed him that he must either stop snicking or fill a grave, t They suggeii ed chewing gum as a substitute foi jmy Lady Nicotine, i. ’li'he only time he has smoked in ten yetf rs was on a hot day last summer wl 'le out campaigning. He stopped to tall; with an old farmer who was pufftalit; at a corncob pipe. The smoke got intv Representative Prouty's nose, and as i>oon as he reached town he rushed lnl|(i his office, grabbed his secretary by the arm, and almost shouted: ” For goodness sake dig out that pipe of j wire and give me a puff! Lock the deers and keep every man out who loiiks like a doctor. I’v© got to smoke or bust!” —Washington Star. H«NDS ITCHED AND BURNED Abbotsford, Wis. —“My son had ecteiaa on his hands for about on© year. Til© eczema started with a rash. His were sore so h© could not close th(m, and when he wet his hands they hit ?t him so he could hardly wash. His h;Qds itched and burned just terrible an I if he would scratch, them, they wculd break out into sores. He could ny.’ get any rest or sleep, and his hunds looked quite bad. ’We had medicine and salve and it kijtpt getting worse all the time. I got sojhe Cuttcura Soap and Ointment, arid after washing his hands with the Soap and putting some of the Cifiticura Ointment on two times a day atd tying cloths on them for about six months they got well and have not hlbken out since. Cuticura Soap and Ointment cured him entirely.” (Signet) Mrs. Lawrence Kiehl, Feb. 13, nia. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout th© w’orld. Sample of «Btch frfee, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address (ost-card ‘‘Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.” Exceptions. ' He —Must stolen goods always be ifestored? < She —Certainly. J He —All right. Will you now take lijack the kiss I utole last night? t Mrs. Austin’s famous pancakes make a /tally delicious wholesome breakfast. Adv. Women who spend most of their ijlme trying to Improve their complexions never think of the old fashioned method of steaming it over a xashtub.
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