m^mm^mmf â- ^WjW^' 1; 1 .-3 â- . f .1 ?l I NMXO. TIB ITOBT OF MT LOTE. nnne. CHAPTER XVn. **Wli»t ii wroDgf ' npMtedthe **Oh, tell me for HflSTen'e nkef She BMj be »Ue tothzoireoine l%ht on the myeteiy," nid the lUjmr. 'She oune here with the lady, and, aa you My ahe ia a confideotial aervant, I ahonld moat certaialy tell her what haa oocnrr- ed." "We do not know what ia wrong yet," I aaid, anawerinir Mn. Biven. '*Thia ia the gentleman â€" Major Esmond â€" ^in whoae hoaae Mias Gabridle Fairfaiz lived Inln- dia, and ha haa come to aee her. He de- darea this lady to be a atrsnger to him, and not Lady Jeamond at all." The woman's face, aa she liatened, as- afamed a livid pallor, and a fierce gleam shone in her dark eyes. " Who dares say it?" she cried. "Who dare utter so fool a calumny?" "I do; I dare," said the Major. "That lady is no more Gabrielle Fairfax than you are! I know Gabrielle as well as I do my own children.*' The old nurse's face became more ghast- ly wUte, and a violent fit of trembling came over her. "dan you tell us anything which will help iy solve the mystery?" asked Lord Saxon. "Thare is no mystery, my lord. He speaks falsely â€" falsely I have not one word to say. Where is Lady Jesmond " "She is here," I said, moving aside. "She has fainted." With a heart-rending cry the woman sprang and knelt down by the side of the apparently lifeless body on the couch. At the sound Lady Jesmond languidly open- ed her eyes and murmured something which did not reach us. "Hush, my dear, hush!" cried the nurse then, turning to us with anger and defiance, she added. "You will kill between you Who darei to say she is not Paul Jesmond's widow and the mo^ih- er of this child?" "Nello, Nello," cried the faint voice, "I â€" ^I will tell you Send them all away â€" all away!" "Hush, hush, my dear!" said Mrs. Rivers. "Lie still!" And again she turned her face to us, as she continued, "She does not know what she is saying. You will drive her mad between you'" ' Send them all away, Nello I want to tell you â€" only you 1" she cried. "Take the chUd to the nursery, Mrs. Rivers," said Lord Saxon. But the woman refused to go. " I ?nll not leave her," she declared. "She is not safe with anyone but me." "Go," said the faint weak voice. And, we aping, bitter tears, the nurse obeyed the command of her mistrets, and left the room. "Wait for me in the dining room. Ma- jor Esmond," said Lord Saxon, "I should like to sde you agaia before you go." "I will," answered the Major. And then, with a slight gesture, Lord Saxon made known to me his wish that I should remain. "Speak out, Gabrielle," he said. " Of all people in the world, you need fear me the leait, because I love you the best. Speak to me fearlessly â€" tell me all." "Oh, Nello, Nello, nothing that I can say will make any difference to you â€" to us?" But I remarked that he did not answer the question. So did she, for she stretched out her trembling arms ^o him. "Nello, I will tell you all." She rose from the couch, and flung her- self imploringly upon her knees at his feet. She caught his hand in hers, and raised her agonised face to his. I pray Heaven I may never witness another such scene. Her golden hair hung like a glit- tering veil over her 'ihouldeis, and her fair luveliaess wiis shadowed by a storm of agonized despair. "Look at me, Nello?" she cried with passionate fervor, ' "Do not turn your eye from me!. You will not love me less when 1 confers that I am » most miserable sin- ner. Throw your arms round me, Nello take me to your breast. I cannot speak when I am so far from you." But he did not move. "Nello!" she cried again; and the pite- ous agony in her voice touched my heart "Speak to me freely, Gabrielle," he said. "At present I cannot understand what all this means;" and, as he spoke he laid his hand on her head. "I am a miserable sinner," ahe sobbed, after a momentary pause not think of the wickedness and I was persuaded. I saw the enormity of my crime afterwards but it was too late to withdraw then." "Tell me," he said â€" and I noticed the change in his voice â€" "is what the Major said trnis Are you Lady Jesmond?" "No," she answered, "I am not. Oh, forgive me, Nello, forgive me If I had known that I should see you and love you, I would never have done it. Oh, forgive me!" "WUl you tell me who you are?" he ask ed, gently but firmly. "I am Lady Jesmond's sister," she re- plied. "My name is Alice, not Gabrielle." She must have caught s^ht of his face then, for her voice died in a wail of deep despair. "Yon must forgive me, Nello, yon must," she persisted, "or I shall die here at your feet 1 If I had known tiiat I should meet yon, if I had known that the time was coming when I ahonld 'see you and love yon, I would rather have died than have been guilty of ttua sin. Great Heaven, there ia no pity in ^onr face, no love in yoor eyes Yoor heart is growing hard and oold towards me. Let me die â€" ^let me die i" She wrendied her luuuU from hla, and flung herself to the gromid in a fren^ of madneiw. I went to her, for I coold not bear tiie light of her deapalr. "Gabrielle, " I said, "do not weep ao bitter] V." Then,my heart achinar with an- gniattat the nght of the oeaccifa; "but I did of the act, betoe me, I tnnied to Urn. *K)h, ImA) Saxon, be kind to herl She knrea yon lo^ wen, and she is 10 nnhappf Bekioito her." " Tell me %\" Lord Saxon wfpin le- Queated. "I oaunot," die anawered **bv gbength fiOt me. Feliflia, f efeeh my moth- er; ahe will tell yon alL" "Yoor mother, Gal«ialle1 Shtf ia not bere,"l8aid. „ **AIi, I focgot yon do not know Mn. Rivera la my mother." ' " Mrs. Riven your mother 1" cried Lord Saxon,in undisgoised aatoniahment. "More deceit, mora intrigue 1 Oh, Ga- brielle, whom Ibelieved to be true aa I found you fair, how coold you atoop ao low?" The only answer to this reproach waa a moan of deapair, "There is a terrible scene below, Mn. Riven," I aaidientering the nurse's room. "Will you come down please Lady Jes- mond wants you." She seemed to fly rather than walk and 1 hastened after her. Ah, the moth- er's instinct, the mother's love She thought neither of Lord Saxon nor of me, but went to the girl who lay upon the car- pet, crushed and helpless. "My darling, what is it " she cried. For a moment the burning face of the unhappy girl appeared through the veil of oosened hair. " Mother," she said, "teU them all! Do not keep one word back â€" tell them aUl" The nurse looked up with a troubled frightened face. "You know!" she said. "We know that lady is not Lady Jes- mond," Lord Saxon broke in, "and we al- so know that you are Mrs. Fairfax." "It is all discovered then!" she said despairingly. "Oh, my beautiful Alice; it would never have been done but for me â€" guilty miserable me!" She turned to Lord Saxon, and Hept her eyes fixed on his face the whole time that Bhe spoke. "My lord," she went on, " you have judged her already. I read your judge- ment in your eyes. Suspend it until you have heard what I have to tell." He bowed. "I must speak of myself for a few min- utes," she said. "My husband was a poor hard-working curate who left me, when he died, with two little daughters, Gabri- elle and Alice. We lived at Wavartiree and after his death I supported myself and my childrenbygiving music-lessons there. I say 'supported' but only Heaven knows the desperate struggle I maintained to bring up my children respectably. I never knew until recently wluit it was to be free from the pinch of poverty â€" pov- erty all the more bitter because it has been what the world in its satire calls 'genteel.' Of all the slow tortures that destroy life, genteel poverty is the great- est. You, my lord, who have never felt the pangs of hunger, you do not know the trials that beset those who have to battle fiercely for their daily bread. My child- ren were good and beautiful. They were both clever and I struggled on until they were old enough to receive educa- tional training. I denied myself food in order that they should have enough to eat. Many a night, my lord, I have lain awake too hungry to sleep but they knew no hunger, no cold. They were little then. "When they grew older, through the good offices of a friend of mine, since dead, I found a home for them in a large board- ing-school near Paris, where they both received an excellent education in return for the services they rendered. "When Gabrielle was about seventeen, she had an oflier of a situation in India. A lady -going thither wanted a companion who could speak French. My daughter went with her and afterwards she went to live as governess in the family of Major Esmond. She was very happy there, and often sent me money home. Still my life was a terrible struggle, and few sun- rays illumined my dreary path. I had to Tent a comfortable house and dress respect- ably, or I should have lost all my pupils. Think, then, what news it was to me when I heard that my daughter was to marry the son and heir of Sir William Jesmond, although, as she told me, the marriage was to be kept sicret. Still I unierstood the advantages that must ac- crue from it." She paused for a few minutes. Lord Ssxon did not stir but I saw traces of deep emotion on hu face. CHAPTER XVin. "You cannot realize," continued Mn. Fairfax, "what that marrh^e meant for me it meant freedom from, the horrible grind of poverty, which had already al- most ciushed the life from me freedom from the irksome task of teaching for a miserable pittance a fair provision of the comforts and necessaries of lifeâ€" for I knew that my daughter would care for me. She did I believe that the first sum of money her husband gave her was sent to me. She told me that she would be able to do more for me after a time that, when she returned to Engbuid, I should cease to work that she would settle a substantial income on me and that at last I should have thd rest so long withheld from me 1 Think of my delight at the glowing prospect opened up to me 1 You cannot realise it, you who have never known want. My daughter begged me to be reticent as to her position and voe- pects, never to mention her manjtte ev- en to my dearest frUnds and 1 never didâ€" not even to poor Alice, her sister lying here, my poor beantifnl Alice I" She bent down and ksiaed thaooloorleM u$e half hidden 1^ the trembluig lia-H n "Not even Alice knew thm," she reit- erated, aa tbongh speiaking to hecaelt "When the little heir was bom, my daoghterwxote to me afiain, and told me of her happinesB adding that the pnmd- eat mommtt of her Ufa wuold be wbm she piaaedhar;iMleaoainii^ ama. fok i » Mod â- wfliet to both »f glA. I«* Saxon/' 1. T â€" Hebowed, bat did not apeak. Iwm b^i« that he would sayafew words to oomiort her. "All thia time," abe went cm, Taf daodifeBr Alice was in VteMO. Shebed {euuTan exoellent situation tfaen, Mid tUnga were going better with VM. Tlwn OMnr a period of disquiet. Oabndle had written tome from India to aay that Met buaband wasgoing to FalaM on aome miUtaiy burinesa, and that he would be absent for three months. ««The next letter that came from her brought the news of his death, and Uiat she waa coming home with the little heir to Jesmond Dene. I well remember the words of her letterâ€" " 'I shall ooimo home to you for a few daysfint,mother; my heart is so complete- ly broken by Paul's death that I could not face Jesmond Dene just yet.' "She cameto Wavertree, bringing with her no servantâ€" only her baby boy; and on the same day my daughter Alice re- turned from France. For the fint time since they were children, I had them to- gether under my roof. Try to realise the temptation. Lord Saxon, and you Miss Gordon. "We were then in my house quite al- one. I had no servant, no visitor, few of my pupils catne to my home and none of them knew anything of my daughters. Lady Jesmond, the diild in 'whom all my hopes centred, was taken ill and died quite suddenly. She looked very ill when she came, fer the loss of her husband had preyed on her mind and weakened her already debilitated constitution. She had never been strong she was fragile and delicate â€"unlike my beautiful Alice, who was always healthy. Poor Gabrielle died of inflammation of the lungs. We called In a doctor but, remembering all she had said about secrecy, I did not mention her name before him he knew only that she was my daughter. Neither he nor I anticipated a serious termination to her illness, or what was done afterwards would have been Wpossible but she died quite suddenly in the middle of the night, when Alice and I were in the house alone. I was terribly distressed â€" because of her loss chiefly, and also because of the complete shattering of all my hopes. The child might live and succeed to Jes- mond Dene; but there would be no pro- vision for me. If my daughter had lived I should have been well provided for but here she was lying dead Poverty and work still stared me in the face and I was so tired An idea â€" I admit that it was a wicked one â€" flashed across my mind showing me how I could avert the calamity which threatened my future prospects. No one knew anything about my daughter no one knew here in Eng- land, which was Lady Jesmond and which was Alice Fairiax. Why not ask the liv- ing child to take the dead one's place? "No one coula ever Know it would hurt no one. A widowed Lady Jesmond was travelling from India a widowed Lady Jesmond was expected at Jesmond Dene. They were both my children, and, as it could work no injury to any one, why should not the one pass for the other " "I thought it all over carefully, and viewed it in all its bearings. There seemed to me little harm in it and I was so tired of poverty, so tired of work The only danger I could foresee was the very one that has occurred â€" the coming home of some one from India who had known Gabrielle there but the chances of such a thine happening appeared to me very small. She had known but few peo- ple, and those few were not likely to seek her out in England and, if they should happen to do so, she could easily evade them. There did not seem to me to be the least danger of my plans being upset in that manner. I pondered the matter in my mind, and then I broached it to Alice. "At first â€" believe me. Lord Saxon she most positively refused to agree to my scheme. She said that it would be false, dishonourable, mean â€" that she would never consent to such a deception But I ^tilked to her, and pointed out that, with her beauty and her position as Lady Jesmond, she would be able to make a bnliant marriage. I penuaded her let the blame and the punishment fall on me â€" I deserve it. "I took my living daughter to the side of the dead one. I drew from my dead child's hand her wedding-ring and dia- mond keeper, and placed them on Alice's hand. " 'It is Alice Fairfax who lies there,' I said; 'and you are Gabrielle, Lady Jes- mond.' I took the boy and placed him in her arms. 'Henceforth,' I said to her. 'this is your child.' ' "I told the little fellow to call her 'mamma ' but I waa much troubled by the look in the child's eyes. If he could have spoken he would have said plainly, 'This is not my mamma she has gone away I' But he was too voung to under- stand; nevertheless, whenever he calls Alice '-mamma' there is a questioning look in his eyes." I wondered that 1 had not thought of that before, for I had often heard the cry of the child for his mother and seen his strange, inquiring gaze. This confession made clear to me many of the mysterious things I had observed during the past twelve months. "We had no troubie in successfully carrying on the deception," Mn. Fairfax continued. "No me suspected what had ^m done. AHoe took possession of Gabnelle's tmnki, of her clothes, her l?' ^?^ P"P*^ *^ **^ P**age left Iw ^tain Jeamond to be riven to Us wife. 2J° *t**? to aay a«t she was not Q^JriaUe, Lady Jennond t The doctor's ?;fr"^*? 7" "»^ out in the name of Ahee FurCaz, and jn Wattettee ehoioh- yaxd tihe name of Alice Fairfax la en- g^ved m vif dead daoghter'a tomb- atone. "But, when 'all wai daagjjier grew nerrous. •Ruged, my *ltii a fr-nd STaSSafege to oamp^tkiwigh. She u4 Mtea aiBM to l^«liild. Them and Staitheii, did â- »• «WB*to,ooma. £ mlTiM pniniM th*t Iwoold hve with her almv* J «*!*,*•? '^^If? happy. Oh,niybeaiitfW Alwe. tavel orShBdyonbyinyBUiwpMelol^r Her vmee diedam^lnhittflr eohi m Ab knelt hr her daughter's side and she who had for ao long been knowi •• /*dy Jeamond opened her arms and pDlowed the gray head upon her boaom. "Never mind, mother," she said. "Do not cry so, dear aU will be weU yet. Hello wiU forgive me." But I knew, from the stem pamed ex- pression on his face, that he would never take her to his heart again. He was "a wonhipper of beauly and a dreamer of dreams " but he was a man who valuid honour and integrity, who could not tolerate deceit. I knew her doom, poor girl, before he pronounced it "You will forgive us both, my lord 1 said the weeping /nother. "Your sin was not against me, he re- plied gravely. "Yon have wronged Miss Gordon more than you have wrong- "Felicia, you will forgive me " plead- ed Alice Fairfax. J'l forgive you, dear, with all my heart," I replied. "You have always been good to me, Felicia," she went on, "although I took so much from you." She did not know â€" she would never know â€" all that she had taken, or aU that I had lost. "Felicia has forgiven me," sho said, in a trembling voice. "Nello, you will nob refuse me pardon " "Forgive us, my lord I" sobbed Mrs. Fairfax again. "Not only do I forgive you entirely," said Lord Saxon, "but it shall be my care and my pleasure to provide for your future, Mrs. Fairfax. You shall luiow want no more." She turned quickly and kissed his hand. "I thank you, my lord," she said gratefully but her daughter's voice interrupted her further expression of thanks. "Nello, Nello," cried the nnhappy girl, "speak to me^think of me " "Will you leave us?" he said to Mn. Fairfax. "I wish to talk to your daugh- ter for a short time." Then, noting the violence of her grief, he added, "Do not weep so bitterly. It was a great folly â€" a wretched mistake but it is too late now to repair it. I can only say this â€" that your future shall be my care. Leave me with your daughter now." And, still weeping most bitterly, Mn. Fairfax left the room. Lord Saxon walked over to Alice Fair- fax, and stood by her side, gravely look- ing down at the face he had so often smiled upon. • "Alice 1^' he said, "It seems strange to give you that name." She looked up to him with eager pas- sionate eyes. "Shall I never be *Gabrielle ' to you again " she asked. "No â€" never more," he answered grave- ly. "The name was not youn, and you should not have borne it." "Oh, Nello, Nello, if you wffl not for- give me, kill me 1 I cannot live without you " she cried. "It is no question of forgiveness," he saii coldly "my dear, beautiful as you are, and dearly as I love you, we must part." (to BB OONOItrUBD.) ""T TT n- I m Tlic Evolution of Names. Annabella is not Anna-bella, or fair Anna,. but is the feminine of Hannibal, meaning gift (or grace) of BeL Arabella is not Arabella, or beatiful altar, but Ora- bel, a prying woman. In its Anglicized form of Orabel, it was much more com- mon in the thirteenth century, than at present. Maurice has nothing to do with Mauritis, or a Moor, but comes from Al- marica â€" himmelreich â€" the kingdom of Heaven. Ellen is the feminine of Alain, Alan or Allan, and has no possible con- nection with Helen, which comes from a different language, and is older by 1,000 yean, at least. Amy, is not from amee, but from amie. Avlce, or Avis, does not exactly mean advice, as some think. It comes from ^dwis, and means unhappy wisdom. Eliza has no connection with Elizabeth. It ia the sister of Louisa, and botti are the daughters of Heloise, which is Hele- wis, hidden wisdom. There is, indeed, another form of Louisa, or rather Louise, hioh is the feminine of Louis, but thu was scarcely heard of be- fore the sixteenth century. The older Heloise form of the name, Aloisa, Alolsia or Aloysia, was adoptei into mediseval English as Alesia â€"a name which our old genealogists confuse with Alice. EmUy andAmelia are not different forms of one name. Emily is from ^mylia, the name of an Etruscan gens. Amelia ODmesfrom the Gothic amala, heavenly. Reginald ia not derived from Regina, and has nothing to do with a queen. It is Remalt, exalted purity Alic, Adebis, Adelaide, Allza, Alix, AdiJme are all forms of one nam?, the root of which is adel, noble. But An- nie was never used as identical with An- nul or Agnes (of which bst the old Scot- tiah Annaa la a variety); nor, aa u atnidi- It Enocks the humouia, and incipieM â€", uUof thelung,, complSiK*«crc Stem. It stimuUtes in?"" of Uver, tones up the .to^r the boweb, purifies the bW^ up the weak places of theSd," purely vegetable cmpoandL '• nuxe than is cUimed f or T' S^ do 2r Piece' "Go^,.Sei^W^t Thenchare able, but not U^^" poor are generous, but lack abiU?' *« "As Good as New." are the words used by a Udv »k onetime given up by the mo.T!'"' physicians, and left to die R J""""" a mere skeleton, pale and'haeST*" able to leave her bed, from allSSig P^o'^iw to ,nff« • It Waa*tWs Heart. f n^^ ^»^ 7PV^ ** •better boy In the future," said hia mother. ;;Yea'm." sobbed the bv. rfmi "HIIIZl" '^^ "'^yo^ft'thw next tun» he aperiks to you." "Tes'm." Jl*i*'^S°/'!; â- »» "dded, ^yiBMtheti. om, '»did he tovoh yeutkewt «fi^ N« m." ressing diseases females, such as displacemeV W? rhoei, inflammation, etc.. etc a^' gan taking Dr. PierceaVavirltV'i scnption," and also using the local ti?" ments recommended by him andl. she says, "as good as new." 'Ptic- "'â- ed to one dollar. By druggists wdnc. No woman is educated who ig not «„ i to the successful management of af ily. TIirowAwayTrusj.es when our new method is guaranteal, permanently cure the worst cases ofT» ture without the use of the knife S two letter stamps for pamphlet andiS. ences. World's Dispensary MediJi sociation, 663 Mam Street, Buffalo, N^ The merit of great men is not 'undo' stood but by those who are formed to ]» such; genius speaks only to genius, What 10 Cents will Do. A 10 cent bottle of Poison's Nervilim will cure neuralgia or headache, iw cent bottle of Nerviline will cure tooth. ache or ;faceache. A 10 cent sample bottle of Nerviline is sufficient, to curecoldi diarrhoea, spasms, dysentry, c. Uj^. line is just the thing to cure all pjia, whether internal or external. Bmil your druggist a 10 cent sample of Nmi. line, "the great pain cure." Safe, ptompt, and alwayd effectual. Lai^e bottlei it any drug store, only 25 cents, The whole of hum -in virtue may be «. duced to speaking the truth alwayi!, and doiug good to others. YoanR Men Read Tbta. The Voltaic Belt Co., of Marshall, Mi4 offer to send their celebrated Electro VolatiC'Belt and other iSlectric Appliuca on trial for thirty days, to men (young or old) afflicted with nervous debility, lou of vitality and manhood, and all kisdnd troubles. Also for rheumatism, nennlto, paralysis, and many other diseasei. Oosi' Elete restoration to health, vigor and OU' ood guaranteed. No risk is inciimd a thirty dasrs trial is allowed. Write thn at once for illustrated pamphlet fret. The key of fate is iu our own hands; n often unlock it and then thro irtliek^ away. How They do it ^tl,tbe«toM« -•lit th» o**" gjgiamitte^ di«cloBC3 ^tbemoatati je^Iy proved navy there ^«nization y^i^Dgallove jhe fourteei ^gn Lieut. •( rf the Fifty Ijncbolas Pohit t^e N'hth Ar ^gatcbeff. Li fjghth Artiller junovitch. Sub jiraspol Begin vatchek of the jnder Strombei ner. a noble- w( noff, a priest's enstein, a phyt molovsiy, a pi rovtzefF, a priei dooy-Basmandj Vladimir Tchi VasUy Ivanoff, With the s: Tchemodanoff, Government bj fendants belong of the Nihilists- an active part 5 gt plots. Scm for for many y« known as 'lh( been tracked si: found spreid among the peas [jart in a street ^zan Cathedii 1879, in a Nihii in framing the rorism â€" and in ler comrades jr She was one of bombs which w March 13, 1881 some revolution workingmen. those wbo plsm assaBsinaticn of wards she was v military rcvolnt Mrs. Dr. Vc ipirator house ii In the assafsinat error. Prince K dsnofF was arii s Khark ff, in a h tahe pasEPP, ft pbletp, sKc^ ft K Lient.Col. As 1882, in tlie c ly revoluticri^.ry sc^ So-called respectable people wonlJficerB of the Pra hesitate considerable before pilfeni; your pockets m a crowded thorou^ifm That would be too too. The same dii crimination is not indicated by the ao called respectable druggist when thi wonderful corn cure, Putnam's Pauib CoBN ExTBACiOR, is asked for. Hef2 pilfer your pockets in the most gentee manner by substituting cheap and deager f "*!^® ^^^ ons substitutes for the genuine FatDtis' Com Extractor. Watch for these gentle men, and take none o:her than Patniin' Com Extractor. Sold by everywhere. N. C. Poison Co., ston, proprs. The ignorant man hath no greater fc than his own ignorance, for it destro] where it liveth. In his rccnrs •] c the army £iid tl nal meetirp's. I ary pampLktsV] ficers, but also a regiment, ai d rs ary purrcses. 1 munication with imitf important. When yon visit or leave New Torkg Baggage expressage and Carriage B stop at the' Gbano Union Uotsl, i }rand Central Depot 600 elek-ant nxnui up at a cost of one million doilnrs, |1 J wards per day. European plan. » Restaurant supplied with the best Hoiw" stages and elevated railroads to all of' Families can live better for less matter^,; Grand Union Hotel than at any oth* class hotel in the citv. A. plain, genteel dress is more and obtains more credit than lace kna^^ broidery in the eyes of the judiciooi sensible. Catarrh-A New Treatmest Perhaps the most extraordinary io°°|f m haa been achieved in modern scienoe a« j^ attained by the Dixon Treatment of Cajeg Ont af 2;0U0 nKMnnta f.mntm] AxOOi W.^ six months, cured of this siuDoom maiaoy. "/^^ thil the lose startling when it is rememnnw not Hve per cent, of the patients jawf-J^ executed regicit ttienuelves to the rejfu'" P'^SSSi » memhcrB nf th*. benefitted. whUe the patent medicinee" memners or tne other cuivertised cores never recortt»o".|W were his constai IN alLStarting'with^the claim now P|»^ believed by the most scientiflo men •»-» oeuevea Dy tne most scieniuiu -â€" ^y the disease is dne to the Pi;«8enM w „ lag parasites in the tissues, "•. J^^ â- â- hia cure to their ei»y once ' adapted HogatchefT, and of the bombs, tl __ clamations, and minationrthia ^^iplished the ««^ by the regicides is practically cured, and the peman^J^ " Apollo Nemo questioned, as cures effected ^y hin" ""^^»t the secret print ago fcre cures stU!. No one .else has " ^jj i.-^. y tempted to cure catarrh in this mannffl. •» wok part in an othHt treatment has ever cured c^JiV^jlK Treasury at Goi application of the remedy is simple ana j- _._ •' „y,„ done at home, and the pre9Pi.t «"^,;i W *»8 " char year Is the most favorable for a fP«2%M jO'We at Odesi permanent cure, the majority or ca^^ Moscow a sccre cured at one treatment «««fx«5^4"s01f,3^ \,^^ fj^" respond with Messrs. A. H.i'i-s-ui' ^j^,^ Mr ^T^ raise J Kmg^treet West, Toronto, Uanada,.ftDOj;;^;^ Tohnikoffkept i ateunp for their treatise on cdtarrxi » â- _^ *:. and Degaieff. C member of the Revolutionary S tionary pamphlei the officers of th also among the s mand. Lieut. Rcgatcl ist after 1880, ar of the regicides v ways. He prepay smong officers ar [places in Russia, advice of Vera I e army, and de brts to the for iBevolutionary C Sub-Lieut. Til the chief of the ress, eet free a J having furnisher' form. Ensi;;!!^ itary revolution comrades, the n aeff. Lieut. Ba intimate with th all their plans. ers of the St. P( lutionaty Societ rp ;08. GAiLOWAT Co.. Cotton, WooUeft^ pet, «ad Wonted Shuttle Msken, i»" CRBS-TOWNS^ 1iS0\ ONE HUNDRED ACR^TO^^" lot 4, eonotasion S'k**i?SG (»«* otahaid. and fencing. O. 8. KUSO. "»»â€" IBOTDHES SS:t/Sl^|y HAND. .8TAMP§^"ig;i FREE nmtOi Dress Ont. CottiBg. •sSfi^ mj