mmsamm^mi KjKffi 'it- .1 MIMAM. PTER II.â€" CJounxTOD eene wu silent for a th ynu^, atsj^ ol qni^y, with a gtim mile mad a enriooa â- adden pain at us heart. **WheQ we partâ€" nqr i^aiid do not find it neoessaiy to wished ]» eonU have stay- J iad^sNoelSy. '^Ihey are at dow k»t of not now, ma^kal J doftis, jsmmtj I shosl^iTe made uf* for months when hAoaine, self stiAnmn iritTiniitMrir welcome. iLij^uai ' he ssid to hiinself DUghi *^rr thafttfhshad eoaU he i^to sti^ for oBonths when got tired of ns in IS (, her w notiung i; he has id disappointmi ther qnMOflW^e shoula laefe mazri^i it'not been i^jt^ou," She psosed for an instant, and t^ui, a« if in spite of her- so^r weSf • tfnâ€" ^H6 ^^maras ai^ or eyes; ia«iSSl i^ZfitEose \et^dd;%irtmiieVWinmfond a. old times. He saw again the girl^t^ the foreshadowings of the beauty noiN^ ainj^y f ^filled, he reme m bered die j^y goodnes to me," she said, a tlitill of deep f eelifig in heiTyoioe. "He came to me when I was hopeless and penniless and f ihJU l U WP " *^Yes, penniless. He comforted and helped nle, and-^tfas^Vs to you â€" I had to. give him the wont thuble of his life in return. He thought that I was free to marry iwiien he a^edj msio be his wife, and I ,had to tell him all my dismal tale. He â€" who would not submit, ha could not believe in' such a cruel fate; l)ut it was too h|rd for Him. " ♦'Andwhy â€" why do you tell this thing tomef "Why? That yott may be doubly sure of the useleasaesB of such a request as that you have made to me to*day. Why do I tell you^ I will tell yon more. It may be beneficial to you to contract his conduct with your own. He, this man who loved me, attended my mother in her last illness-^he is a clever and suc- cessful London doctorâ€" and when I, who had left the school, where I was working for my bread, fell ill too, he attended me. What money my mother had was speni to pay her bills and for her funeral â€" ^had there been thousands, I would not have touched it-^ib was yours; bub there was nothing left. The little salary I had drawn went in the first week of my ill- ness; and then he, mydoctor,leamtthat I was penniless and without a friend in the world. He sent me nurses, he supplied me for many weeks with every comfort and luxury, he gave me his constant care; and, when I could ii)C%il to bioa, he ask- ed me â€" b9gg«i- • m^t-m^, friendless moneyless, unknown â€" to be his wife. Then what a tale 1 had to tell him! I be- lieve him to be one of the noblest men that walk the earth; bat he cursed you, then. 1 did not beg for mercy on you. It seeraad to me that you merited the con- tempt of all srood men. " Kingston Keene answered her, as she finisher' with a -short laugh. "Tioir contenipt will no^ hurt me," he said. • I ought to thaqk you, I auppoa-a, for your cofiSdeaco, for entrusting me •vvith the inteieaomg tal-* ot how you, tSe wife of oa" luaa, w^re th war tad in y tir desira r marry another â€" I migtxi to thank y u, a^id 1 do. Such a wuinan, it is plain is n t the kind of person I would ask to s!iare my home and my life. Ba sure than I will nor trouble you with a iejjotifiun t.f luj^Teti'aeat. That ia all, I think, .«iiich remains to be said; and I will K " "Will your' heas^. "Will you, Miriaai^ Lot.u§, objitefate ,jJi(pae empty years we hive spent a'loneâ€" "I ?ave been a3 lonely hs you â€" 'et U3 begin again to g.ther. Wfiat do you sayl" ^3at, before he reached the door, ]M riam knew by the sound of f amilar t ices in the hall that the Archers had r ' uraed ' You had better waib a momen*' ii you l.3rtse," sue said rather horriedly, "You cnexplriin your presence as you think best; ' aiid bo, with a whispered word of "the cbildreu" to Mrs. Archer as she- passed her »t the doov, Miriim escaped, and left Mr. Keene to the hospitable cares uf the Ilaverend James and his wife. "Whi-. an odd thing for hina to call to bid U3 'g ji.'d-bye' in the middle of a Sun- day afcem ori, when he migbt have known we wer-i at church!" said Mrs. Archer fc hiv huiband, a qaarser of an hour lafcir. "And did you ever hear of anyt;hi:ig do mad as his rushing back to Jamaica in this ridiculous fashion?" "Hei 18 moic estimable person," an- wered h.-r ch'i citable husband, "and hia sister's rtevt;.ii to hiai is â€" ia really touching; but he certainly does appear to have tnidmuinera." Meanwhile Mr. Keene, standing on the gravel sweep, sheltered by the fast m- creasiug gloom of that wiper's afternoon, looked up at the windows of the house he h*d left. ' Then that i$ over!"' he was th'nking. "I have done vrhac appealed to me to be my duDy â€" I have otfered to make resti- tution, :f I I'wed is, aad it is over. Very good Better ao â€" betcer, I am sure, for me. I am to old to bring such a change into my li'e, and the risk is trameu lous. Better so!" Repeating this phrase many times, as though tu impress it on his memory, he turned away. Bat, before the rectory was quite hidden from view, he halted, stood irresolute a moment, and then re- traced his steps. The window of the room he had just left glowed with the firelight withm; he approached ib, tread- ing softly on the grass border, and looked ia. Mrs. Archer, still in her out door dress, was "Standing on the hewrth mg taMng to her hnsbsnd. Keene heiard the sound of her voice as she chattered to liim, alUiongh the words did not readi him, and her light laughter fell with a discordant sound on his ear, not attuned to ndrth to-night. "HIb eyas wandered over ihefire-ltt oosy nxninseandiof one lother f «m, and came back uttafiM to the two on the mg. •Go and get off yonrboiuiei^" -lEr. Azeher wassayii^ lmpeatiT«[|y, ^a^lst ase hate sooie tea." BBtftx^MWihe^omsd tian^toohm. hfas, he pot oota liaiBd aiid ftwr ys wSe ok«e to him Slid kisMd bw. The nan at tike wialosr taEMd avaf and' proud, whicbuhad met his so ahprt a time ago, but w^Isr^^Msqrent |4-^t|ieir.timid veiled expression, eyea which then had "1138nMrtr"filad-- den his brain,, and to cause him. to com- mit the on'egr^t act of folly which had come near to ruin his lifel He saw her shtinkihg^frdm }A^ihx6, his told haresses,' he saw' her nervonsly' obedient, humbly snbaarvient to hevmother and to him â€" hesawjier white and deathlike face, the appealing terror in her eyes as she sank at his feet by the altar steps--8aw it as he had seen fuU many a time since then In.his dreams â€" and then again there came to him a vhuon, but recently beheld, "but henceforth never tobe effaced from his memory, of a beantilffll ^oman who, lying back in her c1iaif,*dang'vjary toftly to the children in her arms. CHAPTER III. During the mists and fogs of that damp November, Mr. Archer caught a cold which settled'on his lungs, and from the effects of which he seemed -unable to rid himself. In spite of the anxiety of his wife and household, he would not be pre- vailed on to take proper care of himself, but would go out in all weathers to visit the sick or sorrowful, and would persist in attending certain wening- classes just established, and at tiult time vdry near his heart. So from relapse to relapse he fell, till his -wife grew frantic with terror, and lost heart through her own impotence to control the man; At last Sir Robert Hick, whose word at Eastwick, at least, was law, cauie to her aid, and declared that for a month or so the Rector should be compelled to rest. To tins effect it was necessaty to remove him from the scene of his labors and to this end he was compelled to accept the loan of a houEo at Bournemouth belonging to Sir Robert, and- to which he and his family occasionally resorted, where it was hoped the enforced idleness and- the milder climate might work a beneficial effect. The Rectory was shut up, the children' and servants going With the Archers, and Lady Hicks, who "had plaimed everything which Sir Robert had proposed, finally car- ried off Mra, King to pass with the family a,t Eastwick Park the period of the Archers' absence. Miiiam had stood out stoutly against this kindly proposition for some time she would fain have kept the Hickses at a distance, if that could have been pos- sible, but was obliged to yield ab last. For one tlfiag, unless she accompanied the Arch ^rsâ€" about whom she had a feel- ing -that, at^ such a time, drawn clpsefr than ever to each other by the fear of a possible separation, they would be hap- pier lefo to each other â€" she had nowhere to go. She knew â€" for she had cause to know â€" the difficulties and unpleaaant- neases attending a young and handsome woman who goes unprotected and unat- tended to a fresh neighborhood. She had libtle desire to renew that old experi- ence. Mr. Archer advised, his wife implored, Lidy Hicks persisted Mr. Keene was on his lonely way to Jamaica. |g was, after all, th'e easiest course open to her and she desperately wanted to do easy .things for the rest of her lifeâ€" she was so weary of fighting and struggling alone. And .so it came to pasa that she went, and in a few days had made an easy conquest of the household. Sir Robert, used to dumpy and insignificant- looking women around him, was never tired of airing his pompous politeness before this beautiful vtoman, who accept- ed it with such queenly ease. Lady Hicks was proud of the new attraction her house boasted, and was aoxious to gather her fiiends around her to display the qu^te uncommon, treasure she had discovered.^ Eila, the^ only daughter, a somewhat gushing but generous aud un- selfish girl, raved about her new friend, huQg on Moriam's words, and even round her neck sometimes, copied quite frankly her dress and the manner iu which 'her ,h .ir was worn, and d^ightedly took les- sons from her in singing. Miriam fonad the adulation, wearisome at times .; but she was so unused tofeefl herself ot much importance that, as a rule, the new sen- sation pleased, her. She found the abundant interest which kindly Lady Hicks had at her commknd now pretty evenly divided betweeh the reports from Bonnaemonth of Mr. Archer's progress, and so maoh as was known to her of the movements oi her only lurotiier. Miriam was joint recipient with Ella of the manifold oonjecturiss and sormises arisinz irom inefficient knowte^go in the: ease of the latter. ' "It is so vexing to me," Lady Hieks said, "to think that all this time he has been wai^ing.oyw his tiresmne hnsiiwss inLondm |m oqght to. have spfsnt witb ns. Whm he tqo^ leave in thiU hiuntled way I thoi^i he sfoled at onbe, bat« month is goqie uid he u stiU here. Bo/berb hoirc^arteUs ine that thb'vesiei in«]dek^ is'riisl^'ib aafl afaiffta t^ morrow. It does seem heartlesst^lbBaBV .dew mb^bBf." TOi^ Islfeto -maA aatoaaoamonUi ABdhlObmh. for avpfeilk i •â- |heAo«klgonngr» Mil ene eut liHiei m 'Tj A Ant CMdTf loweredf voioe, 'nncle Kingston is nuuT' ne^-^n^^/hat dreadful?" •^^-"Dlfiofnl t" acquiesced Miriam, with a qhlSa natanlliliaHdeK "BnTthen he* *SimIy-Iu;hted" 3ra wing-room. is not siogulav in tiuyb misfortune. jManj pelple/ijefciiapl/? -JKl iXV ^nSllaisnot deplor aloring the fact of his JJH)ftillBa"M8 y Hicks, seriously. "I^^tftiie peculiar mis- " igire. Tie fortune attendioig ic. 'JHere is no reason why yon should not be told. My dear^ he accua%; pAttod; »fMtt dittieiMI at the church door." Mariam ~waa sitting over the' fire in the dark with the other ladies, 'waiting for tea to be brought in, when this was told her. Ella, lying on the hearth-rug at her feet, turned and laid her arms across her new friend's knees, lookhig up, into her face to watch te effect there of this startling disclosure. She looked for signs of surprise and dismay. She could nob understand the sudden light of appeal which came into- th6 deep gray eyes she was watching. "Ah, do not tell me " Miriam said. "Dear Lady Hioks, I do not want to hear. I have my own troubleâ€" do not tell me " Ella laid down her sof b cheek consol- ingly on the white hands which trembled a little on Mrs. King's lap. ' lb is nothing to recall your own trouble, my dear," £he elder lady said. "He did not lose his wife â€"poor Kingston â€" so mercifully as â€" as you lost â€" not by death. He found that she was unworthy." Ella lying against her felt the shiver which passad tluougU Mrs. King's frame at the words. "I hope nnde Kingston is sure," she said, a doubt of the infallibility of his judgment arising for the first time in her mind. "Some one might have fibbed, mother. It would be a horrid thing if he left this poor girl, and after all he had no j usb cause for doing so. " ° Miriam released one hand from imder the girl's cheek, and gently smoothed Ella's hair with it. "My dear, there was no mistake," replied the mother, with sad conviction. "Kingston, in such a vital matter, would satisfy every doubt, you may. be sure. No everytjhlng was proved up to the very hilt." "Aud was ,Jiha-^the unworthiu^ss jiXl her own, or was ib the un worthiness of othersâ€" of her parents, perhaps 2" Jlir- iam asked a littl«e. unsteadily. "Her own â€" her own entirely,' she was assured, and felt for the moment a sense of gratitude towards Mr Keene r his reticence. "I wonder," Ella observed, after ' a pause' "if uncle Kingston remembers â€" if he thinks of her, or even regrets h^r, perhaps." "You may be sure he remenibert," answered l^yHwks. '»He will not speak of his mu^Qr^ne ev^p to me but each time thkt t look into hia eyes I know thatlie remembers. I beUeve that he deeply 'loved this miserable 'woma,n." "Oh no!' Mfriam cried to this with eager hasto. "Oh, no " "You think not i • He is cold ami pas- slonleu now? but that is the. result, of self-represaion,; he was not always so. His conduct tturougIiont,:the rashness of this unhappy marriage, proves to me h^ must have iiftadlylovSd this girl. There was, hoHreVefr, something he loved more, his honor and the- stainlessness of his name. He does not enlarge to me upo^ his griefs; but I have not fallen into the error of ignoring them. I know too well what he must have suffered." "Sheâ€" the womm â€" probably suffared too," Miriam said softly. "You have nob heardtwo sides of the questiou, Lidy Hicks. Be sure she had her grievances too." "Poor ancle Kingston 1" laughed Ella. "Picture him, Mrs. King, with bhght- ed hop^ and a broken heart and Tife- lon? regrets I --uncle Kingston with his stnrdy frame and copper-colored face and hair 1 I do hope that heavy, heavy mous- tache of his is not going to turn gray too: it really is the tmly interesting thing about him*"' "Poor boy " sighed Lady Hicks. • 'My poor old playfellow and protector and friend â€" poor ^ngstoh 1 To think that tiiat curly hair bf his shdtildhe turning gray, Uiat he should be getting qoiteT^ quite iitd^'tiiat be should bb alonel" ' â- *-.. â- *â- â- ':#';.# ' â- *"â- '.â- â- • iSfcat excRlenient prevailed at East- wick Park whoL Bobr-the only sonH-HMune home irom college for gOMod, to. be enrolls ed at once sa psrtner in the great bqswing firm, henceforth to be known as that of "Hicks and Son" He'^#as not a bad-looldng or a bad dispositioned young feUoi#, considering how he hadbeen feted and spoilt indos- trioBsly from his bai^hood^ He was a little free with his meney^biit what ooold-one «^peqt l^vad theret was plexJy of itâ€" a fitt^ SflUi^i^e^ited-^which was iufsvltahleâ€" as littlct nnbearable generally as is poSSflde'to only' sons of rich parehte, Soehas fieiieailili i^yther, at least, ador- ed him, aad lodrad%p itttohiittebiioir adflsiifaiflfr «sJia sto^ loot ihe'tog ta th* rooui â-¼faieii iwas! alwsra Jet :»atiast ooitvenation drifted. An hour later the ladieS ol^he party irere^taking tea^ the^;HR4|,pr^eAt~.hnt 2*f ho genUotaen do not honor us," one ibithAEiAaiA/ a TM^#WS^^ ^^ important â- w u ay ' have such things to say to each' ^ler, and they are so 'mum' when we are present. I don't; knMff what p»pa call J|e-d^^,i^ i^ he does Wli'cOme.* Just then pipa%ilii^idb'%as heard out- side the door. • • ' v "Agatha is here," he said. 'Shd will be so pleasedâ€" K;ome in. " -Then the door was opened and two gentlemen appeared, duskly and dimly seen beyond the pleasant gleam of the firelight. "Hero is a surprise for you, Agatha,' IJtte Of themâ€" Sir Robertâ€" said.' "A^ .%ho.t«.dt Jf Ifady ^i*S cried, droppmglier tea-Clip nastily and standing up. "It is only I; Agatha," replied a quiet voice she knew, and sh'e sprang forward joyously. "Kingston, how good of youâ€" how glad I am T'she 'driedj' and 'she put her two hands on his shoulder, and lifted her face for his kiss. "How good of yod " she repeated, almost crying. "I thought 1 had seen the last of you; audi have been so unhappy." "Uncle Kingston 1" Ella' exclaimed gaily j coming forward, "how splendid of you to come in time for to-night." Mr. Keene patted and kissad the girl's "Why *to-night,' little one " he asked and turned to shake hands with two other girls who greeted him. "I can scarcely see you," he said, laughing. "Ibis Millyaad Blanche," their aunt S plained. "And, Kii^tpn, you know rs.i Kii^ She is sbayihg-mth.. na^ ipi ., a and MiMSafSJSSSt ISBS^. ' iime; Mr took "You mentioned in your last letter that she was here," he said to his sister. ;3S8jrsife«S3s^°"i^f thought I would .run down and see you all once .again. â- , And why is.it^ El|a, ^at have "bfeen so" peciiliarly tortunata in hitting on to night for my arrival 1" Tht^n Etls, iHth" her arm ih hfe, began eag*:ly *to explain tp him how Rob was hon^^ and hoW to-Hfghb there was to be a â- **ydiing" dinner-party, and a little dance after it^the very first dance of this year2-fh^ b* midst ff mich, M^s. ** â- (TOM continxtEd.; On the Mle. At evening, when the sun has sunk in ruddy splendor behind the grey desert Then the dingy yellow river is touched by ruddy reflections of the after-glow, and the waves rippling UadStftdiaU^ Shadows of the brown banks have a purple -sheen on them. The Ibag level stretches where 9rops ara just beginning are a vivid green. Dark telt^ of .palm, the feathery fronds 9f which are swayed slo.vrly.l^ the breeze, Sujmd out' clearly against the sky. Be- ,tween their tall shafts one sees the ridge of a distant mountain range, above which the oB(^g^*3ghtflpttrre^'»Hijk l^l^red byi duskjT belt1s7*where" Jlust riats from the desert. The warm golden tintj fade to pale chrome, and th^n Hurh through inatiy gradations Into roseate hues and die 'away into the deep blue btudded with %tars overhead. Every now and then the darker tints ate brightened by faint ^throbrf of rttddy brighit until the after glow disappears and iu its place the ores-* cent moon, sinking low towards the wes- animate nature there is something of In-^ ctfeitee rapidly as we go on. Biff-i backed herons are not so plentiful ai in the lagoons of the inundated Delta, but under the hollo|{;. Jumk. Kingfishers,; black and white, and green and bine, dart across the ^^^ HbopAoes^vkhv^r about tamarisk and mimosa, myriads of blue rock curde dmidradK^^R^ve every village. KeStrlOiB Ifih^erable pose wings liigb^alKfte'^tS;e' maize; vultores gorged by gluttony and hopping heaviljf! *|^^ft~%fi^ outstretched, cranes, and the great Dalmatian pelican may be seen Off distant isandbfd^. Hero 4a|d there %pm Jpknn P/dip. wiA its; «rown ofiloii-Bke ^pk^ t^^Ms usll^ we aro withfii iSm^oa ti#iiMy M^nented by erooodiUi^biltf'We^tii'W see any sign of them vet. ProbaUy theincqrston/)! to mote «Mlttdeii'Ct»i^ -*"" I ns iss way '^froiai down. ' ofbRif and kitchen, and on Bourse he planned scheme, which he communicated ~in"v, a doaeftr 'eongenial spirits upon 'Chto Within the next half-hour the m«hL %raiiumaien#d sfcrtimato the tell^ to speak to six different peopleV «ffiee; and every one of them end«j message with a wish that the beef â- [onionsmmi^^e satisfactory. Thsj :Iawing.WBeK whMi, fuHy recovered j merchant was among his friends agjL â- told all of them a sbory of the wonden' his new instrument,* the telepho, " Not only can we hear each oti, ed, and voices," said he, " but last Friday el! fWire fa body who spoke to me ab my home ca ^# ^^^^ smell the beefsteak and onipus thatk piimiesit proparing for my dejeuner I" mates of â€" t-.^ ., ally, wa dele DU onf u Ai rior 1 le sti ^mur inca abst Ilia piionli peenliar Corns Corns I j^p^ m Tender Corns, painful corns, soft cot f*iii"»«d 1 bleeding corns, hard corns, corns cf ••nd resoi kinds and of all sizes, are alike remij baMlity in a few days by the use of Vvrsi the work Painless Corn Extractor. Never 1 Black CO cure, never causes pain, never la listed by deep spots that are more annoying tj instructi the original discomfort. Give Putst Moyunei Painless Com Extractor a trial. Ber, ^e co of substitutes. Sold by druggists ere En|^h 1 where. Poison Co. Kingston, prop " "'^^ "Maggie, i don't like to see this i S°" " on the furniture," "All right, mi S?!^""" I'll shut the blinds right away?' «»» tun) A Sore Remedy for Neuralgia I^diui Neuralgia is one of the most conm to attain and distressing complaints*incidentsl theroacl this climate. Ib is not confined to i .filled particular season, for whilst most g»ne herculea in the winter seasons, yet many suffer salivated excruciating agony in the heat of snmm stwek it. In late years this form of disease hai i made fro come betoer known, and comequentlyt hfM|k. inoans, qf • r^ef hve become greatlf dwractei ^eea'^d m' numbeis^-as well as in effio Goersen Among the most powerful and penete words, si ing combinations, placed within the ra "Aithou- of the public for the relief of neunlj **f^ "^^ "' we cin mention no remedy equal t« The ir more certain than Poison's Kbevhl' ried thn Its power over pain is something Tond following f ul, and we advise a trial for neuralgia, or twent; any other painfal complaints. Iferni the inaec: is sold by all druggists at 26 cents aboti eell and c also trial botdea at 10 cents. made bo Poets are inspired. When ther s^»' hsd, he f hands with an icicle they feel like wnti the^first. a farewell to Summer. scopic eel Some tobaccos spurt up in the pipe tI tached t] smoking, -with little crackling explosin roaches. This is caused by the addition of for,- After k matter to assist the combustion. Wheiii enough t purity of the tobacco i^ not tampered «t stick tin and it has been property tak'eh" care of, t they, lii eombostible foreign matter ia wholly i escaped necessary. For in that case it bum in the flc a lower temperature than almost anythii result of Nothing of this kind is seett in' smoking t^^^h feve " Myrtle Navy." It bnniB with stea rpjjg jj^ piaced or Ngtkrartd fistetha fcl â- Hd to kinivfiott^f, It combustion throughout. Ethel â€" "Oh, mamma, I've got aud^ter Goi pain " Motherâ€" Where, dear " Etljoaches i (a reiihed child)â€" "In my sash, mamm Caref u Cold feet and hands ate certain indioation; of ini;/Mie and feet cirooiation of the blood. Dr. Carson'e Stpmi^V,' i Bitters pro«u%9B,tl^^^i^li|tiMtlEaep3,tlie boweb t bpeal^l ular aud iifdUoea gbod Sealth. XaiiKe bottles at 30 cei i^f^crwarc â- 'Dtjn't fret'if y6u paniiot go into sociattense. The' oyster is often at a supper when i "My h would -perhips prefer to be at home in! tears stoc bed! disappoir .... lmporta^t• ined ovei When yoi i^fett or leave New York City, s Alknnvor Bagge«e espreasage and Carriage Hire, s^T'^Y*^^ stop as the Grand Union Hotel, oppa istic that Qrand Gentry J)^p;;i; j6C»0 .elaaaiit rooms gaen it 1 up as a coat'Ol one million dollars, H aadiT^ „ wards par day. European plan. Kiovatne mass Kestfiurant; supplied with tbehest. .Horsacithe back fas stages^ and elevated railroads to ail dep:, Families c»ji live better tor less money at "*®, V*" Qrand Union Hotel' tliss at any clber fi Oarea to iSH hotel in the oiiv. Me, I Woman is a luxury. UnleHs a ms between tsircunwtawser'permit of luxtiries lie i wings, t^ettcr be contei't with sewing 9b his c "I tre collar stjudf. j j ' ., the ague. ' "• C4taftTrt»t-A Ttenr Tr^mttdeat ment. I P«hapa ibe met eztraorduituy success 6 Jme wit â€" «4^rr^^^i5.r^ S fi-t and Out ttXwS'laStttJitB treatad^nrlhg the 9 Wtige I hi six months, ndiy ninety per cent. ha Six months, fully ninety pec cent nave hlAw.nrisG cured at this stubborn malady. ..This is n "' P^v mmtvmimi^heiolim^mn^tei On tb not five per cent, of the patients present scribed o g^n^wvBB. to the reflrular practitioner i -,„_j- beaeflUSd; .^hi^* Ihd patent BiedioineB • »»»8 • ^othjp^«4ve?tiaBd^§rA never osconl a ens '"Be not alL Starting witb the claim now genei««odniann( twlieyed, hi i^'ijribsr jBaentfflo^ men Unf fl the disease Is due to the presoice of! 'Ouu u ta9 parMtas-'in the tisSaes. Mr. Dizot ^aTsely once adapted his cure to thehr eJ» a|ia ain minatimi;. this acoompUshed the cstf " ° Isjptacttoally cored, and, a»e permanency ii^V'^O^ *1 no jTii Groerse questiened,' as Ciiree'etQsbted^y him foni J* â- S* axexorea Btili. No one elss has ere' tmipted toourecattfch in th|» manner, anij -:, ocair treatment has ever cored catarrh, 'f apidioatltMr tiC'tiiBTemedy IsBimpIe and cx. ' 1 J ^^ '»jL.saMOD o{' or^B^SDee „ _8hoidd' raspoad with Messrs. A. H. DIXON SOVh KinMtreet West, Toronto. UanadA. and etoi 1 stai^Jft th^ treatise oS^o^S^-iioiitK Star. idhiS Wr. "^i^rttShSr^^er roo«,- nu^lje^ lethinrf (dtow «r dock all day atnight3Kia*:i5!^'.^^;. xtmyvn eaa set aomekUns to stop that ooo^ Lm â€" â€" â- â- • |tii0T*r« MisiiRwblid[i(arl«»ia layfcig to im Bs our hosteii, i7 "iK^fr }menal for new Eter t srsen the lai Eter ieved itesi -inch ie"1 Tester) priso rs, h u nfc ^«1? Hstate Ageni teisr. ftaiiM, a FiDwsi^J I ^â- l^^^^^^i^^'ii^^^^^^'^^^"^^- ':.-.v...i^--.B^S£a^i£ .- A.i.-'^^S "â€" -^