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Exeter Times, 1900-5-10, Page 6, THE EXETER TIMES nEGAL. • ilICKSON eAe CARLING, nee nlarrieters. Solicitors. Notaries. Ooaveyaseets, commwener,, Meow to Loan at 41 per oneb. vela 5 per cent. OFFICE t.-FANSON'S BLOCE. ENR1nn. eta miaow% fe- income menbe*l e firm wilt be at Hewett ou 'thumb:ay or veal), week. R g..001, -441.N8, itarrister ,Solicitor. Couveraocer,Etc. Bamegu. O. OFFICE * Over owstrs Bat LUOT & OLADATAN, 'misters, Solidtors, Notaries Pablic, Couveyancers ,tos e4o. lac -Money to Loan. orricE, ALLIS -S.-CURB% exzrztt. rxmov. It. W. Ot.arnian. _ _ etErtIOAn _ . at. IL BITERS. 3. B. 'TORONTO on vEasrrv. Ito 1M.('. M. Tauity 1.7tilver fflee—Crediton, On.. , 1) r$,ROLION8kel.3104, OtrertileOfiletts. Beeltienetteettesee foresee iy.endrave et. UtliteeiSpeekaten'e beielinee lento( lir goatee tweet:as formerly, seeM , M 31o. Amos' (Ause telit,bn4, south. de4e, .7.1.A. liteLLINS. M.O. led. aelliee, el. „S Beetle elma W11. C., • o. ti. Orsetuets V,e tot is, du • et reel ealee reeideuee. Vete:awe Inhere. rrery, Exeter. H.INDUAL coroner foe the st auras,. ottics, (wont" earien inee.atortairlieter. _ AllOTIONBERO. ROSSENBERRT, General Li- censed enetcorreev sego ettaiumee t•lin t4. Sattataationg taratiteret. Oherees stet:erste. Ile eating 0.tion iiENJYEILBER LiConaed ARCH tsoneeo Soo the Q: 41144, ecd miateieseez sees* eanaucitee at elate rate' teeete. et Poet -mile* Orel. tee Q. laideltINARZ, Tennent & lennen 3.5,MMEU. omelette of ebe fMtario Vetairtere fleet -Ono deer stuth ef Town Ilfaile fl'HE WATERLOO mtrruzu.4 „a, Onto 1Niti'ReNe co. ($I4I4J IU tssa„ fiEAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, o,vr friale Company ilea been over Verney -44e lurk. in auccessful operttiom le %Voltam mariv,aee continues to inoireagiuma lets ir dowager by Vint. !mildew, allirehen luso boureinefonestu 1 tal other desteeptioes h ourablettreareriv. Intimater insurers rem elepetion Q inauringen the eroluiute Ace if itas,u)..)stote. Durine the riot tett years this min.:easy has inettisent. °Nees. CO vorun: property to tea ate,wt 0. soeneett; nud pate in losses elorite Aesers, %tOO,OOconsisting et Cash in I lurk Government Deposarastil the untosese aed lestinunt Notes on butt aud to form oatee.aLle. President; al„ 'lat non 11614,0 aryl. [trellis, Ineeenee, men, Bl LL, Agt nt for Exeter and viainity. , otesagaaaaarx4)33033iiiek?a The Great &WNW Experiment Int all the sciences whieb, have poz- zIed the, sous a men, none Itad such an attraction for the learned rrofes- tor von Baumgarten as those whic/a relate to psychology and, that fined relations between mind and matter. A celebrated anatomist a profound ehenaist, and one of the first physlologista in, Europe, it was re- lief for him, to turn from these Sub- jecte and. to bring hie varied ham - %age to bear upon the study of the sou( and the mysterious relationship f spirits. At first, wizen as a young man he began to dip into the secrets or Mesmerism. his mind seemed to be wanderlog in a strang� land where all was chaos and darkness. save that here and there some greet, lailexPlain- abie and disconnected at lammed met in front of him. At The years passed, bowever. aged as the worthy profee- sees stock' or knowledge increased - for knowledge. begets knowledge 3.5 plOneY hears interest-neueh which had seemed strange and unaecouatable began tet tako another shape in his ones. Now train e recteoning be came familier to him. and be Pertlavei connectine linke where alt bee been ineomprehensible and atartling. By expertmente which; extembot over twenty years. he obtainea a basis fl)f tats upon wbich it was bis ambition to build up a new exact science wbieb should embrace, mesmerietto spirituel- anct all cogna.te aubjects. In this he was inuell helped by We intimate knowledge a tbe more intricateeparts of anuemi plitraiology which treat of , nerve eurrosts. and the working of t the braio; .or Alexia von Baumgarten I was Reglea Profeesor ot IntysiologO 999') for the coadition of clairvoyance, whiele ha n falleu into disrepute tbrough the knavery of certain scoun- drels, but .whieb, can eaaily be shown to be an undoubted facia? I have been able myself, with a sensitive Subject, tG ebtain an accurate deseriptson of what was going on in another room or another: have. How eau such knewledge„ be aceonnted for on any hypothesis save that- the soul a the subject Iles left tbe body and is wan- dering through, space? For a moment tt recalled by tile voice of tbe oper- ator and says whet it ba,s seen, mad then wings its way once more through the air. Since, the spirit is by ite very oature invisible, we lean aot eee these ceanings and goings, bait we sea their effeet the body of the. ettb- jeet, now rigid and inert, now etreg- glow to narrate impressione wbith eoulet never bave come al it by natuoat means. There is( only one way which I can see by Nehioh the fact can he deneoristrated. Although we. to the fleet* are unable se gee thine quilts, yet our own spitits, could. we aeper- ate them from the body, would be coll- ie:taus of the presence ef otbers. It in my intention, shortly to ineemerize one of MY. pupiie. I shalt then mese raerize isayielf in a „Wanner whieh hes heroine easy, to me. Atter tbat, my theory beide good, sny spirit will have no difficulty in meeting and earn Mulling with. the spirit of ItaY PoPilA both being separated from the body bope to be able to communicate the reault of this interesting experiment AU au early number a the Kninplatz' wt" at tbe. University of Heinpletz. anal o;benitelut Medicalschrif. Whee the good protessor liad all the resources a the laboratory fulfilled his prt mise. and published an to aid him in his prefound reseerehe tecount of w t occurred the naraa- es. two was so extraordinary that it was Professer von Detougitrten w vi tell 1, reeeteed with general ince edulity. The thin, wile a hetebet Owe, and tone at some, of the pepere was so o - 8 Y88 whioh were singular- fensive in their re:animate upon the rigbt, and penetrating. eleoh metter that the angry savant declare nauglat bad turrowed his forehead tal tint he would ever open bit contracted lieevy eeehrinatio 11-10Oth again or refer to the subject 11 component° you, you will find pee ready and willing." "Then listen,. setn Fritz, solemn - y. "If Yon will PledOe your word that after this experiment I may have the hand ef your daughter, then I am willing to stesist yon o but if not, shall have nothing to do with it. Tbese are ray only terms," "And what would my daeighter say to Me?" the profeamor eaclauted, after a pause ot astonishment„ "Elise would aveleome it," the young nein replied. "We have loved eaela other long:" "Then she shall be yours," the PhY- eicologist said with decision, for you are a goad -hearted youeg Man, and one of the best neurotic subjeets that I hare aver Imoweeetimt when you are not under the, influence of alco- hol. My experiment Is to be performs en upon the fourth of next month. You will attend at the physiological laboratory at twelve o'clock. It will be a great occasion, Frttz. Von Gra- ben is coming front Jena, and Hinter- etein from Basle. The chief men of science of all South Germany will be there." "1 sball be punctual," the student said briefly, and so the two parted. The prefeesor plodded homeward, thinking of the great coming tweet, at. the young man staggered along after his noisy companions, with bis oiled full of the bitteeeyed Elise. and of the bargain which, he bad eonclon- d with be r father. The prefeetior did not exaggeroto when he Wake of the widespreed in- terest excited by hie novel melon experlinerit. Long before the hour bed erriveid, the room was filled by a galaxy of talent. IlesiOee the celebritiee whom he bad mention- ed, there had come from London the great Prefeeeor Lureber, who bad juat established his repietation by e re- Wackaide treatise tqn Peng-all cen- ters. Several. great !wine ot theSpire 14131'04W body had also cone a long dietauce to lie present, tie bad a Swe- denborgian minister, who eonsidered tb tt the proeeedinge might throw some ligitt Allen the dectrines of the ilosy Cross. There was coneieterable applause treen this eminent aseetubly upon the einiraranee et Profeesor von Baumgare tee :sad Ins aubjeet upen the platform. The leeturer, in a few wellerhesen tint be *e3rc 1u%cur8 per. in any way- e premise wind* he !me worde. 0018111ml what Ille views owe tilet frown, whieh often misled f aillifully kept. This narrative bas and how be prop?sed to teat them. "I P(8 as to Ins etimeteir. for though been compiled, bowever, from tbe most hold," be said. " that whee a person anetere be was tenflereheerlet He authentic SPUreeS, and the events eit- is under the influenee of mesmerieue was prpelar amen; the eitndt WI% who eat in it rely be relied upan as substan. his spirit is for the time releoseti Irene woula gather round him after /IN ler- •"IV rurroet. his body, and I challenge rielY one 10 tures and listen eagerly to his strange It beppened then, that shortly haft' lint forward any other bypotbeele theories, Often be woalii (all for eel- the time when Profeasoe eon Beom„ which will aceount for the fact of unteers from* tenon; them in order garten conceived Me idea of the sbove- clairvoyance. I therefore hope that, to conduct some experiment; so tbat mentioned experiment, be wee walhing urml Enesra"/Zinermyyoung (newt eveinuelly there was tiredly a, eel an theughtfully boulevard after a tong hero, and then putting myself into the class who bad not. at one tone or:, day in the laboratory, when ho met a trance, our spirits may II° able' to another, been thrown iuto a niestrierie a crowd of roisteriug studenia wbo cenomene together, though our bodies nee by lye erofessor. '0 bad eleat streamed out frenI a boor. He still rind inert. ;Wei a me na- Of an thoseyomig nookoroi - house. Az zee twee ot teem bale in. tare will resume her away, our spirits science there was none who equaled iu 'will return into our reepertive boatel toxieeted and very noisy, was ogling enthusiasm Fritz von Hartmann It Fritz van Hartmann. The professor and all , kind permiesion WO shell now proeeeil will he as before. With your had often ecouted strange to Ws fel- would have passed them, but his pupil foto-students that wild, reekless Fnen across and intercepted bine Fritz, ran Hot 1 my worthy 1 to attezupt the experhnent." as dashing a young fellow as ever master," be said,' The appleueo was renowee at titie hailed from the Rhinelands, should de- taking the -old man by tho sleeve, and speech, and tbe audience settled down vote the these and tremble wbich he !Failing littn down the toed with lam. in expectant silence. With e feW rapid did in reading up abstruse worke and There is somethieg I bane to say passes the professor mesmerized the in assisting. the professor in his to you, and it is easier for mo to say young man, who sunk back in lus I woo, i mitinegow, wheu the good beer is hum- eheir, pale and rigid. Re then took a in my head, than at anotber bright giobe of glees from his strange experitaents. The fact however, than Fritz was a lenowin TJ M1EXETER MIES Is eubliehed ovary Thunder morning ab Times Steam Printing Home Walt street, :smith' tesposite Fittotesje weir, store, Butter, Ont.. by JOHN k SUNS, Proprietor& nAl.rei pa. aoltniormING: liblisaeotion, per line IP canoe Elia subsequent ineertion.Per line- 3 cones Toinsure insernth on, aertisements should tomtit in not. later than Wedneaday morning. OurJOB PIZIN TING DEPARTMENTis one C1 Ile largest and best equippedin the County 01 Iimon. Ail work en . rusted to us will re. ce.ve our prompt atteuton. Dirdl eristeus Iteguug Nevrspapers. 1—Any peteon who takes a p.tpor regularly from the post mince, whether directed in bia name or another's,or wnether he has subscri ed Or not, respmstbie for payinent. 2—if a person orders his paper erscontinued be mu -t. pay ell arrears or the pub isher may eontintte to send it until the payment le made, and men collect the whoie amount, vEhether the paper is taken from the office or not. 3 -In. Emits tor subscri pt ons, the suit may be instituted In the place where the p.tper is pub- lished, aitb.ough the subscriber may reside hun ireds of radial; away.. 4.—The courts have deot led that; refusing to take nt wspapers or periodicals frotn the posb office. or removing and leaving them uncalled Lor, is prune. facie evidenze of intentional frond. CARTEKS erTLE OVER PILLS,. $.:VrItitr Sick Headache ancl relieve all the troubles inci- dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, &e, While their most remarkable success has been shown in curing Headache, yet CARTE:e8 LIT/LE LIVER Pate are equally valuable Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimidate the liver and regulate the bowies, Even it they only cured .eehe they would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortunately their goodness does not end here, and those who once try them will find these little pills valualide in so many 'ways that they will not be willing to do without Wenn But atter all sick bead Is thebane of so many lives that here is where We make our great boast. Our pilkt cure It while others do not. • Clintrares Isstrts lams Pitts me very small arid very easy to take. • 000 or two pills make a dote. They Etre strietly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; five for V. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail. •OftlITS11 1333A/Gillet cte,, Ider Toile , Smoll kft, ?dal trice. g t I' ket, and by core:en:rating his gaze end long -heeded. fellow. Months Le- in"' fore he had, lost his heart to- young • " Wbat is it, then. Fritz?" the phy- upon it and making a strontt mental effort, he suceeeried in throwing him- self into the same condition. It was a strange and impressive sight to see the old matt and tbe young sitting togethoe in the seine cataleptic con-, dition. Whither, then, had their souls fled? That was the question tvhiell presented itself to web and every one of the speotators. Llise, the blue-eyel, yellow -haired siologist asked, looking at hiui in inild daughter a th lecturer. Although 611rPriae'• he had succeeded in learning from her "1 bear, mein herr. that you aro lips that she was not indifferent to !Orient to do some wondrous experiment his suit, be bad never dared to an- in which you hope to take a man's soul nounee himself to her family as aeon out cif his body, and then to put it null suitor. Hence he would have 134°k again' Is it not so ?'' " It found it a difficult matter to see his is true, Fritz I" young lady, had be not adopted the " And have you considered, my dear expedient of making himself useful to the professor. By this means he fre- quently was asked to the old mans house, where he willingly submitted ta be experimented upon in any. way as long as there was a chance of his receiving one bright glance from the eyes of Elise or one touch of ber little hand. Young Fritz von Hartmann whs a handsome lad enough. There were broad acres, too, whieh would descend to him when his father died. To many he would have seemed an eligible suitor; but madame frowned upon his presence in the house, and leotured the professor at( times on his allowing snob a wolf to prowl around their iamb. To tell the truth, Fritz had an evil name in Keinplatz. Never was there a riot or a duel, or any other ratschief afoot. but the young Rhine- lander figured as a ringleader in it. No one used more free and violent language, no one drank more, no one played cards ,more habitually, no one was more, idle save on the one solit- ary subject. idle, wonder, then that the good Iran professOrm gathered her fraulein under her wing, and re- sented the attentions of sueh amen- vais &Wet. As to the worthy lecturer, he was, too mu -oh engrossed by- his strange studies to form an opinion up- on. the subject one way or the other. For many years there was one ques- tion which had continually obtruded itself upon his thoughts. All his ex- periments and. his theories turned up- on a single point. A hundred times a day the, professor • asked( himself whether it was possible fer the hu- man sptrit to exist apart from the body fon a time and then to return to it once again. When the possibi- lity first suggested, itself to hen his seientific mind had, revolted from it. It clashed too violently with precon- ceived ideas( and the prejudices of his early training. Gradually -0 however, as he proceeded, farther and. further along tha pathway of original re- search, his mind shook off its old fet- ters and became ready to face any corectuston which' °melte reconcile the facts. Tlaere were many things whioh made hinat believe that it was possible for mind to exist apart feomf matter. • At lase it occurred to him that by a daring and original experiment the question might be definitely de - d• "It is evident," he remarked in his celebrated article upon invisible en- tities, which appeared in the Kein- ple.te Woeheoliche Medicalschrif1 about this tinne, and which surpris- ed, the whole scientific world -"it is - evident that ander certain condi- tions the soul or minddoes separate itself from the body. In the ease of a mesmerized person, the body hes in a cataleptic condition, ‘buti the epirit bate Ian it. Perhaps you reply that the sooli is there but in a dormant condition. I answer that ,thle is tot so, altar:wisehow ean one aeconat Mr, that you may have some difficul- ty in finding some one on whoAt to try Ibis? Potztausend I Suppose that the soul went out and would not came back. That would be a bad business. Who is to take the risk?" "But, Fritz," the professor cried, very numh startled by this view of the matter.: "I had relied upon your assistance an the attempt. Surely you will not desert me. Consider the honor and glory." "Consider (be fiddlestioksi" the student cried angrily, " Axa 1 to be paid always thus? Did I not stand Iwo hours upon a glass insulator while you poured electricity into my body? Have you not stimulated my phrenic nerves, besides ruining my digestion with a galvanic corrent round my stomach Four -and -thirty times you have mesmerized me, and what have I got from art this. Nothing. And now astonishment of his au.dience and to the disgust of the Swedenborgian. you wish to take nay soul out, as you "Where the hanker am 1 then, and would take the works from a watch. what in thander has occurred? Oh, yes, It is more than flesh and blood can I remember now. One of these nonsen- stand. sleet mesmeric experiments. There is "Dear, dear I" the professor cried, no result this time, for I remember in great distress. "That is very true, nothing at all since I became un - Fritz. I never thought of it before. oonscious; so you have hod all your If you can but suggest how I can Five minutes passed, and then ten, and then fifteen, then fifteen more, while tho professor and his pupil sat atifr and stark upon tho platform. During that time not a sound was heard from the assembled savants, but every eye was bent upon two pale faces, in search of the first signs of returning consciousness. Nearly an hour had elapsed before the patient watchers were rewarded. I A faint flush came back to th,e cheeks a Pro- fessor von Baumgarten. The soul was coming back once more to its earth- ly tenement. Suddenly he stretched out his long thin arms, as One awaking from sleep, and rubbing his eyes, stood up from his chair and gazed about him as though he hardly realized where he was. " Tansend teufel 1" he exclaimed, wrapping out a tremend- ous Sotuh German oath, to the great long joarneye for nothing, my learn- eid friends, and a very good joke, too' at which the regius p.oiefessor of Phy- • siology burst into a roar of leughter and slapped Die thigh in a Welly in- deeoroue fashion. The aeLdienee were so enraged at this unseemly, behavior on the part their host that there rolgiat have been a considerable dia- turbance had it not been for the jo- dicious interference of young Fritz von Hartmann, who had new recovered from his lethargy. Stepping to the front of tbe platform, the yoteng men apolo,gized for the conduct of his cone- panion, saying: "1 am, story to say that he IS a harurn+searero sort of fellow, althouceb he appeared so grave at the cora- meeciantent on this experiment. He is still suffering from mesmeric reaction and is 'hardly aecauntable for Ms words. Ae to the experiment itself, I do not consider it to be a failure. It la very passible that our spirits men' have been communing in space during this hour ; but, unfortunately. our grose bodily memory is distinct trona our spirit, and we eat not recall what basincurred. My energies shall now be devoted to devising some means by whieh spirita may itble to re- collect west occurs to them in their free state, and trust that when r have worked this out, r may have the pleasure of meeting you all orice again in this hall, and demonstrating to you the veeult." Tbie attdrese, coming from so young a student, eaused con- siderable aatontehment among the autlienee, and some were inclined to be t fronded, thinking thet he assumed rather too much importance. The ma- jority, however. looneel upon hien as YrWIZ mon of great promise, and Teeny comparisons were made as they left the hell between his dignified con - duet and the levity of his professor, who during the above remarka was laughing heartily in a. corner, by no means abaebed at the feilore sr the em xperient. Now. although. all these learned men were filing out of the lecture -room en- der the impression Met they bad seen nothing eta note, as a matter of fact one of the merit wonderful things in tha wbole bietorry of the world hes Just occurred before their very eyeS. Pro - von Baumgarten had been so eorrect in his theory that both his spirit end tlr-it at his pupil had been tor a time Avant from his body. But here strange and unforeseen complication bad occurred. In their rete.rn the epirit ot Fritz von Inert - mann ban enteree into the tinily of Alexia von Baumgarten, and that or Alexi() Von Balm:Arian had taken up its abode in the teem of Fritz von Ilertmann. Hence the slum and mute MUT which iesued from the Ups of the serious professor, and hence Mao the 'eighty words and grave statements whieh fell renal the earelees Faultiest. It was an unpreeedented event, yet no one knew or it. leo* ot ali those whom it concerned. To be Continuod. CASTOR IA Tor Infants and Children. Tin ht. etrelo itassears Is cs oeiry oreyte. THE BOERS AT S. HELENA. Quarter( OcclIpted by cronies Soldiers es the tittle Volcanic weed. Thirty years ego there were over 0,000 people living on St. Helena; but many hundreds: of them, failing to earn a living there, have gone to Cape Colony, and, when the Boors landed reeently they increased the population Lull)' one-third, So large an infix has never been seen before. When the prisoners entered the harbor they saw, a MU% town, only a quarter a mile wide and less than a mile in length, squeezed into a narrow- valley between two hills that rise, to a height of aboot six hundred feet; on either side. The hill on the west slopes steeply to the town and a flight of nearly- seven hundred steps, cut in the face of the rock, leads to the flat plateau above. This arena- enee is, known as Ladder Hill on ac- count ot the Beget of stone steps. The plateau. is three-quarters of a mile wide near the sea and narrower as it penetrates the mountains on either side. The seavrard part of it is covered with, military buildings and the plateau is known as Deactwood it tt g Bi oAlt sent into camp on St. Helena. Jamestown lie& at their feet on the bey, have a beauti- II Plain. This is where the Boers were Throbbing Through the Arteries Weak- eihuiaasentti.linid::6i,onf front t roun feedt tteovseotleoceta.nt,r at!the sea from a point, of ness and Disease are-impossible—Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Makes the Blood Fur% Rich and Healthy, Not a single day passes but we are reminded of the value of keeping the body sapplted with an abundance of rich, red, life-sustaining blood. Heart failure, brain troubles and nerve paralysis ean only exist when the blood is in a thin, watery °coal, tion. • • Deadly pneumonia and consumption •eannot find a beginning in the healthy body, which is supplied with plenty of pure blood to rebuild and reconstruct the tissues wasted by disease. To goard against disease, to pro- long lite, to insure health, strength • and vigor to every organ you cannot possibly •find a Means • so effective as Dr. Claase's Nerve Food, the blood builder and nerve restorative. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is compos- ed. of the very elements of natare which go to form new, rich, red blood, and this accounts' for its phenomenal success as a system builder, It is es certain as the laws of nature, be- eause it ,getts away down at the foun- dation of diseaeo and cures by making tthe blood pure and rioh, ' • ' 1VIrs. B, McLaughlin 95 Parlieraent at, Toronto, sta tes glough ler 1 was pale, weak, languid and very ner- vous, her appetite was poor and changeable, she could. scarcely drag herself about the house, and her nerves were completely unstrung. She could not sleep for more than half an hour at a tirae without starting up and cry -- bag out in exciteneent. . " As she was growing weaker and weaker, I became alarmed, and got a • box of Dr. Chase's, Nerve Food. She used this treateneet for some weeks and from the firs,t we noticed a decid- ed improvement. Her appetite became better, she gained in weight, the col- or returned to her Lace, and she grad - natty became strong and well. can- not say too much in favor of tbis won- derfol treatment, since it has proven itucli a blessing to my dauglater." To allow the blood to get weak, watery and vitiated ia to prepare the way fer pneumonia, consumption, kid- ney disease, or other dreadfully fatal -implications. Dr. Cb a see Nerve Food prevents and cures disease by creet- ing an abundance of rich blood and eerve farce in • the system. In pill form, 50e. a box, a.t all de,alPrs, or Ed. naanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. blow steadily, but the hill range through the; centre of the island shelters the prisoners from. the winds, whicla are sometimes violent, though always warm. They, have arrived, however, in the early days of the austral winter,. and are probably wit- neseing a larger rainfall now than they ever saw before. The heaviest rains, however, will soon pass, and as far as weathen and climate are con- cerned, the prisoners coluld hardly wish for a more AGREEABLE ABIDING PLACE. Looking directly sent across the hills and theeintervening valleys the Boers may perhaps be able to cattail a glimpse of Lcmgwood, three end a half Miles from their camp, wthich is' famous as the ho -me in which Napoleon, prisoner of England,t passed the last six years of his life, Longwood stands on an - .o Red"' Afler' '197 00av PhOSPhOainel The Oreat English Bonet/. Sold and reemonended by all druggists in Canada. Only rel. able medicine discotered. Six packages guaranteed to cure all forms of Sexual Weakness, all effects of abuse or excess, lfiental 'Worry, Excessive use ef To- bacco, Opium or Stimulants. Mailed rece p of price, one package $1, six, $6. One will please, six wit/ CUM. Panaphlets free to any address. The Wood Compituy, Windsor Ont. . - 'Wood s PhosphodEne is sold in Exeter by •j. W. Browning, druggist. What is •A ere , en, ,reso.nt ets. Oen "•\ i • eneh-- " OnetOritt is Salle1101 Piteileten preSeription for infants and, children. It eentalaS Itteither Opium, Illt;trpitino nor otlaor Narcotic substanee. It is a haratle80 Manta:ate for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups awl Castor OIL It is PienSalet. Its guarantee is 'malty 3Tarrs, use, by- indlUallS or /Others. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Veverisimess. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour (turd, cures Diorama and Wind Colin, Castoria relieve* Teething troubles, cures Constipation and riattdeney, Castoria assiolthltes the Food, regtdates the Storannit au4lanWelee giving itealtleer Med. itata loODe ConStOriet is the Children's ranagea-the ItrotherN FritOad* Castaria. oenstorbt Is excellent medicine for ebildren. Blethers have repeetedly told me of its amid effect seen their eleildren." DS. G. C. 0a0090. Lowrie Afore Castorl$„ "costorls so well iideptel te .001MS 11*41 ereetentend It ste, impeder to any pree sextette% known tome.," XL A. itoteame, 12t.ot Brenton, en te, THE FAO -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER, TS! C2‘"TA.41 TY .1460111*Ifef tv,T0140r, 4.1•ICW TOM'S 1"flf. ' , uthsr plume exteading nearly to the sea ea Lite east awt with: two or three Ibng arnui running op into the mountains. It was on elos nearly flat plateau* that Napoloon took Illn daily strolls, enjoyinge In some eort, the period ot calm, that succeeded the Jong years- of war and politieal con - season In which he Was the command - g figure. 11 the Mere are permitted to stroll, inland as far as the plateett they oceupy extends, they e ill Le wnle. in twomiles of Lonnwooe and a mile and a half frone the Valley of the Tomb, w.here Napoleon's body re. posed under 8 clump of Willsaws un- til. It was removed to Paris in 1810; nnd DOW it nets under the dome of the luvalidea, Prom Deadwood Plain, partIon of the Valley of tbe Tomb eau 7ERv E Mown melon ere * ver iblemvselevetlu,r‘ and. so Ust)ot tililkOWYNOtIlblaotwtshe uln:err eictr;40070,7:700:::::t,bodyaTonrtioeelr lame :01 ulttarir Czr oarr;e: whieh the great Corsican was buried ' aro hidden freen view. Prom the Muer camp there is no BEANS Aiumg m.o.'. macros the civet of youth. This Remedy Ads road leading to Longweod or the lam- icauteo cuter tho west obstinate met Idles all War ous valley near it, but to reachi the .,,,,,,tairig.1,);Nomi.i.,T,Tfto rel4"e• -44 Will' sea where, Napeleen spent his last -treitt et prier ta- years it is necessary to climb Rupertn Hill by the steep road. whien tier - mounts it on the oast side of James- town and, leads to the valley and the little house where Nepaloon lived and d. Jamestown is the only town on the Wand. Lt has never boon thought worth while to build a town on the south coast, for no vessels could safely visit a town there, as the waves raised by the southeast trades breek on that shore with great fury. On the north side of the island in the lee of winds, where the Boers are kept, the surface of the sea is usually calm. Perhaps many of the Boors will not mind the isolation of their prison HAVE CHEAP VENISON. home as menet as the, people of other races might do for most of them are Venison is only two cents a pound aecustomed to the comparative silence lot so. John's, Newfoundland. It is of their great cattle ranehes where ' foR ,t5s1:11 13.0 ,STrittiEs CI IliEBESTANTI.RtIELTMAI1C riEuR.! Nan mADE IhIENPn r6ctl rihutriri vivietto BOX ;54,1.80 IMMO DAINIMIERCO I bitIO BA An Siete Iliee eyeettreefeetleee tleffelfeei; ecid Browninee Drug Store !hater into tho ore piles to any desired depth. A more econoraioal method of unloading ore steamers has long been a desideratum, and. if the problem has been solved it will be to the ativantage of the iron business, Children Cry foi• CASTOR IA. or - the staple food. during the first five they seldom see strangers and do not are hospitably welcomed when they !isolated, except by cable, from the them, 'though all coiners , months of the yeas-, in which they are care to meet appear. Of course none of the Pr's- !rest of the world. Two or three thou,- oners can escape, from! St. Helena as 'sand caribou are killed every autumn a number of them did from their camp and. the flesh is cured or salted down near Simon Town; Cape Colony. The for winter use. In spite of this whole.. sda around them hems the captives :sale slaughter the number of deer on In more effectively than any Prison- the island shows no diminution. wall. • HANDLING IRON ORE. A. bambino for Autematteally Itnioadiog the Ore From Steamers. The iron ore mined at Lake Superior is carried to the ore docks and dumped into the holds of steamers at a cost of only a few cents a ton A great deal of it is quarried by steam shovels and emptied directly into the cars, no hum.an muscle being expended from the time the shovel scrapes the ora from its native bed until the cargo reaches the lower lake ports, whence it is sent to the smelters. 'Until this time, however, no anch inexpensive means have been devised for trans- feering ore from the steamers to the docks or the cars which carry it to the furnaces. A great deal of hand labor has been employed in this work with the result that though the transfer- ence from the lake to the land has been quite a cheap process it was still the result that though the transfer - femme from land to lake at the upper ports At last, however, a new shovel has been inveiated f cis' handling iron ore in unloading steamers. The invention is aaid to have been tested ared found capable of handling 1,500 tons per day with the employment of only three men to each ,shovel. It is expected that thi sinnontion will facilitate the handling of the great ore traffic this year. A. force of neatly one hundred men are •naw at work malting the shovels. It is said that this ingenious con- trivance shovels material on any sia'e of it and can fill cars from the steam- er holds on either side of the steamer. Each shovel has three ditatinct engines awl the scoop in,ay be made to out AUTO1VIATIO IIHNOWN. Kirby could become famous if he weren't so lazy. Oli, he will get famous yet. efee What do you mean? Why, he takes such good care of himself that he will live to be 100, and be famed for that. NEW FURNITURE FAD. It was Cecil Rhodes who made it the fashion in South Africa to use Dutch furniture, and he bought up allethe good specimens which were to be found in old Boer houses, Every piece of furniture in his house is pure ,Dutoh and antigne. Iowa mos,esss RNLI:map BY OMB AP. PLIOAVIOSI OF Dr. 9 itgnew s Ointment. 35 CENTS. Mr. James Gaston, reesehroit,INItleesharre, Pa.; writes :--For ulne years -,I have beet,. disfigured with tatter on hands and fnee. But at last I tate found a eure 18 Dre egnewes Ointment. • My skin iN ne.w ' • entran42 and soft and free from every blem- , Feb. Tee first applieztion gavo relief.—See 11 Sold by 0 Lutz, Exeter.