¥ "The Most Flég. oy "Finish for a SKirt Is S. H:& M. Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding A much more perfect skirt Edge. - binding than is possible if you cut up by hand 3 of a yard of velveteen into strips. : sk for S. H. & M. Redfern--a bias corded velvet, cut on a perfect bias, ready to put on the skirt. Be sure the letters S. H. & M. are on every yard of skirt binding you Use, Fs T0 BB LET. BIAS og | y SO rer SHED | ROOMS. od | ROOMS, WITH convenieoces, ot FE ~ 87) 1 Saddle pa on and Globe Company. ol hao gums bos 2 For In Qriviog RUBBER £2 Hi | Tire Ease and Comfort you should have TIRES put on your carriage by Men's Shirts, Ladies' Blouses, etc., take a finer and more lasting: finish-- with less ironing -- when Bee Starch is used, Requires no Iron cannot stick to the linen with BEE STARCH. FREE {set of three Patent Fiat change on 100 Brand in exe BEE STARCH CO., MONTREAL. , RCH tion of the choice selected beef. W. CLARK --MPR-~MONTAEAL. wo - Pork and Beans. Say. Fellows | something pretty swell to wear during the summer with your summer suit. Well, why not try » pair of our Colt Patent Oxfords | tunate in his smuggling ventures, and ceased {THE ROMANTIC STORY OF A i BRITISH ESTATE. f | witen ! \ Néw in Litigation in the oud very of a Restores Him to c¢ Rave in the past ride the mater prightly tals, hut sebom has & such. s wealth ime. records of the Lin volving an eccentric old har, | posed to have died igtestate within the last year; an exciting. family his tory, extending back to days when flourished on the coast of wiring remarkable , read like a well-planned novel. Every fac tor of he successful story was thege ax t 5. W now bean furnished by the discovery of a Jwill sewed up in an old dress, and still more of a climax--the will is to be proved false by the watermark in the paper on which it is said to have been forged. All the details, except, perhaps, a little of She ancien i ory, ine gut in a court i over by a dignifi judge and in a land where pry ie a crime that is published. The firut of the Johnsons worthy of attention is David, who was born of humble parents in Falkland in 1731. = At the age of twenty he was employed as a postal messenger on small wages. To tke out a living he engaged in smug- gling--at that time led in Fife as a dangerous but not disgraceful occu- pation. The coast from Elie floss to Ki inghotn A dotted with idden coves and hallow 5, which fur nished convenient landing places for the '"'free traders," ns smugglers were called in Fife. David Jobmeon was particulary for- soon to carry the post. As time passed he grew rich from the sale of contraband goods. One ug fortunate night he encountered the English officers, and in the fight w. followed struck one of them on the head with a club. Believing that he had killed his man he fled, taking with him a considerable sum of the East the idea that Hindostan t become a rival to i country. in that direction, and in a few years returned to Scotland a wealthy man. Not dar- i 30 go to File, Jor jess the, hia old comrades might recognize him Aberdeen and married. ish of Kettle. On his death the estate fell to his son William, who fought thro the Napoleonic Te ai Bn hr mpany, and ined frequent drills. The work of the estate was carried on [under military orders. In his old age he an "earth hunger." He added estate after State wi She lar, Jot him. by his father at i of his death was the wealthiest landowner in Fifeshire. He bore a singulat antipathy to his only heir, his son George, and they had many quarrels. They finally se porated after a particularly bitter disagreement. Tradition gives this ac- sont of the cause of the separation : Fa son were em, a drinking bout, n itty She sould his liquor to 4 ly ter advan Becoming enraged at something the drunken father said to him, the son, with the help of a servant, rolled him up in the hearthrug and sewed it together. Then he fell into a drunken sleep. He awakened some hours later, and, secing the distorted features of the father, belioved shat he had mur: him. He fled to Paris, where he lived until his father died. At the age of forty-five, in the year n came into an jdetermine its agt Messrs. Annandale & Son, of Poltos paper mille, declared that the paper a which the will was written was firs! produced by them in December, 189, and took the first prize at the Pam exposition. It was imitation bhand-nyde paper of a su- perior quality, andl has come to be ex- tensively i two years it is obyious that thqwill could not have been executed ini1869. The last de velopment was withdrawal from the case ol the sficitors who had pre- sented the will fol probate. It is said they took this sép on learning that "Miss Ann XL whom I dearly love," died in 1586, three, years before the will is al to have been made by Johnson. ! " Ah!" mused the Chicago damsel, "Jack promises t¢ take me to the coronation if I warry him; promises to take ume to France, and Tom says he wil give me a trip through this countsy, with a week at the seaside, if I wil be his." Here she knit her brow in ive thought. At last her face brightened. "1 have it," she declared. ** I will marry Jack and see the coronation, and tell the other tvo that they must wait until after T have had my di vorces." An Unenviable Condition. To eat a meal without in Jurions bo 4 a pleasure that weldom comes" "6 the ic. : He cannot enjoy his dishes and is fearful to eat what he best relishes. Iron tonic Pills will tivel cure fys- pepsia, di n and headache, Bach box comtaine seventeen days' treatment. Price 25¢., at Wade's drug stores Mes, The Political Parties. From Life. i There are always two political par ties; not so much becausg there | are two sides to every public question as because there are two si to every office, viz., the inside and the out side, ------ "Oh, yes," said the Chauffeur, a member of the SP.CA™" "I shouldn't think you would be so in terested in horses or other animals." "You misunderstand me, evidently This is the society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Automobilists."--Phil- sdelphia Press. : Crabbe--Today for the first time, 1 vas really sielighted to. hear Mrs. Nexdore's womyg. Ascum--Some- thing worth Jistening to, eh 7? Crabbe oui say so. I heats the instal ment man taking it away .--Philadel- pills. phis Press. i Sarah ays avoid har tive They first. make you a and then leave you constipated Carter's Little Liver Pills regulate. thé bowels 'and make you well. Dose, one pill. "Miss Holler says she i will have her 'voice t she Som the verdict will be marder degred Steamer "North King" leaves King "I'm 'Guilty of ter, N.Y. J. P. ston, Sundays, at 5 p.m., for Roches NY. 4 P. Gildemigeve and J. ji | British Papers Advise The Moth erland to Follow Suit--Advies to Canadian Farmers. Departisent of Agriculture, Ottawa, help to coun In the last dition to: had this is the picture presented : rh day the splendid results of Can- dent of affairs. Her foreign increases month by month and year by year; the population of Nebraska, the Dakotas, other western states ap- parent to all; the processes whereby have been attained are under stood by few in this country.. That Canada possesses illimitable natural resources and is both the Scotland aad the Normandy of North America oes not explain the amazing idit, of her development. In Re hor space of ten years she has grown in to a commercial great power. In par ticular the growth of agricultural 1? always a sure foundation for national greatness--is without parallel in the world's industrial history. In 1806 the aggregate value of her ex- potte of food stuffs was $35,773,133 ; ast year it was $63008811. More over, the average Canadian's standard of living has been considerably raised in the interval, and since the growth in industrial and mining population has heen much greater than in rural districts the difference between these two sums does not adequately repre sent the increase in the annual value of hér farm products. How has this remarkable advance heen brought about ? The plain truth is that. Can- ada has always beem governed by business men, and that every member of the present cabinet (or board of directors for the nation), has the necessary talent and training for su- pervising the business of hia depart- ment. Not the least able of these able men is the minister of agticul- ture, who has charge of Canada's agricultural policy--no new thing, though it has been revised and ex. tended of late years. And much of the success of that policy is due to Prof. Robertson, Canada's indefatig- able 'agricultural traveller.' The Canadian Gazette, 'also a Lon don paper, and which devotes itself to Canadian men and matters, in a lead- er states, "the" Canadian department of agriculture is still giving points to the mother country." Here, for in stance, is the St. James' Gazette tak ing the last annual report of the min- ister of agriculture as affording a con- trast between the useful motivity of the colonial government and the su- pineness of our:own--(the British)--in these matters. As an oxcellent ex- ample of the way in which the Can- adian government assists the trader, the St, James' Gazette takes a recent article sent out by this department in reference to Canadian cheese, and how to prepare it for the British markets. The Canadian Gazette adds that "if British agriouiture had a few such enlightened officials as Prof. Robert son 'established at headquarters with, say, one-tenth of the present depart ment of agriculture vote at their die posal, the British farmer would soon hold up his head." i The Cork Examiner (Ireland) paye "There are many ways of accounting for the Uiffereut. Foyutta attained by the prosperous farmers of the colonies and the embarrassed, unscientific agri- culturiste at home. For one thing there appears to be' more thorough co- operation between the farmers and the department of agriculture, the latter being more than ready to afford ad- viee and instruction, and the former to avail themselves of such assistance on every occasion. The results should be of some value to our department os well as of interest to all concerned in agrieultural pursuits. The annual re- port of the Hon. Sydney Fisher should indicate to Irish farmers how far ahead of them their colonial rivals are in agricaltural instruction and i , and how seriously handi- in this country, The Globs (London, Eng.) goats in its latest editorial the ex iency in Bouth Africa cen i ; ¥ ; li 8° 2 " : ell il : feliits | Dr. Pitcher Helps « Sufferi ng Women Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets Bring Ease and Comfort, Health and Strength, to Many Pain-Racked, Health-Shattered Women. efel iE g b { is i | i i i ¢ A wr scalding, irritability of frequent rising at night, pain and dis- veritable boon clear ont the clogged-up kidneys, cure the backache and urinary trouble, roll away the burden of health, strength and energy. There are thousands of women in Canada to whom, life is an absolute burden on account of the unceasing ache in the back, the dragging pain in the loins, the side-nches, headaches, and weary, worn-out feelings which are an invariable accompaniment of kidney troubles. Many women, too, are suffering from forms of kidney troubles, such = as the bladgler, tress in making water, high-colored urine, ete., about which they are re- ticent, not caring even to mention the fact to their physician Te every woman suffering from kid ney trouble in any way Dr. Piteher's Backache Kidney Tablets come as a and blessing. They pain, and give PIERCING PAIN, Mrs. Alice Saunders, whose home is No. 55 Bartlett avenue, Toronto, and a pieture of whom appears here, gave the following statement of her case '1 take great pleasure in acknowl edging the benefit I derived from the use of Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets. thing, and no increased action of the kidneys left my back entirely. These Tablets I can now eat or drink any- takes place. The pain has Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tabl or sent by mail on receipt of price. T Ont. | are worth their weight ih fou to an] en Ea lam feeling better now than I have in a long time. Prior to taking the Tab- Ba ready to recommend them to anybody suffering from kidney or. bladder trou- Jos." "THOUGHT | WOULD DIB." Mrs, Joseph Young, Divisi Welland, Ont., says: "1 Bave od from and kiffney 'trouble for four or five years. At times | vould handly shut my hands thew were s0 swollen, and my ,eet the sgme. Going upstairs hurt my back so | thought 1 would die, and my breath grew awful short. 1 tried almost everything, with no weliel Black specks floated all around, and my eyes were very bad. The pain ran from the small of my back to the base of the brain. 1 i on my back, © of Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kid Igts, and thoy have been a t boon to me. They are just sp I can ace to thread a needle, and the pain in the head is apogt gone All , the old feeling of crescki and © in the base of the is gone, - the back comfortable. The old spells that came on any tims 4 * - day are gone, an e livi again. | can work with comfort ony go upstairs fast with no trouble, I am only tov glad to recommend them to everyone. 5 used to be afraid to turn over at night, and could not sleep, and now | am not alraid at all and can sleep well ™ TENDER, SORE K'DNEYS. Mrs. George Noble, Hunter street, Peterboro, says : "My back for four or five years has given me a lot of trouble, and the kidneys were tender and sore. | got a bowtle of Dr. Pit | cher's Backache Kidney Tablets, and they have done me a lot of good. I have been able to work right along yThey never upset me a minute. | am vere glad to be able to give this good word for the medicine." There is not a woman who suffers from kidney complaint but can find prompt relief and a positive cure by Tablets. Then, why suffer any long er? ney Tab- ots are 50c. a hox, at all druggists, he Dr. Zina Pitcher Co., Toronto, SATURDAY, JUNE Tth 10 Per Cent. Off For Cash On All Boots, Shoes, Trunks and Valises. A. ABERNETHY -- THE CHEAPEST CANNOT BE THE BEST. On The Market. It Is Remarkable For Its Purity. McPARLAND, EE re I McKELV i den Bn Pine apples ot Gilbert's. EY & AGENT. BIRCH, Brock