SERVE BABYS SK With = CUTICURA SOAP A lifetime of disfigurement and suffering often results from the neglect, in infancy or childhood, of simple skin affections. In the prevention and treatment of minor eruptions and in the promotion of permanent skin and hair health, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint- .ment are absolutely unrivaled. Bold 1 irhout the world. Depots: London, 27 Charter 8q.; Parts, 10, Rue de la Chaussee frais, RR. Towns & Co, Bydney: lndis, Opleutta; Chine, Tiong Kong Drug Co; rug, Led, Tokio: Bo. Africa, Lenaon, Tawa, ote. U. 8, A, Potter Drog & Chea Prope. 136 Columbus Ave., Boston, Cugiours Booklet, post-free, toils « about the Cire and Treatment of $kia cod Scalp. LR BIN je pe Id ! EEN Hj Hi Hit ol Lo) n | ow es ce Robin Hood Flour 0 EA il i ¥ You k your Tairery Will you ry 00 tl choice between i rn rm en na Self Juve is not 86 vile'a vin 'As sell-neglecting { Henry V., Act iL. Se. 4 { Helilove is used dn this passage {synonymously with pride. The Dauph- 'in of France urges the Fremch king to (let the English know of what a mon- archy he is the head--to boast the strength of his vast kingdom. iwhat they are. {love that prompted old Gaunt io {speak of lus country as "'this other { Fden, demi-Paradise," to boast, with this dying breath, the renown of his {eountrymen, "feared by TEr breed land famous by their birth," rendwned [to the utlermost parts of the earth. |Self-lova has played an important {part in the development of the United {States, "We are the people" is a [favorite expression, and having utter jed it, strenuous effort is put forth to (prove it correct, | Jdingoism, the excess of loyalty, is a | defect in a nation, but it is not so fvile a defect as sloth, indifference, iself-coniempt. The nations that have {achieved most--Framee, England, Ger- imany and the United States--have {been largely controlled by self-dove. In {the dave of ber pride and self-love Spain held half the known world in ithe hollow of her hand. It was pride; welf-love, that carried little Japan vie totiously through her conflict with i Russia, and it was the lack of self-love jand national self-neglecting that made the Russian gfant so weak ard ine | fective. i But there is another side to self love. It may be vain pride mixed with gross selfishness. In their selfishness and egotism the so-called Christian powers of Fuarope have forgotten all about the brotherhood of man. They are squandering their substance or eets and armies that fiatter thei self-love. Fach is striving to out class the others, not in the infferests of humanity as they profess, but in the pride of place and power. 'They are "Insolent, O'ercome with pride, ambitious past al! thinking {Belf-loving." There is a seli-love that makes fo inational greatness, but there is alse a "pride that pulls the country down.' What is true of the nation is true o I it has to he ¢ seli-love and self-ne glecting better far self-love, A con loeited man is often a bore, but an in different one frequently becomes n bur den. Conceit in self is an excellen! thing, if it will but awaken the latent the soul, A man of ony energy of Gips For be Farmers BY UNCLE JOSH. Out of 1,349 Clydesdales exported by {the Clydesdale Horse Society of Scot- 'Jand, last year, 1,119 came to Can- ada. The society has decided to in vest one thousand pounds of its funds in some Canadian security as a small acknowledgment of patronage ac- corded. oA Potatoes county, N.B., are selling in Carleton at 60c. per bbl. Twelve Cuba, In Holland the cows are arranged in the stalls so that the largest ones are in the centre, thus giving the herd a them to make a more pleasing impres- sion wpon a prospective buyer. Since so many of the cows are sold for dairy purposes, this is a rather important item in the dairy management. ------ Opportunities to' make money been equaled, says the American Agri Surprised To seg the Prices at which we are sg our Boots, Shoes, Trunks and Valises Will Be culturist: Commission men and poul try specialists' all over the country agree that the high have' tended to reduce the number of fowls kept, more especially of poorer ones; that the high prices meat in the cities have proguced of an tic Pains in Side--Constant Coughing. SNERVILINE" CURED QUICKLY. 1 suffered last Nerviline cured me." Those are ing words of the solemn declara tion of IF. P. Von Hayden, the well known violinist of Middleton. work kept me out late at night, cold draughty I had uw harsh racking cough but none broke wu my eold till I a Nerviline. 1 rubbed i This self-love has made the Bultish people It was national self- thousand barvels have been shipped to more uniform appearance and causing in poultry raising during 1910 have never prices of grain the CHEST INFLAMMATION Suffered From a Heavy Cold, Pleurs Anyone that goes throagh all that winter will appreciate the value of a remedy that gures like t "My places brought on a severe cold that settled on my cnest. p "used RY A "77 force of character endeavors to live up to his professions. If he takes pride in his physical powers, he strives to train his body so that others may ad- mire his prowess; if he poses as an in- tellectual force, he studies that he may not be an object of ridicule. But the world is full of charlatgns, quacks, fops. However, they do but little harm and their conduet ip time brings its own punishment. For the most part they themselves are the only suf- ferers, Shakespeare did not consider self: love a grave sin. It was othawise with self-neglecting. On that he most emphatic. It is a "vile" «in. Fach vation aod each individual has a duty tq perform. To neglect that duty is to transgress the law of Ged. Every man is born with certain poten- tialities. What he sctually becomes depends largely on howell. Sin may seem a strong word for séli-neglect, but it is the right one. Man is the paragon of ammals."" That is to say be is potentially the noblest of creat- ed things. The body has been called a temple for the Infinite. How mneoiful it is to cultivate the body, to train it $0 that it may be the sound home of a sound mil. To neglect itis to sin against th? Infinite and against the race. Visit the factory districts of England or the slums of New York. What is seem ? Bent, dwarfed, negleot- ed bodies, The children are weak: lings, The sin of the seli-neglect of the parents is stamped upon them. On his mental side man is equally vulnerable. He has within him a voice urglog him onward and upward, He may smother that voice. Throuch sloth he may neglect to develop the faculties that raise him above the wute, He eamnot rest by the wayside, f he is not in the advancing host he i in the retreating crowd that life's battle, The ignorance and superstition vhich through the centuries have re- arded the progress of the race have eon due largely to seli-neglacting. We speak of degeneraev, What is de- reneracy but ecli-neglect 7 The par | mt has been careless, neglecthul of body and mind, and the, child is born a tainted thing. 11 mén could strike the Aristotelian golden mean between the excess antl defect of self- love it were well. But, { they ecoanot, 'af better for them to have a nro nounced self-love than sinful self-ne rect. The former may be salutary dn its influence; thy latter baneful in its effects. Self-neglecting {estroys character; it prevents development of character. It ix, in word, "vile" sin. i i fears is always the a unprecedented demand for poultry and eggs; that this has also tended to re duce the size of flocks, and that be- {cause of these shartages, the outlook for all branches of poultry raising the coming season is exceptional. The New York Central railway has determined to rum at least three de- monstrajion farms along its road the purpose of illustrating the best methods in crop production, fruit growing, ete. These farms will be un- er the control of experts, supplied by the State College of Agriculture. = "There is nothing philanthropic about this work," says the president of the railway. "It is simply a mat- ter of business. If the line can show how to increase the production of farms along its route by the means adopted it will thereby increase its own business and add to its own pro- fits," The dairy cow in a sense forces dairyman to deal justly and kindly. Unless so managed the cow takes her revenge by silently, but surely with- holding the full quantity of milk. Like the law of moral reaction, she was always thus able to punish the man for his misdeeds. He soon came to know that surly relations with his cow made smaller cream checks. And this came in time to exeteise an in- fluence which could not have heen the syllogisms on the duty of kindness. Mr. Emery claimed, whether the knowledge . came from personal ex- perience he does not say, that the leavening influence thus gotten from the cow worked outward. It made the man more kindly in his relations with his wife family and neighbors. -- Prof. Thomas Shaw. This is a story of the production ob- tained from five pullets in twelve months. The year began with the 12th of February last, and at that time there were six puliets in the lot, but one began ailing shortly afterwards and died on the 10th of the following month. It is not likely she produced any eggs at all between the 12th of February and the time when she died, and most certainly not more than half must, therefore, practically all be ere credited to the five hens. The total number of eggs produced was 501, 160 (per hen. In addition to this eight chicks, were hatched out, but only four of them came to maturity, the others md falling prey to cats. The hens are lay- des |g now, used duced ten eggs having been pro- in January, and seven in the first twelve days of February The comsumption of feed during the was sevan bushels of grain, most- barley, one bushel of corn, to- gether with table scraps. Putting the grain even at the extreme price, it was not worth over $6, while the egge at two cents a piece, a moderate esti- mate, would be worth $16, and the chicks were worth $1.50 more. This t is but | . Dots for | brought about by reading many littie! a dozen. The production for the year | "this twentieth century the farms of the 'world would be unable to grow enough wheat for the population which would {then swarea"over the face of the earth, says Faturday Fveming Post. He i based his forecast on the circumstances {that Tand still uncultivated would {hardly yield crops enough to keep pace fwith the incresse in population, and that there would be insufficient fertil- izer to rejuvenate the soils that had been bringmg forth grain in the past. Fortunatély, Sir William gazed at the future through smoked spectacles, We are now growing more wheat than he predicted the world would require when the lean years would be at hand. Nevertheless, his statistical analysis of the world's food supply served the use ful purpose of directing attention to the fact that we are dependent in large measure upon the varnishing nitrate deposits of Chili for our best fertilizer, and that the scientist ought to devise a means of creating that fertilizer, or its equivalent, cheaply by artificial means. The nitrate deposits of Chili are a form of nitrogen, and nitrogen gas composes four-fifths of the air we breathe. If we could reduce atmos- pheric nitrogen tq 'the form of a nitrate the problem would be solved. Unfortunately, pitrogen is what the chemist calls "inert"; in other words, it does not combine readily with other elements. Flectrical methods have been devised, however, for reducing the ni- trogen from the dir, and we sees to be in a fair way of producing a fer tilizer from the sir fully equal to Chil- ian nitrate, It has been discovered that certain bacteria perform the same function as these electrical methods, and perform them, moreover, with considerably more efficiency; for they actually con. vert the nitrogen of the atmosphere into a form that can be assimilated hy the soil. The modern scientific farmer, therefore, inoculates his land with these bacteria, and thus breeds ga kind of benelicent disease in. such leguminous or pod-bearing plants peas, beans, and the like. The bac. teria cluster on the roots of these plants in knobs, and enrich the soil with nitrogen which they extract from the air. So successful is this method of fertilizing that the United Statés department, of agrieviture for a time gave away bacterin cultures to fa- miliarize farmers with their utility; and many seed houses now sell bacter in us well as seeds, Produce And Prices. , Kingston, Feb. 19.--The market clerk reports as follows : Carrots, 50ec, to 60c. bag, apples,75e. to $1 bush.; turnips, 45¢. bag; cab- kage, 30¢. to SOc. doz; onions, $1 bag, potatoes, 30c. to 3be. Meat, by carcase, 6c. to Tie.; cits, fie. to 1B pork, 1lic. by carcase; lamb, 12%c. to l4e.; ducks, $1.25 to $1.50 pair; geese, $1.15 each; turkeys, 17¢. to 18¢.; chickens, 90c. to 81 a pair; butter, 23¢. to 25c.; fresh eggs, 20e. to Ae, a dozen, J. A. McFarlane, Brock street, re- flour, feed and grain selling as follows : Oats, 48¢.; local wheat, 9c. buckwheat, 65¢c.; barley, 55¢c.; rye, £3¢.; peas, $1, yellow corn, 85¢., flour, bakers, $2.90 to $3.10; farmers', $2.80 to "$3; -Hungarian patent, $3; oatmeal and rolled oats, $5.50 per barrel: corn {meal, $1.90 to $2; bran, $23 to $24 ton, i shorts, $25; gtraw (baled), $10; straw loose, $9; hay, loose, $15; pressed, $15 to S16. John McKay, Brock street, reports ows : Wool, washed, 20x; sheep 31 to ¥1.20, tallow, reuluwrel. Gc., deacons, 80e.; veal skins, 152. per Ib.: hides, No. 1, 9.: No. 2, Re.: i No. 3, Te.; horse hides, %3. | Dominion Fish Co. reports prices s follows: Salmon trot, 124. tc 15¢.; a lb; skinned digh/ herring, 20¢. {lbs white fish, 124. to 6533 lb; pike { 1be. Ibs Chinook salmon, *«. jb. | ippered herring, Yarmouth bloaters {40c. dozg perch, 80c. doz¢ Atlant {salmon, 0c. Ib; salt eodisn, 70. to 15¢., 1b; halibut, 124c. to 20c; fresh {haddook, 10c. lb.; bullheads, 12jc. 1h.; red herrings, 20c. box: mackerel 15¢. lb.; lake herring, Be, lbs finnnan haddie, 108. to 12je. IB: fresh lob sters, 25c. lb; sea bass, 12jc, lbs | piokerel, 12jc. Ib.; mackerel, 15c. Ib 'smelts, 10c, to 20c. People who mean well are {people of limited means. | i usually | Sores Inside the Nose. The lining of the nose will crack, grow very sore and irritating. Noth ing soothes away the tromnble like an nointing with "Dr. Hamilton'd Oint- ment. Rub it on thoroughly, and new skin forms at once. For any sore, cut or irritation, you'll find Dr. Hamil ton's Ointment best of all. Try a Hoe. | box, OSE WHO READ last week's .notice about "ASAYA-NEURALL" the new medicinal preparation for the relief of conditions of nervous exhaustion, and who meant to ask for the free sample offered, may still obtain same upon 'request to the undersigned. The sample contains sufficient to definitely establish the value of this prepar- ation in your case. ASAYA-NEURALL 1S RECOMMENDED when a person, young or old, through overwork, worry, intense excitement, grief, alcoholic or other excesses, or from other recent gr known causes, has overstrained and exhausted the nervous system, and as the result, does not sleep well, wakes up tired, is depressed, tearful, inclined to perspire at the least irritation, has indigestion, lack of appetite, and is, to sum up in a phrase, entirely unstrung. Such conditions are evident to everyone, and are comm 'by early treatment of brief duration: by this preparatio feeding the nerve tissue, enabling sleep to be ol digested, be quickly overcome. LARGE BOTTLES, $1.50 One bottle, taken three times a day according to directions, affords treatment for about 46°days; all that is usually required for ordinary derangements of the nervous system, on in every family, and can with its threefold effect of vt Hy 5 Ld + 5 $ } 1 rv tamed ang iooq 10 Oe gesired auda + Samples and regular size bottles may be obtained from the following 'r 1 BEST. HOAG. 1 To] -" . Prepared by DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Manufacturing Chemists, New York, Montres! asd Shanghai (Fr . pleasant favor of bar. / ley malt and the pungent bit- ter and aroma of the hop, softened \ by- natural age. Is made of light quality, suited to the climate,--in stimulant and a support to $hose who have to undergo much mental or bodily * fatigue " MEDALS AT THE WORLD 155 J. McParland, Agent, 339-341 King St. © ot Es Kingston 's nead, would go ¥ the tl thard road. Kindness That Told, ane Belifield, in ahead.' A lady residing { The lad ad the lawn sloping to the foot of the | interest at the wo ill in front A od down the walk, xl the corner of 11 man with Now vou've vol Faw far toward Our humb Animals ut the suburbs eross roblem that perplexes glanced wi h rk-w 1 fdresa on notify of ol she pass team turn- |walked on down The driver | kindly thought fro a woather beaten coined his horses, "Wait a minute, "and 1 of her home {the sunshine seemel bri th she might 8 t shriek rer. y ro A | 1} s kindna 1 i n be { re, tt sumed 3 « this e, and the entire face of i + radiant glow aid Such thoughts multiplied, reguirmg add but a little effort at understanding of An {in a gold brick every lt nity presents itself PLIMIEL IS A person Ww ho. invests oppor bovs, time the A kindly, ¢ a on EA --_-- --- RE Hidden between two crisp, beautifully 'browned biscuits of unique design, is a fairy-like cream, with a flavor of pure lemon juice. This is our Lemon Cream New Creation. And the presem remarkable demand will be still more greatly increased once you and other discriminating women have MARR LEMON CREAM- The Dainty, Delicious New Treat CCORMICKS LEMON CREAM BISCUITS Pastory at Losdos Warehouses at Slastreal. Ottawa, Hamilton, Hingston, Wiscipes, Cnigery discovered its delicious quality. The daintiest biscuit I Perfectly correct to serve at any