THE WEATHEH S&ttUrdajr fair to partly cloudy and slightly warmer weather will prevail, with light variable winds. IP JC J? X ? if JO C C J t C t? K K k Wayne County Organ a' the repubi;an party Semi-Weekly Founded X 1908 J Weekly Founded, 1844 " 66th YEAR. HONESDALE, WAYNE CO., PA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1909. Q 3 NO. 94 IMPRESSIVE SERVICES AT GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH YESTERDAY MORNING BEV. DR. SWIFT, PASTOR OP THE HONESDALE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, SPEAKER OP THE DAY. Thanksgiving services were held in the Grace Episcopal church by the combined congregation of the Meth odist, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Bap tist and Episcopal churches. The Rector, Rev. Whlttaker, conducted the services, Revs. Wendell and Coe Jien assisting, while Rev. Dr. Swift preached the sermon. The choir rendered excellent and appropriate music. The collection taken was for the benefit of St. Luke's Hospital. The church was tastllly decorated with autumn fruits. The congrega tion was very large and were treated to an excellent discourse by Dr. Swift who prefaced his sermon with the following remarks: I would be altogether untrue to myself and lost to every whisper of honor if I did not publicly express my keen appreciation of the invita tion from the scholarly, genial, broad-minded Rector of this church to speak from this pulpit to-day. I see In it no personal crown with which to deck my own brow, but one of the largest causes for thanksgiv ing, in the breaking down of the barriers that have stood in the way of Christian fellowship not only, but this manifest true oneness of the church of Jesus Christ. I thank God that I have lived to see this day, and to unite with you in this sweet service. I have selected my text from Psalms 65:11 "Thou crownest the year with thy good ness; and thy paths drop fatness." We need only to open our eyes, and we will find abundant reason for Thanksgiving. The "outgoing of the morning and evening" have been made to rejoice together. "The pastures are clothed with flocks; the valleys also are covered over with corn; they shout for joy they also sing." The poet regards the crown as already set on a year of goodness. He sees God's chariot passing in triumph, and blessing over the land, and leaving '-abundance- wherever; it? Ij.tirjpifjv mat is me irue rendering 01 tne words, "thy paths drop fatness thy chariot tracks drop fatness.") ."Out in the uncultivated prairie, where sweet grass unsown by man grows, in the flush of greenery, the hills that wears a girdle of forest trees half way up towards their barren summits, wave their foliage as if glad; the Psalmist hears a hymn of glad praise rising from all these happy and sunny things; and for its melody he hushes his own that he and we may listen to "the fair mu sic that all creatures make to their great Lord." "Thou crownest tne year with thy goodness." Never was it more true than to-day, as we gather for wor ship in God's house. A year of plenty! God's chariot wheels have dropped fatness from Maine to Cali fornia North, South, East, West Is prosperity. The crops have been abundant; the hum of industry makes sweetest music; there is work for all. The Lord hath done great things for us whereof we are glad, and up from the earth, and out of the clear sky comes the voice, saying, "What shall we render unto the iord for all his benefits?" Shall not our grateful response be, "I will take the cup of salvation and call upon the name of the Lord now in the presence of all his people." 'Tls well sometimes to get the cumulative force of the bless ings that have rolled in upon our lives. "Gratitude Is the memory of the heart. In its exercise the heart recalls its mercies, ana records them as so many items of the debt to be discharged. It differs from the mem ory of the mind. The mind is a day-book In which the entries are temporary; but the heart is a ledger Into which the day-book entries are posted for permanent preservation. How many of life's mercies never get Into the ledger of the heart at all! The Item was never posted. Wore to be coveted and cultivated than the memories of the mind with its cold, dry chronicles is the mem ory of the heart with its warm throb bing remembrances of God's dally benefits." Let us instead of trying to count the mercies we have re ceived, for that would be wearisome, and a hopeless task Indeed, get, I say the cumulative impression, for as Van Dyke sings: Do you give thanks tor this or that? No, God be thanked, I am not grateful. In that cold, calculating way, with blessings ranked As one, two, three, four that would be hateful! I only know that every day brings good above My poor deserving; I only feol that on the road of life true lovo Is leading me along and never swerving. Whatever turn the path may take to left or right, I think it follows The tracing of a wiser hand, though dark or light, Across the hills and in the shady hollows. Whatever gift the hours bestow, or great Or small, I would not measure As worth a certain price of praise, but take them all And use them all, with simple, heartfelt pleasure. For when we gladly eat our daily bread, we bless The hand that feeds us; And when we walk along life's way in cheerfulness. Our very heart-beats praise the Lord that leads us. It Is said that Leonardo di Vinci held a lyre in his hand while he painted. "This was one of the se crets of his superb work as an ar tist his heart was Joyful no one can do his best work with a sad heart. It would be well if all of us should learn to hold a lyre in our hand as we work with the other, whatever our duty or our task may be." "The joy of the Lord Is our strength." Yes, I know all about the under current of sadness In many hearts as we come to this festival of cheer. How hard it is to wear the smiling face when hunger the hunger of love Is gnawing at the heart, as we think of one short year ago, and of the empty chair at the fireside, and the table; but God, in his wise and loving purpose has led our dear ones on, and has come into our lives only to soften and refine ..us. whjle in this way we become par-j takers or tne Divine nature anaJth glory that shall e reyealed'yfCf VThere are.'so inany,. sorrowaSi anr find And thread them like a rosary of pearls, To count them o'er and keep them all, In mind.- A day of sunshine where we looked for rain, A sudden bird-sing when the skies are gray; The first frost-painted leaf that flut ters down, The breeze that blows some vexing thought away; The sleep that bears us far from toll and care, And gives new strength to meet the day's demand; Auu oh, above the rest, the faithful friends Who always love and always un derstand. Yea, life hath many sorrows for us all, And hearts grow faint with long continued ill; But let us clasp our rosary of joys And hold them In our dear remem brance still." One fact stands out supreme in our' lives, if we are God's children, and 'tis true that he has revealed his great heart in Jesus Christ, and that Is: That he loves us and so makes all things to work together for our good; the storm the blinding lightning the reverberating thund er the crash of falling hopes life's bitter disappointments. What a won derful thing is human love, and yet It only faintly tells us what God's love means. Dr. Coyle tells us the story of a mother's love the love that comes nearest to God's love: "In our great Civil War there was a woman up in Maine who received a letter which ran like this: "Willie is sick; he is dying." The mother read the letter, and looking at her husband, she said, "Father, I must go to Willie." "No, wife, you can not go," he replied sadly. "It Is im possible. You know there is a line of bullets and bayonets between you and Willie." She did what a Chris tian mother always does when her boy Is in peril. She laid the matter before the Lord and prayed all night. Next morning she said, "Father, I must go "toWlUIe, I must." "Well, wife," he said, "I do not know what will come of this. I am fearful, but If you will go, there is the money." She hastened to Washington. In the White House was a man with a heart as tender as a woman's, united to a purpose as set and irresistible as is the Mississippi river. She told her errand, and brushing away a tear, he handed her a paper, saying, "There, Madam, that will take you to the enemy's linos, but what will become of you after you get there I cannot tell." She started, reached the line, and was challenged by a picket. She handed htm the pass. He looked at It and at her and said, "We don't take that here." "I' know," she said, "but Willie, my boy, Is dying In prison, and I am going to him. Now shoot!" He did not shoot, but stood awed, and hushed in the presence of a love that ws.i Invincible. Penetrating the lines, she reached the hospital. The' surgeon said, "Madam, you must be very careful, your boy will survive no excitement." She crept past cot after cot and knelt at the foot of the one where her boy lay, and putting up her hands, prayed In smothered tones, "O God, spare my boy." The young man raised his white hands under the sheet. The sound of his mother's voice had gone clear down into the valley and shadow of death, where his soul was going out into the silent beyond. Raising his hands he Bald, "Mother, I knew you would come." "Whatever else we may let go, whatever else may be swept from us in the rush of years, whatever doc trines may drop out of' creed, what ever changes may come In Biblical interpretation, or in church adminis tration, let us hold on to this great central truth of truths that God is lovo, and hence, love can never fall. There are a thousand things whtch I cannot understand. Theories and theorlzers go and philosophers often dip away into shadow lands which I cannot explore. But never shall I cease to believe that my life and your life are over-arched and under-girded by the love of God. Never shall I surrender the conviction that love Immortal beats about us as the ocean laves the beach of the is land which it holds to its bosom; that, though the heavens may "fall, and the earth burn, and the judg ment thunder, and eternity roll, still we are encompassed by that love that flamed out In Jesus Christ and crystallized on Calvary. This was the thought that calmed the heart of our own Whlttler when he sang: "I know not where his Islands life Their fronded palms in air, I only know I cannot drift ' i. T3nvsn3 1-1 a lAtta and taia " Kir V'.Undisnbnsable, invincible, immor- jot-iiiai" is inc.. iwniHfoi t "'How; canrive uestrespo heart of love? How best recognize the goodness that has gone before us. What can we give to him who possesses all things? "What shall we render unto the Lord for all his benefits?" No wonder we stop when we ask these questions, and cease trying t osolve the problem. But did not Will Carleton think clear through and reach the right conclusion when he asked and then answered the question? "The God above! What can we say Or do, with eyes so dim To make this Thursday-Sabbath day Thanksgiving day to him? What love, through grace and beauty clad, Can thrills to him Impart? It may wrench our thought to turn from our personal mercies the love that has hallowed our homes the aegis that has been held before our community life, and abruptly give our attention to the broader field of national life. But this has always been uppermost in my thought on Thanksgiving day as the years have come and gone, and I have heard from beyond the stars the voice saying, "Open ye the gates that the righteous nation that keepeth truth may enter in." 'Tls the proc clamation of the President of the United States that calls us to our places of worship and 'tls here always patriotic fervor burns at white heat. With the wisdom of maturer years, I have no desire to change this custom, or dampen that patriotic fervor, or change the tenor of the message. Patriotism and re ligion, In my conception of them, are indestructably linked linked to the thought and purpose of God. "What God has joined together let no man put asunder." There Is a special reason why our thought should be given to the national theme to-day why the national an them should burn within our hearts, and leap in hot flames from our tongues. We talk about America as a world-power and it has become such. But a world power in a sense far beyond our dreams. No country on the face of the earth is exerting the Influence on the world that tho U. S. A. is doing to-day. No flag commands the universal salute as does ours. I speak It not boastfully I speak it reverently I speak it hopefully I speak It with the pray er upon my lips: " God save the State!" God give to us high Ideals, and help us, at any cost, to realize them for the sake of the world! For our ideals are sooner or later to becomo the Ideals of tho world. The changes that are taking place everywhere are marvelous and following each other with a rapidity that is simply startling. Within a year, yonder in tho land of the "unspeakable Turk" a constitution was born granting po litical and religious liberty where be fore no one had dared to whisper the word "liberty." The scenes im mediately following It were inde scribable. One who was in that land told this week of multitudes of young men In that country who within twelve hours of the granting of that constitution spoke to thousands and tens of thousand of what liberty meant with an eloquence that stirred the popular heart. The young man, tall, soldierly, calm, but intensely in earnest, who led the revolution that resulted In dethroning the brilliant, unscrupulous Sultan, one of the greatest rulers that ever sat on a throne, spoke recently In one of our Protestant churches spoke from the pulpit; then visited one of our mis sionary schools, and then said, and the words are most significant: " When we introduce an educational system Into Turkey, it will be mod elled after the American school." China, that for centuries had lived its life untouched by the outside world, Is looking to America to guide her in her political, education al, and religious revolution, for 'tis nothing less than that of one of God's greatest miracles, that will lead God only knows whither! The unselfishness of our govern ment In returning the Boxer rebel lion Indemnity fund has touched a chord in China's heart that vibrates. Korea will first become a christian nation of these eastern counties Korea once the hermit nation. Japan in spite of the yellow journals feels the power of American ideals, and is rapidly incorporating them. No wonder 850 men most of them busi ness men, the foremost'buslness and professional men have met in Scran ton to listen to the call from the world-wide field, for the King's busi ness requireth haste, and we must strike while the iron is hot on the anvil. Seventy-five such gatherings of laymen are tobe held all over our land that an army of invasion may be sent to win these lands for Christ. Meanwhile much hangs on our own national life remaining true to the ideals of the fathers. Not for our own sake alone, but for tne sake of this wide world which; belongs fo kindled at Christ's cross that has been fused the one church. Our great peril as a nation is that we may lose our ideals, and so lose our regenerating Influence. There lies our greatest national peril. ThlB dry-rot of commercialism honey combs our free institutions and threatens to bring to naught that vast and critical experiment of de mocracy and representative govern ment which, In the providence of God, we are set to try for the human race. Meanwhile, what is the church doing about the matter? Once in a while she recognizes her duty and faces It, but the church for the most part preserves a discreet silence. Her watchmen refrain their voices though the enemy march with ban ners to assault the walls of the city of God. The church has a disin tegrated conscience. It is "long" on piety, but desperately "short" on civic righteousness. What should the church do? Just what its Master and Founder did. He connected his religion as immediately with the commonest and most secular affairs of life as with Its acts of piety. He made common honesty, justice, truthfulness, and integrity as much a part of the service of God as pray ers and sacraments. And the Christian conscience still remains the life and inspirations of all civic and political reforms. If we will only let It have a free course to-day and not shut It up in any narrow, ecclesiastical compartments of our life, It will do the work of moral re generation for our political and com mercial world to-day. . This is the paramount ethical business of the Christian church to-day to let the Christian conscience out of the nar row limitations where we too often confine It, and give it its rightful sway over the whole common life of man. The church is to teach men to do business and to vote as they pray, In the fear of God; to go to the polls (as I have often said) or to the legislature halls as they go to the sacrament in the fear of God. She is to speak as fearlessly from her pulpit against the evils of commercial dishonesty and political corruption as she does against any other evil, let It coBt what it may in patronage, in gifts, or in social pres tige. And until she does, she will not commend her religion as valid or virile to this ago and generation. More than this, she is to sound in the ears of her young men of this genera tion, young men who are 'always ready to answer the call to chivalrous action, and even sacrifice, young men who still dream dreams and see vis ions. She is to sound In the ears of these young men the call to righte ous political and nonest commercial careers, and make that call as holy and imperative as tho call to her ministry. There la no holler or higher sphere to-day for the beat ser vice of God and humanity for tho Jesus Christ. And ho la .tQ.come to hisjqwn.'l'r'lly Belle?- Vt)w?: consecrated man, the man of tho highest principles and most delicate ly sensitive conscience, than this same sphere of business and politics. And there Is none that is apter, if a man be true to his principles, to develop the strongest and noblest character, the finest heroism, the truest sainthood. These are the new quests for the new Knights of to day, infinitely better than a crusade for tho rescue of the holy sepulchre from the hands of the Infidel. This then is the call tho church should lift up with trumpet voice in the ears of her youth. "God give us men; times like these demand Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, and ready hand Men whom the lust of office does not kill, Men whom the spoils of office can not buy. Men who possess, opinions and a will Men who have honor men who will not He Men who can stand before a dema gogue And down his treacherous flatteries without winking. Tall men sun-crowned, who live above the clouds, In public duty and In private think ing." Here then lies the searching and final test of our modern Christianity. Can it produce such men to-day? Can It produce to-day the type of Christian who shall meet the needs of this age; the man of solid con science who rings true whenever you strike him? It Is for us each to answer that question. There is no greater question before the church to-day than this America must be come the Ideal nation, that the ideal may sweep the world up to God. We owe our country the best we can possibly give. At the West Point Centennial observances, General Por ter, in addressing the class about to go forth, said: "In closing, let me mention by way of illustration a most touching, and instructive' "acjfme, ! which Ionce wltnesspcLat&e fwihuoT meeting, in- thegreat ball tiff the Srbonne, tfli Baris,,f or , the. piirpbs6 rof wardlSg ntpdalsfbonpip tdihbBB: YAViMi AiVaJE-S: iSf-Jlisx Tii flUbrarytvlff savin g'kuiMn lives at. form. Tho story was recounted' of how one winter's night, when a fierce tempest was raging on the ruae Normandle coast, he saw signals of distress at sea, and started with his father, the captain of a small vessel, and the mate to attempt a rescue. A wave washed the father from the deck. The boy plunged Into the seething, foaming, raging sea to save him, but his attempt was in vain and the father perished. The lad struggled back to the vessel to find that the mate had been swept overboard. Then lashing himself fast, he took the wheel and guided the boat with its cargo df precious human souls throughout the howl ing storm safely Into port. The minister of public instruction, after paying a touching tribute to the boy's bravery, in a voice broken with emotion, pinned the medal to his breast, placed In his hands a diploma of honor and then seized the brave lad in his arms and imprinted a kiss on each cheek. For a moment the boy seemed dazed, not knowing which way to turn, as he stood there with the tears streaming down his bronzed cheeks, while everyone in that vast audience wept in sympathy. Suddenly his eyes turned toward his old peasant mother, she to whom he owed his birth and his training, as she sat at the back of the platform with bended form and wearing her widow's cap. He rushed to her, took the medal from his breast and casting It and his diploma Into her lap, threw himself on his knees at her feet. " Men of West Point," said Gen. Porter, "In the honorable career which you have chosen, whatever laurels you may win, always be ready to lay them at the feet of your country, to which you owe your birth and your education." In speaking of the cathedral of our national life, Ambassador White said: "Day by day the structure rises, its foundations great truths, far more lasting than mere granite; its pillars great rights, far more beautiful than mere prophesy; Its roof, great hopes, swelling higher than any dome of bronze and gold. And from its summit shall come light, beaming brighter, flashing farther than any that ever flung into Serf's eyes from crown diamonds; for it shall reflect that light of lib erty and Justice which cometh from the very throne of tho Almigh ty. All the blessings of our free In stitutions are ours because our nation has been true to high ideals has suffered and sacrificed that she might be true to high Ideals. We stand with uncovered heads before the flag the banner of the free because eternal righteousness la written In blood across It. Appreciating as we must, all that the flag stands for, and the priceless privileges that are ours because of our training under the sacred Influence of Civil and Re ligious llbei w ; privileges that aro ours because" The mother has suffer ed to give them to us. Let us lay in her lap all wo have to give. And write the record of personal loyalty, Integrity give her what she aaks the noblest, truest manhood. More than that, "I believe," says Dr. Coyle, "that America was predes tined In the wisdom of God to be the herald of this new liberty. I believe It has been given to her to be the leader In humanity's march from the swamps and lowlands of national friction, strife and conflict, from the dark valleys of race prejudice and hatred and animosity, from the so cial abysses of greed and lust and ambition up to the sunlit summits of concern and fraternity and Jus tice. If then I am not mistaken as to the God-given mission of this Re public, if it is from first to last re ligious, we can see something of the responsibility that is laid upon our citizenship. To meet that responsi bility, there must be the most ardent patriotism and the most loyal devo tion to our Father's God. 'God and our country for all the earth' should be our motto. With confidence In Him who planted this vine, with His name upon our coins, with his smile upon our Institutions, with his spirit in our leaders and rulers. "We gird us for the coming fight, And strong in Him whose cause is ours, In conflict with unholy powers. We grasp the weapons He has given. The. light, the truth, the love of heaven." Oh friends, let us once more light the candle of our devotion from fires on the altar of liberty then burn and burn and burn to the socket! S III CUILT Girl. Hidden llnder Bed Says Sfe Did NotDourder, Hattie Leblanc Says Laundry Pro prietor Attacked Her and Had a Revolver She Thinks He , Shot Himself. : Boston, Nov. 25. Hattle Leblanc, tho girl arrested in the house of Clarence F. Glover, tho laundry proprietor, whom she Is accused of killing, was arraigned and held in the district court here. The girl is only sixteen years old, and when she was dragged from be neath the bed where she says she had been hiding three days without food or water she looked like a frail child. The story she told In court was as follows: "I was In Mr. Glover's laundry with him Saturday night. I met him by appointment. Ho was perfectly willing to meet me. He was there when I reached the laundry. "I met him downstairs. We went up to tho office on the second floor to gether. We had a talk. Glover at tacked me. He had a revolve? with him. I don't know where he got the revolver or why he had It. "I didn't have, the revolver In my hands at all. I never touched It. I did not shoot him. I don't know who sho't him. I think he shot himself. I left him and was going through the win dow on the floor below when I heard the shot. I did not know he was shot or what It meant. I went through tho Parkway and Moody street. I hurried to the Glover house. "I remained In the house all the tlmo up to the time I was found. No one knew I wus there. I had nothing to cat. I stayed in the same spot under tho bed all the time. It was awful cold, and I was awful hungry. I thought I would starve to death. I did not know Mr. Glover was dead. "I hid away under the bed all that time because I was ashamed of my self and becnuso I was afraid. I was not afraid of being arrested, but I was afraid of what would happen if It be came known that I had met Mr. Glo ver in the laundry at night. Glover said he would kill me If I told what happened." Tho police are working on tho theory that a third person will be found who can clear up tho mystery of the kill ing of Glover. Mrs. Glover, the widow of the victim of the shooting, Is virtually n prisoner In her homo. The house Is guarded by the police, nnd Mrs. Glover has boen notified that sho must not leave under threat of arrest She did not go in to eee her husband when be was dying, although he asked for her pres ence at his bedside. Mrs. Glover told the police that cbe bad no Idea that tho Leblanc firl had been at ber house sine the shooting though the girl was found undtr r bed in th beuss.