BOR } SE IN — c DAR FOR JANUARY, 1895 First Quar 4th da 15m. a. m Fall Moon, ilth day, 2 aS Last Quar l7th day, p.n New Moon, 25¢h day, 35. pw sy } re Ls | a | oe Fe ih m i h m | mor I i iavy | 7 } i 18 2 i 2 | ' ay : 2 43 3} ‘) 0 3 26 Of Brides ; 49) ais an . “y 49) 22 5 4 sis ‘ {2 28 6 68 ©} Monday mi 6: e 3 4 i AJ is | 9 4 9 , a iy i 9 59 a0 ay | i | 39 10 {2 il . a ll 36 s1* Jy i ( atr’nls is) 5 to , 0 5% 6 | Benday } 45) 1 40 1é ' I . i 43 | 2 24 16 | Wednes: ay i4 | 7 3 12 17 | Thuraday ‘| 39 414 i8 ; Friday | 481 “i 62 ] Ss rday | 2 | t] 6 47 20 | Sanday | 2| 42) 7 54 21 | Monday 1) 43] 8 48 22} Ta |} 40 A 9 33 23 | oday | 39 | | 10 18 241 Thursda 3{ a7} 1047 aS ) Feta | 37] 48] 11 25 a6 | Sesmnang | 36] 50] 11 55 3 : my S ot morn 28 , Mon tay ; | 53 0 26 =) Seneens |} 33) 54 0 54 30! Weduesiay | 32] S56] 1 26 1 | Thursday) = | 7 30]457] 2 2] He DAILY EAANIM Tus Leaping Damy NEwsPaPeR or P. EK. Is1 AND, l every afternoon, from the office of s lssue the Ex amiver Puritsurve Company, in the Loadon House Building. Queen Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPFION (IN }DVANCE) Sete TEAM. «cc cceccccccecsoccenscccesensteces $4.0 Six MonTus ‘ Kéjeddanéenene seen Uae ee CN a cnn kee b cdi dnaeawene” 1.06 Ne i cnn dastcns ists di a 0.36 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES For small advertixeraents which are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge is ¢ents per inch for the first insertion, and { cents for each continuation. Rate cards ars farnie! ved on application at the office. Special sontract prices at a reduced rate are quoted for adver-isements four inches in size or larger, which are to run for three months or longer. No speeial notices inserted unless paid for atthe rate of i0 cents per line, and under no circeamstances will such paid notices appear ip the local celumn. Syecial discounts made on all advertise- meats connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Pienics. etc. No notices will be inserted with he same Unless the regular rate of 10 cents per ine is paid. fJaat Taz Examiner is considered by our Meimbants ana Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is *bundantly proved by the ‘act that im Order o accommodate Our auvertisers we have sn compelled to enlarge the paper to its pr-xent size, Tue Dariy Examines is for sale by the fol- lowing agents :— R. a. Misa, Post Office, Charlotte town J. Msintyre. Mal peque Road, C. Paa!. Lower Spctng Park Road, ” W. M. Co Zin, raftoa Street, & Grey.cor. Watereanl Prince St. se DBD. Citagell, Prince Street, - Basa yc +.9ore, Qusea Street . Gea. Oarter & Co., Queen Street. * S. Gray, News Stall, P. E. . Railway and On the trams. af Weel, w yper Euston 8t s a Brass, Car, Euston and Hillsboro St. ; uf r ny, Gt George “t. Ee ans & 30a, Cor. of Prince and Richmond te Ka. M. & T. J. Walsh, Ecleetic Bookstore, Sum- merside. I. Sutherland, Seuris. Hon, D. Gordon, Georgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Siewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton. A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge. wi ESS The Weekly Examiner § issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. [t is made up of matter Waich has appeared in the Daily editions, and is & first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and fal! of the latest news. The subscription for THE WEEKLY EXAM: INEP, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for THE DaiLy EXAMINER. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR 1895 Yol IV. Begins Becember, 1894 A splendidly illustrated life of NAPOLEON, feature of which will be SEVENTY-VIVE PORTRAITS of Napoleon, ssuwing him from youth to death ; portraits of his family and contemporaries, and pictures of famous battlefields ; in al! the great also mary 2¢0 PICTURES Begins in November and runs througy The oo 0 Eight TRUE DETECTIVE STORIES the $1.00. Napoleon Numbers, by authority from the archives of Pinkerton Petective Agency. Lincoln and Pinkerton (Nov. 1894); the Molly Magures; Allan Pinkerton’s Life; Stories of C Japture of Train Robbers, For- robbers, etc. j gers, bank each complete nh one iasue, 12 ina I. SHORT STORIES BY W. D. Yowells, Rudyard Kipling Cona: Doy le, Clark Russell, Robert Barr, Octave Thanet, Bret Harte, Capt. King, doel Chandler Harris and many others. NOTED CONTRIBUTORS. Robert Louis Stevenson, F.M rio n Craw ford, Arehdeacon Farrar, Sir Robert Bal! Prof. Drummond, Archibald For “hx 8, Thomas Hardy. Clubbed wit 7 Tue Dairy Examiner at $ 4 6U pt r ye ‘s 3. wt McCLURE, Lrp., 30 Lafayette Place, novi4 New York. Church School for Girls E*gebill, Windsor, ¥. 8. _-- The Lent Term of this Institution be- gins on Jan: vary 19, 1895. Vor Calendar and forms of admission ap ply te DR. HIND, Windsor. $10 per eet. Partia Edgehill], Windsor, Dec. 20, °94—1m eod sets $2.00 and up wards. Painless ex EET H traction of teeth, DR. , P. MCRRAY flice, 145 Queen St., acts Charlottetown, P. EL ) MINER, —_——— a nD ea eee THE DAILY EXAMINER. TERMS : Four Dellars a Year Serate 7p — tue, ~ true Liberty, NEW SERIES CHARLOTTETOWN, . & PF [stand laltway fh On and aster THURSDAY, 27th Dees mber, Ishi. the trains of this Raliway will raw daily (Sundays exce; ted) as follows .— Trains Outward, Tt Tnward Read down. Lead up 4M Leave Arrive P M 4 Gee ccues Charlottetow: ? 30 74 ‘ Rovaliy Jan ‘ sii} 3038 a North Wilishire ‘ ee BUG .. .cccceceee Hunter River ek S48 . .. Bra taibune 1? 42 857 ‘ Emerald i? 9 10 : Freetown 1220 | 2 os NRen-locion Liu ry UU Ar Lv Li if <M ) f Summerside ) ( AM 25) ¢ia) far‘ to3sol it encascecods MeINCOUChE.... 1: ta} tHe. Wellington icoen ae - 219 cee oseaes Eee... . * Of i: = O'Leary ‘as hs sO)! 58 ..«++. Bloom ficid ican pst Alberton, .... —_— 6 a ‘Tignish ‘ coe OY , aM PM AM ee ... Charlottetown . 1643 20) Kkoyalty Junetion -- 3010 +h ee Bedirord 95? Ar Ly) Yo ) f Mount Stewart ) ; fie @ Lv) fxr) 850 3 oes Cardigan siawock ae : ‘Geor we tO n 7lo} PM 4M | PM AM Ae kcncuee Mount Stewart $7 its ... More! 8h PED iccce ovseicessee eet Bs 7 4 Re ur River 7 & >i Seuris er 62) | vost Av PM AMI 10) “ee Su: rald.... 8 20 | 13) <a riaverse 730} ’ M ° AM | Trains are ran by Eastern Standard Ti: ! D. TOTTINGER Gan Mg: Can Gov! Railwass ‘ Moncton, N I A. MCDON AT tL), Superi:tendent, Chario.tetown. } dec2s SPECIAL DISCOUNTS On All Goods | THIS WEEK. — e 7S AWE OE: e. A. LAYLGE, Watchmaker and North side Queen Square. dec27 Table | Strops, English Jeweller Lippincott’s Magazine, 1sss. | The special feature of LIPPINCOTT’S— A COMPLETE NOVEL addition to the usual in each issue, in Short Stories, Novelettes, Essays, Poems, ete., | All combined, make it one of the most de- | sirable magazines now published. We avoid the objection held by so many readers to a continued story, During the coming year novels may be | expected from Capt. King, Amelie Rives, | Gertrude Atherton, Mrs. Stickney, Mrs. | Alexander, Miss Train, (Author of “ The | Antobiography of a Professional Beauty ”), | and other well-known writers. Price, $3.00 per year. Single copy, 25c } Send five 2-cent stamps for specimen copy ; LIPPINCOTI’S MAGAZINE | PHILADELPHIA, PA dec 7 50 YEARS For the last 50 years Cough Medicines have been coming in and dying out, but during all this time SHARP'S BALSAM OF HOREHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CROUP, COUGHS AND COLDS. All Druggists and most Grocerymen se} it. Bae 25 cents a bottle. & CO, ARMSTRONG Proprietors, St. John, N B. nov23—d Mechanical Drawing, &c The undersigned is prepared to give evening lessons in Mechanical and Indus- trial Drawing; to make Plans and Specifi- cations for Patents, Copying, Biuc-print ing and Draughting in general. L. W. MACDONALD, Land Surveyor and Draughtsman. Nov 21— Pominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Islend for the above Com- peny, are now prepared to issue orders for tound, S!ack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf SELL only the BEST,zwhich is Woodill's German Baking Powder, nl you lack no customers to BUY. dees | Supply ‘ry fas tewn ai) i a IPE nr if ey g% ire wo on os | FIRE wWairail ul ; The undersigned 1 “presents the followins keel ws British Companies : ~~ FIRE. North British and Mercantile Insurance Company. Union Assurance Socic ty L714). Manchester Fire Assurance Company. ee British and Foreigr Ms ¢ Insurance Company. R Marin aul t * ompans | ap LIFE. London and Lancashire Life Assurance Company. . a poe j Fire and Marine Pclicie n here Sterling Certificates, payable in all | | part of the w 1, issued « | ts, ALS S0—Th Nova Scot Tusurane Company and the Dominion Burgler r| Guarau tee Com iy of Canada Ree OFL NCI K—Y Block, Cuarlottetown. Avencies in all Towns and | illages, | Dr ba FRED. W. HYNDMAN. feblL 3—! Winter has s ef Coal in ROW reduced prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO. Charlottetown, December 12, 1894. and Country alike are you have not your Winter THeib! of et in, and is THE taking i. advantage our Sets of C Cutlery, ary by the pair, Mats, Fire Sets, Sleigh Bells, Gr Club Skates. Don’t you think make Xmas Just tr that would yourself, aD. 2. Cl’town, Dec. 19, 1884 Silver Pen and Christy’s Paring Knives, Children’s Sets, Peerless Lamp Stovea. Table Chopping Vases, Coal Hods at 25¢ , Apple anite hristmas Dessert and Razor and and ers, Game Carvers, Spoons, Knives and Forks, Razors, Jack Knives, Scissors in Carving Knives, Bread, cases Cake Bowls and Knives, Corers and +licers, and last. but not least Fancy Coal Wringers, Ware, Acme that there is ‘something in the list very happy to» snneone besides y and we can do the right thing for you BECHARDS & CO. -mwf The Beys who Please the People. RECEIV IInbs, Backs, American Hickory, wholesale lots, R. B. RORTON & CO.,, Charlottetown, QUA DISSOLUTION SALE WI During January JOHN Charlottetown, January 2, 1895 —rod & wky A ON HAND AND Round, FROM ALL COAL and WCOD. N. B.—The Sydney Coal that [ handle is from the Old Mines at North Sydney, properly known as the Sydney Mines, and is the ONLY GENUINE Sydney Coal having a registered trade mark as such; and the public are cautioned against other Coals sold with the prefix “Sydney ’ genuine “Sydney Coal.” Charlottetown, October 1, 13891~6m dy & wy Shafts, A splendid lot of Woodwork and Dee. Zi, Ne rte ee Te UGK NG TO-DAY—Spokes, Rims, Sleigh Runners, Dashers, in Special low prices 189 t—tu fri CITY HARDWARE STORE. LL. CONTINUE McLEOD & CO. L COAL! ———— DAILY ARRIVING: Wut and Slack, ISLAND, ; is no longer e«xtemporized as occusion re- * quires, THURSDAY, WONDE RS OF THE HAND, ONE OF THE MOST PERFECT PIECES OF MECHANISM. Prof. Henry Drummond Gives the Scien- tifle Uses and Value of the Human Hand and the Variourt Movements Necessary to Its Perfect Action, One of the moat perfect pieces of me- | chanism in the human body is the hand. How long it has taken to develop may bs | dimly seen by a glance at the long array | of lees accurate instruments of prehension which shade away with ever decreasing | delicacy and perfectness as we lescend the scale of animal life. At the bottom of that scale isthe amr-ba. It is « speck of protoplasinic jelly, “headless, footless and armless, When it wishes to seize microscopic par- ticles of food on which a portion of its body lengthens out, and, moving to- wards the object, flows over it, enyulfs it, and imelts back again into the body. This is its hand. At any place, at any moment, it creates a hand. Each hand is extem- | por-zed as it is needed; when not needed itis not. Passa little higher up the scale and observe the The hand it lives, Sea -anemobe. but lengthened portions of the body are set apart and kept permanently in shape for the purpose of seizing food. Watch, in the next place, the hand of an African monkey. Note the great increase in usefulness due to the mus- culararm upon which the hand is now ex- tended, and the extraordinary capacity for varied motion afforded by the threefold system of jointing at shoulder, elbow and wrist, The hand itself is almost the hu- man hand; there are palm and nail and ar- ticulated fingers. But observe how one circumstance hinders the possessor from taking full advantage of these great im- provements—this hand has no thumb, or, if it has, it is but arudiment. To estim- ate the importance of this apparentiy in- significant organ, try fora moment with- out using the thumb to hold a bvok or write a letter, or do any single piece of manual work, A thumb is not merely an additional finger, but a finger so arranged as to be opposabie to the other fingers, and thus possesses a practical efficacy greater than all the fingers puttogether. It is this which gives the organ of fon er to seize, to hold, to manipulate, to do higher work; this simple mechanical device, in short, endows the hand of intelligence with all its capacity and skill. Now there are animals, like the colobi, which have no thumb at all; there are others, like the marmoset, which possess the thumb, but in which it is not opposable; and there «re others, the chimpanzee, for instance, in which the hand is in all essentials identical with man’s. In the human form the thumb is # little longer, and the whole member more delicate and shapely, but even for the use of her higher product, Nature has not been able to make auything much more perfect than the hand of this anthropoid ape. Is the hand then finished? Can Nature take ont no new patent in this direction? Is the fact that no novelty is introduced in the case of man a proof that the ultimate hand has appeared? By no means. And yet itis probable for other reasons that the ultimate hand has appeared ; that there will never be a more perfectly handed animal than man. And why? Because the causes which up to the point have furthered the evolution of the hand have begun to cease to act. In the perfecting of the bodily organs, as of all other de- vices, necessity is the mother of inven- tion. As the hand was given more and more to do, it became more and more adapted to its work. Up toa point it responded directly to each new duty laid upon it. But only upto a point. There came a time when the necessities became too numerous and too varied for adaptation to keep pace with them, And the fatal day eame, the fatal day for the hand, when he who bore it made a new discovery of tools. Henceforth what the hand used to du, and was slowly becoming adapted to do better, was to be done by external appliances. So that it anything new arose to be done, to be better done, it was not a better hand that was now made, but a better tool. Tools are external hands. Levers are the extensions of the bones of thearm. Ham- mere are callous substitutes for the fist. Knives do the work of nails. The vice and pincers replace the fingers. The day that cave man first split the marrow-bons of a bear, thrusting a stick into it and striking it home with a stone—that day the doom of the hand was sealed. But has not man to make his tools, and will not that induce the development of the hand to an as yet unknown perfection? No. Because tools are not made with the hand. They are made with the brain, For a time, certainly, man had to make his tools, and fora time this work recom- pensed him physically, and the arm be- came elastic and the fingers dexterous and strong. But soon he made tools to make these tools. In place of shaping things with the hand, he invented the turning- lathe; to save his fingers he requisitioned the loom; instead of working his muscles he gave out the contract to electricity and steam. Man, therefore, from this time forward will cease to develop materially these organs of his body. If he develops them outside his body, filling the world everywhere with artificial hands, supply- ing the workshops with fingers more in- tricate and deft than organic evolution could make in a millennium, and loosing energies upon them infinitely more gigan- tic than his muscles could ever generate in a whole lifetime, it is enough. Aluminiam Shoe Nails. On the late visit of Prince Bismarck te the Emperor the latter called the attention of the ex-Chancellor to the improvements made in the boots of the Prussian infan- try. This consisted in the displacement of the old-fashioned steel nails by nails of aluminium, which is much lighter and more durable. The extra weight under the sole of the foot imposed by the heavy nails formerly worn, and the added autaha consequent upon the clogging mud in hasty weather, made a great and needless extra cmount of muscular expenditure necessary. The new arrangement will per- mit of longer and better marching, with THE LEADING MINIS. Also, HARD ER Mc MELLAN. that they are not the R. McMILLAN. fresher troops at the end of the day.—Lon- don Puliic Oninion, | Travellers, away from the comforts of home, will find in Hawker’s liver pills a speedy cure for all dtsturbance of the stomach. Greatest value in thecity in undercloth ing, children’s cloth’ «and ulsters at Mc- Kay Woolen Co. ——— > 0 ae Inkliegh—Do you believe that poets are born ? JANUARY | French 10, 1895. M. COQUELIN, The Great French Comedian. These are the features of the Prince of Comedians, whose *‘* Tartuatte,’’ which he may Le said to have made his own, convulses every audience which has the del - of seeing the master portray the areh hy pocrite. Respecting ‘+ Vin Mariani,” he says; “Strange to say that ‘ Vin Mariani,’ eo exquisite a wine, should ulso be a remedy, and a delicions one at that, so pleasant to the taste and so bene ricial to the entire system.” Awl Coqnelin merely states a trath which is attested by ihe most famous mcn and women of the age, by the foremos* medica! men, an vi the mana gers of all the great hospital-. ** Vin Mariani” is indeed beneficial to the system. ‘The weakest can digest it; the moet debil- iiated are benefited by it; the most hope- less are revivified by it; and as has been «ften said regurding it, “It vives life and hope” ** Vin Mariani” is the great tonic-stimulant of the age, used by the great brain workers of the world, who find tnat, exhausted by overwork, it refreshes, strengthens, and builds up the whole tys- new tem. An album of portraits of many «elebrities who have spoken highly of ** Vin Mariani ” wil! be sent to tho<e whe send their address to Lawrenee A. Wilson & Co., Montreal, the Canadian Agents. WINES FOR VER YBo DY. France produced three hundred million gailons more — Jast year than it conld oonsume or export. The Bordeaux Claret Company of 30 Hospital Street, Montreal, have purchased some of this rood nourish- swe wine from the growers, snd are now offering it at $5.00 and S4.60 per case of 12 large bottles, = $1.00 cxtra per 24 pine buttles. Write for price list to the Bor- deaux Claret Company, 30 Hospital Street, Mentreal. g MN EN OF Man erth o- $¢ % WANTED HE HELP! MEN inevery 3 locality (local or traveling) to introduce anew discovery and keep our show 2 cards tacked upon trees, fences and bridges throughout town and country. Steady employment. Commission or salary $65.00 per month and expen- ses, and money deposited in ary bank when started. For particulars, write World Medica’ 1 Elect i ; London, Ont., Can. Pe ae ° WNerur Store. WATCH REPAIRING isgn’t a side line with us—we make a specialty of it—devote synost of our time to it. There are no more «xpert repairers in the city than ours, We repair apd nsure your watch against injury tor 75 9 .a year. GOODSTEIN, EXPERT WATCH REPAIRER Everything so new and nice, Everything £0 low in price. Everybody ought to call And see our Bargains for the Fall, At our New Shop opposite J. D. McLeod’s. _novs—im ¢ dy & wky _ THERMOMETERS, I Will give Away CUSTOMERS TO MY A Few Dozen Reliable Trermometers _ ———— Every ‘purchaser of goods -to the amount of ONE BCLLAR Of MORE will receive a handsome thermometer. Call early, as they will go like ho cakes. THE PEOPLE'S DRUGGIST. George E. Hughes, Apotheearies Hail, Desbrisay’s Corner. Dec 15—mon wed fri & wy 6m What’s the time? If you have a Cough it ie time you were taking GRAY’S RED SYRUP SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDAPD CURB FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS, Gray's Syrup has been on trial for more thax 60 years and the verdict of the people is that it is the best remedy known. 6c. and Be. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Paeopaizvens MOMTS EAL. ARSON PILLS viake New, Rich Blood! These pills were a wondertoI discovery. No Xe thera in the world. Wil pamively cure or a di manxer of disease, Tuc information around ox is worth ten times the cost of a box of pilis mut abi tthem, and you wil! always be thankful. UNE 4LL a} 088. the on expel all impurities from: the ~_ licate women a great eh asd - aa fs — ed "picie ba stampa free. Sold aka Stamps ve oxee $i 0a DIE crt Av CRAPAUD. A. W. WADMAN, of Charlottetown started the Undertaking at Crapaud last spring. All kinds of Caskets, large and small, and all small prices. Ladies’ and Gents’ Robes at small prices. <A first- class Hearse and Horses. Draped Stools for tlhe Caskets will be furnished with drapery. Funerals will be promptly at- tended to by Mr. A. Wadman, Crapaud. Orders for Em'.alming, if wanted, will be attended to at once by A. H. Wadman Bluelines—(an editor)—Not often. Charlottetown. dy sat wy ly—oct26 VOL 34.—NO, 16 CANADI AN TO ACCO, | HOW IT IS SUCCESSFULLY GROWN NEAR WALKERVILLE. — Ontario. ‘As Well as Ever “After Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured of a Serious Disease. “TT was suffering from what is known as Bright’s disezse for five years, and jor days ata time I have been unable to straighten myself | up. I wasin bed for three weeks; during that Interesting Details of the Method of Cul- tare—Cultivating and Hoeing—Topping the Plants—The “Suckering” Process Pouliry and a Diet of Green Worms. Mr. William Bonner, who for ten years has been maneger of Hiram Walker & Sons 110 acre tobacco farm near Walker- ville, talked interestingly to a Windsor Record reporter the other day. He said: I may as well begin at the beginning if I am to tell you what I know about tobacco- sxrowinz, here and elsewhere. I came to this farm just ten years ago last April—a year after a beginning had beer made in cultivating tebacco on this farm. The season had been an unfavorable one, and only about 1,600 pourds of tobacce was raised on the farm. The most of that crop is, [ think, still on our hands. Before coming here I had been engaged in raising tobacco in Massachusetts, and had been so employed ever since I was ten years old. I may say that, in that State— and it is pretty well the same in Kentucky and Virginia—there are no large tobacco plantatians to speak of, the rule being for each farmer to have only a few acres un- der tobacco in addit#n to what other crops he may raise. I can hardly say that tobacco growing in this part of the county is a uniformly pro- fitable industry. Some years there is money in it, and other years money is lost init. We grow two varieties of tobacco on this farm, the “Connecticut Seed Leaf”’ and the “White Burley.’’ The former thrives well here, but the season is rather short for the Burley, which is a Southern variety, and is largely grown in Kentucky and Southern Ohio. The Connecticut Seed Leaf grows anywhere in this latitude —in Massachusetts, New York, Connecti- cutand, to some extent, in Wisconsin. It is an early variety and therefore more suitable for cultivation where the season is comparatively short. It is not,however, sosaleable as the Burley because it is a cigar tobacco, and the demand for Cana- dian tobacco for cigar purposes is very limited indeed. We plough up the land in May and thor- oughly pulverize it, using chiefly disk har- rows for that purpose, then the soil is thrown up into ridges, four feet apart, by “a machine made for the purpose, called a ““*ridger.”’ The plants are grown in hot-beds, the seed being sown under glass about the first of April, and they are ready for trans- planting about the first of June. They are then taken and planted in the ridges on the field, two-and-a-half feet apart. The transplanting is neatly and expedi- tiously done by a machine invented for the purpose only two or three yearsago. I could not explain the process very intelli- gently to you unless you saw the machine at work. It is enough for the present pur- pose to say that three men and a tenm can plant41-2acres in a day, the machine watering the plants as it sets them. One man drives the team while the other two feed the machine, putting in » plant alter- nate.y. The next operations are cultivating and hoeing. These begin in the last days of June and are continued throughout July. In fact the cultivating is kept up until the plants get so large that it is imposslble to get through them with a horse without breaking the leaves. Next comes the “topping,” which means the breaking off of the bulb or blossom, leaving from 15 to 20 leaves on each plant. On a thriving plant we leave more leaves, breaking off the bulb at a higher point of the stalk than we do on astunted one. Then follows the “suckering” or “sprouting’’ as it issometimes called. This is done about ten days after the “topping,” the suckers or sprouts making their ap- pearance aboutthattime. “Suckering”’ is s tedious job, as you may easily imagine when I tell you that every individual leaf has its sucker, that there are, on an aver- age, 18 leaves on each plant and that we have about 550,000 plants in the field. That gives us 9,900,000 suckers or there- abouts, and the work of breaking them off has all to be done by hand. We employ about fifty men to do this job. About this time the Green, or Tobacco Worm puts in an appearance and the pests have to be picked off by hand—that is, if the grower has not, as I have done, fallen on a plan of disposing of them in a way that is much more expeditious and quite as effective. Picking them by hand en- tails, of course, a heavy outlay in wages. If we picked the worms off the plants on this farm by hand it would cost, at least, #500 each season, an amount which would put a big hole in our profits on the crop. As amatter of fact the disposal of the worms does not, by the method I have adopted, cost more than #100, if so much. it occurred to me, some time ago, that, if I turned a sufficiently big tlock of chick- ens into the field, and gave them nothing else to eat, they would fall to and gobble up the worms. The plan worked like a charm. The birds got away with, I verily believe, millions of worms, but, strange to say, they got very lean on the diet. They cleared the plants of the pests, however, in short order, and, after their work was through, we shut them up and fattened therm on more nutricious food. I don’t know how their flesh would have tasted had they been killed and cooked at the time they were feeding on the green worms, but, after getting a change of diet and undergoing the fattening-up process, they tasted just like any other chickens, The harvesting of the leaf begins about the 20th or 25th of August, or about three or four weeks after ‘topping,’ the time varying with the favorableness, or the re- verse, of the weather. We begin by removing the suckers, which still continue to sprout, in spite of their having been broken off. We then cut down the plants with a hatchet and allow them to lie on the ground until they are thoroughly wilt- ed, great care being taker that they do not get sun-burned during that time. Then the plants are picked up and strung ona lath by a needle which pierces the stem about 8 inches from the butt. Five or six plants, according to size, are placed on afour-foot lath. They are then loaded on as rack, made for the purpose and fitted on @ wagon, and on this they are conveyed to the barns to be cured. The barns are 14 in number, each 9 x 42 feet and 16 feet in height at the eaves. Every third vertical board in the walls is a door for ventilating. The plants are hung up there on the laths and remain so until they are thoroughly cured. The leaf is cured, usually by about November 1, when the plant is taken down and the leaf stripped from the stalk, tied up in what is known to the trade as “hands” and packed, if sold in early win- ter, in bales of 30) Ibs. to the bale. If not so sold, the leaf is packed in boxes con- taining 350 lbs. to 450 lbs. each; the boxes vary in length according to the length of the tobacco, Ps REAL MERIT is the character istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It cures even after other preparations fail. Get Hood’s and ONLY HOOD’S. ooo —— | the papers I decided to try a bottle. Judging from the signs of the times, Mexico and Guatemala may soon be at! war. The universal Peace Society i is right in sending a delegation to impress its ‘ views as to the wickedness of war on an American republic. It is the fraternity of , American republics that need peace lcs- ' ons most. | time I had leeches applied and derived no bene- fit. Seeing Hood’s Sarsapayilla advertised ia I found HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES relief before I had finished taking half of a bot- tie. I gotso much help from taking the first bottle that I decided to try another, and since taking the second bottle I feel as well as = I did in my life.” Gro. MERRETT, Toronto, Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient, yet easy of action, Sold by all druggists. 25c. ‘ e ‘ ; ‘ i i " . $ : oy 1 Ze 1 2 qa ene e Sl j fr ‘a “a oe ae a . 19 NINES feet =} eS id la Vig: Sys i J) EO \o7* NE Oe oP) OOO : crx eae ff Of fi / a. oaanneand SS ‘ / Mit APPETITE THOROUGHLY restored when Adams’ TUTTI FRUTTI is used. ! See that no imitation ts pets 1 off moe I CHARLES B. THORNE, Practical Flumber, Gas and Sanitary Engipeer. Having for a number of years worked tna the United States with an experienced Plumber, will now furnish first-class work and jobbing of al! kinds at short notice. TESTIMONIALS—Arthur Johosen, Esq., Druggist, Revere Hotel, etc. All orders lefLat REVERE BOTr oct3i—dy 3m eed AUCi TON SALE. The Auction Sale se will be resumed this evening at 7} o'clock at P. Monaghan’s Store, Qneen Street. Crockeryware, Glass- ware, Groceries and Fancy Goods, will be offered withont reserve, C, 1. MORRISON, jan2 eod tf Auctioneer. is Really... Equal to any ‘Imported i ‘lake my ee and IS ON Gettin reece oe ee Pine Se Graicfaul—Comlorting. EPPS'S GOGOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat- ural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of (ue pruperties of well-select ed Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for breakfast and supper a delicately flavered beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until su ong enouzk to resist every tendency to disease, Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escape many @ tacal shaft by keeping ourseives wel! fori fied by pure blood and a properly pourish. 2d frame.”—Civil Service Gazetie. Made simply with boiling water or m:lk, 8o'd ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homecepathic Cemists, , London ondon England. Scoit’s Eee eT Emuision the cream of Cod liver Oil, with liyvpophosphites, is for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Loss of Flesh, Emaciation, Weak Babies, Crowing Children, Poor Mothers’ Milk, Scrofula, Anzemia; —_——___ in fact, for all conditions call- ing for a quick and effective nourishment Send for Pamphiet, FREE, Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 0c. & 61. REVERE HOTEL (Formerly Rockiia House.) This centrally located Hotel, which is within five minutes’ walk of Railwa Depot, has been thoroughly dna, painted and renovated. Is fitted with hot water, and possesses the finest batii roome in any Hotel in the city. Terms moder- ate. Coach meets ai) trains. P. 8. BROW XN, Proprietor, septl9—dy 6m wy l yr — t