The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 November 1913 — Page 7

Have You a Bad Back? Whenever you use your back, does a sharp pain hit you? Does your back ache constantly, feel sore and lame? It's a sign of sick kidneys, especially if the kidney action is disordered too, passages scanty or too frequent or off color. In neglect there is danger of dropsy, gravel ox<Bnght’s disease. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills which have cured thousands. AN IOWA CASE

Mrs. J. Hunt 108 South .Sixth St.. Fairfield, la., psays: "My back was so lame and sore 1 couldn’t do my housework. 1 was restless and the pains were awful. 1 had to go to bed and I couldn't turn over without help. My Umbo were terribly swollen aad I thought I was going to die. When I had almost given up, I heard about Doan’s Kidney Pills and used them. They

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permanently cured me and today 1 am In the beat ol health.*' Get Doan’a at Any Store. 50c a Box DOAN’S WLy FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. Perfect Digestion depends upon the integrity of the liver. IF YOUR LIVER IS TORPID WILL WAKE IT UP AND YOUR SYSTEM WILL NOT RUN DOWN. PLAN FOR MEMORABLE TIME Tuberculosis Day, December 7, Is to Be Participated in by Hundreds of Thousands. Nearly 600,000 members of the ; Young Men’s Christian association of ! the United States, including several ; thousand members of the allied health | leagues, hundreds of physical direc- , tors and 345,000 members of the phys- I ■ ical departments will be urged to co- , operate in the Tuberculosis day campaign during the week of December 7. according to an announcement made from the headquarters of this movement in New York. Lectures and discussions on tuberculosis will be held on. Sunday afternoon, Devember 7, and during the ' week preceding or the week following that date, by many organizations connected with the Y. M. C. A. Prominent speakers in various cities of the country will address these meetings. The details of the program are being worked out by Dr. George J. Fisher, I director of the physical department of ' the International committee of the • association. Secretaries of the local branches of ' the Y. M. C. A., or members of the association who are interested in this ( subject can secure literature, free of charge, from the office of the Nation--s- al Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, 105 East Twenty-second street. New York city. Was Scarcely a Desirable Recruit. “Now, loogy yuh a minute, Brudder Hawhee!” in an admonitory way said astute old Parson Bagster. “I un’erstands dat yo’ been uh-wastin’ yo’ time proselytin’ ’roun’ dat ’ar deef and dumb Campbellite brudder dat lately moved to town?” “Wastin’ muh time, sah?” was the astonished reply. “W'y de man’s got a precious soul to save, isn’t he, pahson, even if he am a Campbellite?” “H’m — mebby. But dar don’t 'pear to be no puhvisions in de cattygory of our church for pussons dat’s ’flicted like he is. Lemme ax yo’: What kinduh shoutin’ Mefudist would a dumb man make?” —Kansas City Star. Home Activities. “What will the effect of the present legislature be?” “Well,” replied Senator Sorghum: “out my way it has already just about broken up the fence-mending industry.” _ * The Knockers. “That bunch of geologists that were visiting here yesterday—how did they like the village?” x “They had their hammers out all the time they were here.”—St. Louis Republic.

gammaßHmmmmmaßHaaaaiiMHißmmamaammaamsMmmminßßCjaEammia Toasted to a Golden Brown! Sounds ‘'smacking good,” doesn’t it? That’s Post Toasties Tender thin bits of the best parts of Indian Com, perfectly cooked at the factory, and ready to eat direct from the package — fresh, crisp and clean. There’s a delicate sweetness about “Toasties” that make them the favorite flaked cereal at thousands of breakfast tables daily. Post Toasties with cream and a sprinkling of sugar— Delicious Wholesome Easy to serve Sold by Grocers everywhere

(WTUOUNTPY LITE JL TN GREECE®*

jfc ffJK \ rmlV /jR ft m ■ C’P N GREECE today counr~ try life refers almost exclusively to the peasants try. The modern .eduj'v cated Greek is essentiala townsman, and yy though some few of the I wealthy classes have I seats in the vicinity of Athens, rustic j pursuits have little attraction for him. i ! There is but little, also, of what we i should term provincial life, for Athens ! i is the one city of any pretensions to i j culture, and in it is centered the whole | social life of the nation. The majority I of well-to-do Greeks make their money ’ abroad —in Egypt, Smyrna and other ■ i parts of the Levant, as well as in west- I ern Europe—returning periodically to ! Athens to spend the fruits of their toil. Rural Greece, nevertheless, presents many interesting aspects. The ■ scenery, in most parts possessed of a ( ■ splendour entirely its own, is made : the more romantic by the great his- [ torical traditions associated with alI most every name upon the map; ; against such a background the peas- > ant —physically and, perhaps, morally by far the finer half of the modern Greek race —makes a picturesque figure. The currant fields at least in the Peloponnesus, are the most characteristic scene of rustic labors. But great and important as the currant industry ’ is, the vines are curiously local in ■ their distribution, and it is only a relatively small portion of the country which can be thus cultivated. Elsewhere the crops are of a more universal kind, and in,absence the occupations of the peasantry are familiar, however details which arise out of loZal conditions may ap- ! pear. The Greek peasant has much ado, thanks to the general poverty of , the soil, to wring a bare living out of i agriculture. His indutsry is proi digious, especially in the mountainous regions where the traveler's admiration is extorted by the diligence with

HELPS IN HOME LIFE P" - sißlraU £ '(‘X. : .5.- ' ' The Quiet Harmony Which Prevails in the Furnishing of This Suburban Living Room Is Worth More Than Passing Notice.

By EMILY ANDREWS. Do not use soap on window panek. Either alcohol or ammonia will give a fine polish. Remove stains or discolorations from tinware by dipping a damp cloth in common baking soda aud rdbbiug briskly. Salt water is a tonic for the eyes and should be used frequently. Broken orris root is more delicate in flavor than the powdered, and imparts a violet-like fragrance to the linen chest.

TRACING FLIGHT OF BIRDS Most Interesting Results Have Been Obtained Through Banding the Flyers. Bird banding has lately become popular in the United States and evidently will soon reach a record. The banding consists of attaching an identifying tag of the leg of a captured bird and then releasing the bird, in the hope that later, perhaps in a year or two, it will be again captured

ENGAGED FIFTY YEARS AGO Romance of Childhood Sweethearts Finally Results Happily for Missouri Couple. Kansas City. Mo—R. S. Hall, seventy, a retired farmer of Breckenridge. Mo. and Mrs. L. H. Carr, sixty-four, of Hartsville, Ind., who were engaged to i wed 50 years ago, have obtained a marriage license here. They were childhood sweetheart* i i ■ ‘ ■ ■■

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; which small (patches of i ground, stolen as it were from the barren ( ! slopes, are cul(tivated and I the peasant j works with implement of the 1 most primitive ! kind — witness, for example, the plow* seen in one of the acicompanying p h o t o g r aphs, which consists of little more than an ironshod spike, yoked to a pair o f undersized cattle. No doubt

the said spike efficiently achieves all that is necessary—the soil is so shallow that it will bear little more tnau a mere scratching! Naturally, in a country with the physical charcteristics of Greece, the activities of much of rural population are pastoral. The goatherd is a familar figure everywhere; the shepherd also, but to a less degree. The goat, indeed, is the Greek peasant's cow, providing him with milk, cheese, and flesh. It is interesting to note that the herdsmen still retain that knack of throwing the voice from height to height across the intervening valleys, which in classic times made possible the transmission of news at a speed that almost rivalled the modern telegraph. The national costume (which is,

Chopped dates may be used in rice pudding instead of raisins. The addition of a well-beaten egg to mashed potatoes improves cakes very much. z To dry a wet article quickly, jtfrap it in a Turkish bath towel, and wring. The towel will absorb most of the moisture. If irons are rubbed with a flannel wet with kerosene oil, it will keep them from rust, and starch will not stick to them. All fruits and vegetables should be carefully washed before eating.

and the tag reported, so as to trace something of its migrations or other flights. More than 800 birds were so bandeu last year, and an association of those interested has recently been organized. The bands are attached sc as not to inconvenience the little travelers and are all numbered, besides carrying the words: “Notify American museum. New York.” An example of the facts determined in this way is the experience of an enthusiast in New Hampshire last year, who found on the leg of a chimney

back in Indiana. Hall was a poor boy. When he was sixteen he went barefooted a-courting the girl of his choice. Later they were betrothed, but the girl’s parents, who were wealthy, broke the engagement Hall came west, married and became owner of several rich Missouri farms. Then he heard of his former sweetheart’s marriage to one of the rich men of Hartsville, years afterward he heard of this man’s death. When Hall’s wife died five years ago he received a letter of sympathy from Mr*. Carr, and

strictly, Albanian in origin) is dying out in Greece, but is still worn by many peasants, though donned in fullest glory only on festal occasions. Usually the working garb is a pair of shoddy trousers in place of the snowy fustanella, or kilt, and a flimsy cotton blouse (generally of a greyish drab color and a check pattern), which has very full skirts, and thus appears to end in a quaint abbreviated petticoat. In Thessaly, where reminiscences of Turkish rule survive, not only in the mosques and other buildings, but in the habits and appearance of the people, the fez is not unusual, aud garments in the Turkish mode of baggy breeches and a sash round the middle are often seen. It was from the great plain of Thessaly that the ancient Greeks obtained their finest horses (of the type seen in the Parthenoi frieze), and in this northern part of Greek territory horse-breeding is still an important pursuit. The windmills of Greece perhaps deserve a word of notice. In place of the cumbrous great arms which a similar structure in this country carries, the Greek windmill carries sails of canvas which can be spread to greater or less extent, as circumstances require, upon the spider’s weblike arrangement of spokes to which they are attached. The wells also — or, at least, their machinery for drawing the water —are often of a very curious pattern. It is no uncommon thing to see a blindfold donkey patiently perambulating a circle and supplying motive power, through the beam to which he is harnessed, to an arrangement of clumsy wooden cogwheels actuating an endless chain of earthen pots, which automatically empty themselves of the fluid hoisted from the depths. But Greek peasant activities are by no means entirely agricultural and pastoral. In addition to currants and vines, are orange groves at Kalamata yielding superb fruit scarcely inferior to that of Jaffa, and tobacco is grown in various districts. The mineral resources of the country are considerable, and large numbers of workers find employment in the lead mines of Lavrion, in the marble quarrifs of Pentelioon and elsewhere. Among theaccompanying photographs will be ftJund a picture taken at the magnesite quarries of Limme, in Euboea, which are worked by a British company under a concession from the monks at Galatake, near by. • A. E. JOHNSON. Made Up For It Fay—The Widow Dashaway’s husband didn’t leave her much when he died, did he? Ray—No; but he left her very often when he was alive.

swift that fluttered down his chimney a band showing it was the same ’ bird he had banded the year before under similar circumstances. Chimney swifts are reputed to go as far south as Central America for the winter; so this bird had made a long journey to get back to his old home for the summer.—Saturday Evening Post. The title of admiral derives its origin from an Arabic word, emir-al-bahr, meaning 'lord of the sea.”

subsequent correspondence led to a meeting here. Use Bears for Carriers. St. Petersburg.—Bears instead of dogs are being used for transports, tion purposes by Lieutenant Siyedoff, of the Russian polar expedition. Undertaker Rescue* Families. Long Island City, N. Y.—Six familiei were rescued by William Ward, a local undertaker, at a fire which destroyed i

ffl®l Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS. Director of Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 16 THE DEATH OF MOSES. LESSON TEXT—Deut. 34:1-12. GOLDEN TEXT—“Precious in the •ight of Jehovah is the death of his saints.” Ps. 116:15. I. The Old Leader, w. 1-8. We have now come to the last of our lessons which have to do with Moses. Following ais lamented failure at the time of the second arrival at KadeshBarne» Miriam dies: at Mt. Hor, Aaron departed and his office is bestowed upon his son, Eleazar. Then l quickly followed the plague of serpents, the defeat of the king -of the Amorites, Balaam’s folly, the apostasy of Israel which was cleansed by blood through the zeal of Phinebas, and finally the arrival upon the plains of I IPoab. Law Confirmed. Here Moses repeats and confirms the law to this new generation of Israel, delivers his last charge, sings his last song, ascends Mt. Nebo to view Canaan, and is “forever with ( the Lord.” In the passage marked out for this lesson we have the account of the passing of this wonderful servant of God. Returning to ch. 31:1-8 and i 32:44-52 we see this journey in prosi pect, after that we read Moses’ parting blessing and in this section we read of the fulfilment of that prospect Moses anticipated his departure by a quiet dignity, absolutely divorced from haste or fret, that was characteristic of his life of submission and was the essence of his life of faith. No protest. no complaint, calm acquiescence to the will of God. At the same time there was absolute confidence that the will of God would be carried out, see ch. 31: 1-8. Strength and courage were to be the portion of Israel under their new leader, Joshua. Before departure Moses solemnly charged this newer generation to observe the law, declaring that it is not ( a vain nor an empty tilling, but in deed and in truth to them the way of life, j Then comes the simple dignified dci count of this last act of obedience, simple, yet sublime. Yonder we see him, viewed by the hosts of Israel, as he ascends the mountain alone —yet not alone —prepared to spend his last hours upon earth with Jehovah, who i doubtless appeared as the angel—i Jehovah and pointed out to him the ! land he so much longed to enter, but could not because he failed to sanctify God in the sight of the people at a , critical moment. Taking the glory to i himself on that occasion demanded an ■ act of punishment as a warning to ( the people, hence, “it went ill with ' Moses for their sakes,” Ps. 106:32. ’ There upon the mount God’s covenant i with Abraham is confirmed and with i undimmed eye and undiminished vigor i (v. 7), Moses was shown the fufil- ■ ment of that promise, his body was laid at rest by God himself, in an unknown and unmarked sepulchre, “over against Beth-Peor,” v. 6, and the children of Israel mourned for him thirty days. The sight from the mountain top revealed to Moses was not to tantalizbe him, far from it, but rather that as he viewed that prospect he was to be rewarded for those forty years of leadership and struggle. Jehovah’s promise of more thaji four hundred years’ standing is about to be fulfilled: shall not aH others be fulfilled? (Titus 1:2). \ 11. The New Leader, v. 9. God never leaves his people without a leader and hence Joshua is exalted to compensate Israel for the loss of Moses. “The king is dead—long live the king.” The worker dies, the work goes on and many times the victories of the new leader are fully as great and Far reaching as any won by the former leader. Joshua was not Moses, he was Joshua and as such called to face new problems. He had his own • equipment, “the spirit of wisdom” received through Moses, the channel ofGod’s power (v. 9), and was given his own particular instruction, Josh. 1: 1-9. He was called of God but he had the experience and training of Moses to prepare him for his life’s work. The | children of Israel gave this new leader I a cheering reception; (1) they listened i to him; (2) they obeyed him, a thing they had not always done for Moses. Joshua was not so great as Moses because his work was not so great. 111. A Great Character, vv. 10-12. The i description of Moses is of one who saw I Jehovah face to face, a peculiar dig- ; nlty, and the secret of his greatness. I When Aaron and Miriam murmured ( God declared that Moses was diiierent from all other prophets in that, “with him will I speak mouth to mouth, even manifestly, and not in dark speeches, and the form of Jehovah shall he behold,” Num. 12:6-8. Moses himself declared to Israel that when God spoke tq them out cf the midst of the fire, “I stood between the Lord and you,” Deut. 5:4, 6. The supreme teaching of this lesson is the fact that great as Moses was, he was nevertheless excluded from the promised land as a warning to Israel. On the other hand this story is a wonderful illustration of the tender compassion and watchful ca/e of Jehovah even to the end. Even the discipline of Jehovah is accompanied by gentleness. If he must needs be excluded yet he is not excluded from communion with Jehovah. Thus this saint who was separated to the will of God passes <_Nt of’life. In the hour of the consummation of his life work his spirit passes into yet closer fellowship with God. The I Psalmist in the words of the golden text most beautifully suggests that such an hour Is a delight to God, and suggests the welcome which must be awaiting his saints. Do not forget the last glorious appearing of Moses after the lapse of the centuries when: **oll the hills he never trod Spoke of the stri«e that won our Ufa TVlth the Incarnate Son of God.” f -’Death avd llidnMßt VMS A MM

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NEAT WAY OF PUTTING IT Remark of Small Brother Must Have Driven Last Hope From Poor Mr. Blinks. It was a clear case of unrequited affection; but, despite numerous setbacks. Blinks persisted in his calls. The lady’s name was May. but her attitude toward him was December. Her ten-year-old brother Billy received poor Blinks the last time he dropped In. “Is your sister at home?’’ asked the suitor. “No, she's gone out.” “Ah, so I've come to the cage only to find the bird has flown.” “No, you ain’t,” retorted Billy. “But you’re like the month of June.” “How’s that?” ‘livery time you come in May goes out.” ERUPTION ON CHILD'S BODY R. F. D. No. 2, Jackson, Mo.—“ Our daughter who is ten months old was suffering from an eruption all over the body. In the beginning they were small red spots and afterwards turned to bloody sores. We tried all sorts of ointments but they did not procure xny relief for our child. She cried almost day and night and we scarcely ?ould touch her, because she was covsred with sores from head to foot. “We had heard about the Cuticura Soap and Ointment and made a trial with them, and after using the remedies, that is to say, the Soap and the Ointment, only a few days passed and our child could sleep well and after one week she was totally well.’ (Signed) August F. Bartels, Nov. 25, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post- | card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.” —Adv. Drawing It Fine. He—Yes, Jack is very fond of drawing fine distinctions. She —I haven’t noticed it. He —No? Don’t you remember that the other night he was trying to explain the difference between love and emotional insanity?—Puck. What He Misses. “What’s Wombat irritated now ?” “These shocking transparent skirts.” “Why should they make him peevish?” “He hears about ’em. but never sees any.”—Pittsburgh Post. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, the gums, reduces Mammapain,cures wind co.ie.2sc a bottleda One way to acquire a striking personality is to become a chronic borrower. Pain in Back and Rheumatism are the daily torment of thousands. To effectually cure these troubles you must remove the cause. Foley Kidney Pilis begin to work for you from the first dose, and exert so direct and beneficial an action in the kidneys and bladder that the pain and tormeat of kidney trouble soon disappears Coach Syrov. TmCm Good. U«« fcj |jjf iatima Bold by Dtmk

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Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You’re Tired—Out of Sorts —Have No Appetite. CARTER’S r LIVER PILLS will put you right CARTERS in a few days. JgSsggjaW BITTLE They dojQfSF 3 I VER their g PILLS. stipation, Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Magnificent Crops in All Western Canada Wfr. Is 1913 Record I parts of the Prov. fAmT |‘ u v* s ot Manitoba, I jW*l liCwjjf*? ISaskatehewan and 1 JAlberta, have pro1 I«A Jduced wonderful <D/2tf iel(ls of wheat. barle,aud Wheat graded from *S-«"j^EH3fSß!gM Contravt toNo.I Hard, p-— JSssm"®HMBSI weighed heavy and ; yielded from 20 to 45 bushels (JOJSeEwQ per acre: 22 bushels was about the total average. leWZjS’ftt Mixed Farming may be WlsN considered fully as profitable ill lllrwlJffl an iuJust, ’y as grain raising. The excellent grasses full of wWe nutrition are the only food required either for beef or dairy purposes. In 1912 at Chicago, gi.'.YCj ; '<A, Western Canada carried off the Championship for beef steer. Good schools, markets eonvenl- ■ C ent - climate excellent, For the ■1 - ’ homesteader, the man who wishes &, to farm extensively, or the invesi'tor. Canada offers the biggest opI (PiTlcS"*, portunlty of any place on the VMeMHWAji continent. . Apply for descriptive literature and reduced railway rates to Su'T** 1 J'Cb® perintend, ut of Immigration, Ultawa - O*nada, or to W. S. NETHERY, INTKKVRBAN BLDG., tOLV.UBrS, O„ nr —MS®? • * at, SlaTraction Teruuiial Bidg.,l»<lianaiivU» RAW FURS pricVbulletiim FREE BOUGHT— Write for it today A. E. BURKHARDT International Fur Merchant. "iSCK IM!?! Cincinnati, O. WANTED Yonr name and address on a postal will bring yojl the biggest money-making offer you ever andfree samples wj th which you can make J4.IW daily. BEST MI G. CO., Box tl'J'J,' Providence, R. L RAW WAIiTCR to tack up signs in your 11V VvAH IED neighborhood. Good pay. Illi I Signs specially painted with your name. UU I A. H. J.. Box 1683, Philadelphia,F*. AGENTS! HERE'S A BONANZA IOK lOUk Get rich. An /absolute necessity in every home. 150% py> ■ You w". J week. Sample 10c. ROSSI IhK M Vsw CO.. 416 ROSS AVE.. WINNIPEG. < AN, WANTED—RELIABLE AGENT, either ,ex. in each community to represent a reliaol* firm. Steady position for right party, jena ten cent® for sample and terms. Addre®! Hicks & Kohl, Box 213, Evansvilhs Ind. BARGAIN FARMS IN BANNER < NTY OF THE SOITH. WRITE “NEWSON.** HLNTSVILLE. ALABAMA. . VrUT’A WatsonE.Coleman, pl I K> Mfi I X lugton. P.C. Booksfree. High. rH IEH I W art references. Best xmulta, iTwronraivoiwi tonic 1 <WI HCT ria FOR EYKS „ir i :—r. 1 -7 .V "t.'-cia- rrsaa W. N. U„ FORT WAYNE, NO. 48-IME, j „... < t ;