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r n-- ' \ * f The Pui/o/t j ^,-Afi SERMON" ?Y TAere/- W?^?[ ^V^/iENDE^^g^p1. Subject: Profanity. j ' Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the | Irving Square Presbyterian Church, Hamburg avenue and Weirfield street, on the theme "Profanity," the Rev. Ira W. Wemmel Henderson, pastor, took as his text Exodus 20:7, "Thou salt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain." He said: If there is anything that is disgusting it is unbridled profanity^ And \ the prevalence of useless, noihtless, unjustified swearing merits the attention not alone of the Church but also of the civil authorities whose duty it is to keep the moral atmosphere iv:? -it (.ma auu every oiner community of verbal pollution. The com-ought to be obeyed and the civil law on the point ought to be enforced. The silly fool who spreads . the germs of diphtheria or typhoid or smallpox broadcast throughout the , community will soon feel the iron "hand of the law laid heavy on his .-shoulders and he ought very properly be put under lock and key until sanity has returned: but any man without a sense of moral respectability or even elementary decency may saturate the moral atmosphere, in which we have to live and to rear our youth. ywith all manner cf verbal disease and the average policeman will but smile .or perhaps add to the sum total of uncleanness. The man who has such poverty cf language and such an absolute lack of common sense that profanity is to him the one way to dignify and emphasize the expression of ideas, should he iailed with that other man who endangers our physical health. The third commandment has, we know from experience, a very practical and forcible application to this day. Nowhere may we , . escape the man of unwholesome vtri + V* -rr>olnr>lro Virtvc iuvu " itu uiivi k/v/ ?J just out of kilts, men who should know better and boys who must learn ----- the disgrace of profligate language if they are ever to amount to much in life, both and all are guilty of the > most shameful depravities of speech. As things stand to-day, no man can rear a child with a pure mind. "We walk our streets and curses everywhere fill the air and fall upon our ears. Does a horse balk the Almighty is invoked to move him. Is the drayman delayed a moment he curses the fellow just ahead. It is impossible to sit by an open window on any prominent thoroughfare without being morally poisoned. Does the boss in the shop wish to hurry up the men ^tbe vilest of language is the means . he uses to set speed to hand and mind. Not once but hundreds of times I have seen foul mouthed inspectors, overseers and gang bosses invoke the maledictions of heaven ' and hell upon poor dumb driven brutes made in the image of the Maker, lest forsooth they straighten weary toil bent backs to sieze a mo"V xnent's rest. Of course these very men will tell - you that they have no desire to dis. honor God nor to offend our moral sensibilities. They lav it to habit, * thoughtlessness and a hundred other causes. s I am convinced myself that) much of the swearing of the day is *due to thoughtlessness rather than to wilful sin. And yet I have seen the same men take more liberties with the name of Almichty God than I "would allow them. to take or they would dare to take with my name? : either thoughtlessly or wilfully. Thoughtlessness is no excuse. God gave us brains and tongues, and id is our duty to, exercise our wills and to use our tongues for the expression of worthy thought alone. Of course men don't think, that is to say, the most of them do not, for if they did swearing would go by the board to a short and sure death. To plead thoughtlessness .in extenuation of sin is to play the baby-act. Men should think and cut the cursing out. The third commandment has solid sense behind it, as have all of God's commands. The misuse of the name of God, or of the name of our Lord, profanity, swearing, cursing, all should be abhorred for several good and sufficient reasons. Profanity is unnecessary, unmanly, indecenr, immoral, ungodly. There are nve good reasons why it should be put aside. Profanity is unnecessary. A curse never prove a point. It rather demonstrated the paucity of thought of the swearer. Oaths never convince . a person of the validity or strength of an argument, but they do show up the poverty of language of the man who uses them. Curses never made any workman do better work; they have, however, been the excuse for many a murder. Sense and no swear words will unravel many a perplexing problem. The name of God is to be hallowed not hooted on the streets. The name of Jesus is wor Ill * ui ic\cicutc auu auuiauuu, lis misuse damns not the man who is maligned but the curser. There is no problem in life that C2n not be solved without curses. Sense, industry, wise reasoning and good judgment will settle any difficulty. Profanity is useless, unnecessary and .wholly unprofitable. Then, too, profanity, is unmanly. Many boys seem to have the idea that the one sure sign cf manliness is to be able to swear with vigor, proficiency and volume. There never was a greater mistake in the world. "Instead of being a sign of manliness it is a sure mark of moral instability and bad manners. It reflects small credit either upon the youth himself or upon the family whom he represents. For an educated youth it is a denial of the value cf education and mental growth. In any man, educated or ignorant, it is degrading ? and altogether unmanly. Manliness is purity, efficiency, power, forcefulness. The curse is impure, inefficient either for expression or proof, / powerless to do productive work, forceful in no way. By these tests it is unmanly. Profanity is indecent. That which is decent is befitting, becoming, honorable. I will lehve it to the judgment of the citizens of this or any city to decide how much swearing i % yr befits a normal, rational human being. Creatures of reason as we are, we find that the cursofc-flies in the j face of sober thought. * Used as we I are to logical procl^es we find the j curse devoid of logic. Profanity i reeks with sulphur and' sends Satan | to our hearts. It is utterly unbefitting and unbecoming. To say that it is dishonorable is i just to begin the damning count against profanity. The curse is with! out honor for it is used only to spread ! dishonor. It looks never toward God but rather uses. His name to invoke the aid of the powers of hell. It is dishonorable .from start to finish and indecency marks it as her own. But one of the two worst things about profanity is that it is immoral. root, branch, tree and fruit. Catering as it does to all that is low in man, hand and bond servant as it is to all the hosts of sin, profanity disintegrates the unity of individual personality. No man can be profane | without dishonoring tioa ana aamI aging himself. We cannot give vent j in word to the evil that is in us I without spreading contamination not ; only through our own lives but also I through the lives of men and women | all about us. Profanity is unclean, j it strikes at the foundations of morI ality. It undermines the sense of honor and destroys the faculty of cool, deliberate judgment; under no circumstances is it susceptible of justification and its immorality is unquestionably a fact. | But the last and the worst charge j that may be upheld against profanity is that it is ungodly. "Thou shall love the Lord Thy God with all thy heart and mind and soul," says our ! Father. The curse is heartless and j tt destroys our finer faculties do we I give it time. Under its blighting in' fiuence the power of mental appret ciation of the glories of God will be ' lost. It is soulless to the last ex! treme. How can a man be godly while cursing the children of Ood in the name of the Father who has siren them life? How can a man i be godly when the springs of sin are rushing from his moqth? Ah, no! Profanity is ungodly. It shames God and disgraces man. It reviles the Father and degrades His sons. God: is good but profanity is evil. God is kind but the curse is verbal murder. r God is truth but the curse cares not for truth. Unnecessary, unmanly, indecent, immoral and ungodly profanity is the most frequent as the most insidious of the sins of the tongue. And yet bad^ as it is when used by men, it is most abhorrent when coming from the lips of a woman. Not that it is morally any worse, but that it sounds worse. If-'you really want to become pbsitively assured of the horridness of profamity you need but hear a woman curse. We need to-day a strict insistence upon cleanliness of language. No man can be a friend of Jesus who is ungodly in his talk. Christ proved divinely the possibility of forceful speaking without the use of profanity. And to-day men are most forceful, most manly, most convincing when they do not swear. Poll Your Boat Up Stream. To drift with the current or to pull against it?this is the problem which is born anew with each new day. Some of our daily duties are easy to perform. We turn to them as easily and naturally as water seeks' a leyel. There is no conscious expenditure of will-power. There is no resistance in our nature that must; be overcome. But these are the du-, ties of the day in whose performance there is found the least merit. i Fortunately for us we cannot, or at least dare not, always drift. Each day has its tasks which test the will: and try the heart. Their performance requires stern determination.1 They afford the best discipline and develop the latent powers of the soul. Inclination is not always?in fact, not often?a true test of the thing we ought to do first. Sometimes it has been a source*of wonder to find a preacher very ready in the use of language, and yet making no headway in his chosen profession. In more than one case the explanation has been found in a dislike of study and reading on his part. To talk has been with him as easy as to drift. To study?well, lie has been unwilling to pull against the current, on A o fjlllpd. To pull against the current' develops muscle, lung and nerve." It increases the power of resistance and endurance. To do the thing we dislike because we ought to do it. is to give the will the place it deserves to occupy. It is to make conscience a I master, and make us conscibus of our own powe*. The hills of God are up stream, not down. The mount of victory is , never reached by drifting. The * ay of success lies in the "pull;" not the vulgar "pull" of the financier and politician, but the pull against the, | current.?Pittsburg Christian Advocate. Helped by Our Company. There are some men and some women in whose company we are always at our best. While with lliem we cannot think mean thoughts or speak ungenerous words. Their mere | presence is elevation, purification, | sanctity. All the best stops in our [ nature are drawn out by their intercourse, and we find a music in our soul that was never there before. If to live with men diluted to the millionth degree with the -virtue of the Highest can exalt and purify the nature, what bounds can be setto the influence of Christ??Professor Drummond. Care of Human Prodigals. Whatever retribution God has for ? ~n+Vior ciflo nf tho oravfl U1CU Ull LliC UI.UC1 Oiviv> v.* vuv D- ? means love, not hate; it means reform, discipline, redemption, not damnation. God is a shepherd. No sheep will wander from His fold in any world that He will not seek, and sooner or later find and bring back. God is a Father. We may trust Him forever, sure that He will watch and wait with deathless love, until the last prodigal among His human children comes home.?J. T. Sunderland. Heights of Prosperity. Believer, remember, heights of prosperity are safe, if only God be with you, and the vale of adversity is healthful to the soul, if God takes you down into it.?Gordon Hall. SULPHUR BATHS AT Ho)?E They Heal the Skin and Take Away Its Impurities. Sulphur baths heal Skin Diseases, and give the body a wholesome glow. Now you don't have to go off to a high-priced resort to get them. Put a few spoonfuls of Hancock's Liquid Sulphur in the hot water, and you get a perfect Sulphur bath right in your own home. Apply Hancock's Liquid Sulphur to the affected parts, and Ezcema and other stubborn skin troubles are quickly cured. Dr. R. H. Thomas, of Valdosta, Ga., was cured of a painful skin trouble, and he praises it in the highest terms. Your druggist sells it. Hancock's Liquid Sulphur Ointment is the besrt cure for Sores, Pimples, Bladkheads and all inflammation. Gives a soft, fcivcvjr rutin. SHE WOULDN'T CONCEDE IT. "But," said the lawyer, "your case seems hopeless. I don't see what I can do for you. You admit that you beat your Wife." "Yes," replied the defendant, "but my wife's testimony will discount that. She'd never admit that she *was beat? en."?Catholic Standard and Times. THOUGHT CHILD WOULD DIE. Whole Body Covered With Cuban Itch?Cuticura Remedies Core at Cost of 75c. "My little boy, when only an infant of three iponths, caught the Cuban Itch. Sores broke out from his head to the bottom of his feet. He would itch and claw himself and cry all the time. He could not sleep day or night, and a light dress is all he could wear.- I called one of our best doctors to treat him, and his treatment did not do any good, but he seemed to get worse. He suffered so terribly that my husband said he believed he would have to die. I had almost given up hope when a lady friend told me to try the Cuticura Remedies. I used the Cuticura Soap and applied the Cuticura Ointment and he at once fell into a sleep, and he slept with ease for the first time for two months. After three applications the sores began to dry up, and in just two weeks from the day I commenced to use the Cuticura Remedies my baby was entirely well. The treatment only cost me 70c., and I would have gladly paid $100 if 1 could not have got it any cheaper. I feel safe in sayin^-tbat the Cutiqura Remedies saved his life. He is now a boy of five years. Mrs. Zana Miller, Union City, R. F. D.f No. 1, Branoh Mich.. May 17, 1906." * WINNING CHOLLY'S HEART. Polly?Cholly is in love with Molly. Dolly?Why what on earth attracted ham to her? Polly?She was the first one to notice his new mustache, I believe.? San Francisco Bulletin. Argo Red Salmon is caught in Bering Sea among the Icebergs. That is why the flesh is so firm and the flavor so delicious. SEEN WORSE. City Niece: Uncle Hirann, I don't see ho^r you to^ve the patience to work with a mule. Ain't they the most obstinate things on earth? Uncle Hiram: Waal, I uster think so w'en I wuz a young feller, but sense I've be'n married I don't notice it so much.?Chicago News. The Modernity of Trousers. i It will assuredly 3eena more than strange that within the last hundred years the wearing of trousers has "been regarded even as irreligious. The fact that In October, 1812, an order was made by St. John's and Trinity Colleges that every young man who ! appeared in hall or chapel in panta loons or trousers should 'be considered ' as absent Is startling enough; but it would appear that eight years later the founders of Bethel chapel at Sheffield inserted a clause in the trust deed ordaining the "under no circumstances whatever shall any preacher be allowed to occupy 'the pulpit who wears trousers." This is striking, but it is even more impressive to find that i the Rev. Hugh Bourne, one of the ! two founders of the Primitive Methoj dist Connection, said of his co-foundj er, "That trousers-wearing, beer-drinkj ing Clowes will never go to heaven." j And it would need a student of "the j Breeches Bible" to say precisely when | this assumed connection between j. theology and trousers began and where the departure from it will end. > ?Notes and Queries. King Edward's Sitting Room. { The King's sitting room contains j exquisite eighteenth century furnij ture. There is an Oriental red car| pet, and the curtains are the same i tone. The mural decorations com| prise a handsome white dado, with ! soft green frieze. The writing room, i where His Majesty attends to his 1??: ? nffoiwK 4,e lilro o ttr TTlfLET i UUMUC^ aucui o, aw AAitvs c* v.v I nate's private ofiice. The King, howi ever, does not care for revolving J chairs, which are conspicuous hy their absence. Nor does he favor the rolltop desks. He writes at a flat table with drawers down each side. His i chair is upholstered in morocco leaj ther, with armrests. He uses an orI dinary steel pen, and is never withj out cigarets or cigars while dictating ! to his secretary.?London M. A. P. Ask your grocer for Argo Red Sal| mon, and do not accept any substi1 tute. There is no finer Salmon packed. j Lots of men seem to think the | wrong side of a saloon is the out: side. Secaue* o 1 tho? in Persia "beggars acfiSW^^I^^M' although they patronize the hul^P donkey instead of his more aristocratic brother. How they manage to obtain these useful animals, or even to exist themselves, passes European comprehension, but the fact remains that they do both. The Persian tramp, astride, his donkey, often makes very long journeys ?even as far as Meshed or Mecca, whence he returns with the proud title of "Hadji." Useful as the dorfkey is to his mendicant master, tEe latter usually treats him in a most 'brutal fashion, a length of chain being a frequent substitute for a w-hip when the unfortunate animal needs encouragement?Wide World. FITS,St. Vitus'Dance:Nervoas Diseases per? manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. B. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. DIPLOMATIC i-'Af.-i. "Papa, what year was mamma born in?" "In 1860, Willie. Her birthday's in February." "That would make her forty-seven years old, wouldn't it?" "Ahem! Not necessarily."?Denver Post The hands of the housewife will be kept soft and white and free from all chap, redness or roughness if borax is used. j THE ORCHARD SITE. . Two mistakes are often made ia selecting a location for ithe orchard. Very moist land will give a good growth for a few years, but the fruit does not set well and the trees decay and die young. Trees set in a sheltered sunny spot will also fail to givo satisfaction. Give the orchard plenty of air and ?. goGd frost drainage and do not give it too much water.?American Cultivator. Surface cars on Manhattan Island di daily damage to persons and property in the average sum of $2,750. Over-Worked Eyei Are relieved of blood-shot and inflamation without pain in one day by Leonardl's Golden Eye Lotion. Cools, heals and strengthens. Insiston having "Leonardl's." It makes strong eyes. Guaranteed or money refunded. Druggists sell It at 25 cts. or forwarded prepaid' on receipt of price by S. B. Leonardi & Co., Tampa, Fla. CULLING THE FLOCK. Every breeder of thoroughbred stock fwho aims to make a reputation endeavors to cull from the flock or herd any an/mal that has the least blemish. If the farmer would pursue such policy, even with grade stock, he would increase the producing capacity of his animals each succeeding year. Every inferior animal retained 13 a drawback to all others, a9 success is had by using only the best for breeding.?Epitomist. Argo Red Salmon is not only Pure Food, but it is the cheapest and most nutritious food in the country. Remorse is the pain incident to Dr. Experience calling and injecting a little common sense. Jflfek CAPUDINE 9 I INHUIATUT CUIUS Jl J TV HEADACHES mWiVBfWBfW<u COLOJ ESSfn^jV^nflB IN I TO IS HOURS J ^2y8y83llB3lTrU' At 0n*o? MALSBY COMPANY, 41. S. FOBsITH ST., ATLANTA, OA.. Manufacturers of and Dealers in ill Kinds of MACH INERY AND SUPPLIES. Portable, Stationary and Traction Engines. Boilers, Saw Mills and Grist Mills. Wood-working and Shingle Mill Machinery. Complete line carried in stock. Write tor catalogue prices. Address all communications to Atlanta. Ga. We have no connections in Jacksonville. Pla. 20 91ule Team BORAX will cleanse 6very article in your kttdhen or dining room?make them bright?and for silver or rewtar give a b gh polish. Ail Dealers. 5-10-130. Booklet Free. Sample. 60. PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO.. Xew York. Telegraphy \ to^ j>o?ltion. I A1 A j S summer rates Shorthand \ ihesouihem Bookkeepmg f T.I L MAIN LINK W1KKS KUN ) IBIBgrapny, THKPUOH BU1LDLNU (NEWNAN. QA > j ^ Side and Centre AtlaS Engines LARGESTOCK LOMBARD Foundry, Machine and Boiler Works and Supply Store, AUGUSTA, GA. ?e ug<y, grizzly, grey he re. Uee U ' NATURE PROVIDES FOR SICK WOMEN WfOT Jl a more potent remedy in the roots 1 jfcJS wilt and herbs of the field than was ever I . | In the good old-fashioned days of \ *l?r ** ' our grandmothers few drugs were *\ used in medicines and Lydia E. f n } Pinkham, of Lynn. Mass., in her III study of roots and herbs and^ their \\ ^jMfiRSjy // 1 "t power over disease discovered and \\ N^Vi It gave to the women of the world a /"jj | ^ ^1 -jlS remedy for their peculiar ills more notent and efficacious than any ^ combination of drags. c. ruiatinm " '"gfji Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, || is an honest, tried and true remtedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. ^ During its record of more than thirty years, its long list of actual ^ cures of those serious ills peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinkham's ^ :':'M Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded. person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with irregular or painful functions, . weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache,: ' flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they -.|$j should remember there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pink- < ham's Vegetable Compound. ( Jag No other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of I Wm female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the United ' States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable compound and what it has done for them. * ] r Mrs. Phikham invites all sick women to write her for advice." She has I cmided thousands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising , 9 sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law 01 ijyaia nun.- k ^ I ham and as her assistant for years before ner decease advised under her a AH ^mmediat^hjection^ddiTisJiynn^ass^^^^^^^^^^l The NEW PERFECTION | | Wick Blue Flame 00 Coot-Stove I | The different Eg The improved ;Mjp| y J Oil Stove jpg Gives best results. ] II \f [ B -I Reduces fuel ex-J) u if \x I 1 pense. A working* II v A:--J9 flame at the touch of the U I\ M match. "Blue Flame" means the hottest flame I produced by any stove. The New Perfection ?}^M will make your work lighter. Will not overheat the latchen. Made in three sizes, with A :lM one, two, and three burners. Every stove war- 1 )M ranted. If not at your dealer's, write to our B -M nearest agency. B JS n MPax/tkT.ntnn m i - f gives a clear, steady light Fitted with B/7 J1 L - , jj?latest improved burner. Made of brass MV-S NfeS/ throughout and beautifully nickeled. W j Every lamp warranted. Suitableforlibrary, H dining-room, parlor or bedroom. If not at a . your dealer's, write to our nearest agency. W ? ^ STAMDAWD^L^COyPAMY - . ^|| UH r>rpg IN REFERENCE TO * -A- ? JOHN K. DICKEY'S E feg Old Reliable EYE WATER woman that \/"t hllFP topro^g^eSS; If It cool? and soothes a tore eye. ana do all WO claim j . It refreshes and strengthens a tired eye. ? for |^# We will' t $i?S it don't hurt when applied. ^ send her absolutely free a large trial! * The^inl^^ endk^0^ ^ r?d folding box. f.0^of *><* Of SstTUO- , :>J Avoid imitations or something recommended just as tlonS and genuine testimonials. Send' ? " '?gj good. For chronic sore eye lids, sties and diseased yOUT name and address on a postal CardL r condition of roots of eye laahee, use Dicker's Old B ?> i ' jM Reliable Eye Salve. At all stores or by mail 25ct?. E |^A St mm Ml CleanSOS. J ~2< DICKEY DRUG CO., Box 50, Bristol, Tenn. I IJ Jl V# 1 ^ ^ ^eals ! ,jg K fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic VV H ITPvB n catarrh and inflammation caused by feml 1 71J|gj V v AAA * * B nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and! < ".-J gUin ^s* I mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur- -M Bl A M H ative power over these troubles is extra- i 'jam ifBl ff atMHr^i Ti I 1 ordinary and gives Immediate relief-; ! - J nl IfnvY B I Thousands of women are using and reo -3 B | ommending it every day. co cents at: ' , '28 vMx4\Y7 VTy^/\Xs THE DANDY B h druggists or by mail. Remember, however,! -?B XJMLUy- R)JGGYW,THfl B IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT. tM l^THE^^^TON^CO^oston^MS^ -M pot on every WHI11> STAR K p J -' ?? ! SIMDARD-oF-Tffi-SOVffl I | ^ A?t us *11 about ?t. J j ! vl^ % Atlanta Bucsr Co., A ' "l/gti '$8 \34 \ihmWfM , jtfSd^ssLss^^sji-aa^! s ^ HOGIESS 5 <i ! > i in in mm i win xwim-, ? l * ... fTTT ? 3 toniHH | # LARD # 1:1 rt yjljsf" ? US. GOTEBNMEOT- INSPECTION g - I injure any tiling. " ?*p BEPoitv^*y/7IVfr3SilR3*vCK9 Try them once Mt ?? ?? ??V'S : Tfesoimi?N-coTroNoa-co.s 1 B^|^Rra S"3^'"SS ? NBrftat-sftaxNAH-xnjWKiwoaEvts g P"Lpul(?,for !> * ?.- >' 'IS 1IABOLO SOME1U, lttBeSi]kir?,,6neUyi,I.7. - ' "-^g < a?2?. -07) g?g Thompson's EyeWater * 1 /S^Wintersmith's I f/Sr?]CHILL TONIC I 1 f *\e a OiirA? MtllU ?SUnd?H ffsr 45 years: leaves no bad effects V % |/,f \X' B (#ures unilis Uk? Quinine; pleasant to take; children like It, M i*n seldom tails to make permanent cure. m m VQiffl M u * . wm Guaranteed under Food and Drugs Act of Jane \3 \ Malarial Fevers 30, 1906. At voar druggists; or sent prepaid M mcnius^ en receipt of prist. 9 ^ 50c^?iid^$ j ARTHUR_PETbg_AjO;iGen,l Agts. Louisville. 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