ANATOMICAL ANALOGY OF ANIMALS l8l 



ing, even by those who pay little attention to its 

 most sublime and important application. 



There is an effort by some materialists to find the 

 supposed missing link between man and the ape, but 

 there cannot be any scientific reason for expecting 

 to find a missing link between any of the species. 

 Any remains of extinct animals which prove to be 

 a separate species, simply adds one more species to 

 the animal kingdom, and that is all. 



M. Cuvier, a short time before his death, had 

 formed a classification of extinct animals, and his 

 collection of the species that are now lost to the 

 world, amounted to about seventy, which would in- 

 dicate that the theory of a missing link is not scien- 

 tific to say the least for it. 



Mr. Darwin admits himself, that "the great 

 break in the organic chain between man and 

 his nearest allies cannot be bridged over by any 

 species." 



Evolutionists fail to establish theories of a per- 

 manent and tangible nature. They go back to the 

 origin of forms and attribute a starting-point to 

 the laws of nature, ignoring the fact that there 

 cannot be a law without a law-giver. There must 

 be an intelligent First Cause to make such laws 



