The Exeter Times, 1894-2-14, Page 72fit
Vetees Consenn , croup, S ore
Threat. pold b i1 lereeteete on. a Ouerentee.
leor a Ismer Side, tie% oecitest Shiloha, Peyote*
Fleeter wagerer eaesatisfeetitheeee 0;44 '
$1.11LOWS VOTALIFEtts
114,saiAtrialrer9fititritATOPI
conmtioitthabsokymnodyforkstz Zitated Wes+
coor tteed." For'Brepepela, Xsilter far (Mg
tnateble it =vele. etrice 760M. '
iLoir
CATATtliN
REMEDY.
HaveYon itarrn? Trythialleruedy. Itvin
positively relieve and Cure you. Frio° ote,
This Inieeter for it succeesful treatment le
furnished free. Rentenakuir, Slue:ars Ben:awl/ea
112amatelot Wye Satisfaction.
LE GAlt.
II.DIOKSON,Ba.rrister, Soli -
...LA. atter of eaprome Oeare, Notary
'Labile, Ontoreyaneer, Oommiesionel, egg
money to Loan.
Offinein • eneou'entoolt. lexoter,
R COLLINS,'
BORAS Solloitor, Conveyanoori Eto.
mizETDR, _ ONT.
OFF.1.0E. ;" Over O'Neil's Bank.
ELLIOT & ELLIOT, ,
barristers, solicitors, Notaries Public,
• Conveyancers &o, ac.
m-uoney to Loan at Lowestellates of
interest.
OFFICE, a MAIN :STREET, EXETER.
' 11. v, xeraoe, pnBoPnICK Stmlor.
oactomosticammumaamertipamingsgswasmaltaammom
•
' DENTAL.
F. ll'INS1VIAN, L. 3d. S, D, D. S.
radunto neRoYel College ot Dentel Sus.
goons,. and of the Dental Department of Toren
to I.TniVersity, (with honors.)
Speatalist in bridge -work, and gold and
porcelain crowns.
Pure Nitrous Oxide Gas and locole anathete
ioe les painless extractions, At Liman every'
Wednesday. 011ice: Fanson‘s Biook. Exeter,
MEDICAL
• T W. BROWNING M..D., M. 0
tr • P. 8, Graduate Victoria Dniverp
0E500 and residence, o o tulnion Labe a
tory , laze ter
-DR. HINDMAN, coroner for as
ijeunty of Huron- ()Moe, °pp...site
Carling Brae. store,Exeber.
DRS. ROLLINS &AMOS.
Separate Oilloes. Residence same as former.
ly, A.ndrew st. Offices: Spaakman's building.
Ilifain at; Dr Rollins' same as formerly, north
door; Dr., Amos" same building, south door,
J.A ROLLINS, D., T. A. AOS, M. D -
Exeter, Ont,
AUCTIONEERS.
T. HAI?' ", LtOENSED AUG-
,
-I 1 • tieneer for the Coenty of IlitrOn.
Charges moderate. Exeter P. 0. '
-L-1 BUSSE1N13.ERRY, General LI -
1 . cense,1 Auctioneer. Saes conduated
In aliparts. Satisfactionguaranteed. Charges
moderate. • Rensall P 0, Wit:. -
HENRY EILBER:Lioensed A.uoe
tion r for the Counties of Huron
and MlCdl5x Sales condtiotocl at mod-
erate rate:- Oillee, at Post-oillee Grad.
ton Ont
MONEY TO LOAN
ONE1. '3.0 LOAN -AT 6 A.ND
perponb, $25.oes Private Funds. Beet
£oanlng timpani esrepres en bed.
L. H. DICKSON
Barrister . Exeter,
o---edeeeneneet. -----
SURVEYING.
FRED W, FARN0OM13',
frovincial Land Surveyor and Civil En-
331T0hr
'Office, Ire stai rs .Samwell's Blook, Ere ter. OW
VE TERINARY. •
rennent&Tennent
E NETER ONT.
6 militates of the Ontario Veterinary Col
lege. •
.
_ossres 0130 dooillenth ofTown Hall,
...aggramotwassom-essaremosTemstscasmot
INSURANCE .
TILE WATERLOO MUTUAL
, SIRE IN 811BAN CI E 0 0 . '
r •Hatabilehed in 1863. .
UEAD OFFICE- WATERLOO, ONT.
This Company has been over Tweritv-ol,rh
years in successful oper ttion in Western
Ontario, and continuos to insure against lossor
damage by Fire. Buildings, Merchandise
Manufaetories and .. all ether descriptiont of
insurable property. 'Intending insurers have
the option of insuring on the E'rernium Note or
Cash SYsteirt. •
During the _past tenyears this cornea:iv has
issued57,090 Petioles, covering property to the
• amount of $40,872438; and paid in losses alone
$709,752.00.
Assela -81.76,160.00, consisting of Cash
InBan"-' vernment Deposit and the unasses-
P
sed. i 111 e 01Notes on hand and in fol'oe
‘cik
j.W.IVAili as, M.D.. President: () M. 'Rexene
Seeretary ; ..t. 11.1ft:eyes, enseeator, . CLIA.e
oNana, Agent for Exetee and yeanite
The Molsons Bank
(CHARTERED B X' PA fiLIABIEle de 1855)
paidnpOaPLtal•-• 6'0,000,000
ilea, 'Puna ... 1,10o, o
Beadofeee ,atontren.l,
WOLFERSTAN THOM A .leert.
GartritnAL lirAkantrt.
Iiiteney advanced to good farm erson their own
note with ono or more endorser at 7 per cent. '
per annum.
g/ceter BVti,nob.,
Oren overy.laofui , from 10 a. re.teSp,m
eArgite)AY8,10 0, ,nt. to
' ceexent 511.38 Of interest a/lowed en, doposi
,PVBR )31:TBDON,
Sub-11/lanager.
80ielitill 0 American
• Agency for
• CAVgAlreo
‘114t411)Z' MARKO,
DESICta:pirraterv,
, , cota
tsvowris, °to.
, Yor information aati froe1L,edl5ok writo to
, & 851 BivrADnav, NMS•YettIte'
• (Oldest bureau for asournat patemts in• AirierIon.
Nval,nat4tit t&cOn ovt.us• vs Is btought before
on Immo 1)3t aluitld0 igiseti free of ainqo Juno
0,011114tC. 14011e/14
tit.** emulation efany'sciontin in th6
k e
reAftgLIAIVAiiirfitritid
ei,en,diciy:iln_tistvatm
•
ViTOILTICARSPA ,14
War In. Europe Inevitable,
On AMA Africa the treeese-rie eamee,
Mooted, 0141, Word etruggIe to the
;kettle is sloovid to Own Soon -
War in Europe is inevitable and even he
who prophesies as he runs need net hest -
tete to peediet 11 is not far distant. Any
litele thing limy bring it tthoub. There is
no dispasitien on the part' of men who
Plenty the eithetione-men like de 13lowitz,
St. ()ere, Haves 1.e Amir -to the in it
anything but war, There are two distinet
forces making for &pen war ; the Ananoiers
on the one hand and the taxpayere on the
other. The European Governments are
betWeen the deep eea of popular discontent
and the devil of financiere. The coat ef
the °p.m -moue military establishments ie 80
great that there is only the alternative of
war or naticual bankruptcy, Russia,
Auetria, Hungary, Germany and Veatice
might he able to merry for some time yet
the burden of ,the wintery budgets, bue
even in these oaths the difficulty is only
shifted. There comes in the danger of the
growing power of sovietism and the
anarchistic. parties. For these internal dite
orders the enly remedy that European
statesmen discover is the blood-letting of a
general war.
• The very causes that make war inevit-
able will make it a long and fierce struggle
-a war in Europe and Asia, that shall do
away with any need of Melthesian pre-
cepts for therm of generations.
Lona sanisattna's POSPrION.
Where will the next war break out?
Lord Salisbusy said, you may remember:
"The next war is Russia's war," There
is good. reason for accepting this statement.
Whether fantassine swarm over the Rhine
or Cossaelts ride amuck in Austrian lands
it will be no other thing than Ruseias
gaining ground in the east or winning
water ba the south.
It is the rising of the Great Bear.
But before one men answer with any de.
gree of probability the auestion where the
next war will.break out, it is necessary to
look into the jarring interests that make
for war. But mark this, when the war is
on end you are asked, "what is the causa
caymans of all this uproar ?" do not forget
the answer is the "Dardanelles."
.1n the first place, France ; it is not diffi.
cult to understand the interesb :France has
in the coming struggle. The clamor forxe.
venge on Germany is noisy enough the
popular ory for the recovery of the lost
peovinces is loud enough to deceive Obe
who takes politics lightly into the belief
that these are the strongest influencei
in French affairs. But the really ponent
factor is the French ambition for expansion
and cenqueat in the east, It was this
that brought about the Franco -Russo
alliance. The greasy Ineehanics of Toulon
and the men of Paris cheered . • the officers
of "the Russian fleet in a soet of enthuelatic
hatred of Germany, but the presence of
the fleet in Gallic -waters meant the
reopening of the eterrtel eastern question.
The first intentions of France are against
Siam, British India, the Orient.
And Russia?
It was the will of Peter the Great and
the drown of Catherine to secure a e water-
way to theaouth land and the countries
of the golden. east. It is a racial ambi-
tion. B,ussin hae no port fromwhich to
launch her ironclads. The north is eloped
half the year by ice the south is closed
all the: year by paper and ink treaties.
Through Turkish water alone Russia can
find her way. to European Dominion.
NT/bother she makes war eastward toward
Herat or southward over the Balkans,
over black river and salb seas, down to
the plaster palaces of Stamboul and... the
barren fronts of the Dardanelles her object
is still the same. Her interest lies in the
east.
TiMEGY'IS THE XEy.
This is old, sound logic. Posseesion of
the Derdanelleti means not only the bal.
same of power in Europe, but th; control of
Asia as well. Men who studied. the field
long ago reached the same oOncluaion.
Roman a.nd Greek Emperore sent enormous
armies into Asia,' Minor. They paid no
heed to therich, unreaped fields of Europe.
And. they were deep thinkers. Even then
Turkey was the key to European aspire..
tions. To -day this truth is italicized. Not
only does Constantinople rule,, the inter-
course between the Black sea and the out-
side world through the 1Vied.iterranean, be -
aide e that of Asia Minor as far as the
Euphrates, but it means the sovereignty of
the great east -for the nation that holds
in fee the straights of the Dard,e,nelles shall
be lord of the Suez canal and the highway
to India, The possessors of Constantino-
ple command the Black'
sea attd, from 'a
militartr standpoint, turn the flank of Awe-
tria-Hungiery, Germany, and the rest of
the petty countries along the Danube.
It is tlae interest of England, Germany,
Austria and Italy to keep inviolate 'these
little straits which divide Earope and
Asia. It is the interest of Russia, as it is
her racial ambition, to Out a way through
them. France again finds her interests in
the east
e England is the power which stands chiefly
in the way of the realization of the Eranco •
Rustle ambitions and England will bear the
• brunt of the struggle. This is fairly wen
understood in Great Britain, and within the
last few weeks there has been forced .feorn
the .unwilling Liberal Government a heavy
increase of the naval force. -
As I have said, the first bellicoth fire-
cracker may explode anywhere, but the
trend of the war, I believe, will be over the
Balkans.
ASIA T_US PItIZa AT see. X E.
Asia, then, is the fee of the coming war,
and there is no fantasy in the prediction'
that the struggle win follow the line of
least resistance, which is through the do.
mans of the "sick man" of Europe, Tur-
key.
The sending of a Russian fleet to the
IVIecliterranean has invariably beer: the
prelude to a war againsb Turkey. There
ie no reason for believing the omen will
fail. Well-informed ,writere predict that
the preeenee of Russian fleets in the
Mediterranean and the Black tee, to -day
means that the forcing of the Dardanollee
an affair to be looked for in -the near
uture. Thie much is certain. During the
ast year or two the fleet in the Euxite has
been pub 'in war trim. Ships , are being
built with war haste at /elloolaieff, Sebago.
el, and all pods on the Black sea. The
eet in these watere now conmeises 10 first -
teas line -of -battle shins, of from 8,000 to
2000,tons, with 15:inch arrnor and. 12-
tioh guns; score of powerful ganboats ;
6 or 80 torpedo boats ; a dozen steel tore
ado rams and nearly. 80 armed cruisers.
rid lately a axone Russian fleet. sailed
Tito the Mediterranean waters'. All the
ockyaeds in the Czar's deniable are
°thing day and night, The Russian navy
a A 'power to reckon with seriously•,
The one thing needed. --a, naval station
n the Erench Mediterranean coast,--Erance
willing to lend her ally, The importanee
f this acquisitioit to Russia spoaks for it.
elf, The eelvaritage to France would be
erived from the support of RusSian ariniee
any international ,cemplicatione whieli
hould array agitiest her the powers of the
riplc Atlittimei
. And, again, n event of re
a; between Fraiitee and England, the
resende of it Russian fleet in Meeliterran-
ari waters, would be of capital importance
o the rspnblie
A settenatto or 'mu •tx
eYSISr,„%1111,,...,-414,111M h" ongtholoa_.
04 ov
us ranee n tat: leVe fo
0 eatitern einpire and the weeitern re -
relent/ Gerlanney ee've a Shifting of the cen.
ter af politieed ittterest and dang,or from
the Rhine ead the Alps to the Benet= an
the Beeptiortle. It ia noteworthy, tee, thet
the eeme vieW prevailed in Itolta And
since that time teething has othurred-atioe
even the " Italien nets" in Framoe-to in-
dleate the imminenee of anything like a
orittie in the iuternational reletione of Frence
and RIllieitt with Germany and Italy. It to
evident thet C'aprivi end Celea1 gaVe the
same interpretation to the eigne of the
timee,
Engleud alone hag hown pertnebetion.
The sending of an English fleet to Spezzie
wee Lord Roseberyts Deemer th the presence
of a %mien fleet in the Mediterranean.
The trauquility in Berlin and Rome and
the tee:disguised Anxiety in London and
Vienna ere indices a the direotion sind par -
port of the coming war,
A, CIONKIRHATOBY PRI4T610).
There is one incident slight in. itself,
which adds etrong confirmation to the
view I have taken of what is inadequetelY
gelled the " Baroperen situations" Till"' is
theparticipation et Sande ire the threetrical
welcome France gave to the Russian
Whore. It means that tee breach betteeen
Austria end Servia is completed, and that
this fretful kingdom has beeonie a military
outpoet of Russia, esteblished between Bul-
garia and Vienna.
The alliance of France ond Ruesia is anti -
English rather than anti -German. It is
in their oommon hostility to England that
France and Russian interests find the best
field for combined operations. There are
already instances of this, on. the one side,
in the Pemirs end the opening of the Dar.
dawdles, on the other, in the defeat of the
minion to Moroecot the ousting of
Britiali entetnrise front Syria, the decrease
of British infleenee ia Egypt, the blow to
13ritish prestige in Siam and the develop.
tnent of Frenoh preponderance in the leled
terranean. In Egypt alone has E ngland
been able to make any effective reeistanoe
to Eren.oh progress,
Surely Germany is not coneerned in thia
matter,- except in a secondary way. She
'night prefer the preponderation of British
Rather than. French influence it the east,
but she has no direct concerti with the
ea,atern question. In any tate she could.
not afford to iuclude England in the Triple
Alliance,and for the sake of harming France
eetabout defending the world-wide interests
of Great Britain.
In fact, she may well let Austria out of
the Triple Alliance, finding it unwise to
attempt to buttress up this rotten obstacle
against Russia's way to the south.
nut DESPERATION' OP ITALY.
Italy alone has more to gain than to lose
by an immediate resort to war. To be sure
an unsuccessful war might bring down. the
house of Savoy, or lead to theepareellation
of the peninsula' but in che opposite event,
which is deemedmore probable, the dynes.
ty would be rehabilitated in popular esteem,
and,in the end, the fithal burdens would be
lightened. Hatred of France and papular
discontent are groveing rapidly, and there
is some probability that Italy in her dee-
perate and reckless con.clition may declare
war 'at any moment. This would,„ast I have
tried to thew, merely precipitate the larger
war which makes for France and Russia, in
the east. •
It is worthy of note that the impression
in Rome Is that the Vatican will really
welcome a crisis in Italian affairs and its
influence is said to be for it war in which it
has little to lose, and groat possibilities to
gain in the reconstruction of the Govern-
ment by any agency.
This, then, is their state of affairs. And
while Russia is steaming her warships
through the straits, and the French eagle
is cock -a -hoop, I can read in the coming
wet nothing but a menace to England and.
Austria. For Russia the command of the
Dardanelles and a high way to, India; for
France supremacy in Siam and Egypt.
Almost any event may bring on the war -
the perversity or bewildeement of the Sul-
tan, the mistake of a French 'sharpshooter
in Africa, or the cropping out of a fiscal
scandal in Italy. The immediate rause does
not much matter; the causa causans is the
Dardanelles. "
These straits are so narrow that with a
rifle you know you can bring down nine
times out of ten a blu e evano flapping up
from the reeds on the opposite bank. But
give the white Tsar coalman d. of thern and
English supremacy in the east is at end.
Keeping this fact in mind, it is not un-
reasonable to predict that the next war will
be fought over that part of the world. -
[V ance Thompson, in the Empire.
A SPEEDY VOYAGE.
Great interest Man fires ten in the Delivery
or the American limes In England.
A London despatch says :-The White
Star Line steamer Majestic, Capt. Parallel],
from New York, for Liverpool,via. Queens.
town, passed Daunt's Rock at 4.42 o'clock
this morning, having made the passage to
that poitt in six -days, six hours and fifty-
seven minutes, Daunts Rock is the point
off which the mail steamers stop to leaden
take on board by tenders passengers and,
mail bags. The Majestic landed 05 bags of
mail for points in IreIand,aml at 5.5) o'clock
proceeded for Liverpool. It is expected
that the mails on board of her destined for
London wil I ar rive hereby midnigh t to -nigh t.
Mtush interest is felt in tbe delivery of
thew mails, for the reason that the Ameri-
can line steamer New York, Cxpt. Jamie-
son, which left New York on the sazne
day as the Medestic, bile bound for
Southampton, had a heavy mai, whieh it
• was said sh:s would. attempt to have put
down in London before the Majestic's mails
arrived. Despatches received here on the
day the steamers sailed stated that, the
Mitred° crossed the bar ab Sandy Hook at
4.26 p: m„, just fear minutes ahead of the
NOW York. At the time this despatch is
sent -8 a. m. -the ltrew York hae not been
sighted at any of Lloyd's signal stations.
The steamship New ork passed the Scilly
Telex:de at 2.25 this p. m, She will not math
her doolc at Southampton until about 1.80
o'clock toanorrow morning. The meil 8110
carries will, it is expected, reach the Lon -
dos Post Offiee at 4 a. in.
London, Feb, 1. -The train carrying the
mall matter from the stoma, Majeetio left
Liverpool at 8,22 last evening, and arrived
at the Easton Station, London, at 12,56 this
morning. The mail bags reached the post
office at 1.25 o'clock, The steamer New
York arrived at Southampton at I &clot&
this morning. Her mails ate not expected
to reach London before 5 o'cloek.
Bitikees---" I don't eee *how's you can
laugh at Stephead's insane joked" Winkers
-‘' You would if you knew hie pretty ais.
ter."
That unpleasant eensation knOWn as
• singing in the ear generally results from
the hardening of the wax. It may frequent-
ly be removed at oneee by yringing the ear
with it little watne seep and water or ley
droppiug & libtle glyeerine ofl into the ear
at bedtime. If these remedies 40 nob
• answer, a mustard poultice applied lust
behind the ear at bedtime, and. repeated, if
necesSary, two or three nights, is A5 almost
certain cure.,
%hare tire sortie dangers la sca,.bathing
which can be generally avoided by presence
of mind. Here are a few hinte reSpecting
• thein ;-"If the swiromer snceald be eaten
out by a current he should try to swim
aerom it diagonally towards a spot 05
talok0, 6,0a then swim to Shore, If carried
out when floating he sheuIti never 1088
Ceara ge, but brats himself up for a long
hard Mimi. •OrtiMp is the tire:tiled bane of
.the matinee
TIJE T SCHOOL
1NZEBN TIONAL $43,4Igat rEs 18,
• 17., 1-9..GOLD IM TWIT
-GEN. 15. Oa
MeetentOnnert =Nies.
There ace terenterefour peers between the
dates of tide letAiten aa, the heed The his.
tory of this iaterval le recorded in Getesie
12-10, The leeding events are---Abrant's
sojourn in Egypt (12e 1.0-20); Me eturn
o °gnaw (13 t1-4) ; his tieparatitnt froni
Lot and eettlement at Hebron (13 de -18) ;
the 41°111'40n of Ohedorlaomer And the
eepture of Lot (11 ; 142) ; Abram reties
Lot (14 « 13-10) ;his meeting with the king
of Sodom and withMelchizedek,. king of
Belem (14: 17-e4); the covenentwith Abram
(15 :1-1); Abram making Hagar his wite
(16 : 1-3) ; the flight of Heger, her return
end the birth of Ishmael (16 4-16) e the
oovenant renewed and the namee of Abram
en Sara changed to A„brahain and Sarah,
which is the subjeet of tide lemson,
DT PARDAIIII10.
L A New Promise. V. 1, When amen
was ninety years old and nine. -Twenty -
our years after his departure from Hareem
and thirteen years after the birth of lehnutel.
The Lord appeared unto Abram. --In three
visible form or manifestation. 1. am the
Almighty God. -The all-aufficient, and
therefore possessing the powers to fulfill his
promises even when the order of native
presented no prospect of their fulfillment
and the power of nature were insuffieient
to seoure it, Welk before me.--.0easoious
of my piesence and anxious for my ap-
proval. Be thotiperfeet.--Entirelyrcouform.
ed to ray mind and will. Matteo: 48. V:
2, I will make my oovenant. Not an add-
itional covenant to that deacribeclin chapter
15, but an intimation that the ceareetant
already concluded was about to be carried
into execution, and the promise of a son to
be more specifically determined as the off.
sprine of Serai, Will multiply thee ex-
ceedingly.--Gen.12: 2; 13: 16; 15; 5. V,3.
Abram fell on hia faee.-In, reverential awe
and „worehip. God talked with hi m. -We
do not know in what way. V. 4. My cov-
enant is with thee, -The covenant already
made with him. Thou shalt be. -Aa I have
already promisedin my covenant,
ANe-sv Name, V. 4. -The covenant is
now attested by the giving of a new Dante,
Abrar. -High. father. But Abraham.-
Fether of a mulbitude, as the next clause
explains. The new name was to Abraham
as 0, new life to find the promise growing
more clear, the gifts of God's goodness more
palpable and evident. V. 6. I will make
riatitins of thee. A promise fulfilled in the
Ishmaelites, and the Edonaites, but more
eapecially in the Ishnutelites, and in all the
spiritual teed of Abraham, the father °fall
the faibhfult Eings.-David and Solomon,
and the Messiah, the King in Zion. V. 7.
An everlasting covenant. -For all ages, all
dispensations, all believers in all the world
to the end of time.
*III. A New Uountry. I will give
unto thee . . the land. -It hadbeen pre-
viously promised to Abraham and. his pos-
terity, (chapter 15 : 8.) Here it is promis-
ed as an everlastingpossession, andwas there-
fore a type of 'heaven, the "better country."
(Heb. 11: 16.) This heavenly Canaan shall
be the inheritance of Abraham's spiritual
children forever. 1 win be their fiod.-A
promise and pledge of all spirjtual blessings
V. 9. Thou shallereep my eovenand -Faith-
fully perform thy duty in relation there-
unto.
QUBSTIblIS ON THIt LESSON'.
I. A New Promise. va, 1-4.
When did the Lord appear to Abram?
By what name did he declere himself ?
NV hat command did he give? Meaning a
walk before nes? Of be thou perfect?
What did the Lord etroinise Abram? What
did Abram do? Whet did this act and pos-
ture express? What did God say? How was
the covenant promise here expressed?
II. • A New Name, vs. 5-7
What new name did -the Lord give to
Abram? Meaning of the 128.510 Abram?
Of the new name Abraham? Of what
promises was this new name the pledge?
What nations were descended from Abra-
ham? What kings? Who are meant by
the seed of Abraham?
III. A New Country. vs. 8, 9.
What new country did the Lord promise
to Abraham and his seed? For how long
were they to possess it? Meaning of I will
he their God? What did God command
Abraham for his part of the covenant? Of
what was the land of Canaan a type? To
whom is heaven promised as an everlasting
possession? •
• CLOSING WORDS.
',MOE8 U1 O131:'
• God's promises are mann and precions,and
he never forgets them. We may trust him
even 111 the darkest hour. Though we may
sometimes have to wait long for the fulfil-
ment, our trust will not be vain. Observe
how God reassures the faith of Abraham,
not only by the repetition of his promises,
but also by enlarging and extending them.
His language has- a wondrous weath of
meaning. It included not only Abraham's
immediate posterity, but also his spiritual
children. How gloriously has it been ful-
filled 1 Christ the Lord, the king of Zion,
was descended from Abraham, and all be-
lievers in all ages are children of fadthfpl
Abraham. A mightyhost of redeemed
ones v.re already praising God in mansions
prepared for them. Mightier host are
still to follow from all nations and kindreds
and tongues. ..abrahain believed in the
Lord. He trusted the word of God. If
we become the children of Abraham we
must believe, Faith, love and obedience
are the whole of religion. By faith we be-
come interested in this covenant and entitb
ea to all its privileges. God will be our
God ; new names, new nattires, a new in-
beritance 'will be Oven to. us. Believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ and you shell be an-
cepted, pardoned and saved.
CANADIAN CHEESE.
An American Paper Sees Why It outsells
the American ArtitIe.
The veeetern Ontario dairymen's aasooia
then, says the Ohio Fartner, held a very
successful annual meeting at Ingersoll, laet
week. John Gronici, Whe wag one of the
speakers, co,ys it was attended by theJargest
crowd ever asserahled for a like purpose -
over 500, from every part of theDontinion,
with representatiyes from &ahead and
west to Manitoba. The offinittle of the
Dominion were there and took part itt the
priMeedinge. There were eight sessionteall
inteni
sely ntereating and instruotive, and
some Of them five hours in length. Canada
is enthusiastic over her victories at Chic:ego,
where she swepb everything. Her dairy
interest is rapidly increasing. In five years
she has doubled her cheeen exports, and
last year they amounted to $13,000,000.
The inditatty is Well fostered by the gate -
emu -tient, It has a greet dairy oommissiou
that rettehee every pert of the Dominion.
It has its dairy :schools tend inetructoes,
supported by the government. It abso-
lutely prohibits the manufacture and Attie
of oleo, hutterine, Ailed chettee, and edul.
terated goods in any form, and instead of
hunting up french: and prosecuting them,
the coMedssion devotes tte eaergies to at.
.sistiag the dairymen and promoting the
industry. She enjoye bluer:Mud distiudion
of being the °lily government, in the World
that le free from mild toreted dairy products,
and elie inekee no skimmed cheese -ell full
000451, Is it any weeder thet Canada
cheese oateells Any thab it made in the
United Slats, in any narteleeb at home or
abroad? Tho proeeedings of a &arsonist
meeting over there ette nob help being of
interest end tee to ota: readers) and a gooO
report, of this meeting wiflbo given. next
Week.
inee gnat ee
„Wand,
,egto fat
Singel xnaine fiehee are sotteetintee fouad
thettered abeet on dry land far from tea.
They ere transported by atorme Whieh at
fleet take the form of Waterseonte, sleeking
up the fluey ereetamee together with a
portion. of their neseive elemeat end eerrying
thern shoreward.. Showere of Imp and the
lervat of went:die inseete are pro:Kneed in tt
Millar fashion by tornadoes. JI -Vit 84 the
waterepent ie of tort treneformed int* 4 tort
nado on menhir% end pethiug over the land,
SO the "cyclone twister" will eomethnes
sleek e pond dry in pethieg. In feet, the
tornado and the weterspout are the same
thing. 1h0 latter is capable of deetroyieg
the largest ships. Doubtless tnany vessels
leave been deetroyed in this way)
• NO 086 SUR,nvING
to tell the tale, The waterapeat usually
travels at the rate of about thirty miles
an hour, or as feat as an ordinary express
trein, Ito mighty oolunanjoireing the Maude
with the ocean is mainly vapor, as ie judged
from the feet that physical laws would not
permit the water to be sueleed up to a
greater height then 33 feet.
Tornadoes are the most extraordinary,
and among the most deribrumive, of atenes.
pheric phenomena. It has been reeleaned
that, on an average, eaoh of them, costs one
• lite. The funnel shaped oloud which does
the damage rune at a speed of from forty. to
eighty miles an hour. It looks like an nn.
memo balloon, hlacle as night, sweeping lee
neok round and rourid with terrible fury,
and Witting everything to pieces ia its path.
Its track is alwaye from southeast to north -
thee, the width of it being rerely over 300
feet, Warning of the tores approach is
given by a still and sultry eir with a lurid
• or -greenish sky. People feerdlepressed wale.
out knowing why.
• Then comes the mighty funnel cloud, bel-
lowing like a million mad buns. In three
or four minutes it has passed. by, leaving
desolation behind it, and torrents et ram
relieve. No stracture that can be raised by
man above the surface of the earth will
resise this kind of storm. It perpetrates
!WAXY ErrnAonDIXAlrit mantes,
plucking chickens boas 'without hurting
them, tearing the hair from women's heads
and twisting it into ropes, and stripping
people naked and covering them with mnd.
Every tornado seems to carry great quanti-
ties of mud, It has been known to take
up a carpet from the floor to which it was
securely tacked and carry ib out of the
'louse without tearing it. On one occasion
a piece of scantling 7 feet long was driven
lengthwise through the body of a hog.
This gas that covers the surface of the
earth, by which we live by breathing, is. a,
wonderful element. The electricity which
pervades it, though employed for various
useful purposes by man, is a mystery- yet.
Some of its phases are astonishing end, be-
yond explaining. For exernple, there is
the moat intense form of it known, termed
globular lightning. Ib takes the forni of
spheres of dezzling brilliancy. Such spheres
were seen playing about during the great
Louisville tornado. People on board of
ships have often observed balls of fire "as
big as barrels" rolling along the surface of
the ocean. These spheres aro apt to burst
with deafening reports.
MURDER. AND SUIOIDD.
proniere Shoots Ins S niter and Himself,
A Montreal despatch says :-There was a
shocking tragedy on Champ de Mars street
this morning.,
Philias Dufresne, aged 28, shot his
married sister through the head and, then
shot himself in the temple. Both are
dead.
Mrs. Brunelle, the murdered woman,
kept the house, 126 Champ de 1Vtars street,
four of the roams being let to boarders.
The house is large and is kept in a cleanly
manner. Mrs. Brendle lived apart from
her husband. LOSt fall her brother,
Philias Dufresne, returned from theUnited
States where he had been for years pur-
suing his trade as eigarmaker. He was a
consumptive. Two week ago he had to
leave his work in IVIontreal. Lately he has
been depressed and strange in his manner.
He al -ways sleeps with a loaded revolver
under his pillow. Sometimes he said to
his sister, 'el' am going to die and you win
be all alone in the world; it would. be
better if we could die together."
.Last night he was heard walking his bed-
room all through the night. This morning
the sister-in-law of the murderer lefb him
in the house with his victim. The rest of'
the leoarders were away. Returning about 11
o'clock she found Mrs. Brunelle lying on
the floor, fallen from the chair by a window
where she was knitting. The sister-in-law
raised an alarm, and then there was heard
e. thud and a faint noise. Re-entering the
room Philias Dafresne was found sitting in
ohair behind the door, dead. He hal
evidently only shot himself after his sister-
in-law'e return.
• The interior of the room had the appear..
mace of a shambles. The police were noti-
fied and Sergeant Soullieres and Sub -
Constable Girard went to the scene with
Dr. Bouchard. They found the unfortunate
brother and Sister past all aid. The woman
was shot twice, once in the front of the
forehead and again at the side. The man
evidently held the revolver close to his
head. The walls and farniture were a
ghastly sight.
Mrs. Brunelle is descrilaed as a woman
of twenty-one years, bandsome, of very
quiet ways and seldom going out of the
house.
flow to ataG-"Sunlight" Pieture.
Send 25 "Sanlight" Soap wrappers (the
large wrapper) to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43
Seotb $t. Toronto, and you will reoeive by
post a pretty pieture, free front advertising
and well worth frafning. This se an easy
way to decorate your home. The soap is
the best in the market, and it will only cost
lc postage to sand in the wmppers, if you
leave the ends open. Vsrrite your address
carefully.
fie Rad railsd Before.
Itardestestie-I'm afraid I've got to fail,
business is so bad, end go to the wall.
Mre. Ilterdeastle-Oh, that's so nice of
you, Wili ! Now I can get that lovely seal-
skin I've been wanting 1
0
TO Days
Oh, the days goue by; Olt thadeyo teolie by
The ape i tile orehat end. the pathWa
tereUgh, the rye;
The thierim (it the robin tnd bhewbists or th
As he piped acrese the inoipwe aws�t et alt:
nighingale; -
dlithertttee bleom wen on the Waver, uM bit
blue was M the eke,
And di y happy bead lateatried over,in the day
gone
Oic daY,'s gone by, when mynaked feet wer
e tripped
y the tioneytheklees tangles, where the wato
lflt dipped,
Ana the xinple ef llte river lipped the mos
• • , along the brink,
Where the piaold-oyed and lazy -footed cattl.
oame to drink,
Ana the tiiteug snipe stood forirlese or th
, truant's warned cry. , •
.4eid the splashing of the sWiltiltiet, m the clay
gone by,
Oh, the days gone by! Oh. the days gone by !
The trio of the laughing hp, tho luster Of th
The chili7.1sh faith in fairer, and elladdita
rnegic ring,
'The shriek), soul-repoeing, glad beliefin everY
thing, • _
When life wee like aStorY; holding neither so
nor sigh,
In the olden, golden glory of the days gene by
• -Mimes Whiteomb
The Sleigh. Bide -
.rust roomier two, not too mon room;
I tuck her in all snug apd warm;
I'm eorisoions of her bait s perfume
And of the nearriev of her ann.
I shake the lines out free and p.y,
The sleigh bells chime, and were away.
Aerase the crisp and glittering FRIONV,
Leaving behind the eity strew.,
Its gariQx glare and n i*e, we go
Into the tiarknose still and sweet;
And here end there a household gleam
Flits by us in it flying dream.
Birti:siTeittbbealhi
orttgoarYeltYlv4erriYVtealid1d11.
And every star is white tn heaven
• And every field is 'white on earth.
How dark tho brightness seem, how brIght
The darkness of the winter night!
We pass the open road like wind,
But in the dim and shadowy lanes
Our wild pace slaelcenS. and 1 find
Ono band enough to bold the reins;
.And, somehow, when Itry to speak,
Itly words are kieb,es on her cheek.
Ali, life is fair in Many ways,
And. full of dear, enchanting hourst
And love is sweet in summer days,
'Mid blossoming paths and eylvanbowers
But let mo choose, all bliss above,
A sleigh ride with tho gir1I love.
'When Sissy Starts to Elar
Oh, there'ssadness in the household,and there'
gloom upon the street -
When Sissy starts to play on the Manner.
The robins and the bob -o -links, they beat
swift retreat -
When Sissy starts to play on thenianner,
Even the organ -grinder passes swiftly by th
• gate,
His empty- tin -cup in his hand, his eyes a-gleaxr
with hate;
The neighborhood for blocks around is strang
ly -desolate-
When Sissy starts to play on the planner.
The young man in the parlor is sitting Pale a
death -
When Eissy starts to play on the Manner.
While father thinks the house Loo warm an
goes to get a "breath "-
When Sissy_sterts to play on the pianiter.
The tote -cats jump from °Utile fence and flyt
parts unknown
Where they may charm the stilly night wit
And "krliZia°1.s
0- iiflaleainrTtgi
os the moon out in th
yard alone--
When Sissy starts to play on the planner.
The dItisphoenstkaeaevirootlril pantry shelves and ro
When Sissy starts to play on the .pianner.
And grandma says sb.e's positive a burglar's it
the door -
When Sissy starts to play on the planner.
Oh, what woe and mortal anguish upon m
mind descend!
What haste anddesperation allmymovemen
attend! _
Excuse me --T must snatch my hat a-ne. go t
see a friend -
When Sissy starts to play on the planner.
"Bairnies Cuddle Doom"
poem askedfor by several eorreSpondents.
• Tbebairnies middle doon at nicht,
WI inuckle faucht an' din:
• "0, try and sleep ye waultriferoguesi
Your father's comin' in."
They never heed a word I speak;
try to gie a froon,
But aye I hap them up, an' cry,
"0, barflies, cuddle loon."
Wee Jamie ver the curly held,
• He aye sleeps next -pie vva',
Bangs up and cries, want apiece!"
Therascal starts thorn a',
I rin an' fetch them pieces, drinks,
They stop awee the satin',
Then draw the blankets up an' cry,
"Noo weanies, cuddle doon."
But ere live minutes gang, wee Bob
Cries oat, free 'I:Leath the olaes,
Mither, mak' Tem gie owerat mace,
H ss wi' his tame'
The mischief's in that Tam for tricks.
He'd bother half the tom
BuFaye r hap them up au' ory"
"0, bairuies, cuddle doon."
At length they hear their father's fie,
An' as he streeks the door
They turn their faoes to the wa:,
. While Tam pretends to snore.
"Hee the weans been wild!' he asks,
As he pits at' his sheen.
"The baumies, john are in their beds,
An' lartg since cuddled doon."
An' just afore we bed emelt;
Welook a,t nor verse lamb%
Tam has his anti nun' woe Rab's neck,
An Rab his o.itm roan" Tam's,
I lift wee Jamie up the ',bed, .
An' as Isla:Mk each croon,
I whisper till my heart fWs
"0' baitnies, middle demi.
The bairnies cuddle doon at nicht
WI' mirth that's dear tae me;
But suns the bitc warld's °ark and care,
Wilt quaten down their glee.
Yet come -what will to ilka ane.
May He who sits aboon
Aye whisper, though their pews bo bauld,
"0, bairnies, middle doon,"
-[alex.,Anderson,
The Twenty -Third Ban.
(In Scotch Verse-)
My min guld shepherd is the Lord,
Wha, leaves ohnue the sky:
Ave kin an earefti' been 0' me,
15 a' the years gane by.
Hoo oan X ever be Muff,
Since He gangs at my side
Fe_r my soul an'body'S weal,
shairly will provide.
kte gles ine a quote home tee rest,
Wi' dearest anes at nicht
.A.n` When the mornhe debt blinks itt
I'm up, an' oot, sae brichn
For me, He waleth Oka step,
XY hale day's wark He sees;
What'S rieht tam Mier 4011 dae,
My bonnie Chief tae tlease.
In trouble sair, His lips drap doon
Gran' gracious words o' cheer;
'That what I get Hiniser in skald
lily hrt noo kens nee fear.
We loytng hanes. He sprceds my board,
An' takerme tae His bricet;
In spite tt" a' me faes aroon'-
I lino e denty feast,
The gladsome oil rine °tyro my hold,
Th melee me ea -theme ehinet
Sweet etrenant Sup eve blessing best,
lie tells rise a' aro mime
Twa faithfte emote ere flee eve me,
Guduioasitn' Morey fah;
Until stay in heevenly fade,
Wi' JsoUS over there,
Gareiaer, Gletigow,
taby yoga*, we sta,sllot Clest.cds,
rbap showas a Child, talin cried eter Cesterle,
he became illi, elle clung to Citstori
e Olalletiene show
'
popular
(lve,..5
Th.
c3oo1
'
money,
T,
....
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, •
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•
B. P
Va.,
1
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prtct
bcu
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MA5T1FF
, PLUO CUT
' . 15 rnaKin
pi pe -51110 h i I")
becauie
more for
este Tonaceo Co,, Richmond,
and 1VIentreal, Canada.
e,
le k
eo
,
(i) .
It
the
THE KEY TO
i.,-
!,
...
17111001M &lithe eloggeti
Bowels, 3T_Itriuszys
ing.off graduallrwithout
Oystera, all the impurities
humors of the) secret
time Correcting
Stomaela, maring Biliousness,
pensia,, Honftehes,
aeartburs Coruslipation
et' the elralp Dropsy',
Vision, .113,uncliee
Sedesipelas„ ScroZlia,
the Heart, Nervornmess,
oral Debility; all
other similar Complaints
happy influence
LOOD Bite:Meat B,
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Salt laneutni
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Same;
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