4 fpje VOLUME 7. KKVNOLDSVILLE, L'KNN'A., WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30, l0. NlWIiKI! 21$. 1 VJ Big Reduction! Your Opportunity! Here is your opportunity to get good Shoes at a big reduction. Don't miss it. Bargains insiioes I handle a fine line of the latest styles in ladies' and gents' shoes which I am selling at a small profit. Call and me my stock before buying your shoes. I also have a large stock of overshoes. JAMES K. JOHNSTON, Nolan Block. Handy Tools Reunoidsville Hardware Co. A, D. DEEMER & CO, Dress Goods Our line of Dress Goods have without doubt the line of Black Goods ever Bhown in lteynoldsville. Novelties from 12 i to 60c. per yard. Fine Black Crepon from $1.00 to $2.00. 42-Inch Serge at 25c. per yard. A beautiful line of all-wool Poplins in all shades. A fine line of Dress Patterns Dress Trimmings to . match. Call and see our Silk $1.25 per yard. A complete line of Taffetas. Fur Collarettes something you need tor our $1.79 Collarettes. We have a few left; we ex pect another new lot in this week. Ladies Misses and Children's Coats and Wraps Ladies' plain cloth Capes, Kersey and Bouclays, nicely trimmed. Ladies' plain and crushed plush fur-trimmed Collar and Front they are beauties fancy lined. Our Ladies' Jackets great care has been taken to select only one of a kind. - Call and Bee our new Blues, Tans and Greens. We can save you money on any wrap you buy of us. We certainly can give you good values. ' See our WOOL BLANKETS from 2.50 to $4.00 per j-iir; Cotton Blankets from 45c. to ( 2.00 Yarns and Flannels fl. D. 4 I am now cloning out my stock of Ladies' Coin Too $3.2fi Shoes for 2.25, and Men'e Box Calf, Coin Toe, 2.2.r Shoes, for $1.75, These shoes are first-class and a big bar gain for the people who buy them. are more than convenient; they're necessary. You want tools, and you want good ones, too. In our stock of hardware we carry the best tools made in this or any other country. It's a maxim In hardware that the better the article th better It pays to buy it. There's value in such goods and you want value for your money. To insure that we confine our stock to top grade. Don't go elsewhere for something that's too poor even for a gift. surpasses all others. We largest and most complete Waist Patterns from 85c. to cool evenings. Ask to see to $1.25; Haps from 75c. or. all Kinds. D861W ft CO. THANKSGIVING SERMON PREACHED BY REV. A. E. HOOPER IN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH On Thursday, November 4(h, 1898, to an Appreciatlva Congregation. Trit! Psnlms 147: 20 lip hntlt nut dealt no llh Ktijr mil lull. To a devout fwrHclitn there was no more Inspiring theme Ihiin a review of bin nation' history and Mh nation's grcalnes. And well ho might; for ho would bo recreant to the principles which worn held by the founders of fcla nnllon diil In) not rejoice In the fact that Israel was peculiarly (lod'g nat ion,! hat his peo ple were antdect people, that God Indeed worked mightily In bringing bin people from a condition of bondage to that of liberty and honor and power and glory. Hut David only echoed the thoughts of M irnep. when he composed thin beauti ful psalm. Long before the Psalmist's day Moses had sung of (iod's wonderful mercy and power: "For nsk now of the duvs that are past which were before thee, since the day that find created man upon the earth, and ask from the one sldo of heaven unto, the other, v-hother thero hath been any such thing as this great thing is, or huth been heard like it! "I)W ever people hoar the voice of God speaking out of the midst of the Hie, as thou hast heard, and live? "Or hath God assayed to go ait and take 'him a nation from the midst of nnntfcer nation by temptations, by signs, and y wonders, and by war. atal by a mighty hand and by a stretched out arm, und by great terrors according to all that the Lord your God did for you 111 n.gypt before your eyes.' Ueut. 4: ',i'l-'M. O happy nation, to be the special ob ject of the divine watchfulness, beneath whose wings Israel might nestle with the happy consciousness that though the heathen might rage, threaten and assault, yet no harm could esmo to the loved ones as long as they remained un der that protection. It Is my purpose to bring before you to-day certain formative elements In preparation and growth ff American nationality that ought to bring forth thanksgiving from every truly loyal heart. The hand of God to evident In American history. Equally, though In different way, America, with Israel, is a chosen nation. There are a great many things that show uathat God did really Intend that America should bring forth fruits of a peculiar Irind. J. Tho very position of the country, Isolated as it la In its situation, shows that Ho who created the land and tho oa must have placed America where he did for a grand purpose. To the East and to the West there extend vast bod les of water that formed an Impassable barrier to the navigators of the early times. Their ships were Incapable of combating with the mountain waves of tbe furious ocean. 80 the people wore confined to the lands then known until they had fought out the battles neces sary to prepare them for the new tand beyond the aea. Invention was tn its Infancy. Their ships were of such a kind that they could not venture far from the land. When nation was pit ted against nation and people against people It was very necessary that the veil of mystery be drawn over this new land 'until men had come to recognize those hlghor principles of brotherhood and lovo that ought to govern the ac thins of mankind. If these elements of strife were transported across the ocean the condition of things would 'have been the same as they were In the lands from which they came. But America, from Its very Isolation and distance, was pre served for scenes of a different kind, for people of a different nature and people with a different purpose. Ought we not to thank God even for our loneliness sometimes. We know not what Ho Is preparing for us, we know not wbat grand purpose He has In view for us In the future. If our loneliness teach us the value of His friendship, years are not waited in wait ing; for we know that from the sad silence of years shall rise tho glad hills of our land of promise beckoning us on ward with the hand of hope to the enjoyment that is made all the more de licious for the waiting and the silence more harmonious in contrast to the strains of heaven's musio. There were green fields and delicious fruit In Amer ica that might have been enjoyed long years before thoy wero, but God bad a purpose In drawing the veil over this unknown land until, In the fulness of time, His purposes were brought to pass. II. God's remarkable dealings with this country may be seen also from the noble men that God brought over as pioneers Into this country. , It is impossible to estimate the Influ enoe that a country's position has In de termlnlng the character of its people. Any one looking over tbe map of Europe can see how true this is. At tbe North are the sturdy, snergetlo, active and trustworthy Teutonic tribes; at the South are tbe Romania tribes; the Span- turds and the Portuguese especially !iiugli!,V, cruel, with a great lust fur gain. Tho very struggle for existence In the eoldersectlonsof the world nessita tea ac tivity, demands economy and a morn temperate mode of living. The position of Europe as rotated to America must also be kept In mind. The Influence of tho gulf stream makes the clltniito of Northern Europe much warmer than the ame latitude In America. Have you evor asked yourself the quest Inn what would have been the condition of this country If the Span- liirds Instead of tho English had gotten possession of this new lands? But Col umbus sailed from Spain when he dis covered America. If ho had sailed straight West from Lisbon ho would have struck tho const about on tho lati tude of Philadelphia, but, evidently, God did not mean that the Spaniard should gnln possession of North America and as Columbus was nearlng the new land a very simple occurrence, we would call It. changed his course further South. He notleed a flock of birds holding their course In a South-westerly direction and these birds decided whether North America should or ohould not lie colo nized by the treacherous Spaniard. Here God Interposed In the very begin ning of our history. Are men chosen for a great work by God because of their national character? Undoubtedly they are. Tho Spaniards were cruel, selfish, murderous and they wore not the men that God intended to place as tho guar dians of this great continent and nation. The truth Is that the men who should come here were not yet prepared for colonizing this country. God Himself selected a f eople for this great work. But trials and persecution were neces sary to fit them for His purposes. 80 wo see the oppressor's hand laid hard upon them until they cried out In anguish for some land where they could worship (Jod according to the dictates of their consciences. When charaoter brought forth frait in settled conviction and de termination to serve God though all the world were against them, then God allowed these brightest gems of all tho nation at England to depart and form home and community where nothing should impede the natural outgoings of the heart to God. Surely then God had a purpose in planting hero the North man, the energetic, brave Englishman, Instead of the oruel, lustful Spaniard. God not only selected the people, but he selected the time also In which they should como here. As we look back upon it now we can see that no other years eould have produced such colo nists as those that came during the twenty years following 1(120. Then per secution was at Its height; then relig ious enthusiasm and dauntless religious courage more pronounced than at any other time. The religion that con Id bold its own in such a time as that was worth a great deal In the eyes of God. "Among those 20,000 Englishmen who took up their abode on the rocky coast of New England were men of the highest char acter -and education. Of their eighty ministers one-half were graduates of Cambridge or Oxford and no wonder these men were moved to establish the New Cambridge College on this side of the sea when Boston was only six years old." Such was the race chosen of God to colonise this great North American continent; such were the men chosen out of this race In order that there might be established a nobler element of manhood, a firm foundation on which the future of this nation should bo built. Well might William Staughton In 1688 say: "God sifted a whole nation that he might send choice grain into the wilderness." III. God baa dealt marvelously with this nation In the people's preparation for their form of government. It was not from hatred of tbe form of govern ment in England that a republlo was formed here, because many of the ele meats of English rule were transported to this country. But the Pilgrims did not come direct from England to the coast of Massachusetts. Across the En' gllsh Channel there was a small country in oontaot with whloh it was very necessary that these pioneers of the forest primaeval should come. This was the Dutch Republic. The reformation which began In Switzerland and the interior of Germany naturally flowed downward with the commerce of these nations to the seaboard. Holland itself was thus prepared by the influence of tbe reformation for the reception and education of this people. Here they Imbibed those ideas of representation and government that bore fruit when they landed on the American coast. We have only to look at the present condition of Afrloa in order to judge as to what would have been the condi tion of this country if monarchal, in stead of republican, views had been brought by these early settlers. To-day America would, have been split up ba i tweeo the different nations, each one in niitngonlsm to tho other. If tho Dutch Republic, ut historians say, was Impos sible without tho reformation, we may truly say tho American Republic was Impossible without the influence of the Dutch Republic. It Is only an illustra tion of the marvellous way In which God works In order to bring about His purposes. That small bund of Pilgrims seem to have been guided by the hBnrt of God as plainly as tho Israelites wero conducted through the wilderness Into the Promised Land. If God had a purpose In directing such mon to this country, Imbibed with such Ideas, we must conclude that America was entrusted with the work ing out of a problem thnt wns prrelous In God's sight. In conclusion we can readily soo that God has a mission for America. Whether men will recognize It or not, the nations of tho earth lire In tho hands of God to work out His purposes, and happy Is that nation and bright her future thnt recognizes God In her affairs nnd strives to do His will. Eneh nation has a mission. Though composed of Individuals, each with his own individuality, yet each man has something that he can add to the com mon fund. I have seen a football tcum working with such precision and success that It was evident to everyone thnt each man was Intent on ono object, that all their wills were blended in to one great will; so in the nation there Is a colossal will that acts and Is moved towards one great ohject. For tho exercise of that will the nation will ba hold responsible before God. God does not coerce the will of the nation any more than he does the will of the Indlvldunl; but if tbe nation rebels against tho manifest will of God nothing is left to her but the fate of those nations thnt have been entrusted with missions In the pant, and, because of their unfaithfulness, have now only shadows of their former greatness. What wore the principles that made this nation great? Wo go back to the Revolution and see tho noblo men who valued liberty more than life, who poured out their life's blood that their sons and daughters might become inheritors of this prloo- less legacy. What nobler passion could stir the human breast! Who are more worthy of honor than the men who counted not their lives doar unto them selves for the sako of liberty! What nation Is more worthy to live than that one which gives her best sons and her richest treasures for something moro enviable than jewels, before which tho clink of gold and silver seems like the shackles that bind sordid slaves to the dungeon of their own selfishness! When we consider what aro tho fundamental principles which ought to guldo the transactions of this nation wo cannot come to the conclusion thnt our first thoughts should bo contercd upon gold or even the building up of commerce with tho whole world. What Is true of the Individual Is true also of a nation. It must "seek first thu kingdom of God and His righteousness" and trust that all these things shall be added unto us. It was for freedom of person, freedom of thought and freedom to worship God according to religious conviction that brought the Pilgrims to the wintry coast of Massachusetts. God and liber ty were first In their thoughts and first in thoir government. That same Idea found fruit In the heart of Washing ton and that thought nerved tho arm of every soldier in his army. These aro theaontimentsand principles that make noble men. These are tho sentiments that tinvo always brought victory and liberty. I verily believe that God has raised up such mon as Washington and Lincoln as object lessons for the United States, warning the nation that If she depart from the lofty principles on which she has been founded there re' mains nothing but shipwreck. We may say with the poet of old, "Leavw to the soft Camnanlan Ills linths and his perfumes; Leav to the sordid race of Tyre Their dying-vats and looms; Leave to the sons of Carthage The rudder and the oar; Leave to the Greek his mnrhlo nymphs And w-rolla of wordy loin;" . but for us, the ohildren of a purer civ- lllzatlon, the pioneers of a noble future, It is for us to found a Capitol whose corner stone is Justice, and whose top stone Is Freedom. It Is ours to hold aloft tho lamp of liberty, proclaim' ing freedom to the slavo and tho op pressed. It is our mission to bless tho world with tbe cheering rays of the lamp of life. A Common Danger. - If you have ever had a oold which you permitted to "wear away" it may in terest you to know that it was a danger ous proceeding. Every cold and cough whloh is neglected paves the way for consumption, bronobitls, asthma or catarrh. Otto's Cure, the famous German throat and lung remedy, will cure any cough or oold and save you from consumption. Call on H. Alex. Stoke and get a sample bottle free. Large slse 25c. and fiOo. HIqH Scliool Bulletin. rnmmiAt.sTArr: MlUr-le-Okltf, Hirrr Itrpl, '00. Ait't UlWr, flat Xjrin, '01. Lm1 IlllR, Lydla Mtllltf r, '00. Few of the people of our country thought that by doing a humane act, similar to that of freeing the slaves, their would bo thrust upon u one of the greatest questions thnt could come before a nation, and especially a repub lic which previously had but little studied the matter. Our navy and our army settled the question of superiority In the war wo have finished and thoy settled It In a way thnt only Americans eould settle It. But the great and dif ficult problem that arose from tho strug gle remains for our statesmen to solve. This great question Is Imjierialism, or territorial expnnslon. Possessions scat tered ull over the globe, somo say, nro a benefit; some say not. Nations having foreign possessions are continually hart rassed by wars arising directly or indi rectly from thorn. More than half the wars of countries having them origina ted through causes trucenble to these. The Anglo-Egyptian exedltion. is an example of this, as are many others. Tho peoplo of the United States abhor war. It ciuises loss of life. Tho people have to defray tho expenses Incurred by war. Neither do they favor a large standing army which is necessary In tho case of Imperialism. This will not bo the republic of the present if we fol low the example of tho greedy, land grabbing nations. Some say, "Wo have spent millions of dollars In this war, why not get a recompense?" Wo start ed the war In tho cause of Immunity and not for conquest. Besides, it will- cost us many millions to retain tho vast amount of territory which might be seized. Coaling stations are acquired by having foreign possessions, but coal ing stations are m cessnry - only In case of war. Let It not be forgotten that our nation Is a republic, and a model one. Do we want to be an Imperial power and exor cise sovereignty like an empire. No, the peoplo do not wish this. Our coun try is large. It has the greatest re sources, as a nation, in the world. It Is unnecessary to reach out and grasp every little Island that wo can. It is not our place to do it. We can profit by the fates of other nations who have tried this policy. Let not our noble nation mar her thus far brilliant record, so resplendent with glorious achievements both in war and peace, tho most renowned tho world has ever bid to look upon; but may she con tinue in ber victorious career, triumph ant In the arts of peace instead of con quest; prosperity instead of expansion; and above all preserve an undying faith in tho principles which have been in strumental In elevating her Into those higher realms of statehood which it has been her privilege and pride to enjoy. j LOCAL. The Senior class took dinner with. Prof. Lenkerd at the Imperial or Thanksgiving. Some Seniors, when In pleasant corns puny soem to think the longest way la, the sweetest way to school. Miss Lois Robinson, of the Junior claiH, Is on the sick list. Miss Ella Lenkerd spent Thanksgiv ing at her home near DuBols. Miss Molly McDondald was In DuBols over Sunday. William Smith missed his Thanks giving dinner by going to Brookville to, referee for the football team. James Pentz spent Sunday in DuBols. Miss Gertrude Dolble entertained the Senior class at her home Saturday even ing. Jr. No. 2 need not think he Is the tallest log in the saw mill. Which girl wishes to learn to play the baton In tbe orchestra? - The prices on watches at Gooder's are trade winners. Headache for Forty Years. For forty years I suffered from sick headache. About year ago I began using Celery King. The result was gratifying and surprising, my headaches leaving at once. The headaches used to return every seventh day, but thanks to Celory King, I have had but one headache in tho last eleven months. I know that what cured me will help others. Mrs. John D. VanKeuren, Saugerties, N. Y. Celery King for the Nerves, Stomach, Liver and Kidneys is sold in 50c. and 2Tc. packages by H Alex. Stoke. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for outs, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satis faction or money refunded. Prion 25 cents per box. For sale by H. Alex. Stoke.