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The Exeter Times, 1880-11-25, Page 40 The Moisons Bank. 1*olintiATIL1) DY ACT OVAIWL 1800,' aepttai,$2,000,000, READ OFFICE MONTREAL. \Ammo% lisq„ prescient. 4..H, B. UoLsoffiailsq.,, - - - ' - Irise4.11rifs, DLIWTORS. torn D L R W Simphestl, If A Nelson, 111 P P, 8 R Miles 'enMinus, F. 'V )^0914e tv Tit )‘1. c. 8sQ., ''c1 Z1 IVO'. ;110. is eraals , uer Aratzttv34 a/quit. itLkie.t.r.us, - . - Dts9oster. Exeter Drar.v3-11,. /REMIT' C., — In'AN•AGElt. LOANS Ti) PARBIEP.S.• money advanced to farmers on easy te nes, ou Chef r ow.' promissory uotos with one or more good. im- dorsers, Nomortgage required aseeourity, SAN:RIGS NI D'or...i11Thl111ar is forest atiourial owtieuosits. Drafts ou United Staodul tes bought solal Marrs waxeliangebought sold, Coneetivs made hi all varts of the Dominion .til re tura promptly rmatiftod atIlowest rates of ev.,:bange. xoter August irsih. 6m THIS PAPE re'ElY rio found' en: me at Gm. P. R nown.r. it Co's Newspaper Advertising. Bureau. (10 spruce istreet)\rhere advelcus vno Using contracts may be made RA; it in Gin un greteg Eintit.g. been in prison, I waft Mesita Man. must Dot blame theme' And 'They would have crone if they rued knowu. They would not have let me die alone, I don't thitili she would have dents that,• I wonder where elle is ?. Nebody has missed meezethet alL I must, not minds' Growing weaker he thought less ant? prayed more. ID preyed ot last, a1 11108 time. Menthe did not pray he slepW t. het he could mot sleep.. he prayed, He addsessed God with that sublime' familiarity of his, which fell from hie lips with no more irreverence then the kiss of a child falling norm its mother's hand or neck. ihe metederer, the tenet, the outoest, tented with the Almighty Holiness, as a man talkoth with his friends, The deserted, distrntd, dying creature be- lieved himself to be trusted by the Being who had bestowed on him the awful gift of life. 'Lord,' lie said, softly, guess I can bear it. I'd like to see eorcebody--but I'll make out to get elong. Lord ! I'm pretty weak. I know all about these,spasms. You get delirious next thing, you know, Then you either get better or you never do, It'll be decided by Monday night. Lord 1 ----- Dear Lord I,' he added, with a tender pause, 'don't you forget me ! I hope THURSDAY, NOVEMBER•18; 1880. You'll miss me enough to hunt me up.' It grew dark early Saturday night. ZERVAH HOPE. The sun sank wider a thin, deceptive web'of cloud, The seadow beneath (=smarm), raom T.A.GE 2 ) the palmetto grew long over Scip's Scip put up his feeble hand ; Arvind' 'fresh gra". The eters were aim and Seip• spoke mote. The :Am The wind rose, and the lights in took it ; no nurse held the negro's hand a low:, the city, where waloners kept their sick, trembled on the frail breeze. and seam - in ; the lamp went out ; they sat oil ed to be mnitiplied, like objects seen in the dark. Through the flappiug. woodenthrough tears. shatter the stare hiolred in. Through the wooden shntter, Zer- S ullenly, ZOrviali perceived that vital could see the lights, and the lona- Seip's hand' was quie cold. 131 palmetto, and the grave. He could Ha curled him. out by starlight, and see those few old stars. bawled pita under the palmetto: It He thought, :.while hie thoughts re was httrd work digging alone, He s , niuld not make a very deepgrave, and biownmost tenderly and he hti cofein. \YLleQ the earth and longingly of those for whom he e had given his life. He re aembered w na stamped down, he felt extremely bow many keen cares of their own weary and wells. He fell down by shovel and pick to rest, and lay there they had t:) miry, how many ghastly in the night till he felt stronger. It was damp and dark. Shadows like mussed. Who was he ?-a disgraced. elonds hung over the vutliue of the unfamiliar man, ameng their kin and fingere,. the cries of Calhoun to thewide, The Senile bells in the city had neighborhood. Why should Limy think wall world. . swamp. of him ? he said. : By sunset, all the hells had don 'LADIES TRIIEMED HAT S ceaaed, There were no sonuds but the Yet he was glad that be could re: login and done tolling, There was as iss .-4 0. „>: :Va tel as cries of a few lonely bird and wild- ..s. memb r them. Ho wished Ins living c'et}lr eirvl with cool e°1("1"' It see ° creatures in the night, wlinse names ,• ae be did not know. This little feet add. Things that his i ti laeauts had raid to palmetto lifted its faint head. The °;11P0'%''' -,:-:- a is-. see. or his dying could help them any. ed almost cold:about Solip's hut. The the dark. Itei inteuse- aud paesienate ed to his souse of solitude. dust slept. It was not yet dark when a 0,5 :4 .?.,''''•ea, ed on him, tittle eigne of Inman rove a tittle party from the otty rode ' '''''''''' • up, a :ee , A .. &•-,.:7. LI ..., E .“.' '... UM, 1001CS that. healing eyes hat tn rn- . 6 al •-s , get up and svalk back to the city in eearobing for a drealr place. They g ',--; :':',D4,' 'tpl.' ,,!. 5 1.4v •••••k, • 1..... P g --.:...,. He thought at first that be wouldss ea= 2 c and learning, came beak to him a& be lay thereeand .stued aronnd hio bed, had ridden fast. lir. Frank was with .... -; rt..: hn;Ying smell him to be am mg living , • them, and tae lady 11.1.1trian Dare. She L'' 5 0" 9., like people in thesdark hut, 'f- tu4t). He took. a few steps down the role at their bead. She hurried ner- B'LK WOOL CASHMERES, 'They loved nee,' he said ; 'Lord flit road. The unwholesome duet blew tipei , against his Nee. He found himself so M Ud dnd bold by 113. only. RANTON BROS.. true as rrn alive, they di'd f Ihn, glad r v°°81Y ou. She was pale, aed stilt Ai - lived long euough to save life, to save weak. The chairman of the PAW' tired that he concluded to go back to • life ! I'm much obliged to You for that! Committee was with her, and the sub• the lint. 1.1) would sleep, and start We IVO also showing as llama the largest and host -i-,-, .-,,,,,,,,o, ,-, I wish there was something else i could sunimittee and °t'llers. . in.Le la U.1N It./.1\1 l.:ASILv.:Elir.S, at iq the minting at the beeak of the assorts,' scosk of do for them. * * * lord I' I'd IOr.. Dare pushed on throng!) the dawn. Ha should: be glad. to see the swinging door of the lint. She entered RANTON BROS be.willing to die if it would help them Tinwar e • faces of his kind aain, even though • , alone. They saw the backward inntiou Stoves and the stir of welcome and the light of any..lt I thought 1 eouldilo anything trust have gene out oc' them fur him. that way, tuward• sending. them' a oilier gray -sleeved wrist, and came TV) farther. but removed thkir hats t.n,.1 'zo her seenin the eat- consisting of They lived, they breathed, they spoke. r°'''t - etoott. hhe knelt beside the bed, and He groped beck into the lint. Th a able. A host anal a humeri life ain't a 00'k* Staves, 'No,' he added, 'that ain't reason Hs wee tired of death and. solite de. put her baud upon her eyes. God is good, after all. Let us hone that they convertible cede. Ile don't do nn• Pallor St oyes, i.,ii wu hm, and be c mid 110b relightDRESS GOODS (large stool.). reasonable things. Mee, bi rve lost knew her before the'Y closed. the lamp. He threw himself in the my liead already. But I'd be glad to. She came oat, and triad to tell aboei Box Stoves, at dark upon hie bed. Tbat's all. I suppose I can ask You it, but broke down, Reid sobbed bAtt,r T e BANON BROS.. lie slept until late in the morning, them all. In onatess variety. A full stout of Timva-c of all heavily. When he :wfor a frost. That itked,, the birds 's reason. 'It is a martyr's death,' sail the kinds. Au immense assortment 0 'Lord God of smell and heaven ! were shrill iu the hot airolnd the sun chief ; and added solemely, 'Let •05 glared in. pray.' a Lamps' and Lamp Goods ieet 'I will go now,' he said aloud. '1 tie knelt, and the o'hers with. him, am glad I can ge,' and crept to his between the buried ne4ro and th-a nu • • mercy on ue miserable sinners I Hay • Which wears selling at enormously low. prices . mercy on the folks that pray to You, knowledge mid tburied nurse, and thanked God for the OVERCOATPCGS, & He took took ter° steps -staggered -and he recollection of the II .B . —Highest price paid. for desan Sheol) and' On the folks that don't 1 Remean- TLE' CLOTHS tit fell back. He lay for some momeuts, holy life which this man had lived skins in ellen or trade. bar the old graves, and the new ones, DISSE'I'T BROS. strikeu mare with astoniehnieut then among them in their hour of need. and the graves that are to be opened if' alarm. His first words were: They buried him as they mast. and — Holism. AND 'Lord God t After all -atter all rye. ,this hellish heat goes on, and send its hurried homeward to their living,. Gon• if a blessed frost, 0 Lerd, As ftn ftOt 0' gone threngh--Lord God almighty, forting one 'leather for his memory humatiity 1 And if that 'ain't the way as Cattle. Paurders you'll believe it --I've. got it' they could. to speak to You, remember 1 havehit ' This was on Weduesday morning. As for him, he rested, after her hand been a. praying rilim long enongh to A full stock.of alLvariet les of Night fell, lent nu one came. There. Ilan billet) on his eyes, }L3 who hail I learn the language veey well, -and CONDITION POWDERS', day -bat oatside the hat uo step stirr- known,so deeply the starvatioo ofbleep. ' that I'm petty sick, -bat that I COUGH POWDERS,. . ed the parched, white dust. Friday lessness, slept well that night. would be glad to die -to give 'them.- DIURETIC POWDERS, 8ra. .-Satardsy-no voice bat his owe Iii the morning when they all woke, • a great, white, holy frost,. Lord, a moaning broke upon the sick man's • theee of the sorrowing city here, frost 1 Lend, ft owl, white, clean and Also Winan's Collet & Condit:on Powders, straining ear. those, of the happy city yonder : when frost,. for these poor devils that nave which have stood. the test for years, at the His profeseional experience gave Jum they took up life agaio woh its return - borne so 010011 !' an excruciating foremight of his syntp• up sunrise,---the sick and the well, tin CETAL allIAL DRILT STOR)L At midu:glit of that Seturday he tome, Enid their result presented itelelf free and the fe.tereet, the living and the ' ' dozed and dreamed. He dreamed of to him with horrible distiectnese. As dr rel, -the frost lay, °eel, while, bless- • what he hid thought while tocip Was one by one he passed throngh the ed, ou his grave. kmiliar conditions hose phases The host variety of be sick ; of what it was like, to be holy ; w waking, thonght of holy ----- /0-1-04-4 GIRL:S SHOULDER BRACES n temporary ignorance. His trained it Id watched in other men a hundred and, sadly timee, he would, have given his hre for neople-good woman and honest men, who had never done n deadly deed. cle on 'Nloudity morning last in which ,• The Linden Fres Press httd an arti- now mado, illANT.ON BROS., , An addtional stook of %nglieli and French Trus- vaagiufttiutl bad hula inertly on him. .1 uannot be holy,' thought Zerviali all effort is made to persuade Exeter ises J est robe taste Ile weighed his chances, and watched atne ; 'bot 1 can pray for frost.' So that the G. W. R. is not reeponsible The same brands of Ifedidual Liquors. alwv,3 s. he 1140(1 10 pray for frost. But by that his fate with the sad exectness of for the insufficient supply of oars at -- kept. . kuowledge. time he had grown confused, and his HYDIIOLTNE— Poultry, Sutter and Egga A.e the days passed, and no one cama e will wandered pitifully, and he saw Exeter s'ation. The explanation is that. I now. roroncly for Consumption.. to rytto,, lie was aware, of not being able strange sights in the little lint. It was that the oars are lying unloaded at the as- if lie were not alone.. Yet no one to, re/Hon with himself alearly alont seaports. It also says that the Grand had come 10. She c mid not come at Itis SOlitiltle. Growine weak, he re. midnight. Straege-how strange 1 Trunk stations are as badly off. If the A Complete Stock of Patent Media/nest ' onembered the averted 11(085 of the iseopte for whom he had labered.and ‘' I V to was that who walked alit the (T, W. R. is not at, fault, how is it able Druo gond me I ramble. Druggists' sundri -a whom he hati loved. In the etrese of hot ? Who stood and looked nt him ? to seen all the oars that are needed Its complete stock. Materials 1 or curing eider 8000 leaflet' to llitn ? W110' brO0d8,1 soon ft8 an agitation s•prings up for an- Stattanery,,, School. Books, Fancy 6004 hi in. Hs foie that he 'was deserted, be - hie pain their estranged eyes gazed nt (Wet' him ?' Who tett arms beneath 00 i pi - . • -0 tt ae, ae., as estate ler au way, ie awe ot )(area er , can ei, he wee distrusted. Patient as ite wee. this seemed, hard. TILE TIMES ea. 'Yes, 1 gum I do. I coo now, Fn t Hot used to You. I never saw You before, You are Iiint I've peered about --God's Son 1 Crod's Sou, You've taken a great deal of trouble to come here after me. Nobody else canoe. You're the only one that has remembered me, You're very good to me. 0 11 * Yes, .1 remember. 'They made a prisouer of You. Why, yes 1 They deserted Yon. They left You die by Yourself. What did yon do it for ? 1. dotal. know mouth about theology, I ata not an edacated man. I never Prayed till I come South. * I forzot What did you do it for?' pliAedprofoand and soleinti silence re - ''Well,' said •he sick man, brooking It in, a satisfied tone, as if he had been answered, '1 wnen't worth it ^' but I'rn glad You came, I wish they had a frost, poi' things 1 You won't nation or rather excuse to offer for the short,comings of the railway. Rut mo away ? Well, I'm glad. Poor things ? PI)0r 1,1111) 1 I'll take Your the Free Press nate, rest assured Oat no effort will be left undone to semen a hand, if Yeu've objeatione.' After a little time, added., in a aempeting line to (heti, W. R. tone of auutterable tenderness and tam leall•SeMsompor 3ar Lor.I 1' and said no more. EKeter, on the. iStii fast, .the wiFe It was a quiet night. The stars rode of Mr. George Kemp, Merchant, of' a on 11.8 if there were no task but the dangtlter. tasks of stfbrs in all the uuiVerse, atid Dzmunoex.-In 'Osborne, on the 21st inst.,the wife of Mr. John Delbriclge,, 01 11 daughter.' no sorrow keener than their sorrow, . TRELME.—In Exeter, on the 1.8tit hist., the and no onre other than their )tian otiilr. W. Treble, of a daughter. and their shiniug, The web of cloud mos:elm-Ili Exeter, on tbs tut, the Hosted like exhaling breath between wife of Xfr.W. Ht. Minicar; el a daughter. them and the yartli. It grew cooler before the dawn. The Ravels of the palmetto over Scip's grave seemed' to inicurl, and grow lax, and soften. Tito The O'ciuueit of the Corporation of dust still flew heavily, but the win! he rose. GO ITN TY 0 11:LT Et 0 N The Sunday -bells rang pettoefully, wm meet the Tae siolt heatcl them, and the conveles- cent and he well. The dying listened ql(fIVN I -I ALIA to them before they left. On the faces is not subject to any foreign inirimee. But it is not so 1110011 the ineufficient aaeornmedation of the G. W, ita that the people of Exeter and surreunding coantry complain tile most bltterlY of, alttiongh that grevienne does press heavily upon them, but the high rates exacted from Exeter shippers compared with those given in rival towns by the Grand Truk. That is where the shoe pinehee the most. It is finite proper for time Free Press to melte an attempt to soot! e the feeling,sof the people here. It is a Loudon paper, end devoted to interists of London. It knows that a breech of the G ran I Trunk would eu• GENTS' SITITS at able our merchants and others to deal , with Toronto more directly and to bet- RA.NTON BRos.. ter advantage than they do now. Lon- don would thus lose uo inconsiderable share of our business. Under these GENTS' OVERCOAT, at conditions, we fully expected that thei• RANTON BROS, London papers would have some expla- irovEmBErt 25, 18E40' E TEEL BIRTH& NOT I E. in the of the &ail, too, there coma the look of those wets heala TOVV:11 of Win.o.haro, The belts. tolled, too, that Sunday. 00 They tolled al moat all the afternoon. Phu young Northerner: Dr. Remane 7r ‘uesday, 7th De:ember next. was gone,. -9 reteeeute brave young All ecanntR mast be preseuted before the first maia-and the heroic' telegraph oper- sessienor tato sad ttay of 1:x133611g. ator. Saturday nigli't they buried her. deecls and sights to d ) and bear. It was not strange that Ito should ea be Sunday,' •B bby' took her place at the wires, and spelled out with shriking GENTS' FUR CAPS at RANTON BROS, GENTS' SHIRTS. & DRAW— El3s (rb RANTON BROS, :BOYS' SUITS, at RANTON BROS. :BOYS' OVERCOATS ah ,RANTON BROS. 'LADIES' MINK SETS at RANTON BROS. LADIES' MINK CAPS at 'RAN TON BROS.. LADIES' IMITATION SEAL. SETS, at BANTON BROS.. PE no, ADAMSON-, Co. 01.2". LAME MANTLES at November s2nd, ass°, , RANTON BROS. . . Look att RANTON BROS. 'WOOL SQUARES (k, SHAin,s, RANTON BROS. • COLORED CASHMERES at RANTON BROS., :that made the South and North, the pestilence and destruelion, the 51012 tbne well, the living and. the dead, INV.' TWEEDS & SUITING'S at RANTON BROS. RANTON BROS,. :B:UFFALO, ROBES, at RANTON BLANKETS at RANTON BROS., DELICIOUS TEAS, at BANTON BROS.. CHOICE FRESH GROCER - ns at Drags good and retahlo. Druggists SiinclriPs—„. mi.njitsta se,sss. utlar:It14 o istag him ?' W'llo.leolced at lion, as those look wile 10,ye the siok too aluell 1,3 is, the Great Western neglecte local Gen tral re)rtag•Sto,re ,T,tor (lid not a,tra. enorto fix. me tie shriuk from then ? freight for through traffie awning from, ms mo,, he said, „iota gouity. 4/ don't know Y Paid Z3rviali, in the Michigan Central, and the New wIt6 no& woth it. / he4 dianthus Eieat1rjto 8 nil. york o,htrail while the, Grand 'Erank * • OVINAN.'S OL:11 sraala, • • 1 :A:0111Es tni70133)5rL1(10°11L a LUTZ IVANTE.D RANTON BROS. "