Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, May 28, 1908, Image 7
THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY u DR, CURTIS LEE LAWS. Theme: Men in the Church, A : { ‘Brooklyn, N. Y.—Dr. Curtig Lee Laws, the new pastor of the Greene Avenue Baptist Church, Sunday night preached a special sermon to: men. The service was held under the auspices of the Men’s League of the church. In the ceurse of his address he said some very strong things. .The subject was “Why There Ara More Women Than Men in the Church.” He took no text, but at once vigorous ly took up his theme. He said: It is not a fact that our churches are not reaching men in our day and in our city. We are reaching men; we are reaching men in large num bers and men from all classes of so ciety. But it is a fact that we are not reaching men in the same pronortion and to the same number as we are reaching women. This is a fact, and it is a fact to which we cannot be in nocently indifferent. We must meet the situation fairly, and if the fault is in the church we must remove it. Here are facts which no one will dispute. Fully two-thirds of the church members of our country are women and more than two-thirds of the people in the church congregation are women. I doubt very much if we have in Brooklyn a single church with more than thirty-three per cent. of men in its membership. This is a startling fact when we come to con sider it, and it becomes more start ling still if church membership bears any relation to the question of salva tion. Few will claim that a man must be a member of some church to be saved, but all will agree that the‘ church is the place for saved men, and that, generally speaking, saved men are in the church. ‘ Why, then, is it, that with all our equipment and zeal, we are not able to reach men in the same proportion as we reach women? Why is it that only a third of our membership are men, and that, relatively speaking, we have so few men in our congrega tlons? Personally I love men. I re joice in their society and fellowship, and I do my best to interest them in Christianity and the church, and yet, broadly speaking, we have the same conditions in our church that prevail everywhere else. I come to the study of this question with a great deal of personal interest and after a great deal of thought. It is claimed by specialists who have studied this question that the reason why men are not attracted to the church in larger numbers is that the ministry of the modern church is not strong enough intellectually to satisfy men of culture and education. This is practically the ground taken by a writer in a famous article pub lished in one of our magazines. After talking with hundreds of young men the writer came to the conclusion that “The modern pulpit is sluggish and stagnant,” and that young men ab sent themselves from church simply because the average minister is dull and heavy and behind the times. Are the men who do not attend church brainier, more intelligent or more cultured than the men who do attend church? I wofilfiflke to see the men who do not attend church ‘placed upon the south side of one of our streets and the men who do at tend church placszd upon the north side of the same street. Then I would Jdike to driye slowly along the street ‘between these two groups that I ‘might study their faces. On which side do you think I would find the ‘brains and the culture, and the re finement and the character? Again, when non-churchgoing men prate about the uninteresting preach ers, I always feel that they are cast ing needless insults into the teeth of their mothers and daughters and ‘wives and sweethearts. Women read ‘more than men, and except about po litical and commercial questions they are better informed than men. Not withstanding their higher culture and ‘their greater refinement, the women ,do not find the sermons of the average preacher dull and inconsequential. . Again, it is claimed that the ‘churches don’t seek the men nor wel .come them to the services as they should. Now, personally, Ido not be lieve a word of this.. I have been for years very closely identified with the .church life of a great city, and I have ‘ ‘been in close personal relations with ‘a greath many of our ministers, and I .tell you that the whole Christian church is making a mighty effort to .reach the unchurched men of the city. And wanting them as much as we do, it is nonsense to talk about not wel coming them. I have heard that in a -certain section of Maine there is a church which has out in the vestibule ‘a nickel-in-the-slot machine. All that a stranger has to do is to walk in and drop in his nickel and out from the machine comes a hand to grasp his in cordial welcome. We do not have anything like that here, hut we can beat that in our church, for here many a stranger gets a hearty hand grasp and goes away with his nickel in his pocket. I tell you that men are welcome in our churches; men, irrespective of the accident of fine clothing; men, how ever dressed and however wicked; they are all welcome in nine-tenths of the churches; and what is more, they know quite well they will not ounly be welcome, but that we are praying that they may come. Let us glance now at some of the real rea sons why men do not come to our churches and into our churches, as their sisters do. Men are driven go hard by the*work of the week that when Sunday comes many of them are in a state of col lapse mentally, and so they spend the time in bed, or else they betake them selves to the parks or to the country for recuperation. I know many men who are commit ting a slow suicide by the work which I they are attempting to do, and I know that when Sunday eomes they snatch a little rest as their only safety, I feel that in some way they must get out from under the burden which they are bearing, some by choicz and more by necessity or else while taking care of this life they will by sheer neglect lose the life which is to come. i Now, women, on the other hand, have 1 their-work for the most part in the bouse, and they welcome the Sabbath 1 day and the church services as a kind ! of mild ertertainment and pleasant diversion. There they see their friends and have a pleasant word, but the men have been seeing their friends all the week, and now they want simply rest. Men have many things in their lives which furnish them with social life, and with a little balm.for thsir sore consciences. Tens of thousands of men belong to clubs and societies and lodges. Here they spend their leisure time and spare money, and many of them will single out the charitable features of these organiza tions, and will say that their lodge is their church, inculcating all that is | good and beautiful. When any man allows any human society to take the | piace of the church of God in his life, that society has become to him a posi- | tive evil, and he ought at once to rec ognize it as a snare of the devil. These societies do good in their way, but in comparison with the church of God they are as a rush light to a star of the first magnitude, as a firefly to the sun in all his glory and splendor. I blame these societies for keeping | many men out of the reach of the Gospel, for they try to teach men that morals are as acceptable as religion, and many men are giving a blind al legiance to these human institutions and at the same time believing that they are serving Almighty God. Men | ‘also have politics to interest them,‘ and during a political contest it seems iutterly out of the question to interest ‘the ordinary man in anything else ‘than a political discussion. Women ‘have few societies, and, thank fHeaven, they have no part in politics. ~ Men are more enamored of certain forms of overt sin than women, and the devil, through these forms of sin, is winning many men away from all | the influences of the church of Christ. Gambling and drunkenness are the sins of men, and while some women also fall into these two classes of sin, they are the exception rather than the rule. In many of our American cities we have one legalized place for the sale of liquor to every fifty of our men, and we cannot tell, nor do the authorities seem to care, how many gambling places there are in our fair city. But all of these places live largely upon the patronage of men. Now, is it strange that we have so few men comparatively in our churches? Men are far more in the clutches of overt sin than women, and that fact must be reckoned with when you count up the men in the churches. God pity the great host of men in our city who have sold them selves body and soul to the devil, and ‘who have no care about righteousness ‘here nor felicity hereafter. ; Society places a premium upon the irreligiousness, if not upon the posi tive unrightousness, of men by per ‘mitting the double standard of mor- | als. Men do with impunity what a ‘woman could not do at all if she de sired to remain respectable in the es- | timation of her family and friends. Now, so long as society, composed in | part of Christian people, permits men | to be libertines and drunkards, and ‘does not make them smart for their sins, these same men will have but little regard for religion. How can ‘we expect the libertine to have any respect for religion when he is made the welcome guest in the house ‘where, if the people lived up to their ‘religion, he would be loathed? - How can we expect sinful men to come into the church and give up ‘their sins, when the men and women ‘with whom they associate do not dis count them in the least because of the lives that they lead? How different with women. They must be pure to be respectable; they must not fall once into the sin in which their hus bands and brothers riot, for if they do they will be scourged out of soci ety. I tell you men and women of Brooklyn, the social order in which we live puts a premium upon the vice of men. We are responsible to the }extent of our influence. I plead with the fathers and mothers to protect their daughters. Be as willing that your son should marry a fallen woman as that your daughter should marry a fallen man. T plead with the Chris tian men before me to refuse their in timate friendship to impure men, and under no circumstances to allow im pure men the privilege of social equal ity in your homes. Not until Chris tian men take some such stand will ‘the men of our generation realize the §enormity of social sin. sk Every Man by Himself, ~ God beholds thee individually, who ever thou art. “He calls thee by thy name,” He sees thee and understands thee. He knows what is in thee, all thy own peculiar feelings and thoughts, thy dispositions and likings, thy strength and thy weakness. He views thee in thy day of rejoicing and thy day of sorrow. He sympathizes in thy hopes and in thy temptations; He interests Himself in all thy anx ieties and thy remembrances, in all the risings and fallings of thy spirit. He compasses thee round, and bears thee in His arms; He takes thee up and sets thee down. Thou dost not love thyself better than He loves thee. Thou canst not shrink from pain more tpan He dis likes thy bearing it; and if He puts it on thee, it is as thou wilt put it on thyself, if thou art wise, for a greater good afterwards.—J. H. Newman. To Live We Must Grow. Are there not some of us who have been trying a good while to get back an old experience? If we succe.ded we should only be where we were, and if we are only going to geét where we were we have abandoned the law of progress and begun the downward retrogression. God has Himself withered, by His own consuming breath, the flower and fragrance of your former joys, that He may lead you into something bet ter. Let your old experience go and take the living, everlasting Christ in stead. What thing thou lovest most, thou mak’st itg nature thine; Earthly, if that be earth—if that he God’s, divine. —R. C. Trench, i e S Evolution. Evolution has never been the orig inating, creating or commanding power. Human thought never ad vanced so far as to get away from thee first statement in the Book, “In the beginning God created.”—The Rev, W, F. Day, Los Angeles, Her Lawyer—“My earnest sym pathy. Yours is an irreparable loss.” The Widow—"Do I really look so old?"—Boston Transcript. e 2 s i gl FITS,St. Vitus'Dance:Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve | Restorer, $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr, H, R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Pity that regrets could not come. before instead of after hasty action. _A CORN CURE THAT CURES, ABBOTT'S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT is a won. derful remedy for hard or soft corns, bun- | sons, sore, callous spots on the feet, warts and indurations of the skin. It is applied with a brush apd cures without cutting, burning or soreness. 250. at your druggists or by mail from Ter Assorr Co., Savan nah, Ga, | g —eeee e | Kissing is less dangerous than the girl's father, “ TETTERIVE—-A RELYABLE CURBSE. j TETTERINE is a sure, safe and speedy cure for eczema, tetter, skin and scalp diseases and itehing piles. Endorsed by physicians; praised by thousands who have used it. Fmgmnlt, soothlnsf, antlsugtlo. 50¢. at druggists or by mail from J. 1. SHURTRINE, Dept. A, Bavannah, Ga. 1l news travels fast when it is go ing to a doctor. To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up the System Take the Old Standard GRrove's TASTE LESS CniuL Toxic. Yoi know what you are taking. The formula is plainly ptrinted on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. For grown people and children, 50c. Wall street bears are more danger ous than bruin in the Black Hills. Ladies Can Wear Shoes : } One size smaller after usini Allen’s Foot- | Ease, apowder. It makestight ornew shoes easy. Curesswollen, | ot, sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At alldraggists and shoz stores, 25¢. Doun'tac cept anysubstitute. Trial package FREE l’;y j mail, Address Allen S.Olmsted, Leßoy,N. Y, Thanks to the Gibson Gir? The Million’s figure has astound ingly improved during the last five years, and the much-abused Gibson girl has done a great deal for it.— From the Onlooker. ‘Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they can not reach the seat of the disease. Ca tarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, end in order to cure it you must take inter nal remedies. Hail’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hali (atarrb Cure is not a qfuack medicine. ‘lt was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this coun try for years and is a regular presecription It is composed of the best tonics kmown combined with the best bloed purifiers, act ing directly on the mucous surfaces. ‘ihe perfect combination of the two ingredients 18 what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials free. ¥. J. Cnexey & Co., _l’rg}m., Toledo, O. Sold tg Dru§gxst's, ;it'}ce SC. o Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. His Lucky Day. Deputy County Clerk J. Robert Set tle says Sunday is his lucky day. His litle daughter was born on a Sunday and last Sunday a hen hatched six teen chicks from sixteen eggs for him.. —TFayette Democrat%fl_wdf LNS 3}*‘&.‘3’:’.**’*9"‘% Hicks’ Capudine Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, overworked, or ngat nelti’ llt_ rgéresh(f,s lthe brain and rves. 8 Liqud and pleasant to e, IQc., 25¢., and 50c., at drug stores. gt Dentists ought to make good oflice seekers. They have the pull. Saved From Reing a Cr!p_pl(; For Life. s “Almost six or seven weeks ago I hecame paralyzed all at once with rheumatism,” writes Mrs. Louis Me- Key, 913 Seventh street, Oakland, Cal, \ “It struck me in the back and extend ed from the hip of my right leg down to my foot. The attack was so severe that I could not move in bed and was | afraid that I should be a cripple for life. “About twelve years ago I received l a sampie bottle of your Liniment, but | never had occasion to use it, as I have | always been well, but something told | me that Sloan’s Liniment would help me, so I tried it. After the second ap- l plication I could get up out of bed, and in three days could walk, and now feel ’ well and entirely free from pain. { “My friends were very much sur-; prised at my rapid recovery and I was | only too glad to tell them that Sloan’s Liniment wag the only medicine I used.” Even the clam knows when it is time i to shut up. : | Al the Change A widow never claims that the lase lamented’s demise was due to over work. What a lovely world this is to a girl the first time she falls in love. Free QGure for Rhou matism, Bone Paln and Eczema Botanic Blood Balm (B B. B.) cures the worst cases of Rheumatism. bone pains. swollen muscles and joints, by purifying the bleod. Thousands of cases cured by B. B. B, alter all other treatments failed. Price SI.OO per large bottle at diug stores, with complete directions for home treatment . 'Large sample free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. 30l : ‘,%" % , 2 @"}%« "::3’l'?:-:-. § : " -$ &“* (200 2 e S SRR A ' 5‘;?‘():&\-1 NS, . ¢ gif 2L, < YN L N 7 NS e O o WY y B .BN AfE ~ x frii R R iy LG 3 By Pl More proof that Lydia E. Pinke ham’s Vegetable Compound saves woman from surgical operations, Mus, 8. A, Williams, of Gardiner, Maine, writes: ‘1 was a great sufferer from female troubles, and Lydia 12. Pinkham’s Vege. table Compound restored me to health in three months, after my physician declared that an operation was abso lutely necessary.” Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of 154 Cley bourne Ave,, Chicago, 111., writes : SNy suffere(i from female troubles, a tumor and much inflammation, Two of the best doctors in Chicago decided that an operation was necessary to save my life, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound entirely cured me without an operation,” 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 thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, Feriodie pains, backache, that bear ng-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. Address, Lynn, Mass. R e e TN TR PR .. The man who.doesn’t butt in occa sionally seldom gets ahead. NO SKIN WAS LEFT ON BODY. Baby was Expected to Die with Y zema—Bloed Oozed Out All Over Her Body—Now Well—Doctor Said to Use Cuticura. l “Six months after birth my little girl i broke out with eczema and I had two doe tors in attendance. There was not a particle ’ of skin left on .er body, the blood oozed - out iust anywhere, and we had to wrap her in silk and carry her on a pillow for ten ’ weeks. She was the most terrible sight T ever saw, and for six months T looked for her to die. I used every known remedy to alleviate her suffering, for it was terrible tto witness, Dr. C—— gave her up. Dr. ' B—— recommended the Cuticura Remedies. She will soon be three years old and has ~mever had a sign of the dread troublewsince. - We used about eight cakes of Cuticura Boap and three boxes of Cuticura Oint ment. James J. Smith, Dumid, Va., Oct. g‘ -and 22, 1906,” r L — ~=i—- - impossible to Match. ' “The president,” said a Pennsyl vania avenue bootmaker, “would be pleased if he knew what a pretty girl said about him in my shop the other day. “She came in to order her brother gome riding hoots. I showed her the jast idea in riding boots, a splendid thing, “ ‘These,’ I said, ‘are called Roose velts. “She wrinkled her pretty nose, “‘How absurb,” she said. ‘Where I should like to gnow, will they find a pair of Roosevelts? "—Washingtop Star. DON'T CUT YOUR CORNS, ! If-you suffer with corns, bunions, sore, oallous spots on the feet or soft corns Lbe tween the toes, go to your druggist or send 25¢. by mall for ABROTT'S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT. It cures quickly and permanently without cutting, burning or ‘“eating’” the flesh and leaves no pain or soreness. Address Tue Apsorr Co., Savannah, Ga. The love which comes after mar riage is often for the other fellow. B I ii it Take the Place of Calomel Constipation sends poigonous matter hounding through the baody, !)ufl headache, SBour Stomach, Fel.ed’iireuth, l“mu-n_l Eyes, Loss of Energy ;|'“l| Ap- Pfi:lfif:;ll.fi:hv‘n::;:‘r:;' ::lux'lll"tfl.vrl\'j:;‘yllfillii‘l‘)llll.f l"l"’l‘n.‘-_\ ‘nl\::c'il(‘f l: the Shlmzir;i liver to better action, cleanse the bowels, strengthen the weakenaed parts, induce appe tite and aid digestion. They do not Salivate, no mat ter what vou eat, drink or do. Price 25 cents from your dealer or direct from J. M. YOUNG, JR.,, WAYCROSS, GA. Weak Women frequently suffer great pain and misery during the change of life, when the female functions are undergoing the readjustment that comes to every woman.. These hot and cold flashes, pains in back or side, drawing sensa tions, headaches, dizzy feelings, etc,, have been found, in thousands of cases, to disappear, as a result of taking Wine of Cardui _Mis, Lucinda C. Hill, of Freeland, 0., writes: ‘“Before I took Cardui, T suffer ed so, T was afraid to lie down at night. 'After I took it I felt better in a week, Now my pains have gone, and the change of life has nearly left me.”” Try Cardui. Write for Free 64-page Book for Women, giving eymptoms, causes, home treatment and WRITE FOR FREE BOOK s soeeteiye Liv, b o Vi T SP R G O NS e e SR T ——— ~ “FMEMBER OF THE FAMILY, ™ 5 2 'MEN, BOYS, WO EN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. b 2 il 3 pe~ W. L, Dou%las walies and sclls moro “Gn B 45" i fl:" RS 53'0;" and $8.560 shoos RETM G S e 7 ‘rn.y ethes manufacturer in the I . A 3:-! . 'bocauaa they hoid their®E G ,%fl' BT AN |, _Shape it beiter, wonr tongar, and il / &Ak pig= are Fral_tor value then any othorm VTN Lyelets shoes ln the world to-day. e 'fi’na Uied w#?i“%;“ and 85 Bt Edga Shoes Canol Bs Equalled At Any Price eelusively, > ON. .1, Dougmas name and price is stamyped on bottomn, Take No dubstitiute, Bold the bert sho» denl @ shoes maled yin factory any part of the world., lns. “‘“e‘tz“flol li‘lsi &,au;u'ga :z‘.r..'rywhe(e. e um'l“\l'l(.“l:: I;J)'U(:-?L‘AXQF lrll‘toclflx’ltuvl’xd.l ]l"d ;L!lyi‘b‘.o A Century of Stone Coal. | Wilkesbarre today celebrates the centennial of anthracite. Special hon iors will be paid to the memory of Judge Jesse Fell, the Wyoming valley ‘pioneer, who on February 11, 1808, ‘at the village tavern, showed how “stone coal” could be burned in an open grate, An Indian massacre of unusual atrocity, a poem and the reputation of being one of nature’'s garden spots fix the Wyoming valley in the popular mind. It is otherwise entitled to fame as a source of matienal wealth far exceeding the product of California gold fields or African diamond mines, Twelve years after KFell's discovery only 365 tons of hard ¢oal were ship ped from the mines in a year. Now there is an annual output of 72,000, 000 tons, with a value at the mines of $166,000,000. All the gold mined in the United States in 19¢6 was worth but §94,000,- 000. The Pennsylvania anthracite fields cover 470 square miles and in clude fifteen seams. The industry em« ploys 145,000 men, How long will the supply last at the present rate of yield? Probably 100 years, accord fng to conservative estimates. By thav time the 630,000,000 tons of anthracite in the Shengi regions of China may have become available for American use, if no new ‘yellow peril” occurs to prevent. But the certainty of the ultimate exhaustion of the Pennsylvania fields makes al the more obligatory measures of econ omy in production and the correction where possible of the eriminal waste of the past.—New York World, The Wise Youna Man. It wag a wise young man who paus ed before he answered the widow who had asked him to guess her age. “You must have some idea about it,” she sald, with what was intended for an arch sidewise glance. “I have several ideas,” he admitted with a smile. “The only trouble is that I hesitate whether to make you ten years younger on account of your looks or ten years older on account of vour brains” Then, while the widow smiled and blushed, he took a graceful but speedy leave.—Youth's Companion. ANTIDOTE FOR SKIN DISEASES That's what TETTERINE i 8; and it is more. It is an absolute cure for eczema, telter, ringworm, erysipelas and all other {tehing cutaneous diseases. In nggmvuted cases of these affiictions its cures have beenrphe nomenal, It gives instant relief and effects permanent cures. 50c. at drugglsts or by mail from J. T. SaverriNg, Dept. A, Ba vannah, Ga. He Would Arbitrate. The German Emperor hints that he would like to have his salary as King of Prussia increased; but there seems to be no probability that he will go on a strike in case his demand is res fused.—Chicago Record-Herald, IEPrLé‘PsY | —— —-— T — 1f you suffer from Fits, Fnlling Sickness or Bpasms, or have Children that do so, my S e S S R TR T e TR S st SR S TR New Discovery and Treatment will give them immediate rellef, and all you are asked to do is tosend for a Free Bottle of Dr. May's TRIAL EPILEPTICIDE CURE Qo o 8 with Food and Drugs Act of Oon, Juszr’!é)th 1908. (kunglete dirgetions nlufi: timonials of CURKES, ete., FREE by mail, Express Prepald. Give AGE and full address W. H. 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