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The Exeter Times, 1880-9-23, Page 6SHE TIMES Ten Lost Tarbes, the ltee,rt, ill the spirit aoa not in the DEVONSHIRE HOUSE. • whose praise is u' t of men, but of Gr . -A LECTURE 1./LIVERED BY THF. REV. I have ehnwn in ttrie address tha J. GUND'Y, IN MI laITHUDIs'r CHUBOH, hNETER, AU0r. 1Jt11 1$80. the Stotle liiuodutn O Dalliers pro' Om is the kingdom of (hti.-ct, T hav ICONT1NUED NROU LAST WEEK). ALSO $130W11 that the "Toil Trrbee' We are told by the advocates) of this) "Mired with Judith and Benjamin it the blessings) of restoration and union peeulirzr theory that Christ and his ill; their own hind. If these propos.' npostlos were not seta to the Jews but tions have been established as I at a,'l the taraelites,and that the Israelites sure yon wilt rzdmit,thon the two fund its distinct from the Jews accepted ttmeutal propositions, upon which this :flim as their saviourwhile the Jews) A.co10 Israel theory rests, eanuot pos. ohne wore guilty of hie death. This sibyl, be tree, and the whole theory, ^statement is strangely inonnsistent with like the linage in N'.buehadnezzar's dreaul,must crumble into dust. Let us therefore, instead of wi's'ing our time and taleuts in endeavoring to establish a baseless theory, employ theta in the more laudable purpose of trying to extend the glorious kingdom of onr Lori! and saviour, and endeavoring to multiply the nnlnber of those who by faith in Olivia shall bee •mo heirs of the blessings and promises snored to the children of Abraham. So shall Grad's promise to Abraham be fulfilled "I will multiply thy seed as the stars ) GLIMPSE AT Man LIFE IY 11::01.AND•^-PRIC>;• t LESS DIAGNIPICi9NOE. o A oorre:pontlent in England of the San F azrci400 (OM.) Obrouiele Bays:-- Lord IItrtingtou belongs to the great fatuily of the dishes of Devonshire, hod n it was to the I)evonehirelionso, Picea- that the Queens's messenger was sent to hitt him thane to 'Windsor. Oatiforuians who have vi•-itel' London must surely 11:ee'e nolio d this gloomy. inpoeing tilten:tiorl standing behind a great stone wall', whose wide open gate show the roomy ravett enrol yard and` the mensolenn) !oohing, house beyond'. Its exterior is n"t without a e.tronir snggeetin i of enanny grandanr, rrinoi- pally cls• ivea fronx the great size of the house and is air of trnnlnil seelu+ion amid the roaring rash of Piccadilly .but not until one crones the threshold and vigils the lienee, as I have, can nay idea of the priceless magnificence of the place he conceived". The central entrance hall is krin•imv, low and Clark, but the superb stai'•onso at the roar, o marvelous constreetitm, in the finest the tbeury that "Israel" was lost fur e,tt►titrioa before aid after the titne of t Ihriet, and has only been recently fiend in the Anglo-Saxon rage, bat it le olio entirely opposed to the teach- ' hies of the New reotameut. As we Fere Teens weeping over the City of Jeru- a trler.r and exoleiming,"IIowoften would I here :;stiles r•d thy children together, a.a a 11011 (10'11 rather her brood under her win's and ye would uot,"we have a eui'eent answer to this strange theory. ii'• cern." unto His own, and His own tee eco Biel Lot. But as many as of the heaven and as the sand which is r; o ral !.lith, to thein gave He power npou the lea shore; and thy seed shall Fn t .,;,,Pru the sons of God, even to possess the gate of his enemies; And 1he%1 that believe on His name":— in thy seed shall all the nations of the Jells; 1. c. 11, 12 v, In the:New Testa- earth be blessed ; because thou hast I:le-nt we find tee terms Jew and Israel- ite neal n,—1synoaniously. Christ is called Kitts of the Jews and the Ring of Is- re,•'1, On tho tray of Pontioost "there war'' <i,vt:Bing et Jerusteleni Jews, de. vent men out of every nation udder le .r,:n ' There were "Parthians, and Eistinites, and the dwellers in ithoojiotan:i:t," po,eibly many of these aescerldnnts of some of the an eient exiles who remained in their pos. sa+ieie.,a ellen their brethren went ala ,tel their own lard, hot they a'•e all eal- +e I "Jews," ani et the saute time Peter in a.ilressiug t'he're styles theni 'one's • -of Israel. Again Peter in Acte 3 c. 12 v, eliergos the "leen of Israel" with 'The lava -lora swage" is a native of the 'teeth of C'hrr t, but says.: "And Sigh-leeia. • now brethren 1. wet that through iguor- Thereatest home attraction is a anee ,e did it, as did also your rulers. g And Ile freely offers them salvation, tidy wife with a loving smile. escleiruing : 'Tote you first Gnt bey- That man bath the most friends who in raised up Hie son Jesne, sent Hirt, reedeth a friend's assistance. to bless yen in trruinl away every one Flies work from eon to sun, but the 'of yen from his inieuities," and so we ( mosquito's work is never done. are told that toe "I:urnher of the men Ire submits himself to be seen who believed was about five tlr,in- sanl" The Teeeeh SaI)hed itn 18 ad- through a mioriscope who suffers him obeyed my voice":—Gen. 22 c. 17, 18 v. Then, too, shell God's promise to his son bo realized : "I shall give thee heathen fur thine inheritance, sand the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possessions":—i'saltn 2 e, 8 v. "And upon His head shall be many crows," "Then shall the Jew and Gentile meet In pure devotion at Ills feet, And earth shall yield Him as her due— ller fullness and her glory too." WISE AND OTHERWISE. dressed by Peter as the "rulers of tht people and elders of Israel," and tilt high priest is said to h•tve called to :gather the council, "and all the senatt of the ,hildreu of Israel ;" and so it the A.ots, the terms "Jew and Israel' are used 1pti scriminately and apeliei to the same per.ions, the blessings o salvation are freely offered to them and in many cases, gladly received In Asts 22 e, 20 v. we are told that "many thousands of Jews" believed Paul galls himself a "Jets":—:lots 21 0. 39 v., and also an "laraelite":— Rnm. 11 •c. 1 v. stead also Acts 8, 4 13 ohtt,ps-, and Bona. 9, 10, 11 chaps. It has bean asked what advantage OSE possibly be realized oven were it possible to s-ubstautiate this Anglo - Israel theoary, anal in answer to that• question it is said that all those 0011 - vent blessings whish God secured to to Abrubant and his seed are the right. ful ineritanoe of the British Nation, and that all those gtorinut+ promises which God gave to Israel are being Ful- filled or will be halted to the Anglo- Saxon race. There ts, however, a more direct and certain means by which we may beonme inheritors of these pram. 94es and share in tiles• convent bles- siege. The apoette P.tiil tell.; us that there are three ditl.tinet meanings to expression, "The seed of Abraham, In Gatatinne 3 o. 16 v. it is applied to Obrist. •'Naw, to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He seit.h not, And to seeds ss of many ; but as of one, ;And to toy send, which is , Oh -rim." In Romana 4 c. 13, 16 c. is, is applied to the legal or natural pls. terity of Abraham who are palled "his seed through the law." But a more• extended 'Meaning is given to this ex• gression when it is applied to all whr, are believers in Christ.. ''Fri;~'the promise that Ire should be the heir of the world w161f not to Abraham,.,or to his send throaght the law, , hut through file righ'eounites of faith;:—Rom 414. 13 v. "Lorry ye therefore that they which ire of•faithe the same are the children of Abrt><iimrtzt And' the sarijat,- ure foreseeing that God would justify the heathen through faith, preaohed before the goapel antoA.bratt•tnieptying, in ghee sltizll all nations be bleeped So ten they which be of faith .are Wetted with faithful A.brahern. Aud.li6•ye be tlhriet'sthen are ye Ahroetla,n a.. seed, and heirs according to th,, •promido,::-- Cial. *8 e. 7, 8, 9,:.29 ere Here • then is the only.meant , trq•, whin,he we- 04r1 become igtheritoes.. of: thaws • prom ses en'Isharerslin ,theee,onveunnt Wooster. Wd Mast .hck.t i,ted; to (lyrist by living faith, and be b ire . twain of tete spirit, that W9 may become heirs of these. promises. "Fdr he is not•aelow which is one otttwardly; aeithet is that oir- outneision whiah is outward in the f}er•b: 131111 he is a Jew which ie one in. aeseetiyi 11,44 dl I:0 rn0iaiou • la thigh ut • self to he caught in a petition. 'Sildiers must be fearfully die- ' horest,"said ie--+horest,"said Mrs.Partington; 'it seems to be an ocenrrence of every night for • a soldier to be relieved of bis match,' t An old Syrian proverb : Never agree f pith your neighbor when he abuses '1 his horse, his dog, or his wife, unless you want to make him your mortal enemy. There are hours ,in life when the mo•:t trifling little thing takes the 'form of calamity. Oar tampers are �ilike a'1 opera glass which ;noires the nbjte's small or greet according to the end yen look through. A reporter calls et a haniring hnnre and takes notes and it's all rie!lt. Alone conies another felines, '.)tke•a some enter and gets jugged for fiat years. This iilnstrit'es tho privileges eiljoye'1 by the press. 'Tint I rue,' sail a clergyman r'e- cAntly in digonesing one theme of II1 subject to take up another. 'Then I [mice it spstles,' yelled a man from •l he gallery, Who way dieaming the happy hnnrs away in an irnttginary game of Napoleon. 'I would annonnoe to the oongrega lion that, prob'e,bly •by mistake, there was left at the rneetina hnnre t1)k morning a smell oatren nlnheriln,mnclt damaged by time and feat, Reel of en exceedingly' pale blue color : • in the avara large bleak silk nnib'rlle of great bean'y. ]3lrin,ler's of this sort, my friends aro getting little too cern- mon.. am-mnu.. Carver marble, with s wondernns balus- trade, which rivals the st'tendor of the Italian palaces, is more than sufficient to redeem the hall it,elf. Q lee on the staircase, you sea throvnh the wile window one of the most nnsuspec'eti beauties of the house—the lovely perk attached to it in the rear, an immense velvet sward ,lotted with rnn.gnifioient tree9, some of them of great antigntty. 'The rooms on the first fieor are nnf.h- ing short of Palatial, gnrgeons with rich hangings, resplendent with mesherpieees by B fttelle, Domsnichino and Valesquez, while over every doorway and window the introduced profusely in all the decorations, bell)neural and of the furniture, is seen the armorial device of the house of Devonshire—the snake with tail and bead interlaced. I was present a few months, ago At one of the rare festivities given At the Dev- onshire lzollse—ten afternoon 0000011. There is no duchess now, and the duke is an old man, bnt the honors of the dt'y were do're by }adi' s of the family, principally the lake's d.in;ghtt'r. Seine of your elkgantes would iudee.l hove been astonished to see the exoeetlin "quietude" of this lad•y'8 onstnms 00 the occasion. It was nothing more pore legs than a navv•blue serge, with linen collars and o••ff's. At bar waist hong an t chignons Cheteiaine in meta sive chased silver, 'manner a •core or so of articles necessary to a house keeper, namely, scissors, penkuife, keys, pin - ambito), tweezers, thi,iable•ease,needle ease, etc. She is a handsome, very fair blonde of some thirty-five or so, with a complexion like strawberries - and -cream, anti a fine symrbetrie.rl:'fi'. tire; • The ltistorioal balls through which she moved so demurely have I echoed to the tread of the dcjoheas of iievonshire when() fame as-1t'ng as the annals of the fine arts sntreive. Oe»rgiana, the beautiful 'duchess of l)evons:hire (whose portrait by Gains borough and its mysteritins diyal'pear• (ince are mina vital; topic ill art•OirCte4,) , !held court -in thesettplendid ronmp.1I,,r 1'xtinisite beauty, ie a tra'litain *blablives in history; and4ti iii one, that tie whole world 'of civilization of to -day is fa'nnliar with ; for where is the town which has uot;seen ,in frbe witelows of its ltictnre and stationery stares aop cy f the sweet creatur,e•in tbeeItowdtirod hair, big rimmed had.and tight. sleeved, op -held dress, while a Oahu . of t'tsattsliu is crossed overthe bosom, asd•tin one of the beautiful Bands is a rose?'' In the ball room of D,'vonshire house took an p'ace the fire tow attire performenoe -r•f Lord Lytton's•comedy, Not so Bad as re Seem,' for -the benefit of the guide f literature, lliullens and Bnlwer both oiling to insure the success.. The chest known collection of old English important to Con•umptives r• t A gentleman having been so fortul)etn,s,y to . elm his son ofC.tnsutuption in its worst stagc'g, aflr'r being given up tc.die by the ri.net,ctsIe- bratetl physicians, desires-• to make iknown .the care (which (troves succossfnl ,in every carp) to., those afflicted. with Asthma„ Bronchitis, Coug1i , C:okts,,. Consumption, -.ant. the Aloe - aqua oL.tha1Throat and Lauge-,.antl will scud t11e.1t';eipe,.frec of, charge to all who denim it, if,tlteey will forward their address to I)ANIItL 41,)J1121,:04:14herty,St,, New York.. (ire.. Ih. 4swlor'sw.Extract, of\gild Straw- berry,colles•.caukes of the etomach and 1>:>weUs. dysentery, o-holateaanii rbus,and all ,sugma•.er.00nrpheints.., mac.-rh--sse I:r.thzr man nfact-ore of tobearlo,, from t)iie leaf, ,sugar, or, enolasses and.gmmof coma,,kini :ere deed Ie the manuieo; tore.of tthe " 1lyrtle NNitivy' brand; the sugar; used rip the ffet•st, white., loaf, known„ iia thio,, trade at; graualated:. This is a.agar•ira,whioh, Ohre,•iti•, soh dome atlytard.ulteratinn, . hoe!. to : goad,q et. 'the poesihi-lity,'nf,it., old' sugarq treed in the factory is subtnitted to oar( -.1 fel testa of its purity. The gum used l ie the pure gum,erabie. pay honks And piny -bills is at Drevon- sllire braise, having been : bonght by •fei'n i)hi.lin Rerblo for,$r10,000, Tlie f.rnilv•joaels, known as the Devon• shire Gems, aro. atheizingly fine, even 10 thetee too>leen . clays . of wonders hi that litre. 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When I say 1 mnrkpracture my own furniture 3 l n)s1prepay..•.lwith lay proof -sheet *out the people can inspectatany, t5uae by. calling at hey Wort, r•e)uee where they will see a superb dfs Play of Furniture iniA,11 Its.:Branches uvt�ift"`1.'19y ,IVsalf,e'il'uyen'u!)fined•.rti,ticsI,ilt,wit'igood workinausitip. Ider mre not, usattis.ying the encs!:) with a egress of Gn niture that cannot be equalled for quality or price in Bseter,,111 blowing to the contrary, notwithstending. --0-- WiNVi MI WAIT tiNY FURNITURE CIVET BRAWN' Ar RAIL "testily opposite hemp's Tobacco Store,itlain Street,: ^setei', 14 t4' eff ONE OF THE OLDEST AND MOST; RELIABLE,: REMEDIES IN THE WORLD FOR ; THE CURE OF Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Croup, Whooping Cough, Asthma, and ' every affection of the Throat, Lungs, and Chest,, including= CONSUMPTION A WELL-KNOWN PHYSICIAN WRIFEgr "It does sot dry zip a cough, and leave the cause behind, as is the case with most preparations, , but loosens tit,-cleanses•the lungs and allays irr-i-. ration, thus removing the cause of complcvint." • DO NOT BE DECEIVED by articles I bearing a similar name. Be sure you get DR. WISTAR'S BALSAM 011' WILD CHERRY, , with, the signature of "I. BUTTS" on„the wrapper. 50 Cents and 81.00 aBBottle.. Pte: •_.. pared by,SETrr W. loolvLE Rc Soxs, Boston, Mass. Sold by druggists and dealers gonrzally. C..1 , ,�\e Ly tt,lte, aper than. ,ever. sH,,{ ooxFU, IN,ITURE;-W,A:fEI?0.0M,&' W,VT..%V. BALL. would t•itin ltia to those about to furuialt houses or in coca ,of s•amtbing in hts Ileo , that he has acieted largely to his; .facilities for turning c,nt fret-clgssWork. Sssb,,Iloo) 8,. 11(11 1'l..turo tt'ramen on 1tan4,.. t tl-Ordors•.a Sp9eialty! Give him a call 1)u 1wuod,June17,I88ee ,A •.1.'roteeted loiation of the Protozide of Iron, Is as, wily ,diggsted,And assimilated with the blood as the,simplest food.; 'When the blood does not contain the usual quantity of Iron, the deficiency can -be. supplied by,,the use of the . PERZI,YIAIY ,YRUI:� It sures a,” thousand ills" simply;byTown.6 Ur,.INVIQORATING, and VITALrzI us ,the. system,.. The enriched and, vitalized blood.,pertneatgs every part of the body, repairing .damages and waste, searching out morbid seeretro;'•t . ' ' ;thing for disease to feed upon.. t ms rn the secret of the wonderful success. of ;thus: remedy in curing Dyspepsia, Liver.Complaint, Roils, Dropsy, Ch'ronio • Diarrhea, Nervoc,s Affections, Female Complaints, . And nlinditesses Prigi;nating in -a bad state of • the,blilcel .ire ,tethenlpeniedlay,.debility, or a low state,of•,thc, spit ems,. • 1 0AC%TIO-y,--$ ',sure you get the "PE.. It':1TY14.1Y Sold bydruggists gener- ally.. P imphxte )ant free to any address by, Spurr W, 1 „ i^r,la ;,oars, Proprietors, $6 Fla;r';- rieee, A.vt LY, ill t,�t, Hags,..