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THE PULPIT.
A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY
REV. DR. NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIS.
Theme: The Enrichment of Life.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—For the last time
until the fall the Rev. Dr. Newell
Dwight Hillis, pastor of Plymouth
Church, preached Sunday morning.
His subject was ‘“The Enrichment ot
Life.” The text was from John 9:
15: “I have come that you may have
life, and that you may have it more
abundantly.”
* The time was when scientists be
lieved that life was spontansbus. It
is forty vears since Huxley published
his article on the Bathybius. The
scientist held that there was a gela
tinous substance in the bottom of
deep sea along the heat line of the
equator. This sheet of living matter
enveloping the earth held the proto
plasm that was the germ of all living
things that creep or walk or fly. The
union of the earth and the deep sea
water and the tropic heat brought
forth the substance that mothered all ‘
life. The theory was so novel that
the Challenger was fitted out for deep
sea dredging. But the expedition
brought the keenest disappointment
to the scientist. The investigators
found white sand at the bottom of
the tropic seas, and the Bathybius be
came as mythical as the Trojan horse,
Then scientists set themselves about
the task of producing life by chemical
means. To make sure there were no
pre-existing germs they boiled the
water, roasted the earth, and cleaned
the air and then sealed all three up
in jars, which they kept at blood
heat, in the hope of developing spon
taneously living germs of an order no
matter how low. For twenty years
the experiments were continued, with
the result that all scientists agree
that life comes only from pre-exist
ing life. If you want the living shock
of corn, you must begin with the liv
ing seed thrust into the ground. If
vou want the fig or the grape, you
must find the root or cutting. The
babe’s life comes from the mother
who lives before it. Even character
comes from contact. Goodness is an
importation and salvation an exotic.
No man can will himself into gentle
ness. A profane man in his child’s
presence can set a watch-upon his
tongue, but planting a lid on Vesu
vius does not put out the subterra
nean fires. The man may restrain
his hatred of the enemy, but he can
not will himself into loving the false
friend who stabbed him in the back.
The selfish man compels himself to
give, but God alone can stir the gen
erosity that makes giving a supreme
joy. Jairus’ daughter cannot bid
herself to live; Christ standing above
her gives life for death. If you have
the living plant, the vital spark in
the root will take up the dead soil
and lend it life. And if you have the
living Christ in the heart the soul
that is dead in selfishness or dishonor
or falsehood can live unto sympathy,
justice and love. Christ came to give
life. There is no spontaneous good
ness. We lift our eyes unto the life
giver, the joy producer—unto the
Saviourof thesoukr. - -~ .
Now, what all the world’s a seek
ing is life—more life. Growth? It
is a question of vital force. Health?
It is the overflowing, outbreaking vi
tality of the body. Death? It ap
proaches when there is not life
enough to take up the bread and
meat and turn it into rich red blood.
A little life means little work can be
done. A little mind means that a
few books will suffice. A small na
ture means that it needs only two or
three friends. A great, royal, divine,
universal soul, pulsating, glowing
and throbbing with life, means a vi
talized intellect. This is an intellec
tual law. We speak of some young
people as having hungry minds. The
young scholar devours facts, conver
sation, the statements of books, and
friends. He vitalizes everything he
touches. The events go into his in
tellect in the morning as raw mate
rial, rags and wood pulp. The
knowledge comes out of his intellect
at night in the form of literature. He
has a vitalized mind. He possesses
life, creative. If he is a poet, give
him the great authors, the great sing
ers, and he will extract their mes
sages, Witness the way Schiller di
gested the books of Goethe. Witness
Millet's mastery of the old teachers.
Witness Mozart's swift progress in
musie. No imitators these men.
Every page is stamped with individ
uality, What is the secret of their
success? Plainly, fulness of life.
Without this abundant life all strug
gle is failure. This one youth has no
gift with the brush; hé may break
his heart, but he will die a paint
grinder. Another toils over his
rhymes, but the inspiration will not
come, The advocate stumbles on,
seeking after the necessary word, if
haply he may find the idea. And
each in turn ends the struggle in de
spair, What does he need? life.
More life for the intellect, as writer;
more life for the imagination as art
ist; more life and passion as reform
er and orator, more life as a saint.
Men need moral talent for prayer,
spiritual genius for purity and peace.
For all talent is a gift and unique
supremacy is an endowment from
God. The unseen Father ordains:the
parents to hand forward their gifts
up to the children. Remember that
Christ has come to give life and to
give it abundantly.
In these college commencement
days our illustrations should come
from the realm of education. Here
and now we recall Matthew Arnold’s
definition of culture — a familiarity
with the best that has been done, or
thought or said. And to this senti
ment let us add his other word:
“There is a power in the universe,
not ourselves, that makes for right
+ eousness.” What is culture for the
scholar? There is something in the
books of great men—in the sage who
thinks for us, the poet who signs for
us, the orator who pleads for us, the
hero who dies for us and that wisdom
beyond ourseives comes in, floods the
scholar's soul and transforms him.
And there is a physical power in the
world, not ourselves, and that we in
voke for progress. Man's arm lifts
100 pounds, but there is a power in
the steam, not ourselves, that lifts
100 tons of molten steel. Man's leg
runs four miles an hour, but there is
a power in the flywheel of his engine
that will help him to run ecross this
continent in four days without losing
breath or bringing tire. Man'’s voice
is no stronger than it was in the days
when Caesar made 10,000 soldiers
hear his command, but now a powern
not in himself but in electricity
makes for eloquence and speech
across a thousand miles of space.
And how shall we explain the trans
formation of impetuous Peter, and
passionful David and this cold; craf
ty, ambitious, cruel rabbi, Saul, into
this gentle Paul? There is a power
in the universe not David, or Peter,
nor Saul, that makes for righteous
ness. Christ descended upon them to
give life, and to give it more abund
antly. How do you explain the Ital
lan Renaissagce? There was a pow
er in the world that made for beauty
and sweetness, that descended upon
the young scholar. How do you ac
count for the German Reformation?
There was a power in the universe
that made for faith, and character,
and self-surrender. And that power
descended on Martin Luther. Whence
came the Puritan Reformation in
England? . The explanation was not
in John Eliot, or Sir Harry Vane, or
John Pym. There was a power in
‘the world that made for the sense of
personal worth, inspiring each man
to give an account of himself to God,
challenging him to stand upon his
own feet and assert his manhood,
urging the sense of brotherhood, and
‘that unseen power flooded the souls
of the Pilgrim Fathers and the Eng
lish heroes, and changed the face of
the whole world. Well may the men
of every great era of outbreaking ge
nius exclaim: “We lift our eyes unto
the hills from whence cometh our
help.” “Our help cometh from the
Lord, who made Leaven and earth.”
Let us now praise famous men of
old, who have redeemed the people.
But let us remember that God clothed
the knight with His shining armor,
that God pressed that blade with the
two edge into the hero's hand; that
God lent the soldiers their paens of
victory that they sing beside the
camp fires; that Christ came to lead
His followers forth to their holy war,
giving them life, yea, life abundantly.
This principle also explains the se
cret of growth that beging with life.
The old idea was that salvation was
by intellectual culture. Christ’s idea
is salvation by life through the new
heart. Bald intellectualism says
“Blessed be wisdom.” Christ says,
“Blessed is character.” Hera is a
little child. In his selfishness he
seizes. his sister’s littletoy and breaks
it. Time and growth will increase
the amount of his selfishness and
make him strike his own wife and
break the heart of his little child, for
growth increases the size, does not
change the sort. Here is the youth
who is sowing wild oats. Little by
little he is draining off all the vital
forces. The false friend says, “Don’t
be discouraged; he will outgrow
this.” But every farmer is in terror
when he finds the wild oats growing
amidst the tame. The wild oats
drink up the rain, steal the richness
from the soil, starve the tame oats.
And if they do this when the false
oats are young, time and growth sim
ply multiply the havoe. Time can do
nothing for a youth who is sowing
wild oats save gather the harvest of
pain, disaster and heartbreak. Time
can turn a spark into a conflagration,
growth can .turn a little leak into a
large one that will ruin the dike and.
submerge the land. ' Given a disease,
time does not cure it, but only en
larges and spreads.the poisoned tis
sue. Given a selfish child, growth
turns him into a monster. Given an
avaricious child, time and growth
produce a miser., Given a tricky and
cunning child, years end with a Ben
edict Arnold or an Aaron Burr, or a
Judas and a Apostate Julian. What
the wild thorn needs is the rich life
of a double rose grafted within. The
orchardist can use the wild root, but
he cuts from a tested peach or plum
a cutting that turns the sour sap into
sugar, It is new life we need. Jesus
was right when He showed the se
cret, the new heart, that brings viec
tory and peace.
Disheartened and discouraged, the
way is not to flee from God, but to
flee to Him. We live and move and
have our being in God, as our world
floats in amethyst and ether, borrow
ing all its colors from the light that
surrounds it. We have our life from
Christ as the tree has its life in the
rich juices of the soil, wherein the
tree is rooted—the stimulating at
mosphere with which the boughs are
surrounded, and the all-embracing
sunshine that lends warmth and
beauty to the sweet blossoms and the
ripe fruit.
Spirvitual Religion,
If our religion is to be real and
truly spiritual, it must be rooted and
grounded in brotherly love. “He that
hateth his brother cannot know God,”
nor can he know man. The precious
Christian quality of love will onen
the eyes of our spirits to the abiding
beauty of every human soul, to the
temptations resisted as weli as to
those which have conquered, to the
aspiration after something higher
struggling like a plant in a dark dun
geon towards the light, to the glorious
possibjlities hidden in the being of
every child of God. That clear per
ception of the good concealed within
our brothers and sisters will help us
to catch some bright glimpses of our
Father in Heaven. It is human
geifishness, which hides the true na
ture of God’'s children, however de
graded they may have become by
their own fault or the fault of others,
from our sight; it is the same deep,
deadly shadow which darkens our
own perception of God. Through
brotherly love filial affection to God
is born in human hearts, and when
that sacred emotion has once filled
our whole being, spiritual religion is
known and loved.—Arthur W, Fox.
The Cause of Much Trouble,
All kinds of doubts, disappoint
ments, vexations and sins come to the
professing Christian who makes his
religion secondary., If his main con
cern is to get on in the world, to
make money, to have a comfortable
time, to indulge a tdste or inclina
tion, then come in a troop the things
which chase away sleep and pierce
with anxieties and doubts.
Our usefulness, our happiness, our
growth, our triumph, are to come, if
they come at all, as the result of giv
ing the accent of our lives to our spir
itual interests. ILet us be Christians
and make first things or stop trying
to deceive ourselves and others by
claiming to be Christians when we
are not.—Baptist Argus, .
1 Good Roads. g
An_ Interesting Address.
The South Carolina Good Roads
Association held an interesting meet
ing at Columbia and teok action on
several matters tending toward the
betterment of roads in that State.
Among the addresses was one by B.
F. Taylor, president of the Columbia
Chamber of Commerce, who gave
facts which are of general interest in
connection with highawy improve
ment. Mr. Taylor said: (
“Gentlemen: It gives me great 1j
pleasure to welcome you all here te
day. The city of Columbia, and in |
“ett every city, depends more largely
upon good roads for its prosperity
than upon anything else. Roads are
the feeders by which the great popu
lations of cities are supplied with the
necessities of life and in a great meas
ure the trade of such cities is depend
ent upon the roads for their outgoing
commerce. There is another aspect
of the road question which has arisen
in recent years that directly affects
the population of cities. These roads
are in-a great measure the play
grounds of the people, and in com
munities like Massachusetts, in addi
tion to maintaining the roads, the
commonwealth provides magnificent
parks alongside of them. In this |
country the density of our population
has not reached the point where it is
necessary to make artificial parks, for
our natural woodlands and streams
furnish these in a more beautiful form
than the hand of man can provide.
“There is possibly more ' interest
taken now in good roads than in any
phase of our development, but the
United States is possibly yet more:
backward than any country of its
size and population in the world. As
far back as history can record good
roads have been one of the principal
items of internal improvement, and in
the case of Rome they did not confine
this to Italy but etxended the roads
to the utmost bounds of the empire.
“In this country, where we have
been willing to spend large sums of
money, inexperience and lack of or
ganization have caused a partial or
total waste of the money and in some
sections where the community was
fully able to do work it has not been
done, due to a lack of knowledge of
what could be accomplished. Of the
$70,000,000 being expended annually
in the United States the greater por
tion is by men who have practically
no knowledge of road-building and
who are acting under systems totally
obsolete and inadequate. With 2,300,-
000 miles of road to keep up the
necessity for competent engineers and
managers is clearly seen. Such men
are often hard to procure and it
therefore is absolutely necessary 1.l
such meetings as we are having here
to-day should be had frequently for
the purpos® of exchanging ideas and
educating -the- men ‘engaged in thi
most important work. R
. “Along this line I should like to
suggest that the cost of roads is a
very important item and that for the
purpose of seeing that our roads are
- properly constructed at the least pos
sible cost every board of commission
ers should require of the supervisor
a statement showing the cost per
square yard of road built under him
i each year, and this should be com
- pared with the tables of cost given
i by the national Government, and with
ithose of other supervisors in our
State.
“It is estimated that the average
cost of hauling baled cotton by wagon
from the farm to the market is fifteen
cents per hundred. With better roads
this can be reduced to at least ten.
cents, a saving of five cents per 100.
South Carolina produces five hundred
million pounds of lint cotton. With
a saving of five cents per 100 the
farmers would save on the cotton
crop of this State alone $250,000.
“Other crops would probably ine
crease this amount to approximately
$1,600,000. Now the cost of hauling
cotton by rail twenty miles is ten
cents in this State. I do not think
any one will deny that an improve
ment of our roads all over the State
would reduce the freight rates on the
railroads to a very considerable ex
tent. Road building therefore does
not stop at the actual expense of haul
ing, but it goes farther than that. It
forces competing methods of trans
portation to reduce their rates. -
“There is another aspect of this
matter that is most important. The
building of roads of a good character
practically means that real estate
now remote from cities is brought
nearer to themarket, and congequent
ly increases in value. Think what an
enormous profit it would be to add
$0 to the value of every acre of land
in South Carolina. I believe, geatle
men, that when our roads are reason
ably good this will he done, and that
each and every one of you will re
ceive the thanks and commendation
of the people of this State.”
Good Roads in Texas. ;
The city of Beaumont and the
county of Jefferson in the State of
Texas have authorized a bond issue
of §300,000 for the. purpose of im
proving the roads that radiate from
the city of Beaumont, A great shell
bank on the Sabine River has been
purchased by Ireland & Co., the con- ‘
tractors of Port Arthur, who contem
plate getting from that bank 120,000
cubic yards of shells for the making
and improving of these roadways, and
it is thought that 100 miles of road- |
way will be thus secured, which, if
done with the bonds in hand, would
show a cost of about S3OOO per mile,
't is supposed that one of the roads
shall reach through to Port Arther,
5 Fire-Kilied Timber.
Fire-killed timber is sometimes con
sidered to be practically valueless,
but it*has been used for some years
for railway ties and mine timbers, and
with satisfactory results. According
to investigations made in Colorado by
thes U. 8. Forestry Bureau, the ties
are as durable as those of green tim
ber, hold spikes well and do not ent
under the tie-plates. Some of the ties
are from timber burned 35 or 50 years
ago. Red fir ig preferred; then yellow
pine, limber pine and range pine, and
even white pine is now used; spruce
resists mechanical wear but needs a
_preservative treatment to make it re.
sist decay. Such timber is also being
used for making crates and boxes, the
fire seasoning having driven out the
odor of the pine go that it can be used
for packing crackers. The timber is,
of course, well seasoned, and it is ex
peeted that its utilization may be a
source of profit to the forest reserves,
—HEngineering News.
Big with the importance of a new
discovery, the London preacher says:
“Never check the flowing tide of wo
man’s talk.” We mnever heard of
anybody who ever did.
John R. Dickey’s old reliable eye water
oures sore eyes or granulated lids, Don’t
hurt, feels good; get the genuino in red hox.
; BEYOND HIM.
“l have just been reading a story |
by Henry James” |
“And what do you think of it, Sena
tor?” \
“Oh, he’s too smart for me. 1
knew from the language that he had
a joker concealed, but I couldn’t fer
ret it out, experienced as I am.’—
_Pittsburg Post.
To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up
. ot the System
Take the Old Standard Grove's TAsTe
_ LEss CHirL Toxio. Yoa know what you
“are tnkingo The formula is plainly printed
fi,eve,rg ttle, showing it i 3 sim;Hy Qui
ne a.nfllr\tm Jnf& ta.st%leu form, and the
most effectul orm. For grown e
and children. 50c. . L
o § DIFFERENTIATION,
“Is lying ever justifiable?”
v“Never.”
- “But I have known some very well
reéspected men to promise one thing
and do another.”
~ “Goodness, man, that isn’t lying;
" that’s business.”—Nashville American,
~ ANTIDOTE FOR SKIN DISEASES,
*_ That’s what TerTERINE is; and it is more,
-_;gis an absolute cure for eczema, totter,
; orm, erysipelas and all other itching
~cutaneous diseases, In aggravated cases
of these afflictions its cures have been frhe
nomenal. It gives instantreliof and effects
‘permanent cures. 50c, at druggists or by
‘mail from J. T. SaveTrlNE, Dept. A, Sa
“vannah, Ga.
~ Bloodhound Tracking In England.
. The most recent case of the suc
_ cessful official employment _of the
. bloodhound in the public service was
g;‘“ of the lost girl Miss Campbell
.sin. Ayrshire, & year or so ago, When
_ the provest of Gatehouse sent to Mr
Qeorge Oliphant, secretary of the
Bloodhound Hunt Club, for thre:
‘hounds.
These hounds were three days at
work on the scent, in most difficult
-and treacherous country, and suc
‘ceeded in carrying the search party
to the edge of a pool, at which they
threw up the search, and from which
'~ on its being dragged the body of the
missing girl was recovered,
- The bloodhound hag the same in
stincts for guarding his master as
any dog or hound possesses, though
he does not hurt the man he has
shunted. —Fry’s Magazine.
i GSK_IN“M Cures Indigestion Pains,
m ',',’E’ Sour Stomach, and Heartburn,
ol 55, "LA B
% 5&., at drug ltgren.cn ™
Postmaster Works With His Feet.
New Zealand possesses a postmas
ier who, for all practical purposes, is
armless. Owing to a physical deform
ity which renders his hands useless,
he Is:obliged to do, and actually
does, all the clerical work of his of
fice with his feet. His name is Mr.
Earnegt C. Moon, and he {s in charge
ol the post office at Te Uku, Auek
land. He uses an indelible pencil in
his official work, with which he
writes clearly and legibly. He is 37
years of age, and has been in charge
of the post office at Te Uku for the
lagt eleven years, The offcial re
ports of the inspeciors of the New
Zealand Postal Department show that
Mr. Moon has given every gatisfaction
in the discharge of his duties. e
makes out money orders, postal notes
snd the periodical offictal state
?mns by using his feet In the
same way he applies the date stamps
to letters with wonderful rapidity.
Mr. Moon can also ugé a hammer, saw
and other carpenters’ tools with his
feet.—London Dally Chronicle,
J meouren By 6B
- f sovpainTer\\, 48
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BEST PROFOSITION EXER QEEERED AGENTS
No Ex-President Living.
In connection with the death of
Grover Cleveland, it is interesting tc
note that only twice before in the his
tory of the nation has the Unitnd
States been without a living ex-Presi
dent. George Washington died in 1799,
when John Adams, the second Presi
dent, wag in office. Andrew Jackson,
at the time the only surviving ex-
Chief Executive, passed away in 1875,
two years before General Grant retir
ed to private life,
Efforts ure bemmg made in London
to further the emigration of British
women to South Africa.
i s
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Vet N
‘ ..;:zfz?f"" T3S 55:"55'5_55:;‘.
AR AR il BN
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This woman says that sick
women_should not fail to try
Lydia E. Pinkbham’s Vegetable
Compound as she did.
Murs. A. Gregory, of 2355 Lawrence
St., Denver, Col, writes to Mrs.
Pinkham:
‘‘l was practically an invalid for six
years, on account of female troubles.
I underwent an operation by the
doctor’s advice, but in a few months I
was worse than before. A friend ad
viced Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound and it restored me to perfect,
health, such as I have not enjoyed in
many years. Any woman suffering as
I did with backache, bearing-down
pains, and periodic pains,should not fail
to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound,”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable (‘omf)ound, 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,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
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. Address, Lynn, Mass,
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Take the Place of Calomel
Oonztipation sends Pnlmnous matter bounding
thrnuls the hodv. Dull headache, Sour Stomach,
Foted Breath, Bleared Eyes, Loss of Energy and Ap
otite are the uurort signs of he affliction.” Young's
Elver ;illu Kuutivo y cure constipation. They awaken
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bowels, n%r(mfthen the woakened parts, induce appe
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your dealer or direct from
J. M. YOUNG, JR., WAYCROSS, GA.
M
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TRY A BOTTLE Ask your dealer tor it
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n 0 On 0 eg Georgia.,
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Buyers, Manufactuvers, and all others, young or old, who are unable to classify
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" 4":‘,””'1" ik / agnificent buldings, costin L 0 degant appointments, Refined and Chrstian
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oAN AULL (DX courses. Conservatory unsurpassed. Teachers from the best schools of Evrope and
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o ond O. W, ANDER IP()N. Presidents, Florence, Al Hoas¢ (AP
southern Female College students will attend Florence University for 1908-1909.
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SOLD EVERYWHERE |
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THE REILY-TAYLOR COMPANY
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SIMPLEX PRESS COMPANY,
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