HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1879-1-23, Page 7J
aANUAIi1 - ,3,1S7O
ONLY JONEL
Tlie officers of Her afajosty's Twerity-
fourth anti Eighty fourth infantry were
drifting round their mess -table hn Ces-
Ile town, the capital of the [file of mom,.
.one evening more than thirty years ago
—Wed i:+, all of them except one ; but
then that one was only Jones. Nobody
mirded Jones even his pecnlittritiee
hats begun to. be an olds Mtlbject fol.
'chaffing,` and, indeed, hehad Nisi
such small itttetitioat to th• it chaffing
that thee had carne to fiud it little
pleasure, and after some ttvette of (11e-
comfort; Lienteriant Jones lied beep al
lowed to choose his own pleasures
oaat much interference. Those were
dant extravagant—n favorite book, 1t
gong; walk iu all kinds of weather, and
at sail when the weather was fttvorni)lo:
isle would not drink—he said it lout
:ills health ; be wonlit not shoot—he
Haid it hart his feelings ; he wolti(1 net
;gaillble--he said it hurt his 00(I8Oieuce;
and he did lint Clare to flirt or visit the
belles of the cepital—he said it hurt
11i8 affections. Once Ottptaiu de honey
lispiugly wondered if it we', r ossible ''u
hurt his honor,' and Joues calmly in.
s•rvert'd that 'it wits not possible fol
Captain de Itensy to do so.' Indeed,
.longs censtaetly violated thtou' gentle.
men's ureas et proper belutvi, ur, but
for some reason or i tiler oe on•,
brought him to Recount for it. It wit.
easier to shrug their shmilders and call
him 'queer,' o. say 'it woe „uly J01.0•+,'
or even to quietly assent his u,itr•nrelitl+•.
One evening Colonel Und er4v';md waf.
tdiseussiti , 1L insuring party rot the
slay. J')Oe walked into the room ours
was iuii telietc'ly rtilonsted : —
'Soo tetlli115; new, I4ietlte,);t'lt. I lied
there aro plenty of hares on the island
and we mean t() give ptse. a run to -
Morrow. I have heard. that yeti are a
good rider. Will yon join nil ?'
'Yon must incense mi', Coleeel ;
such a thi='g is neither in niy flay of
duty nor my pleasure.'
'Yon forgot the honor the aulnnel
does you, Jones,' said young Ensign
Paws B.
'I thank the Colonel for his o'nrt•
esy, but I can see no gcod reason for
accepting it. I am sure my horse will
not apprr,ve • f it ; and T ani sure the
hero will not like it ; and I eor not a
good rider, therefore, I shruld riot en-
joy it.'
'Yon need not be afraid,' said the
Colonel, sneeringly ; 'the country is
quite open, and these low Maux walls
are e'nsily takers.'
'Excuse me, colonel, I'm afraid. If
I should be hurt it would cause my
mother and sisters very great alarm
and anxiety. I m very much afraid
of doing this.'
What was to be lone with a man so
obtuse regarding conventionalities, and
who boldly asserted his own coward-
ice ? The Colonel turned away, hell
contereptously,and Enbigu Powell took
Jones' place.
The morning proved to be a very
Nati ooe, with the prospect of a rising
storm, and as the party gathered in the
barracks yard,Douse said earnestly. to
his Colonel :
'1 am afraid. sir, you will meet .with
a severe sterni.'
'1 think so, Lieutenant but we
promised to dine at Gwyune I -11t11, and
we shall get that far at any rate.'
So the rode rather gloomily away it)
the rain. Jones attended to the mili-
tary duties assigned to him, and then,
abent noon, walked seaward. It was
hard work by this titne to keep bis
footing on the quay, bot amid the
blinding spray and mist he saw quite a
crowd of men going rapidly toward the
great shelving Scarlet Rock, a mile be-
yond the town. Ile stopped au old
sailor and asked t—
'Ira anything wrong ?
'A little steamer, sir, off Calf of plan;
she le driving this way ; an', indeed,
1 fear she will'be on to rocks afore ta-
night .'
Jones stood still a moment, and
ashen followed the crowd' as fast as the
storm would let him. Wben he joined
)therm they were on the summit of a
huge cliff wateninl' the bottled craft.
fShe was now within sight, and it was
'':evident that her seaman had lost all
control of her. Sbe must ere long be
flung by the waves upon the jagged and
frightful rocks towards which she was
driving. In the lull of the wind, not
only the booming of the minute -gun,
but also the shouts of the imperiled
crew, could be heard.
'What can be done ?' said Joues to
an old man whose face betrayed the
strongest emotion.
'Nothing, sir, I atn afraid. If she'd.
manage to rount td; rocks,, she would
have gong ta pieces on ta sand, and
there are plenty 'of men who would
boos risked their rife to save life. J3nt
how are we to reach them front this
height ?'
''How far"are we above octet ?'
'This o .(swall
2111 rook goer) down liken a
rorty fathoms, sir ?
'What depth of water litthe Not?'
'Thirty feet lir more.'
,.Good. Have you plenty of light,
long rope r
'Mitch tai you tvautt sir; but let ale
T -LT TIMES
tellyon, sir, you can't live ten minutes
clown there I to first wave will throw
vee on to rocks and dash you to Riede(.
Plenty of no world pat you down, sir,
but .yon CUI't swim if you get down,'
'1)o ynrt know, old man, Lend
swiinwuing is ? I have dived thronr,b
the.stlrf ,t Nukuhevn.'
'Gott bless, you, sir_ I thought no
white man could do that sande.'
vt 11tlo. this conversation was going
nn Jones was divesting himself of all
saperf1ous clothing and cutting out
the sleeved of his heavy pea jacket.
with his jack knife. This done, he
passed some light, stroug•rope through
them. The then watched hint with
eager interest, and Bering their inquis-
itive look, li.e said :
'The thick sleeve will prevent the
rope from cutting my body, you see.'
'Ay, ay, sir, I see • now what you are
doing.'
'Now, men, 1 have ()ply one request t
give rite plenty of rope as frost as -1
draw on you. When 1 get on board—
you know hots to make a cradle, I sup.
.Pose ?'
'A.y, ay, sir, but how are you going
to rends the water ?'
'I tun going t0 plungo down. I have
dived fr1'm the main yard of the Ajax
bc'f.'re°'this . It was a high leap.'
He passed, it double coil of the rope
arum) d his waist, examined it thorough-
ly to Pee th'tt thole wes plenty to st'trt
eiih, and saying, 'Note Mende, stand
out of the way and let me have a clear
>tn.rt,' rtti ed his bare 111.1(1 One moment
teeard hcuiven, arts,' taking a short
roll, leaped as from the spring board of
.t plunge bath.
Such an u1xiolt5 crowd as followed
that leep ! Great numbers, in spite of
that dangerous wind, lay flat on their
breasts and watched hies. He struck
the water at least twenty-five feet be•
y,ud the cliff, and disni pc ared in its
dark, foemy depths.
\Vllen be roso to the surface he slaw
jnett beims Min ,L ,gigantic wave, bet he
bad thee e to treadle, and ' before it
reached him divided in itte ;;entre. It•
broke, iu fury upon the rocks,but Jones
rose for beyond it. A mighty cheer
from the 10011 0n shore 18)1011ecd him,aud
nolo he began in goad earuedt to put
his Pacific experience into practice.
Drawing continually on the leen for
more tepee—•which they paid out with
drafeuitlg cheers—he met wave after
wave in the sande manuor, really ad-
vancing, however, more below the wa
ter than above it.
Soddenly the °despairing men on.
board heard a clear, hopeful voice :—
'Help at hand, Cul taiu ! Throw me
a buoy.'
And in another minute or two Jones
was on deck, and the cheers from the
little !steamer were echoed by the cheers-
of
heersof the crowed on land. There was not
a moment to be lost ; she was breaking
up fast ; but it took but a few minutes
to fasten a cable to the small rope and
draw' it on board, and then a second
cable, and the communication was com-
plete.
'There is a lady here, sir,' said the
'We 1 sal ` for
t n'n. mastn a cl t
1 tl
C prig l
her, she can never walk that dangerous
rope.'
But we have not a moment to waste,
or we may all be lost ; is she very
heavy ?
'A slight little thing—half a child,
sir.'
'Bring her here.'
Thio was no time for ..ceremony.'
Without a word, save a few sentences
of direction and encouragement, he
took her under his left arm, and.
steadying himself by the upper cable,
walked ou the lower with his burden to
the snore. The crew rapidly followed,
for in such moments of extremity the
soul masters the body, and all things
become possible. There wits plenty of
help waiting for the seamen, and the
lady, her father, and the Captain had
been put in the carriage of Braddon
and driven rapidly to the hospital hall.
Jones, amid the confusion, disap-
peared. IIo had picked np an oil -(rein
coat, and when every one turned to
thank their deliverer he was gone. No
one knew him, the sailors said they be-
lieved him to be, 'one of the military
guests by his rigging,' but the individ'
utility of the hero tronbled no one un-
til the danger was over. In an hour
the steamer was driven on the rocks,
and went to pieces, and it beiug by
this time quite dark, every one went
home.
The next day the hunting party re-
tdrned from Gwvnne Hall, the storm
having compelled there to stop all
night, and lit the dinner table that et',
ening the` wreck and the hero of it
were the theme of everyone's converse
tion.
'Suds a plucky fellow,' said Ensign
• Powell. 'I wonder who he was.
Gwynne says lie was a stranger, ler.
haps one of that crowd staying at tbo
abbey.'.
'Perbans,' said Captain Makes, 'it
osi Son( s'
Oh, JOtles would bo afdaid of his
mother.'
Jones mad° a little satirical bow,and
said pleasantly, 'Perhaps it was Pow-
ell,' at which Powell laughed, and said
'not if he knew it.
In a week the event bad been pretty
well exhausted, especially as there was
to be a great dinner and ball at Brad-
don, (anti all tire pincers had. invita-
tions. The ball had lit peouliar inter.
est , for the young lady who had been
saved frons the wreck wculd' be there,
and rumors'of her riches and beauty
had been rife for several days. It was
said the tittle steamer was her father's
private yaeht, and that he Was It than
of rank end influence.
Jones said he would not goto the
dinner, as either he or Saville must re
tnain for evening drill, and that Saville
loved a good dinner, while he gated
very little about it. Saville could re-
turn illi thne to let him ride over about
ten o'elock and dee the danoieg. Sav-
ille rather wondered wliy roues did not
take his place all the .evening, and felt
tialf'iujnred at thisdefault. But Jones
had a curiosity about the girl he had
(used: To tell the truth, ho was near-
er in love with her than the wished, in
calm blood, to see if elle was as beanti-
Ite his fancy had painted her during
those few awful minutes that he had
held her high above the waves.
She was exceedingly handsome ;just
the fresh, innocent girl he had known
the would be. He w; tettetl her dame
ing with his brother officers, or talking
to her father, or 1gga�uines on Braddon's
arcs, and every Ilene he :aw her she
looked fairer awl :greeter. Yet he had
not oonrage to ask fur an introduction,
and in the busy ball room no one
seemed to think of him. He kept his
post against the conservatory floor
quite undisturbed for .some tune- Pres-
e=ntly be saw Squire Braddon with the
be.ttity ou his' arm approadbing him.
As he passed, the Squire remembered
he had not been to dinner, and stopped
t0 say a few cuui'teone words, and in-
tr' duced his colnpenicn.
Trios Conyers—Lieutenant Jones.'
Bit no sooner did Miss Conyers
uta(tr Lienteuant Jones' voice than she
gave a joyful cry, and, clapping 1!(r
bands together, said :
I have found him 1 Papa! papa !
I have found him 1'
Never was there such an interrup-
tion to a ball. The company gatheledl
in excited groups; and papa knew the
Lieutenant's voice, and the ,captain
kuew it, and poor Jones, uuwillilig en-
ough,had to acknowledge the decd end
be made a here of. •
It was wonderful, after this night,
the change that took place in Junes'
quiet ways. IIis books and boat seem-
ed to have lost nil their charms, and
as for his walks, they were all in one
direction, and ended at Braddon Hall.
In about a month Hiss Conyers went
away, and th.eu Jones began to hunt
the postman, and to get pretty little
letters which always seemed to take It
great deal of answering.
Before the en.l of the winter be had
an iuvitation to Couyer's to spend a
month, and a furlough being granted,
off iu great glee for Kent, Jones nev-
er returned to the Eighty-fourth. The
month's furlough was indefinitely
lengthened;
.
fact,he sol
It and en-
tered upon diplomatic career under
the care of Sir Thomas Crouyers.
Eighteen months after the week Col-
onel Underwood read aloud a descrip-
tion of the marriao of Thomas Jones,
of Milford Flaxen, to Mary, only child
and heiress of Sir Thomas Conyers,
JOHN SQLQAN0
Fins just commenced business one half mile
West of Dnshevood, and is prepared to (lean
Clooks,watohes and Sewing Machines. • J1rn-
brellas repaired and Organs and 1felodiir,t s at-
tended to. Those in want of his services'
should giv a hint, a'cail be lore sell -A away from
home. Charges moderate and entiresatiafac-
tion guarntesd„
THE FA.LLANMVO TUE TRADE
C. Southcott 44 Sion.
TAILORS" and CLOTHIERS,
Take pleasure to itfolin the inhabitanteof Exeter
add, surrounding mimicry, that they have just
ope.ledout ane .eelleutassortnientof
Tpeeds, Coatings, Veatinysetc.,
in the In, beat styles and putterna,e.ndfeel assured
that in teem atter of clothing, they can suit the
mostfastidious bastes.
BLACIMINIXTIIIDTC
NEW FIRM, INGRAbi'S 01 D STAND.
Er01:so Shoeing, wagon and Carrie ge Mkaing,Dia-
mond Narrows, and Plows, Genera, Beleksmith-
ing in all its branches, at the lowost rat, and sat -
guaranteed. Give IIs 0 call and esat,,,Lo Our
work before t_adine elsewhere -
MOM ILr k1 &MolBIDl(, King St.,1'Ieu , 1.
Eeusall, June 30,1878. ( m
H {'NSALL'
PORK PACKING HOUSE
Having commenced business for the
Fail anldWinterTrade
We are prepared to purchase any quantity of
Pork, subject to the following regulations:
We will tale off two pounds per hundred if
dry, and three pound of soft. Shoulder stuck.
twenty-five cents. If any of the 11nng gut is
left iu, 25 cents extra will be deducted.
No pork will be bought at any price if
warm.
SA,US A.(ES
—AND-- -
Pork Cuttings
ou handl at reasonable rates.
We want all Hogs Cuttings right through
breast to head, and .gams opened out to tail.
G. & J. PETTY.
REMOVAL!
REMOVAL!
REMOVAL!
REMOVALI
REMOVALI
REMOVAL!
P. FRAYNE
has remove to'.iis now shop, lately occupied by
Perkins & Co—two doors north of J. Grigg's hook
store, where you will end everything usually kept
in a first-class harness establishment, which for
quality of material and slylo of workmanship
IS NOT EASILY SURPASSED I
Call and examine my stook before purchasing
elsewhere.
PETER FRAYNE.
MILLINERY
MISS GARLICK.,
}las vow in stock a complete line of
SPRING HATS, BONNETS,
FEATHERS, FLOWERS,
and Trimmings of F, very Kind, in
.Latest Style and Lowetat Prices
A full Stook of Fancy Goods,
Berlin Wools, Honiton Lae Braies
Patterns, Ctlirdboard Mottoes, &c,
I Jaekets out and made to order,
MISS GARLICK
.}'Lain St. L deter.
"Knowledge rather than Choioe Gold,"
EDUCATION FOB ALL.--Auniiur C`OLLOGE
andUtiuvOasxrv, Belleville, Ont, founded 1815.
Courses of et udy and examination forlf,.tricula-
tiou in University, Courses f t teachers' Certifi-
cates, (Ir mar Schools for .til grades of Students
Commercial College tire -eines, Telegraphing,
Myeloid course completeAlexandria College for
Ladies, Board and Tut o.n only SUB per annum.
inter term begins, .1 1. Spring term, Aprilto, Circulars, &c., a:,tt ,ren by addressing Proal-.
lent at., Jaques, .�.1). Belle Cnt.
KNo111�99a"",rH tht int s;iwa , . ullis cou-
tainc d in the es medical
bock ever i st. , entitled
SLI r-PlLEsErt t TION
Friel., only Sl. ntoy
`;
� 18 8 P 00 receipt of pia-. 15
treats ofExliausted3'intlity, Premature _)e elrue,
Nervous and Physical Debility, and the endless
concomitant ills and untold mr'1r1es that r, salt
therefrom, andcontaies more than 50orilual pre-
scriptions, any oat of which is worth the price of
the book. This belle was written bythe most ex-
tensive and probably the most skilfulpreetitloncr
in America, to whom was awarded igold aueljew.
elledmedal bytbeNational Medical Ae ociatio0.
A 1'amplilet,illustrated with the very finest
Steel 3;pr:lrings-a mar-
vel of art unit beauty HEAL
-
Brnt VILE to al:. Send
for it at once. .Address
-
PEABODYUMEDICALBut.
rr
INSTITUTE., No 4 B
ul
cinch St.. Boston. class,
t:
.i., 1 . 11:'.'
•11 nuo, , , rl
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c„l,t (r 1 t 1 r., e•
buds its, to •.1 11t r . ii
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trip, K nt1 r•'.: --tort
u orpd L.vor. ) .0:..a, , ,11:.,.., ,.r
e Ltv r 4 o, -1t oI , F i 1 ,;tr.
Mere. " I re. , Gull( l( 11 ,. 1 1 1 , , ,u I 1,1
it (•11( 13 I) t r 1
lit the (-ac 11,„ E nt,t(0
cart 6t.1^...; 01 C01:141.::.1,),....4,., I! • . ilLawn the.
III, IC:11 f,testl'e. rn 1 e,: , v,.,..cnnea
it tb. :.t..t 1. 1 1 ,, 1 ,. 1,21(0
H ct.r<,thrr..tr r: t 05 11 thecy:tuta
' 1 purines the bloc' ' 1
x11 1°II-.I:r r r . , I!irlx:tsary
:im1 L.veils stLs .1,.7...,.e. :• ...... -.
of Conyers' Castle, Kent, and a pare- '� ' �'it th„° ,�lMy u M I + - t•••!• Gi
;.rapid below stated that the Honorable
Thomas Jones, with Ins lovely bride,
had gone on to Vienna on diploma
tie service of great importance..
'Just his luck,' said Powell.
'Just his pluck,' said Underwood ;
and for my part, when I come across
any of those fellows who are afraid of
hurting their mothers and sisters, and
not ashamed to say so, I eh`sll treat
thein as heroes just walting:f,er as op-
portunity. I-Iere is to the Honorable
Thomas Jones and his lovely bride!
'We are going to India, gentlenten,next
month, and T am sorry the Eighty-
fourth has lost Lieutenant Jones : I
have no doubt whatever that he would
storm a fort as bravely as he boarded
a wreck.'
PRACTICAL THEOLOGY.
A eolored,Georgia minister, preaches
the following practical theology
” broddren, my 'sperience is dat it ain't
de perfession of 'ligion, lett de 'casional
Practice of it, dat makes a man 'dept,
able up yonder. W'en yer gets to de
guldengate, an' Peter looks yer right
in de eye, an' yer shows Iliad yet long
creed, an' says,' prompons-like, dat yer
'longed co a big church, de postle'll
shake his head, a11' say, 'Dat ain't ruff
ter got yer throiigh.' But if yer takes
all yer bills under y1'r anis, yer grocer
bills and yer rent bills, an' he looks 'ern
over an' finds' then all receipted, he'll
say, 'Yet title's clear,' an' unlock de
late ilii' let yer pitch yer voide for de
angels' song. But taint no use ter
trabbie along dat natter path 'lose yer
can carry, folded np in yer creed, a
ree'mendatiou from yer creditors.
good
Rehire') ain't no place for a man who
has to cl;idge roan' a 'writer for fear ob
meetin' some one who'll asst for dab
littlo bill dat uebher was paid,'
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Three Pc11et9 ere , onro,dy forger thm, aastarei.aod8,
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turbaure to the eonstltutlon dict, cr ccent+•itlalt
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Pleasant I'uraativo I'otic(a. h1 ux ' mallein rf tht
remedial power of 1221100 1 err. zits t 1 dkas lir r er
great a variety of (11sras, ..11 ut.:y h, :d4 that then
action upon the a I mol eeolwaty 1' nnh arsnl, not a
gland or tissue examatril,clr.anatlV lmprese 11,
Iota not (1(111 ala luolxiills of tloso P, 111`.
They are sugar-coated null Inclosed 111 1.law )1 (1.;
theirvlrtuos being therel ypretotved mil mpii r 1 rol
any length of Blue, In any a 1in11(te, s) that Ila, lin
always Croat end reliable. 111181a not Ile, r •no• wltt
pills put lip In cheap wooden or inu,teboar 11111,(r(ta
1'n' all digitises where a Laxative ,'ai.arative, lit
Purgative, 1,, Iud(atctl, 1.11(01 1 it 112(2,' Pellets (lets wig Eivt
0
the roost perfect tau isilwtlon. Soli bydraxrrhk.
Ill. V PT r, R. 1).. I't urtn. \'i oral's h,t,pensar3
and lnvtditi' Hu Cul, !Sufi do, iS. Y. .ti
scat e ISYM T 15. .irretinent 110 11.
simaut.
t1l
a\metes 1,•rfllttry lilann110(1), pn111ont 0(221110, t,..
ht ((010-0), a dryness, di• •, v('at 11, w( it e1 infin: cc'
eyes, stepping' up, or motto, len, of be 1(11g,t1 (11'
sages, rinelua in ears, dea1Uok, hawki ig and e.• tl( h
tog to flea r the throat, 0110%1 018, se et 14 front 1211 rs
volae altered. nasal twang, (111•e naive steers, impairs V.
or total deprivation or setae of smell and u:
ttt', t:•
zimiss, meatal depression loss of an lone, its (env
tion, enlarged tonsils, tickling coven 11t (env n
few ofthese symptoms are ,(1(0.1yto1.1present 11,en}
case at ono titan.
DR. SAGE'S CATARRH RE Ili DY
(140(101 es radical cures of the worst c kers er ect:web.
no matter of how long at ,1 (1h'r, lht Iteral T r C03y
mat be seethe!, et better 11 polled by the1'11 n Dr
tIt ItCE'S Nutria,. This 1.• the 0111y form 1 f Smartt.creat yet invented with whish Matti rurdirinc can 1
Wtrriad monCt' (11I I1r1i1'EC'rtl .t1(1.R.n (u 81.
1/5118 Of the 01(41041 nnsai p tasnao tm'I the 1111111
hero 01? 11411/,t11 s e onto anienting hexewl!'1, in tvitirt
spree and 1)1111(1 ”' l fenny evict, and from tvhb lr
the eal1(t tid l y.scher n generally ..proter ts, II, list
is rdealilnt and ,goody milersto0(1stool direclio)11
dream anyl(1 each natrement. `I7) , 1• d
m"a•.
Imlt 11S.t
0muds�' rtlrn.� rat'ettt hoer( of "(:01(1 h, tit(
Brad "boa few ,i1pl r•:)rinrid, IC (11,11 I n,l plea:•
But to 1,i• metasais. no Btre55 t••r a (1 I 1
rHMiwn�t41r11V.l'111ti811.t31n'rti )`irrlt `n1,1i,.1'11rua
taara1rV t..,,) 1,14011,:1