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THE PULPIT.
Py |
A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY
THE REV. LEWIS T. REED.
| B o 3
Theme: Suggestive Therapeutics,
" Brooklyn, N. Y.—ln the Flatbush
“Congregational Church _the pastor,
the Rev. Lewis T. Reed, preached a
sermon on “The Theory and Practice
of Suggestive Therapeutics.” The
text was from Matthew 8:13: “And
Jesus said to the centurion, Go thy
way; and as thou hast helieved, so be
it done unto thee. And his servant
was healed in the selfsame hour.”
Mr. Reed said:
In this theme of “The Theery and
Practice of Suggestive Therapeutics,”
it is not my purpose to expound nov
elties or to satisfy curiosity, but to
assist all of you who worship here to
lay hold of some of the great princi
ples within this movement by which
it will be possible for you to live con
fidently and joyfully. I should be
glad to make all of you practitioners
of the art of suggestive therapeutics.
There are a few great principles
which it is essential you should honori
and obey. First—the power of sug-.
gestion. We have been wont to be
optimistic about everythingthat takes
place in our lives, provided nothing
evil appears at once on the surface.
‘We have proceeded on the faith that
the psychical system could take up
and dispose successfully of every sug
gestion made to it. Evil thoughts,
envy, anger, greed, concupiscence,
gluttony—all the vices abhorred by
St. Paul might present their vile pic
tures to the mind, and as long as we
did not act on their suggestion, we
still preserved our character. We de
luded ourselves with a hope that we
were what we appeared to be. And
now we have had to learn afresh the
truth of that Scripture: “As a man
thinketh in his heart, so is he.” 1
know of no process in man’'s life more
calculated to give him serious
thought than this function of the
subconsciousness of storing up the
suggestions that the outer life brings.
Day by day as we touch the world,
and get cur own reactions of courage
or cowardice, of self-control or self
defeat, of purity or selfishness, of
love or hate, we are continually drop
ping, dropping these suggestions into
the reservoir of this subconscious self,
to come forth some day to hbless or
curse. Abraham Lincoln lives day by
day the sacrificial life of the burden
bearer of this people. Day by day,
hour by hour, he gives himself the
suggestion of devotion, sacrifice and
faith; and then, when the hour for
utterance has come, takes up his pen
and writes on a few scattered sheets
the supreme English masterpiece of
half a century. Benedict Arnold was
always passionate and revengeful.
Day-after day, year after year, the re
action of life on him resulted in sug
gesting to his deever self hate, envy,
pride, and self-will. When his hour
for expression came, he took up his
pen to sign his name to the betrayal
of his trust. There is nothing in the
process of the soul that needs to
cause us more of joy and more of
fear than this amenability of the soul
to suggestion.
Secondly, you must come to a new
realization of the supreme place of
the will. Heredity must have some
-place in the formation of character,
although that place is not yet very
clearly determined—but the- most
weighty discovery of the present day
seems to me this rediscovery of the
regal power of the will to do right;
These psychologists, and hypnotists,
in their investigations into the unex
plored tracts of personality have come
across not only a God-like aspiration
after virtue in every soul, but also
an unlimited power for the attain
ment of that aspiration. Just as the
Master of Life stooped over the crip
ple, saying, “Arise and walk;” and
knew that within that stricken form
there was the ability to rise and
walk; so modern psychology stoops
over every sinful goul and repeats the
Scripture command, “Be ye there
fore perfect,” for ye are in the image
of your Father in Heaven, who is
perfect. This is a tremendous doc
trine of individual responsibility, It
is an old Scriptural doctrine, but it
gains a new force when, by the mod
ern hypnotists’ appeal to the soul of
goodness in a man, you see the drunk
ard go forth a new man, the spend
thrift reformed and the invalid made
well. If there are in us those pos
eibilities of virtue, there is no escape
for us from the responsibility of at
taining that for which we were cre
ated. There has come to us the con
viction that inspired Jeremiah: I
those days they shall say no more.
The fathers have eaten sour grapes,
and the children’s teeth are set on
edge. But every cne shall die for his
own iniquity; every man that eateth
the sour grapes his teeth shall he set
on edge.” There is no more proper
incentive to earnest living than the
realization of the fact that God has
intended life to be perfect for every
creature; and that if it is otherwise,
the fault is in ourselves.
“Dark is the world to thee; thyself
art the reason why.” Whoever would
possess the reality of the Christian
life must achieve the victory over his ‘
moods; and the most heartening mes
sage of this or any age is that by our
God-given endowment of the will it is
possible for us to give to the deeper
life of the soul the suggestions of
courage and faith and patience and
strength, which altogether means
eternal life.
In the third place, you will have to
form for yourself very likely a new,
and very stern, doctrine of sin and
virtue. The old doctrine of a forensic
justification before God was an ad
mirable thing to look at, but it did
not work very well either for the
justified or for his family. Those who
deemed themselves “saved” very
often failed to possess the homely vir
tues of cheerfulness, kindness, cour
age and forgiveness; whiie many who
were obviously “good” were not con
scious of salvation. The religion of
to-day gives the genuinely *“good”
man his due, and placards in their
proper place these hateful sins of un
kindness, intolerance, moodiness,
worry and hardness of heart. It is a
great service that any sstt bestows
when that body of people stands forth
to proclaim that the ills of the flesh
have an origin in the ills of the mind,
and that the thoughts that issue in
these bodily ills are sins against the
High and Holy One. From whatever |
source derived, the conviction of the |
necessity of controlling the outbreaks
of our evil moods would be the great
est conceivable blessing in so-called
Christian homes. This is surely no
new gospel. All this teaching is from
both Christ and the apostles; but it
is undeniable that the recent presen
tation of it has amounted almost to
a discovery. 5
The fourth principle which must
govern your thought is that of the
very great influence that we exercise
over one another. If you believe in
the telepathic communication of one
subconscious mind with another, you
will believe that the condition of your
subliminal consciousness—of irrita
tion, or quiet, of hope or fear—even
though you speak no word, will af
fect those associated with you. In
no hazy way, but very definitely, then,
We are our brother's keepers, respon
sible for the world’s stock of cheer
and faith. The home is the peculiar
field for-the operation of this sub
conscious power. There the quickest
of sympathy exists, there influence is
felt most readily and most deeply.
The atmosphere of a home, although
a hackneyed term, expresses a clearly
defined reality. The atmosphere is
the spirit of the house, emanating
from the deep well of the subcon
scious mind of the homekeeper. God
has created no more gracious figure
in His great world than that of the
wife and mother, who gives to the
very place of her abode her own
quiet, buoyant, soothing spirit. What
she is in the unsounded deeps of her
being will appear in time in the house
where she dwells and in the faces of
the little children that look up to
her. On the other hand, the home of
the card-club woman and the home
of the gad-about! Who does not
‘know them and shudder at the
‘thought? Their atmosphere is that
}of restlessness and spiritual poverty.
Woe betide her children and her hus
‘band; for she cannot give them, after
‘their day of temptations and vexa’
tion, that by which they%are renewed,
ithe spirit of peace and quiet confi
dence in good.
11. Now, it will sometimes happen
that, despite our best endeavors, we
shall be overborne in the press. 111-
ness comes on, whatever the cause,
and the causes are often complex.
What are we to do? Every physician
'would join with me, I believe, in say
ing: make the spiritual attitude cor
rect. To use the terminology of the
‘books, give yourself the auto-sugges
tions of courage, confidence in God,
faith in His willingness and power to
care for and restore you. Make it
the genuine conviction of your spirit
that God does provide for all His
creatures. Rest in the promises of
divine health with which the Scrip
tures abound. If there is any cause
of irritation, remove it, if it be pos
'sible, by the right action on your
part. Nothing is more irritating
than harboring a vigorous grudge. I
need not remind you how strictly
sceriptural is all this method of creai
ing a correct mental attitude; and I
believe that your own careful obser
vation would come to my support in
the statement that the great majority
of the diseases from which our house
holds suffer can be finally traced ‘o
the fret and ambition of our present
life. As the pastor, then, of your
souls and the minister of the Lord
Jesus Christ, who, through faith, re
stored the body, I would exhort you
to cultivate to the utmost the virtues
that Christ always insisted upon—
trust in God, humility, self-forgetful
ness, forgiveness, sincerity.
Still, in many cases, the conditions
of ill health will continue. What is
to be done then? Manifestly, if the
trouble be serious, it is the time to
employ the physician, who can diag
nose the case and prescribe the regu
lations under which recovery can be
most rapid. I earnestly hope that in
the excitement of this new discovery
of the therapeutic power that is in
the mind no one here will believe that
he is privileged to sin against either
himself or his brother. Al} laws of
action are laws of God. The best re
sults ensue when we learn how to
use all of God’s laws in harmony with
each other. Quinine is just as much
a creation of the divine spirit as is
the mind ¢f man, and we may as well
acknowledge that infection is a
process likely to take place under pre
vailing conditions, unless guarded
against, ¢
The employment of mental healing
in cases of physical disorder is the
employment of a therapeutic agency.
You may use medicines if you see fit
and they produce the results, al
though as a matter of fact medical
practice of the present day makes
less and less of the treatment by
drugs and more and more of the
treatment by the natural agencies of
rest, air and water. On the other
hand, you may employ the mental
healer, provided your own spirit is so
attuned to the spiritual life that yvecu
are able to receive its benefits, My
!own belief is that those who are
wonted to the spiritual life—by which
I mean the life of communion with
God through prayei® the life of faith
in a controlling power, and of inter
est in the life of the spirit in its
higher manifestations—are best pre
pared for the reception of these ben
efits. No one can be benefited who
sets himself even secretly against his
healer, who prefers his own will and
way to the will and way of God, or
who cherishes a false self pride in his
own condition. - The only way of
restoration is the sincere and humble
committal of oneself into the hands
of God that He may work His restor
ing will. One must learn the very
heart of the meaning of the sixth
chapter of Matthew, the core of which
is the insistence upon the necessity of
the genuine union cf the life of man
with God. llf there is one place in
which no deception is possible it is
in this relation of life with God.
Whoever the healer may be, the pre
requisite to success is the sincere de
sire of the patient to bhe helped.
Greater than the desire of having
one’'s own way, and of cherishing
one's own foible, must be the desire .
to receive that more abundant life
that Christ came to bring.
Therefore, while, on the one hand,
this is only a system of therapeutics,
on the other, it is a system the suc
cess of which is so intimately related
to the attitude of a man’s spirit to
ward -the infinite that it becomes a
matter of religion.
e ——————————— S————
An Epigram by Dv, Frank Crane,
Life is a perpetual choosing; the
road to ruinbranchesoff atevery step,
PRINKS FAR APART.
Plants &as Well as Animals That
Thrive In Arid Regions. :
It is dificult to comprehend the
part that water, or rather the lack
of water, plays in shaping the lltel
of the desert. Mice and other small ro- ‘
dents native to arid regions have
been known to live on hard seeds
without green food for periods of sev. ‘
eral months or even as long as two
or three years, and nothing in their
behavior indicated that they ever}
took liquid in any form. |
Similar adaptations are exhibited
by a large mumber of plants. The
guarequi of Bonora is a member of
the squash family, inhabiting a re
&ion in which the annual rainfall oo
curs within a few gays in the autumn, 4
The base of the stem at the surface |
of the ground becomes swolien to |
the size of a market basket in the
adult plant, and this serves as a res
ervolr for water. During the hot
rainy seagon the thin vines are sent
up, leaves are formed, and the small,
squashlike fruit is formed:; then the
vines gpd roots quickly perish, leav
ing the guarequi resting on the sur
face of the sandy soil like a bowlder
until the next rainy season, when the
vegetative activity is repeated.
One of these huge tubers was pick
d up under an acacia tree in the Son
ora sands jn February, 1802, and plac
ed on a shelf in a museum case with
a number of preserved exhibits; in
the summer of that year, and in every
vear since, it has sent up its thin
stems and spread its leaves at a time
carresponding to its active season in
the desert. These have soon died
down in a very natural manner, all
the plastic material and water not
used being carried back into the tub
er, which now goes into a sleeping
or resting condition for another year,
Six times has this awakening occuc
red, and no change in the firmness of
the guarequi or of its external sppear
ance has taken place. It has already
lived six years upon water which it
bad in reserve, the last addition to its
store having been made in October,
1901. It would not be unsafe to say
that this plant accumulates a reserve
which may last it for a quarter of
a century.—From the Outing Maga
zine, o
BURDEN ENOUGH, NOW.
“So you are not in favor of having
the Government own the ratlways?”
“No,” answered Farmer Corntos
gel. “It strikes me that the Govern
ment has sinfulness of its own to
keep it busy for the present.”—Wagh
ington Star.
DON'T CUT YOUR CORNS,
It you suffer with corns, bunions, sore,
callous spots on the feet or soft corns be
tween the toes, go to your druggist or send
25¢. by mall for ABBOTT'S EAST INDIAN cony
PAINT. It cures quickly and permanently
without cutting, burning or “eating” the
flesh and leaves no pain or soreness,
Address Tae ABBoTT Co., SBavannah, Ga.
e AR
Happiness consists in being less un
happy than your neighbor.
BABY'S AWFUL ITCHING HUMOR.
Nothing Would Help Him—Mother
Almost in Despair—Owes Quick
Cure to Cuticura.
“Several months ago, my little boy began
to break out wjth itching sores. I doctored
him, but as soon as I got them heuled up
¥ in one place they would break out in an
other. I was almost in despair. I could
not get anything that would help him.
Then I began to use Cuticura Soap and
Cuticura Ointment, and after using them
three times the sores commenced to heal.
He is now well, and not a scar is left on
his body. They have never returned nor
left him with bad blood, as onme would
think. Cuticura Remedies are the best I
have ever tried, and I shall nighly recom
mend them to any one who is suffering
likewise. Mrs. William Geeding, 102 Wash
ington St., Attica, Ind., July 22, 1907.”
Occasionally an honest man tires of
the game and takes up politics.
ANTIDOTE FORt SKIN DISEASKS
That’s what TETTERINE i 8; and it is more,
It is an absolute cure for eczema, tetter,
ringworm, erysipelas and a!l other itehing
ocutgneous diseases. In aggru.vuted CASes
of thes» afflictions {ts cures have been phe -
nomenal. It gives instant. relief and e&ctsf
permanent cures. 606. at druggists or by
mail from J. T. Smueraine, Dept. A, Sa
vanneh, Ga,
It's easier for a fool to ask questions
than it 1s for a wise man to stop him.
Your
Good
Looks
Thore is Only One
ssßromo Quinine’’
That is :
Laxative Bromo Quinine
i USED THEZ WORLD OVER TO GURE A OOLD IN ONE DAY.
Always remember the f#fll name. Look
for this signature on every box. 26c. é% %
One of the z
® ‘
Essentials
of the happy homes of to-day is a vast
fund of information as to the best methods
of promoting health and happiness and
right living and knowledge of the world's
best products.
Products of actual excellence and
reasonable claims truthfully presented |
and which have attained to world-wide
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Well-Informed of the World; not of indi
viduals only, but of the many who have |
the happy faculty of selecting and obtain
ing_ the best the world affords. |
One of the products of that class, of
known component parts, an Ithical
remedy, approved by physicians and com
mended by the Well-Informed of the |
Worldasa valuable and wholesome f amily |
laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs |
and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial |
effects always buy the genuine, manu
factured by the California Fig Syrup Co.,
suly, and for sale by all leading druggists, |
et e
A New Derelict Destroyer,
The new derelict destroyer Seneca ‘
will fill an important function in the ‘
protection of shipping. It will be
the duty of this vessel to patrol the
‘coast to rid it of the floating dang
ers and to be in readiness at any |
moment to cruise wherever a dere.
lict may be reported, either by ves
sels entering port or by wireless mos.
sages. Kach season there is a list
of ships missing for unknown causes,
and ag it is probable that these dan
gerous hulks have much to do with
sending sound ships to the bottom,
the activity of the Seneca may be
expected to reduce this list. There
w 1 be other uses for the derelict
detrayer, such as supplying sails
and provisions for vessels in distress
or taking oir crews from unseaworthy
or sinking vessels, but its real value |
will be in ridding the sea of one of |
its greatest dangers.—Boston Tran
script,
Dutles on a number of fancy and
ornamental stones are to be increas
~ed five-fold by an order which cus
~ toms officials are to. put in force Mar,
16.
i PN
: ‘f’?%"/:':" A s
: = J? 59
|;e [ %
“or 115 )
‘ This woman says that after
‘months of suffering Lydia E.
'Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
'made her as well as ever.
~ Maude E. Forgie, of Leesburg,Va,,
writes to Mrs. Pinkham :
~ “1 want other suffering women to
'know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound has done for me. For
Emonths I suffered from feminine ills
80 that I thought I could nos live, I
wrote you, and after taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compouznd, and
using the treatment you prescribed I
felt like a new woman., I am now
strong, and well us ever, and thank you
for the good you have done mz2.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousandsof
women who have been troubled with
displacements, mflmnn)ut ion, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that | )ear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizziness or nervous prostration,
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Addvess, Lynn, Mass,
A A
Woman’s good looks depend, of course, very largely upon her health., If you
are weak, sick, miserable, and suffer from pain or other Symptoms of womanly ail
ments, your face and appearance will quickly show it, and nothing will bring "back
your good looks, until you cure your female troubles,
Wine f Cardui
is the medicine for you to try, when sick. Mrs. Sarah Avery, of Moark, Ark., writes:
“I suffered with womanly troubles for two years, and nothing helped me until | took
Cardui. Now lam well.” Tryit. Sold everywhere, in SI.OO bottles.
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prepaid, Ladies’ Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co. Cbutunoo‘n,- enn,
_
Hemp Plant Along Gulf Coast,
The valuable nature of the work
how being carried on in Texas by the
United States Agricultural Depart
ment is again shown by the discovery
that the “abaco” or hemp plant can
be successfully grown in the South:
west Gulf coast country. Experi
ments have been carried on the last
year and the horticulturists are con
vinced that this valuable addition
can he made to the list of Texas
Crops.
It has long been the theory that tho
hemp® plant would not grow success
fully in any section of the world ex
cept the Philippine Islands. Efforts
have been made to transplant it to
Africa, India and South America, but
with little success Heretofore Manila
has had a monopoly of the hemp trade
and the finest ropes and cordage come
from that ecity,
The hemp plant is a variety of
banana and has exactly the same ap
pearance as the broad leafed plants
found growing in many San Antonio
yards. It was quite by accident that
the discovery was made that the
hemp plant could be successfully
grown In Texas.—San Antonia Ex.
press, &
FITs,St. Vitus'Dance :Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. §2 trial bottle qu treatise free,
Dr, H. R. Kline, Ld.,981 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Probably a miser saves money be
cause he doesn't know what else to
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IEPILE”ES\'
ITS
It you suffer from Fits, Fnllin? Bioknoss or
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R New Discovery and Treatment
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Express Prepaid. Give AGR and full eddress
W. H. MAY, M, D., 548 Pea:l Streel, New York,
R CURES s
NUBI AN Constipation, Blliousness and
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TRYA'BOTTLE Dot NofGrine. | Plenant o Take,
~
MALSBY COMPANY,
41 S, FORSYTH ST.,, ATLANTA, GA.,
J e
7. gn o (@0 s o, ',.
e ( i
| o \‘g(,
i 0, Vi o
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o e 2 o W P i
R ,-_i"'f‘,.if;,:;}é."';i}!- Ay [t TR
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i O gl
i ¥ A ‘.g:r,flvv"‘ '_i;_,,,;-.'-' baro IDA e il
Manufacturers of and Dealers in An wiads of
AND SUPPLIES.
Portable, Stationary and T'raction Engines, Boilers, |
Baw Mills and Grist Mills, Wood-working and Shin- |
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Write for catalogue prices. Addiess all communica. |
tions to Atlanta, Ga. We have no connections in |
Jacksonville, Fla, ‘:
e ———————————————————
(Atlß-'O9) |
..;.‘::_‘.‘;l“ \
SRR
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W 1 A 5 RN
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Yl P NOT NUBBINS, BUT—
-7 W ‘.&\:‘.’\_...
B! two shapely ears and more per
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Ears that are solid from tip to butt,
Every, grain plump and heavy and rich,
~ ';‘
That is the common record when a worn goil
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L W.LDOVGLAS
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saving articles, All goods gnaranteed,
Wiite for particulars regarding outfit today,
Start a business of your own and make large
profits in an easy manner, We want one
agent in every lown. Write before someone
gets nhead of you,
We are the oldest and best-known manu
facturing canvassing house in the country,
We refer you to any bank, express com
pany, or commercial egency as to our
responsibility,
HOUSFHOLD NOVELTY WORKS
30-100 :l:qcumseh St., BUFFALO, N. Y.
GREATEST Protective and Beneficial
Order ever started. Over 650,000 mem
bers. Both men and women. Helps get
EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES with other
people. HIGHER WAGES, LESS TOl7,
and IMPROVED CONDITIONS g"snm‘nl
ly. NO RACE DISCRIMINATION. SIOO
alt-death; $26 to each male member at
wife's death; $lO at child's; MANY
OTHER BENEFITS. Membership open
to all honorable people alike. LE.\gING
RACE MEN AND WOMEN D P%—
TIDS WANTED IN EAOH LOCALITY.
Work after hours. LIBERAL PAY
AND PLEASANT WORK, Write at
once for full rurticulars, enclosing 10¢
for postage. The I-L-U GRAND Lofi{?*
178 I-L-U BLDG,, DAYTON, OHIO.
e ————————————————————
$60,000 Value Given A wa)m
THERACYCLE 2151 opuiuns e g
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“75¥m. Wi nf-nfu&n}f. V‘Vo:m‘:‘hn% RSN 4 t\‘.('), \
cheap RAUYCLES but you can got yours WM WA
ATFACTORY PRICES Sot R\ R
log and pamphlet sent Frn “J?!‘l‘l‘:%‘:itho 'l’(\"
fl&?ofimdhovwmn’ml 0,006, ‘»
WANUFAGTURERS OF THE RACYCLE, GHIDDLETOWN, 0, ;
“——-M
I afMicted ’
with wt-ul(Th E w t
s+t Thompson’s Eye Water
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