The Exeter Times, 1879-8-7, Page 3AveusT7,
THE TIMES
DERA I3I1J 1on it the amts of all your friouds !who have
emierated to that blessed country, all the
eileah friends of Your youtkt, the friends of mai-life
A ewn. feweetafON BY DB. TAIMAM% 11113AOHED ON NDAY MORNING, MAY ea, 19, as well as th? friends who have recently gone
there; make a long list of them • pat thorn tdi
thine aTV U.TO is athaucl."--seeond TIZIOTUY 4 : O.
he' Cittio.f tales a'17bY ‘? 116'P (1.t Chrf8tian'S (Nor')* Earls ifl Depart.
tire, mit J1g,th.I ler fence whence Pant Departed -...1nvitett to a Banquet -Ur
/W(/(d mega- era s1 ii Chtistion's Approaching Ltepartu re.
shonti being (I rent Wen -Ile !./,0 to. .11Y eet hi Friends -It would 'not du to
trust us gith It. tI'I((lfll't)// Power -Vic Matter Compronlieed---Eternal u.
rouvence prim, CiewilSat Ottrinqity-Aniranoe int() the Bret.
Noddy of the Gniveree- 7 he firet Question : Trlare to J88113 1.--7 he Sinuttr's
Depot tare.
r.:-..t.r-Tt:::••-••.t..."..?".11:1,nr.,,.:•.,F!...rt.F'ti-7frn,,t,?..:7"-..-'71m,trt•:.vm.nr:r?!....:22:711.,".r."TrtTete..."-:-., Lor
The e ay out of ilea woi•ot je so bel iiv I1n Raying ; "f am, now ready tO be. offered;
offin, and hearee, i. .1 me tortal.te"e nate,. the time of uiydspartn re is et hand."
awl ecrew-driver that. ii, alum- hapoetible they tette him out of the anegeon. They hest -
for the elleristien to think me he ought of the eultim aloug the xoed, amogge alone, nov•,"
happzete4 alli,'y.ewe ptit, they ory "berry alang, old innuor you will
bleak heaved of white nu the place where the feel the weight of yotr spear." Tilley an rid -
good mon gains his lael, victory. We elettel he is walking. Paul turns lei them and
weeeing over the heap of chains eaye, "How fax in it r hTlnee mile,' thee
freed spirit hail teed off, 4441,ying; "Poor men 1 answer ; "three miles." Oh 1 three miles le a
What ? play 1i haa to come to this 1" Coni* to bldg jetualeY for aa aged man who Itaa been
what Why, by the time the people have wilIPPed and cripeled by Rialto/etre:et, In a
11.!..,4outoled. at the ohnegulee, that man has
hotel throe (hue amid such jilyg as luake nil
the haul:ties of earth oomenoptibte.
The Iteetelitee, if they hal Walltea tO
b mit to .reeypt, acid had come, and in to
weeping over the bride kline because th •,v hal
.011ort time they reach the pie, of execution.
They fasten him to a pill r. It is may to do
that ; lie =awe no resietanien t. Peul, now is
your tine to ge.t free, You hare trinde in this
ohrong. 'With that Withered arm, why not
lanneh the threnderbeit of the peeple, and put
toy ILls4;(4, woune not have boon so siltyas thc;ti fight all iltotie infamous RolclioN ? Ati1 Peed
Christian who haulwon
would met, de that ; he would not ieteriere with
yci t to mottle from
beeeen to flat: world. fetich subjeet of Ma men coronation; he wan too elm.1 to ga.
see the executioner brandiehing his word in
the death is made morbid. and
the sunlight, and Penh so air from being al-
eh:My. We look neon it as the hole into whinti
frightedethe old- Chrietian here looke at the
0,1 good ti11411 stumbles and falls when his
ves out. The whole subj„et je owe. exeentioner bratuliehieg the 3:‘ ord and FayS to
breath gi
dotes with varnish and di.drifeettints wheu it lam: lath now ready to be offered ; the time
onght to be sweat with inignonette, And Ism
slid that the Apost6 Paul, • in his tet, takes
that old elect of a Werti, "(kWh,” ana flings h
n Nayand sebstittWes the word, the beautiful
V:01.41, the bright werd, the eitgeme ice egad,
'tleptertare,"asIlk`Seriptiii, of every Chrietian's
release.
New tiepin tart: implies n tarttio-place
a place of destination. Whett Paul left this
etoold, what was his stereing-plaee It was
a place of met physleal dietrette, It ewe the
Tuilkunun, the. loatrr dungeon of the Mamar-
1 :no proton. The upper dungeon was dread.
fel enough. The (Jelly ablate in OW roof. for ingress one
aoponing,
scaffold and from dengeori, and from the biting
Peres:: nd
that the prieoner was havered, and through pang of elrnwood rods, and front the sword. of
that came ad the air and the light emit the the headsmaninto the most brilliant society
feed that wee iweeived in the P135011. It WEIS of heaven. . A king among king,e, The multi- 1
dreadful place that tipper dongem of the tudes of the sainthood rushing out to welcome
Mantertiete plison, but the Tula:mum was the
!ewer duegeon, and more horrible. That war
of my clepartare is at hazel, .1 rover my
eyes with my hand, for I cannot beat: to
see the last stgegele. 0110 Sh9,11), keen Yoke
of tho exeentiolier, and Paul lute gone to the
banquet, and Paid does dine with the King.
on 1 WIIAT A TRAsarrtax IT W12
-frOM the malaria of Rome to the fineet cli-
mate in the universe, tho zone of eternal
health and beauty ! Thy pee his mhos, tho
ashes of the body, in the Catacombs ef Bowe,
but the air of heaven hi one moment bathed
the last ache from his immortal apirit. From 1
down, end pie will find that .you have • more
frienda itt heaven than „no earth. 1,Vell, • do
yot not want to Meet thein ? Neve peer loved
ones, your ohildeen, permits, . been gene
so long you IBM forgotten them ? Do younot
Went their society ? Oh yes • They have gene
away fromyou. 'Too say,"If 1 amid got them
back again, I:wouldn't take the responsibility
of 1)41100,06m".
You .w.ield not take the reePoneibility, yort
say, of bringing them to . this world • o
tronble.. Yon are mistaken. 'would no
do for tiod to !Tea yen,tny broth r,with rester-
reetionary power. It would hot do for Cod to
trust us with reem•rectionary owee. We may
NIA now, we would net tiring them back, i
I we caoll, to this werld if troahlo, bet we would
Some, of you bo fere tohnorrow morniug, yon
had that retearrectio,yary power, would be rat-
tling at the gates of the cemetery, and you
world bo crying : "Come back to the cradle
where you slept 1 Come back to the hall where
yon played ! Conte back to the table where you
'evil to sit 1" and thei o would be a gmat tetra -
limy in leateen, No 1 pc, I no ! it would not
do for Gol to trust us wieh retorrectiotiery
power. But ho says11will compromise the
.matter. While our friends cannot come down
whom we are, we can go up wbero they no e,
And I tell yon thee -are just as. lovely and beau-
tiful now as they ever were. The (wimp email
not take away that beauty. Morasente contd
not'dostroy it. Consumption could not des-
troy it. No earthly disease could dash out that
locality. You thought Sci perhaps in the last
• tianneut ; but they aro all well again, etermelly
well, immortally young again.
Lot me Say to all these aged people, that
when when you leave this world you go into
1111; neer CLVAITE OP TrIn ITNIVIIRSH-010 Wry
beet elitnate, better, far better than theee hot
summon:, and these poll rantees, anti these
springs. better healing. Bette: (sees:edit
IMoro tonic in the a'r. Afore perfume ia the
bloom. Mina sweetness in the 90/1f:. 0 aged
I man I do you not soinetionee feel as if yon
wonlit like to got your aem and your foot free
again Do you nut sometimes fl as it you
•1 would like to take spectaoles and cans and
memoir and throw them forever away? Do you
not feel as if you would like to step out into
the spring and the elasticity an 1 the eternal
boyhood of hea,yen ? 0 my ?other. my father!
when your departure from this world is going
sure of saying they have bent on the top of
those high peaks. Shall we fear to necard
the eeerlaeilng whieti dart a tho-sand
miles beyond where stop the higheet poke of
earth, and when we know there Is no danger
10 the aecenelott.
•
Whon a man was doomed to the pooffold be
etepped ripen the ageffold. and 'Held I "Now
in ton minutes 1 shell know the great secret,"
0 my frionde 1 exit frotn this world, or tieeth,
if yciu please to will it, to the Christian 14 eitn.
ply eeplanatiou, cannome rat ion, 'rradiaticon,
•suuhuret. It is the opening of WI the vin!.
Otto, it is the shutting of the cetechiein of
doubt, mid the uaroping of the moil of the
f most positive inimmatime Insteal of standing
t r,tthe bottom of the la•bler, and looking up,. it
is standing at the too of ,tho ladelt-rand looking
down, It is (Inc cechangine of the everlasting
recurring itderrogatiou fur the mark of explan-
Lion, It is tilting thelastmyetery ontef botany
, out of olunniiitry, out of geology, out of ammo
olny,out of theulogy,. It is the solving of all
riddles.- It is tho answering of all queetlou,.
And if you realize that radin your closing mo-
, ment, yonvall have all the exhilaration of the
apoetlo 125, he tweet ont, tha moment he started
, on that veyafte of ,discovery : "The time of
my departure is at hand."
1 had a fritnel, a mirdetor of the Geepel, cly-
10 Philedelphia, Hie last words were most
imegestive aua beautiful, throwing light on
tine theme. Hie
LAST WORDS
were : move into the light I" De you know
the last words of (Inc aethor of that beautiful
hymn, "Rook of twees Cleft for me" -Mr. Top -
hely ? His last words chi earth -he came to
the final hone, and his face was fflumined,and
Inc cried, "Light!" and then, after,verds, he
lifted one hand front the pillow, and wared iti
and oriel, "Light 1" and whop the net luStilt,t
of his lire bad come, he rose half up in the
bed, hie countenanoe radiant with the glorioe
of the batter world, and lifting both bands and
%ravine hem he cried, "Light 1 light 1"
I eon imagine what 1 show first like to
hear from Pahl. the author et the text, when I
• meet him in that good land. I should like to
hear him describe the Amin that 051110 on the
THE PLA.CE WREZ51 ream STNNT BIS ' LAST
DAYS;
it was the under dungeon, the only place for
the light to come in and the food to come in,
an opening in the roof, and that roof the floor
of tile upper dungeon. $o you may see it was
him ; for 1 must tell you that ee -on the r'ght
hand of 'God is ()Inlet, so on the right hand. of
Christ is Paul, the second great in heaven.
I .have to tell you also thee Paul changed
icings ;
lie changed kings one minute before
his death. tie was under 'Nero, the thick -1
necaed, the cruel -eyed, the filthy -lipped ; the 1
seelptered representatioes iu the British Mu -
a dreadful place. it was chill with the clamp. zotim -the scultured representations of that
neer; of cometuxtee. It was filthy wits the in- mail bringin down to this day the horrible
irceration of many miserable wretches. possibilities of his nattere. 112 sat amid plc -
That is the plane where Inc spens his last days. tared Baptism inmbles, under a ceiling adorn-
Tliere we find him shivering, hie lips bine with ed with mother -of -peril, in editing -room which
tin? cold. There we find him waiting for his be: wontiertoil machinery was kept Whirling in
• .1.1 overcoat for which be hid vnitten up to bewitching magnificence; his horses stsuding
Trees, and v.-Idoh hal not yet been sent down in stalls of solid gold ; the grounds around his
to him although he ha,l written for it. palace ot night lighted with human victims
I will introduce a sou -goon hot° that lower whom he had bedaubed with tar and pitch and
,inngetin end find out what is Ilia prospect of than set ;on fire to illuminate the darkness.
Pours enduring that kind of imprisonmeut. That was PeursKing.'
1 want yoa to understand he yak an old man.: But now ha marelies right out twin under
he was within two yens of seventy. Just at that king. and lie 110111130 11110 the realm of Him
Inc time when he wonted warmth and light whose reign is love, aucl whose comae tiee paved
teal freeli. air, he is gout out from the light of with love, and whose throne it set on pedestals
the *tn.. What ie',the Scar on his ankles ? of love, and whose sceptre is adorned with jay.,
That athe on each ankle was getren when he els of love, and whose palace is lighted with
v feet., his feet in the stoeics, fast so Inc love, and whose lifetime is an eternity of love.
tenth' nut turn except to loosen the flesh from When Peul ?eft such a Nero ou one side of the
the bone. What are those 00519 on his beak? pillar of inortyrdom anti footed cinch a Christ on
'nod is the plaee where he wile whipped, five the othorside f inartiyrdoin do yon bI,me him
for crying out in great exultation, "The time
of my departure is at hand "?
Well, uow that might to bring great glee and
great joy to all the old people in this house. 1
do not know why in the idea of your Anal de-
parture, 'anyaged Mende, my father, my um -
ter -I do not know why you should not have
the same glee. Charles I. wee combing Lis
head Ono day, when be came zeroes the first
gray hair, anil he trook that grey hair am/ put
• ,
it upon a platter and sent it to On gneen as a
great joke. Alt I my friends,
=EBB /8 NO JOKE ABOUT OLD AGD,
Some of the aged have been looking forward
to a znonient in their life with great dread,
width, however,' onght to be 'of gteat exhilara-
tion. 'You say, you aged man sag, "Well, I
would feel just like Paul and just as glad when
my time domes to go, if it were not for that
'terrible struggle wheu the soul and the body
separate." . , Why, my aged friend, thousands
have endured that, and yon. can endure it.
Besides that, odl medical authorities .agree iu
stating that there is no kelt iithuggfe, that the
pain in the lest hprir dries mot enema to so
much as the pricking of a pin, that all the
seeming signs of dietress in the dying hourane
altogether involuntary.
Brit, artys the aged man, "1 win1,l be willing
to go, and /*paid have the afione joy that yen
sonikf,and Paul spealne of, 11 19 were not for
the King. The shuffling feet overhead are the the uneettaintiee ahead." 0 my father, why
feet of the executioners. • They :come, to thee do you ;play the injutel ? When t-tod has given •
hole in the dungeon, and they hout clowu in this Bible 1 rill of peoinieeseind full of stories
the holo of the dungeon : "Old roan, get ready 1 about the good things ahead of yon, how titles
get ready for the mach) get rergif for exeett- you talk of uncertiduehis? Why this world is
(ion? Hurry now 1 Hurry! clot timely I Paul the piece of tmeartainty. Hewes is the grand,
was ready. He heel nothing' to pack up. He glorioes, everlasting ja2t No uncertainty for
had no baggage. to take. He had been ready the Child of God.
furit good many yeare. , 1 gee him rising.. 1 - But you eay, would' be willing to go 11
see him atreighterting outhie stiffened limbs. •woe net fee partiug with cry friends." Why,
.E see him pushing back the White hair trent V !OU ell agreed, you have ulq,c:e frieedsit
his creviced forehead, end Irmo bite laelthig
up through the lno1eins the l'Oef of the drrigeott heaven than on earth. Why do you not t
into the fa(1ie iees of exechtionere, Mot I heat, the census? Take a Ingoali of aher uti
!MOS whipped, thirty-nine strokes at each
eipping-gone hundred • cued ninety-five
et rokee ana the ono hundred and ninety-five
strokes fettliog tho blood. What is tltat
bruise on Pal's arm ? The; ho got amid the
ehivered timbere • of the shipwrook, while he
was Lying to swim :whore What is that gash
in Paul's side? Perhaps be got that in the
tussle with the highwaymen, for he was in
nerds of robbors. He had motley of his own.
He was a mechanic as well as an apoetle, and
I :suppose the tents he inaele were as good as his
eernions. How do ,you account for that wau.
ness 111 thteapoetle's look? 1 think lie get that
wauness by being twenty-four hours an a 'plank
in the Mediterranean Sea, fingering awfully be-
fore be WAS rescued ; for an account says that
he passed a day and a night in the deep.
0 aged man 1 you must be reelatchely amid
all this stress, No man under such it Wives of
reinstitution could keep cheenfo] 1 demo to
him. loom° through the darkness of the dun-
geon. I come arose up so I can see him by. the
faint light that wines through tne opening in
i the roof, and lo I 1 find on the face efttie•apose
tle a supentetural joy, and Isay to him : "Aged
nian, 1( 19 possible for you to keep cheerful
nutid all this glen 2" And lie gives an answer
that startles the darkness as he says : am
now ready to be offered, and the time of any
departure is at hand:, • .
Hark 1 what is that shuffling; of feet over-
head ? Why, Paellas had an invitation to
and he is going to. dine to -day with
•
away from all the inconveniences of old age
lute eternid juvenescence, can you not feel the
timid of the apostle in the text, and are yon
not willing this tnorning to drop your cene and
clap your hands while you cry, '"Phe time of
ihy departure is at hand" ?
But 1 have also to remark. there is great
suggestion of joy in this subject for alt thoso
who have a
near CURIOSITY
as to what is beyond this teerthly terminus.
And who leas not that curiosity? I suppose
that Paul had as clear a view of heaven as any
men ever had and yet Int writes : "It cloth not
yet appp ir what we shall be.'' Ile says it is
very much like looking through a broken tele-
scope. "Now we see through a glass darkly."
1 can ask yon a thousand questions about
heaven yon cannot answer ; and yon can ask
inc a thousand questions about heaven that
I cannot answer ; and. wheu Paul knew
that through inarterdom, through the
1 leth hone, he was going away from till the
mystery of this world into a place where he was
going to have every thing explained. can yvn
blame him that through holy curiosity, if no
other feeling, he wanted to go?
And I event to go over into that good land
some dey, and See for myself. Not now. No
healthy man, no prosperous man wants to go
now. God has given us all this natural love
for life. We all have it. But after a while I
want. to go over and see for myself. I do not
want tilw6ys to be looking throngh gates ajar.
I want to have them :flung wide open. There
are so •maziy things I want eeplitioed, 1 about
you, abnut myself, about the government of
the world, about Gol, about every thing. We
go along on the plain path of what we du
know ; but how soon we come up against the
high wall of what we do not know ! I want to
go over and See how the laud looks. One man
tells me it ia, a, paved city, pavect with gold ;
another man tells nee it is the "Tree of Life ;"
Another men tells me it is a fonntain ; another
it 18 ni trnurnpinalp pand
roressnon,
then some one elle comes along end tells me
all three) things are figurative, and I want to
know, ivewant to know. I have an ililITIOILSUT-
able ouiieeity to sae what it is, and hew it is,
and where it is, tied 1 hayea right to that earl-
osity.
Have you no desire to see foreign lancle, for -
Sign cities, great inenntehis ?. It would not be
ainfel for you tot go forth to looknoon those
mountains and those cities, and is there an
rinleely curiosity in wanting to sec the fuiroet
city on, earth, the fairest city intim oniveree,
the'new Jerralem of God ou high, and the
monntedoe' of God's strength and glory? Gd -
terabits' risked his lire in trying to find this
cOntinent, and shall we shiver to go ent on a
voyage which will bring in our view the etern-
al continents of helmet) ? Sir John Franklin
risked lois life in trying to find is passage be-
tween the iecberge, and shall We fear tel go out
anti find a newton to eternal summer:.
Trnyipers in Switzerland elitth the Matter
horn, and they go hp with rapes end rockets,
abed guiles, and Alpine stook, which they put
elown 14 the trevieee between the rocks and
wean the itieberge, and: after a. while they
slip and are :ambled to the bottom and de-
Stroyedi , They tick il fail Stet for the plea.7.
voarld, where will you go to 2 Taf aiitatt
go np the way Paul went rudest you here '
Paure Saviour. Who will bo your corapattione•,;
At what house will' e•en etop? What will 11
your destiny? A mail was fatally woomtlad bn
the street. They carried hitie to the itearc&,.
lions, and he fetid re he Was lying there : "1
itaVt) Often lienol of pcopi, (Vag un)1ree,arlah
bet I never thonght I ;Veal be 000 oi
Mott malt 1 do to be raved?" But :berore 93.e
queetiori watt enawereci.Iial waa eattioet. Death
to kiln was denerture. Bet oli! for what. plate ?
When two invitee how wept the epee
wow eweet rho cave:len eioermive Hemel 1 .
Come, :inner, 10 to, r ,h, t1tntno away,.
Wotele 3 .oG ot. perdoomie Clod is fovzoli
11 AN E Y()ITI,Os'r TH1.; SENSE (1!'
z.. Pik STI) 011 t:Alr !I.). it 301y 1,, ", •••••
the iinPikE3T eet *ha 11,1,10 (!.1,0111:y, c !ewer:we.
CONstITLITIONAI, R.PNtrIre ,wil reetwof
yea 1.3 1 01114. IL lily c31 rep on.
cartel. hut i,i1 other olt4e1c3, at th,• vuono ti,
ariee r Jew n3t1o. It, 3.31,!,1.44.* ,;,1
Mot:blew dealers 91oes1 t to.orip ir r 4,1 23311 •
phlot containihti t riotie 004 no eorttl.
cfvte-.3 of the. enrod '1'. J. b. P. o,.
10'i Agent, i;roickviliP..f t.
CON STIPITTIONAT... tO.ITA MIT/ 11•11.Y.1.11.1T.
'Ph" only' 04191 to ond ND:eh/el ett170 0,1
0Coyisht' betide up tee ee .terti ilr,3 4111043J
disc:nixes at til,' f.enie t: ono. AoAlornt... 111,,0101'3.
Hay riser, tierveme ihLtft, all louvo txtf- tn.
when the (1o34 -,'Il, at oo1 Oat,: rrkt 1:61;otly
aq 1'14'9 $1 ro, 1114:10, Vvr
by all drujdists mud IL:cll.:hoe dealer
AGENTS READ THIS
we alit nay agentl ti. SAli'y c, f ettea rev menth
and oxpeneee, or anew 1 1x'gt t3ttnrt'1osj b
our new and wandSrfni. luron thins. Ire recan
We 804. SaDIVIO /Vet..
It; 4IAN813,i.:
MAIM STREET, RrETEB.
RE AIOVAL! M OVA LI
REMOVAL!RE :0VAL
REMOVAL! REMOVAL!
P. FRAYI\T_Ei
has remove to loin new shop, lato/S.'^o,. IrIT•;10•"1
Perkins A: Co -two Jeers north of j. urtiog s boot-:
Igiorn,wherc you win ilna ever ethl tog nsnu, ko-o-
1,•.•.• itrNt-cLe=is harness est:Or-hill-Leen", whirl
anality of materiel and style of wortemallETII:
IS Nt)T EASILY SURPASSED
eau and examine my stook beforeperehweieg
eleewhere.
ETER FR AT N E.
afteliterratteah, when the t 0 hundred 91(11 I
eeventy-fivi paegengers were tossed in that AY PUMP WORKS.
great -terra 1, , 3-i if e I e
cool ane -
cool enough afterwards to describe the tema •
pest. There is a amino -Ilion about a ship, caul G.: DOLTON
a fitecination about tho sen, which 1 sloall hey -
or. get over, mei methinks when I meet Paul I
,
would litte to hear him deeerbee his experi-
once on the Mediterranean Sea.
Birt when we meet Christ, of what will we
first want him to seealt ? I think now.
think now of what we will want to hear Christ
speak when WC eneet him in heaven : we will
want to hear the tragedy of Hie lett hour ;
and Mark' accent of the crueifixion, and
Luke's ageount of the crutlxion, and ,Tohn's ac-
count of the crucifixion will- be nothing while
we hear from the living lips of Chriet the story
of how the darkness fell, and of how devils
rose, and of how the pain grow sharper until
the infuriate mob began to swim away from
liho llying vision of Christ., and their cursing
became more faint to His ear, and His arms
were extended on the horizontal piece of the
cross, aril His fent wore fastened to the porpen-
I have once more to remark that lily text
suguests that when the Christian leaves this
world he goes into that very best society in the
loth:Erse. You see a throng of people on a
street. You wonder who is attracting their
attention. Yon find there is a prime pessing,
some great potentate passing. Yon under-
stand the throng. Now, I look off upon the
streets of heaven, and I see a great multitude,
and I wontlee Who is the focus of all that eel-
miration, who is the centre of that glittering
throng, and I find it is •Teallet, the champion of
all worlds, the favorite of all aye. 0 the ra-
diant One,how I would like to see Thee -Thou
01 9113 manger, but without the humiliation -
Thou of the cross, but withont the pang -
Thou otthe grave, brit without the darkness t
Doyen knew what the first question will be
v:lien you enter heaven ? Your first question
will be.
"WEERE 29 JEAN?"
-the One wino pardoned my sins, the One
who carried my sorrows, the One who fotight
my leattle.a. the One who won my victories.
Where is Jesus ?" And what will you first
want to hear from lain. I cannot sny.
dim -ilex piece of the cross, and then His chin
fell wore His bosom in the lase sivochi, at He
said: "It--le-finisheci 1" All heaven will lis-
ten to that storye every harp will bo clunth.
Every lip closed. All the eyes of heaven con.
centred Upon that Divine. narrator until the
story • is done; and the very moment the
story is done, then finger on string 'of harp
and lire to month ef trumpet, they roll forth
the oratorio of "The aleseitth." "Worthy is
the Lamb that was slain, to receive blessings,
and riches,' and honor, anti glory, and power,
world witbont encl. Hallelujah I Hallelujah 1"
"Whet Ito endared, oh 1 Who can tell,
• 1.10 44t.11e OM: sante from death and 3,4)1 9'
Oh 1 when between Paul and trate el:Lapilli-
pent personage there was only the thinness of
the sharp edge of the executioner's sword, ao
yen wonder he wanted to go? 0 my Loni he-
ns ! let one wave of that glory roli. over our
emit; to -clay. Hark 1 I hear the wedding -bells
of heaven ringing now. The marriage of the
the Lamb has come, and the wife hath made
herself enteciv.
.011 ! t what I (mould take that old word
"death" and grind 11 10 pieces, and substitute
the word "departme," for it is just a, appropri-
ate for the sinner as it is for the Christian, the
Word depertute,
in the case oi the mart unprepared to go, 1( 18
'eleparrtne in :mother direction. 0 soul unpre:
rend for the eternel world 1 orlien you leave
Trevinoadded to non enner ma:elm-ate eee
cured 11 large q,oantity;,of .1.44".• .
Ban preoared oder an
Suporior to any Factor yin the COLO:,
and at prices that def.: roompettinn.
gisterns'ring on the iall.C.Irt:
Before pnrehasiug call at, the Weeercrup
re.-eabop-one-coutater mile north ri Ezett:
TIOadOilnAra4. 0
NEW ..I3 T WEER S.17102
The undersigned would f orra t• he
tants of Exeter and vicinity that Iic In.e
OPENED A NEW BUTCHER S1101'
coredoor south of his Illacnan•I tioshon andeorc 3
thesame patroneite that hue beep ue
corded to nue i11tine
)3cxs112rn A.511 W.143324 itcerhy
linevtillheextendee to him in 11 15 11;t3( el
lousiness, His meat wagen wineew ee. tote iote.
dents of the villagethrec 'wee:Isar:a
T.;1 R S .1\ ]AT
all kheis kept constant:II an (lam.13 itt 30o5
be tc h or shop.
Illaelcsinitl‘ing and wagon twain g..c arried on
as nomad in al) its
R. DAVIS.
DO NOT READ .THIS
LI"ing r.-iheived a lot of now mach:nery.
would interne the farmers of the snn
rotincling country that I am prepared to moan -
foetal.° all kinds of Horse :Rak'
es Barley
Forks, Grain Cradles, Snaith,, e.t.a and havtue
secured the services of a first-class Turin r,
am prepared to do
ALL KINDS OF TURNING
on the shortest notice, and for style end priee
I defy competition. A lweys on hand ,a tast-
eless stool: of Fork and Shovel handles. Mill
half 11211110 south of Exeter.
A. OOTTELL.
• KNOW ;A; re !'fl':i?riff.17. l!;:ilt11.42(rTI!'.
1.4471.•4) II. 110 r.17434t3.4.1
bnop; d
IyslisIS;-P.l.eEtelE..t 'litarowy$1.1...y.
LiTHon114110 Vt .
ttonto of Exhangted )74:onty, Prono,d tore
Norious and Ploy,ual /Janney, ,10•1 4•114)1.. o'
• peortonlinnt the 1,0,1 nitoOkirwt oil,' thole r,1 -1t
therytteen, and et inert/ Mitt ori,..ri:01 )l1'.
scriptionsonv ere oof wl, eel, r it. 1,13.1t • w
• the. hr m14'4'1'40'1 t'1•••• rhz Itlf`tt
RiVe 11111 111,01,:b/v11 nit»; sk;11V11.11rtilimo.t
inAtrwrie.31;Iii whrTo iiw4tre4i•414 v••
ellerarnedattoy the Iti etiolool :o I etlOr.,1.1 t'?.
A Piunphlot, illoostrat ,1 wi:h. the very 111.00l
Stool Enernving,.-a feu,,Ru.47,11.
Yel cif. sort and
' ernt TRW: 30 alt. t4rtitl 3.4.
for it sr once, ..9 dorm.,
1NaTITCTI., he 4 11111. t,
rEA.Bony Nurayr:'Arr..rr y OIL ;75
11nolbt.. BOSOM. ;,•144•9
ATILLINERI
r. miss G41rflL Iry 1& s.
8. full Iinemow in, of ;
Spring and (Sommer Hats. AndZiknretal.
an the very latest shepos.
Now -Flowers. Feathers( and Ortnnent3.
• Trimrattgs in greab variety.
GIRLS HA.Ts FROM $1.00 UP,
nicely trinunea..Everything will bo cola set:hone
as poesibee,
ran,...y cocas. Iteiltn Wool, Mottoes, eta., a MI
line always kept.
Jeakete made or cut it the latest styles.
• MISS GAILICK,
Aurti; 74. Maio Si. It toter: