The Exeter Times, 1891-2-12, Page 2TIM NOD -ERN PULPIT aPPallini, inPwrY, hop-elessness—e
des is' ITS A TOUGli STORY.
compage with which all darkness is aS mid-
day. How difficult te forewarn etten with —
A. PITIFUL PIOTUIM any succese 1 The exhorter himself has IP:JT VOUOUD POR
been overwhelmed, the teacher nietimieed,
the saintlieet soul Se couseimie et a ministry FiNfAlia e SO I.BNTISTS.
not divine. Still, on every hand the werd
o e.xliortatiou and persuasion rant be
spoken, awl the prayer of entreaty must be wrodueing a Moslem Centaur — A Man's
breathed with eagerness endpassioxi if haply Bratus grafted lepon That et a Horse—
on soul may be rescued from the way to What Will be the Result?
hell end the chambers a death.
Sy Or, Joseph Parker, of the esite Temples
tendon,
Xy on, neep my words. men lay eh my com-
mandments with thee. Keep my command -
merits, end live ; and nee law as the apple of
mine eye. I3ind them upon thy lingers,. write
there upon the table of. thine heart. Say unto
wisdom. Thou art my eieter ; and eall under.
standiegtijrornai :that they may heep
thee from the strange woman, from the strain
ger which asttezet4 with, her woede."—Prev.
vii.
The father getliere himeelf together as
Io r a final effort to rescee his son trom the
temptatioes ancl perils of life. The appeal
aUy begius with the twen ty-tourth verse of
the preceding chepter. By a description the
most vivid aud graphie ever &awn by hu-
man genius, the young man is warned of a
vital danger. The only security a the
"son" is to keep the commandment of the
father, ancl to make his Lew as the apple of
VTR REBELLION IN OHTTI
Mythology finds its justificatton in neauy
instance through the discoveries of modem
ecience and mysteriessuppond to have heels
buried in the tomb of antiquity itre disclosed
by the operetions of modern !science. The
latest instance is that which explains, at
HARD TISTITING RETWBE14/ THEEGY rtially, the exiatenceof that at= e
-al AND IN. SUMMIT EOROES. freak nowzias the ceutaur, a creature ha
man and half horse which ia represented in
so many ancient seulptures and whichplayed
an importene past in old French traditioes.
Apart from the Darwinian theory another
wus letoettadest, Bomberde41, and Cap-
tured by the Revolutionists—Property
13"°reigners Dantaged—Min"te" "141 clue has now been found to the centaur
Coneuni Threaten te Leave Their Poste mystery, which provokes at least an inter -
:tad gate Refuge ex the Porde.* War e,stingeoraparison. The following storyhas
ehtps—nalumeeen, Asks Thent to Watt
reached here from Vienna and, is believedto
the eye. 'I'he father exhorte the son to Wel LoNDON, Falk—Despatches received M be duly authenticated. Last Fall an main -
the paternal commandments upon his fin- this city fireutChili, vie Buenos Ayres, bring eut sctentiet by the nen of Liehholx, who
gers, Zz appens that the thoag of the phyle further particulars concerning the revolution has lived the life edit recluse in the Carpa-
actery for the left arm was wonted seven in Chili. The rebel Chilian war vessels oc- thian mountains, neat .Neusolal, feund bini-
times round the middle finger. This henne- cunied the roadetes.d at Porto Ccquindo on self at the point of death from caucer. Ifia
sente the idea of trusting to other titan a Jay not specified, bue supposed to beabout, condition was such that death was at the
merely human power, and, being well pre- four or five days ago. The war vessels also most a atiestiou of only a. few hoUrs, By his
pared ageimet the day of danger. It was not fired thots into the town, probably at the liedside sat Drs. Brae; ae4 Treatel and a
enet4gh Its the Indereent of tlee father that troepsdefeneling_the coal depots, number of young and enthusiastic physicians
theyoung . man shOuld be warned against Troops from Falpafaiso are oceupying_ta who were there by special appointment in
evil, the wise father proceeds to dll up the Serena in force. ininbo, or Porto etspints- addition to the reguler medical adviser of M,
very mind and soul of the child 'with wise bo, same distance b rail from La Serena ,Leibbolve who sat with ids Wield on tbepulse
wotds and useful ecetmatione. Say unto or Coquimbo City. tbe Balnuiceda treepoof the dying man as if counting off his last
wisdom,
Thou art my sister, and oftli Werequartered in the hospital and Wheel* lbeart beats, The other oecupent of the
deratc,-,414-4 the kinsw9roart," Thus the of La Serena, and are suppeeed to have room Was a rather novel inmate cif a, death
negative and positive are luippily combined been driVen oaf Of Porto Coquimbo. chamber. It was the favorite charger of the
in the school of Silvtural teaching, The The insurgents have blockaded Tougoy expiritig man, a lunulsome R11$414111 ?My
retest danger elf ell is a vecant. mind, on Teegoy Bey, *Owlet thirty milee from named Nieholes, which had conic to play a,
Rad a heart that has no sitpreme affee. Coquimbo. Toney otnmeeted, by roil very bnporteeit part in theproeeeclings. The
tion and law is expoged to the seclue- with Tamava and Ovalle, the latter town horse had ben placed in nob n. potitioii
tione of tense. Our tartly security is in being, in tura, connected by, railroad with that it could be operated upon w enever
high and egad eigployment, We Ought Corimmito. Torbarallis is also announced those in charge of the proceedings were
to be able to Sno7 with Nehemiah to every to be 'blockaded by the rebel forces. Three ready to commence. The feat which they
tempter and to every enemy, "I AM d°ing thew:and Oovernment troops have been had. set thentselve,s to accomplish was cer-
a greet work, and cannot come clown." The sent to re -enforce the garrison at Tongoy, tainly a digeeett one,
euerny is aleileve On the alert, and, a$ re- Later advices say it is reported that a AN reXehnitteNT os' A ereer PATUNO MAR-
Pnsent44 by be lure of the text, night is battle has been Ringlet at Torigoy. Therein ,teerm
45 asY) and. (IV is as 1414 ; every form, of els have occupied leimache Alto, a town
biaralislinteut and eliepeecti is pressed into tweeine.gee mike fromeweeperaita. AtUm. was contemplated. .1/111 attempt was to be
the unholy service, and the alemempes, ache Alto the rebel forces took Dosses310,4 of made to graft the brain of a human being on
sessed heart is resolute upon the 4CeoTp-' the Etatieno, faeteric3, nee eer %lee the di. to that of a horse, the most highly seemtive
lielitneut of cue object. Theproeees Whi0b rector and adherents of PresidentBahuaceda ?Jul probably meetIntelll'e'4 of alttilunb
iv devibeti virtaiy rereEenta the re3htY from the town. The rebels have also Qom. '14'31404 AS ti‘e PhYstetatt who 1;44 bell of
of rite. leret4 we are accmtotned to the , Rine quileete. in the rroeitme ef arnipernien, the dying man's hand motioned to Dr. Bram
ei htof ; secondly, we became ettammu'• ufty tailesfrom..Santiage, on the Ancontigua, aveording to a preconcerted arrangement,
4 it; thirdly, We are prepared to listen, twenty miles from the Pacific. diselosing tile feet that vitelity was VW
to itsnoize ; tenthly, we ere tritztled to The property of foreign reeidenta is BUJ- reaching so low an ebb that the time had
pen its cliatms and then suddenly, if tering considerably hem the rebellion been reaebed for operations to commence
encli a mine there can be any vita of the efforta of the the letter stepped forward and, although
en we loee eur feothelil and repeseentateeee of foreign revere topro. the beientist Was already unConscioue,
tO
preeerve againet any possible return to rite -
oy eur oeen Seill. No Man eau take trot toe interests of foreigners. The ec-
aro 3 his hum witheut his clothes being tion of the diplomatic representatives has &MI administered to hun tux muesthetio
leirued, per en it men walk nesen hot coele been et' diecourecing to those officials that which almost immediately produced a trait -
without his feet being seorthed. The Pain, they have keeesuy informed the ceinetti as
gumiletm
izinigepr.
ofreet upon hlr. Leihholz. At the
immediately followe the pleasure. 'The Government that they will embark on boar Trestel, an expert in tho vet -
drop Lena eerth to 1141 le mstantaneoun , the veesels of the fleete of the foreign powers erhaary profession as well as a profound an-
A.wful, indeed, is the position of telted' if the eonfliet continues.
. . . Manua, tmeratedupon the horse with the
lives. That wideli is revolting Is bldt ens President Balrinteeda, in reply, has osk et
1 men results that his colleague had upon the
and that enly Which is beanited and fate the Ministers and Commie to delay taking dyinv man, at whose suggestion the unique
einating is allowed to be seen. The bed any action for a few days, as he hopes bailee and momentous experiment was to be per -
decked with coverings of tapeatry, with able to suppreaa the rebellion wit in t a formed. As soon as the ascendency of the
ear ,,ed wor1-0, -with flue linen of Egypt, may time, drugs was completely deznonstrated tho two
doctors went busily to work with their sur -
be spoken of with artistic preciation, and
gical instruments, watelied closely by their
taste it:elf may delight in the perfume of
myrrh, aloes and eitutamen ; but gates A Frog on an Outing, assistants as with nerves of iron they 1:av-
t In the early pert of thia summer we had a ceeded to bare the brainal chambers of both
cif neer), meer open upon perdition, and i
horse and mom. This they were not long in
nt end of the flowery w- - av
z"5'Y ansevere thunder storm, eccompanied with a
finial the very gulf of hell. Pitiful is ,,eas doing, and then followed a series of delicate
g on entering the eitting ro'hoomn,eIxtettIllsr°%. operations which could be only intelligibly
the pietere of the man who is allured by -rli.tig,,i. wind,about sundown. I
described by a member of the profeaston,
InightY telalttathms. "He Veth " " " object on the carpet near ihe window of an
Ile -unusual appearance, and but which were neceasaryin order to detach
goeth to the slaughter, or ns a fool to
correction of the stocks; till n dart strike 'one had purchesed a green rebanermefrdogwanmde the upper and lower brain of both the horse
dr
through his liver as a bird basteth to the placed it there for truschief. On a closer aancienDtis.tleintiohhtehlez and to put that of the
snare, mid knoweth not that it is for his ;Inflection I found. it was a lino frog, evhite
itrite a dark green body and black CRANIUM OF TEE ANINIAT.
life." It is a blind irrationalism which bey,
atterents to ignore all the machinery of hell jo,.s;
t lack stripes aoross the begs; body in place of its own. It was the craze of Dr.
whieliie working on the very surfohe of the sts"
three inches long. He was very lively, and Lethhole during the lag few months of his
impregnable basis of demenstrated fact. To
uae their own comparison, it seems to be a
epee in which the brain has reyerted to a
condition of infancy from whieh it has to
develop by a gradual process, the results of
which they seem to be suffieiently positive
of when sufficient time has elapsed for there
to establish themselves. Although there are
any number of difficulties in the way, it is
the opinion of the two doctors that we are
on the verge of discoveries which will re.
volationize the whole d.eatiny of the anima
race and advance them to a position of
reason at least eghivalent to that enjoyed
berretta in a savage state, thus opening up
to thetn the possibility of an emancipation
from cenditiells w!lich halre hitherto seemed
to be hopelessly peramment, but which is
only one of the temporary limit a times observ-
ed throughout the entire domain of nature.
th
With regard to e physical thanges whieh
may evenuate from the introduction of
reason into the uatures of the inferior
auiraals, they think that in eoarse of time
the outward results of such a development
ceuld but manifest. tliemselves, though
prebably a long time mast elapse before
any
DRVINITR ClIAN`o* WOOLn 314 OBSERVADIX.
A lengthy paper on the subject haa beepaddressed. by Dr. 'Presto' tootle of the scieu-
tine societies in this city, but the whole
story is regarded e.s preposteeous, and it Ints
been suggested that Some enterprising
scheme is afoot for trainiug. a horse for ex-
hibition purposes and that the story Of the
twain trausplenting has been coneocted for
puree:nee of advertuiement, The names of
Dm, Bran and Treetel nentld, however,
seem to be sidlicient gearatitte that the
experiment is genial%
A Fiendish Sacridee‘
The story of a deed, which rivals In fiend-
leheess those of Messaelmeetts in witeheraft
dare Mies from the Sasitatchewen
14 Jima. heat an Indian, Blatt Horn, went
hunting Wad trapping in the beaver hills,
near Fort Seekatehewan, accompauied by a
boy about 8 years old, the eldest eon of n.
Victoria Indian. While looking at his
traps one day, accompanied by the boy,
Blue Roth told the latter to rote= to camp
while be continued examining hie traps. On
the rettlrlf Of Bine Horn to the camp be was
surprised to fital thettlee boy was not there.
ether The Indians in earap turned out and
searched for the boy, but did not find him,
and finally gave it up. The other day a
halihreed them Beaver Labe maned Charles
Deselineit found in the woods. not far from
New Beaver Lake trail, and about six miles
east of Fort Saskatthewan, the skeleton of
the child in a standing position, its arms
stretched out and wriete tied to two trees,
He did not remove the akeieton but went
to inform the father of the lost, Vey in order
that lie rnighte ace it and identify it as the
remains of his lost sou. From circumstances
stmounding the affair it is evident the lost
boy lied been offered as a sacrifice to secure
good luoic in hunting by Indians. As is
their custotn, the savages had bung about
the body hits of cloth and trinkets to pro-
pitiate gods.
earth. NS e may drew down the blind, an I foum, nd hipherced on the low window sill life to have this experiment performed, and
exclude the light, but the mighty 'engma is
working to the destruction of all that \den 1 eine back with the watering pot to he had himself written out mese minute in-
ia
eecere my visitor, I covered the top with strections as to the manner in wbith the ex -
noble in youth, beautiful in manand ths exsePtien of " mall space for
ners, air, in- periment should be conducted. With his
hopeful in progress. The wiser piety will
tending., after my return from the city, to brain once in the head of the horse and the
go out end confront the evil, exposing its leave inm out and see if be had started in ligatures properly applied which would ins
eubtle policy and its cruel design, and speak-
. the •dof the nearest watermm
, some sure the amalgamation of the importedbrain
ing about it with the holy audecity wine distairection
nce off ; but, before the rest of the
can utter even corrupt war& without being family saw him, be had somehow made his
corrupted by their pollution. escape.
"Hearken unto me now therefore, 0 ye • I had often read of it raining frogs, toads,
with the -proper coonection, the professor
felt positive that he would be able in his
equine condition to exist as a rational crea-
ture. The time allowed for the operation
children, and attehd to the words of inylete., but here I had stronger evideuce than hvas short, owing to a desire an the part of
mouth. Let not thine heart deehne to her t had, ever heard of, as this front room was the experimenters to rob Dr. Leibholz of as
ways, go not astray in her paths. For she the second story, and a veryhigh one, there- little of life as possible. The operation was
bath cast down many wounded ; yea, many fore he could not have jumped up. He was successfully accomplisbed, hev,,ever, before
strong men have been shun by her. Her not borne there, except he was borne on the ', the fatal moment had Arrived and owing to
house is the way to hell, going down to the wings of the wind. He could not be account- the immediate placing of the doctor's brain
chambers of death." (Vers. 24-27.) ed for, except the storm picked him up over in its proper position it , is believed that the
In the twenty-seventh verse there is an half a mile off at least, as neither the Little experiment will prove u, complete succhss.
energetic expression full of mournful sug- Miami nor the Ohio River, with no creeks Since the performance of the operation more
gestion, "Her house is the way to leell." Oh. between them and us, was nearer than that than two month:411one elapsed, during which
serve, it is not the place itself, but the way distance, and. carried him to the floor of the time the horse has been watched by Drs.
to it 1 In this case, what is the difference" ripper porch, when he hopped or was carried Brau and Trestel, who have devoted their
between the way and the destination? , into the room by the storm before the win- entire time to making notes of what has oc-
Verily, the one is as the other, so much so, dows were closed, which I learned was done cured, and by the showing of these eminent
that he that has entered the way may r after the fury of the storm had commenc-
on upon it as a fatal certainty that he Will ed -
accomplish the journey and be plunged into
"the chamber of death." No man means to
go the whole length. A nian'S will is not
destroyed M an instant ; it is taken from The •story of the 'three races that a The
-
The Three Graces.
gentlemen there is every reason to believe
that the personality of Dr. Liebbolz has
beenidentified with that of the horse and
that the doctor, to a certain extent, under-
stands and expresses all the possibilities of
his physical nature will allow,
him, as it were, little by little, and almost. dia.n parson pronounce at his table last After the performance of the experiment
imperceptibly; he imagines that he is as holiday time is a good one. Some one had the horse was kept for two weeks m a dark
strong as ever, and says that he will go out given him a turkey with all the "fixings" stable, and to a certain extent under the in.
and shake himself as at other times, not and over the first dinner the grace heir • fluence of amsthetics to prevent any violent
knowing that the spirit of might has gone with the words: "Most bountifidgehoea . effects resulting, such as mightheve occur -
from him. Is there any object on earth The next day there was very little turkey red from a too sudden consciousness of what
more pathetic than that of a man who has left and the parson said: "For what we are had taken place,
lost his power of resistance to evil, and is about to enjoy we thank Thee," ete. On - AT THE END Or TIIAT TIME.
,dragged on an unresisting victim whitherso-1the third day the turkey's remains looked
i
ever the spirit of perditionas no symptons of irregularity were noticed may desire to ,like the keel and ribs of a ship just begun.
take him? Like the young man in the par- , Over that the parson said: "0 Lord, we in the animal's actions, it was deemed ad -
able, he is taken to the fire and to the endeavour always to be grateful; Johnny, visible to let the normal condition of its ex-
istence be resumed, and no extraordinary
results were observed, the condition of the
horse being evidently one of excellent health,
with no obvious change in its habits. The
first symptom of any extraordinary manifes-
, ishment, and flatter can do has been done; Elder Goodman--" In order, Yrs. Grey -
the cloven foot has been most successful good from the tion took place one day when the two doe-
IY neck, to secure the greatest tors were both together in the stable, when
concealed s the speech has been all garden hearing of the sermon, you should, as a pre -
and paradise and sweetness and joy; the paration, enjoy to the utmost the sweet, the charger suddenly commenced to rub its
word hell or perdition bas Dose against one and then the other of them, not been holy calm of the Sabbath morning." and then neighing loudly as if under the in -
so much as mentioned. The young man Mrs. Greyneck—" I feel just as you do
might have been on the way to heaven, about that, Elder Goodman, but when fluence of some excitement. It at once oc-
a
1
so flmto wake the curred to the doctors that the action of theowery was the path and so any birds woman has to get up four times animal was due to a dawning conception of
sang brightly in the blue air as he passed hired girl and then wash three children that 1
a
along as upon wings rather than upon feet- don't want to be washed, and then find her new mental acquisition, probably caused
a i
How could such a path lead to aught less husband's clothes which he always puts,in by the influence of their own minds upon its
No further effect was made
then
it home beaueiful as summer and blessed different place, the sweet, holy calm of the ' cmscimalless'
water, and the infernal spirit does what he
pleases with the victim. It is true that the
yonng man can plead the power of fascina-
tion: all that music and color, and bland -
pass the potatoes.
Takes the Edge Off.
as heaven 1. This is what is meant by seduc- Sabbath morning leas had considerable of its
tion; leading amen out of himself and from edge taken off.
himself onward and onward by carefully
graded processee until fascination has ,
accomplished its work and bound the eon- ' What He Wanted.
senting soul in eternal bondage. Sometimes Old Gentleman--" I have but one &bugle.
indeed men have awakened to the reality of ter, sir, and I can't afford to let you take her
their condition, and with heartrending cries from under my roof."
have appealed for help. Then it has been 1 Young Man—" Exactly, sir ; and I can't
found to be too late. .Are there any words 'afford to take her froin under it. What 1
in the speech of man so solemn and so awful , want is to live under your roof with her."
as th • vords "boo late" when addressed to 1
the son. that feels the extremity of pain ?1
to develop matters on this occasion, as it was
the policy of the doctors to work very grad-
ually for fear of producing some meetal un-
balancing which would destroy all their
anticipations. A day or two afterwards the
experiment was repeated, when the animal
again betrayed the most unmistakable
signs of recognition by pawing and neighing
loudly when the doctors had been a few
minutes in the sta,ble.
SINCJE 18155 °COMMENCE.
the two doctors have been engaged in de-
veloping the power of expression in the
Whilst we have no right to clilate upon this A wife calms down a man's impetuosity. annnal said claim that they have received
possible aspect of human experience merely , Often unseen by the world, a woman holds , unmistakable proof of a consciousness on its
for the sake of 'melting human agony and the reins of a xnan's life, controlling, check- 'part of what has occurred and is occurring.
despair, we are entitled to dwell upon it in' ing, saying him from many a disastrous The statement of these proofs as they really
the hope that the tempted and imperilled: mistake, many a fatal step. But she not exist would only provoke incredulity, they
eon's of the yeer ;v.:ay be alarmed and ex- only holds in theck—she inciteis to right claim, and as they occur only spasmodically
cited to consideration. That there is a hell action- stimulating a man's flagging nen. at present they decline to challenge a public
no man of experienee can deny,—a, hell' gieti, spurring him on to renewed effort, to, proof until some regularity has been ac -
litre it hell of remorse, self-reproach, ' do and to dare at the bidding of duty. I eomplished and the proof can rest upon an
Sir Molter& Burton and -the Robin.
The daybefore his death (says Lady Bur-
ton, evritiog of ber late husband, the great
African Traveller,) he am a little robin
drowning. in a tank in the garden, crowds of
birds sitting round on the trees 'watching it
drawn and doing nothing for it. He got Dir.
Baker to get it oaten chwarmedit hieliands,
and put it in his fur coat, and made cmite a
fuss until it was restored, and put in a cage
tobe kept and tended until well enough to fly
away again. Hewes very fond of kittens, too,
and always had. one on his shoulder. When
he laid dead, his kitten would not leen° him,
and fought and spat to be allowed to remain.
He was very particular about the taking of
life, and would not allow anything in the
house to he killed, saying we had no right
to destroy life. One of -.his great remorses
was shooting a monkey. "It cried like a
child," he said, "arid I can never forget it,"
& Golden Weadum.
"Where are you going, all dressed up us
fine as a fiddle ?
"1 have been invited to attend the golden
wedding of Tim Spickens."
"Did you say yon were going to attend
his golden wedding ?"
C ye,
"People celebrate their golden wedding
when they have been married fifty years,
don't they ?"
"Certainly."
"Then we're not talking about the same
man, for the Tom Spitheris I mean is not
more than thirty years of age, and he wasn't
married at all six months ago."
"We are talking about the same man,
hut you see there are different kinds of
golden weddings. I call Tom's wedding it
golden wedding because the fair bride, who
is a sixty -year-old widow, is saki to have
thirty thousand dollars all in twenty dollar
gold pieces."
Wished He Was a Ghost.
"1 wish I was a ghost, blamed if don't,"
said the ragged and starved looking boy who
was breasting the cold storm. "They goes
wherever they please, toll free. They don't
owe nobody nothin' and that's a comfort.
Whoever heard tell of it man who had a bill
against a ghost? Nobody. They don't
have to buy hats and clothes and wittals,
nor they don't have to saw wood and run er-
rands in the cold as I do. I do wish I was a
ghost I"
Religion and Geniality.
"There is something very winning in
this thought that true religion has its genial
aide. There is great comfort in believing
that God is more like man, and heaven
more like the most perfect home -life of
earth, than people commonly supposed ; and
Christmas does help us to believe this.
When the spirit is overburdened by thoughts
of the more awful verities of the faith, or
weary with pondering the insoluble pro-
blems of man's origin and destiny, there is
the same sort of relief in turning to this
exquisite picture of the angels and the
shepherds which a harebell, or it violet, or a
delicate spray of fern, gives the eye When'
one catches sight of• it springing out of some
mossy cleft in the rock at the foot of a great
waterfall or on the face of a mountain steep.
The cataract or bluff has filled us with
thoughts of our own utter insignificance ; we
feel cowed, devarfed, dismayed; but the
delicate penciling of the flower reassures us.
The same hanct, we say, made both rock
and leaf; the same Creator who seemed to
frown on us from the greater work seems
now to smile 'upon us in the lesser. In the
Child of Bethlehem, God -head and manhood
meet and are knit together. ' Is God, then,
like this r we ask, in pleased surprise. • Are
the characteristics which so strongly attract
us in the persen of Jesus really it reflection
of Iseity ?' ff so, the meeting him may turn
out to be better than the rneetieg with
one's dearest friend." --[W. It. Huntington,
D.Da D.C.L.
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The underaignen wishes Lei, zoinufsotanrmtityhien swpuclelh—
le in general that he keeps
All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL
DRESS Olt UNDRESSED
A large tockof liemlock alwaya on bend at mill prices. Flooring, Si ive,
dressed—inch, inelearuha-quarter, incleandenbalf and two inch. Sash Doors, 111111115
Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, ke.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY—Competition challenged, The best and the lergeet
stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1.
All our timber thoroughly seasone and ready for use, No shrinkage iteenreol.
A o 11 will hear oat the above.
Jas. Willis,MiinSt
THE OLD EST.ABLISHED
To
Sweet melting Love ,• thy shadow slowly falls,
Born, while I gazed thy inmost soul upon:
Dear namelese one whose dreamy orbs I bless,
Since now they rest mime and hate forget;
Fathomless; my have for thee, and. as the
boundless sea,
So is its width
I dream or thee andosish the night were longer
far,
But dream I still. although the sbadoWs nee,
Dreary the world was, 'ere thy gentle voice
Stirred my hard heart and framed it sweeter
thought ;
Night never seemed to dark, nor day so fair,
As when thou smallest on me an d taught me
Love.
Stay not thy flight then, 0 winged joy,
nut, like the fleeting clouds from storoi-swept
sky
Speed on thy course and chase the awful
That sure crush me should I lose thy love.
Toronto. 13. Knesee.
Why.
"The things which are seen are tenaporal;"
"the unseen things are eternal,"
We standby the bier of our dead,
And weep with a sodden despair :
Repeating the words which they said
As they paseed from thereach of our care.
We see but the clay and the cold:
Not the spirit with God.
We feel but the gloom of the tomb:
For the odorous bloom
And the balm of tho evergreen
Where the fragrance and beauty distil,
Hath never yet bunt on our sight
Or ravishee, our souls with delight:
We see not,
We know not
One, mighty to save:
We see
And we know
But the shroud and the grave.
We toil and we labor, alone,
Fonthat vvhieh is sordid and low;
We hope that some good will atone
For the gifts, WO on Only bestow.
We see but the clay and the clod:
Not the glory of God.
We feel but the pulse of our need
Not the throb of a deed
Reaching out to a fulness of bliss
In a life that is higher than this.
We trust for the things we believe,
And passion's fruitage receive,
We see not
We know not
The good which obtains,
We see
And we know
But our getting and gains.
We live, but on such it low Dalin,—
(Though we deem that our doings adorn
And are helpful to God and to man)
It were bRtter we ne'er had been born.
We see but the clay and the clod,—
Not the purpose of God.
We feel but the forces of earth:
Not it thrill or the birth.
When the spirit—di vine—in the word
BTpeace and bypardon restored.
Finds glories, immortal, in bloom,
And Heaven, by the gate of the tomb.
We see not
We know not
The true life, within:
We see
And we know
Cut the human and sin.
LLEWELLYN A. MORRISON
"Tho Blms," Toronto..
After the now end the Shroud.
• What if we all lay dead below:
Lay as tbe grass lies, cold and dead
In God's own holy shroud of snow.
With snow-white stones set foot and head,
With all earth dead and shrouded white •
• As clouds that cross the moon at night?
What if that infidel some night
•Could then rise up and see how dead,
How wholly dead and out of sight
All thine with snows sown foot and head
And lost winds wailing up and down
The emptied fields and emptied town?
'think that grand old infidel
Would rub his hands with fiendish glee
And say "1 knew it, knew it well!
I kneW that death Was destiny;
late, I drank, I mocked at God.;
Then as the grass was, and the sod." •
Ah Inc the grasses and the sod
They are my preachers, Hear them preach,
When they forget the shroud, and Gott
Lifts up these blades of grass to teach
The resurrection! Who shall Say
What infidel can speak as they ?
• .1oAnuur munna,,
Spellbound
"Begorra :mid Pat,
With an emplueeis that
Left no doubt of bit being elated,
" it's Kitty orizake
Has the charnuns to make
Any man in the wurruld frilaritted.
"Sieh shpell thetesinvoltee—
Sure Oihn tellin' no jokee—
An' so quick puts yor nerves in &tatter,
That the first t ohne I eet
• Me two eyes on the pet
Be the powers 1 01 niver looked at her.
"An' fait: it's as thrue
As the wurruld thro' an' thro
A man's father's daughter's his sister.
So greet was me daze
At her illigant ways
That the first tonne 01 kilned 'er Oi missed
',men
A Difference.
Yesterday she turned away,
Everything seemed. dark and gray—
lhhw she is my fiaveee.
Life seems all it holiday.
I don't want it yesterday,
And it's not.
Now my • hair has turned to gray,
And my wife's long bills I pay,
Life don't seem a holiday --
Ergo, now, I sadly say,
Oh, that it WerO yesterday
But it's not. —Life.
A Slippery Problem.
Teacher (shrewelly)—" Now, Willie, sup-
posing a &nen pair of skates cost $24 and
your 'papa was sa ring $1 a week for each
seven days, how long would it take to get
aneetlpilaliir9"e(romptly)—" Two days."
Teacher (anxious to correct) --"Now, show
me how you work the problem and get this
answer.'
Willie (confidentially)—" fine pair equals
two skates. Ma says pa gets a skate every
day. If it takes one (ley to get one skate,.
two skates will take two times one day, or .
two days. Therefore, it would take pa two
days to get one pair."
4
The Changes of Tiw
" Strenge how marriage chargeiwomen."
" This morning, after a visit to au old
school friend just wedded, she told me she 4
wanted a full set of six new chairs end a
sofa like hers and yet when I was cemting 9
her I don't believe she knew or carea whether 1,
there was more then it single chair in her
father's parlor."
All Hope Abandono
• Poet (meekly): I shoald like to leave thia
little poem for your inspection, I suppoae ,
a good many poems are left here, -
Editor (gruffly): Yes --and so are tha
fellows who watt us to buy them.
Dreams of' Thee.
I saw thee in my dreams
Altho' we had not met,
The glory of thy visicm
I never can forget.
• In the dark and dreary days
It cheered me on my way,
• Tho' 'twas thy dream face only
I knew th' ne would come sr
Thou wert the star ofionelee
My hope in each dark he
And softly did thy Kevin
Shed on me sotithi-s'
When weary 151 •
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