The Exeter Times, 1884-9-11, Page 2 (2)goes, not even Rene
He is still at the
aware; but _ she will
w
g . to r one faithful friend,
emima Ann, 'Waiting for the answer to
�* ei '_,r ' a.' not ,
or write to him.
She ,, w e �
Bl' 11" �h`S, 1'1,1r I , �'tl`!
Siboit
Veto stay 1"
nil 'Irene Jltrui Mere her ?et=• the, louden ro��d,g1'hIods, and " `fo stay. I havorun away, Jemima..
" Ons Night's ,lstyxter]ty,., with her a will ra" fi lir "Merica, 'I am notnever more No—do going—baolt nevem eve :
,tc„
to dc. And once away, no Bower on snail - do not ask me.q!hues•-
compel her to return, Come What quay tions to -night ; I tam tired, so tired; 1
-death itself—she will never return to cannot tallc. Give ane some•tes, please,
i' A I2 T I. this life frown wilt* site fifes. if) ou can, and let me lie down some -
In mine eyes she ie, the sweetest weeShe dresses. She ,racks a mediahere and Yt:;t: To-morrove I will tell
"
that I ever looked on. with, some needful things; she takes the shoo everything, Jemima Anu starts
jewels given her by ?aladaala: araIeutine, co
up, full of mice= and repentance. In
lIRo11 Aatoaasorr Yo1,ltlsr., and money seffecient foe .all present ,a moment the candle is lit, and she is
removing her young lady's bat and
]mantle. Now she sees how thin she
has grown, how pale, how wore -1r very
shadow of the brightly- beautiful "Wise
ise
Snowball " of hardly a year ago,
She pours herself a second cup of tea. noels. If these things are root hens, they
Rut her baud .shakes, and her pulse are :lot at least the proper of Shane
beats nick and high. Not going, after Valentine. If M. Paul is their xigbtful
all. Miss Dorothy, much perturbed,
takes the advice, and marches up to ," Oh, any Ivor dear,,` she murt2urs,
the chamber of her sister'-ira,.law. Enter- t, d arc effort, to ,sat. tears rising. to her ayes, "" What a
big. she finds Dolores in serol,darkuos 't► s:.pfe• hard, hard Cline m must have bad,'`
ILIAher Dolores herself, lying Bale ammo
tri within �y,hard^-haazt•break lla;" Dolores
her pillows. IIer eyes are closed, her he 01,00 f ee, Q itlrJan e>na, once
hands are clasped above her head, her far from this b..•. once across the answers ie the aaulo spiritless way,
fair hair is towed .about—eo lying size ocean, once 'fauI .gut of the power of for all thatt I inly over --ever tired out
foreverw, Jere,
looks so wan, so wort, so really ill, that her tyrant and i villa Booth, and she here Uou, rod tr will rapt am
Dorothy is startled said alarmed, Nara notlliug—n.,• her work, no pav- y'
Nly doer Dolores," she eateJaJi s, erty,nor homelessness, Silo will be tree!
"what ie this? Is it possible you are tier heart boats at the thought. �l few
really ill?" weeks more of this life would drive her
The blue eyes openand look up at her, mall.
The dark circles that tell of sleepless The house is. Ter • still, in its long :hent u stairs and da�v11, bringstea,
nights surround them. forenoon repose. the servants are I'
"Not really ill, only tout of sorts and ens cd in their various dnties—the sets the table, gees out and returns
altogether unfitted for a railwauurne . u•a fol Luc • iia, one with '1ter oris- with a crusty loaf, a pat of fresh butter,
My lead aches. You will pr o Inert ,tress. No one notices the quiet figura watercress, and a cold roast fowl. These
without rue, It is impossible for me to that, veiled stud baked til lll+xld b rafreshurenta elle arranges in the old
go to t'oruwall to.day."
"But Vane said—"
' T know a uickly, "Rhe could not fore.
see this. Indeed my head aches hor-
ribly; I was awake all night. Do not
stay for rue—with a few hours' perfect
tEL I shall do very well. There is no
reason why you. end Miss Routh »»Mould•
disappoint hung. Do not lose your train
by waiting here. A few hours' repo ,
a rid I will be quite well again. 7iouur
brother will be angry if you dis ambit
bins, you: Itnow. '
This is so true that 3lisa Valentino
winces. She stands more thoroughly et
a toes than ever before in her life. To
go, or not to go, that is the question.
%.inch will anger Vane moeta to ° go to
him and leave Dolores behind, or to re-
main with her and disappoint him? His
irritation is certain. either way. While
ahestauas irresolute, Camiilacomesfiut-
termg gayly to the rescue.
"Ill, LadyValeutino? So sorry. So
ver yy''inopportune. Cousin 'Vane will be
so disappoluted. Still, Dorothy, it will
not do for us to disappoint him as well.
His wishes were most positive, you nla
remember, to ego to -day without fail,
You had better not linger.. We will tall
hint of Doloroa' indisposition," and of
course he will come for her to•morrorv..
So sorry to leave you 'quite• alone—such
a bore to you --but it is only for one day.
owner, :i`I, Pawl Is hertree and generous
friend. Then she rin• gs for 'tea And
touStrength is nec.
some' of muni
z. r
more, my awn true and lovitug riend: '
She drops her bead against the stile
of the upright wooden chair, and rests;
uo, with closed two, pallid, spent. Full
of a great catupassiou, Jemira bustles
l o , wt deft, neat way, arld then ggently su,n•
and shawl strap, and
the house by nous hop beloved guest. Iz1 her hard,
thside growth{, and dpark-lans amid the stiff-backed chair, Lady 'Valentiue ,is
leadsgrowth day, peril -lane, rIt is a bolt aslce , thoroughly fatigued and
leaden, sunless threatening rain— p y � �
the gray old Manor looks grayer and worn out. The little sapper looks
more gruesom a than she has ever seen tt piloting, and she is hungry, and eats
it. How txlrterly miserable from the with a rehah she has not felt for weeks.
Pony first she has pool there! with a, I She is free --her Rutile is left behind—.
shudder she :turns away, Pulls her veil that is the thougght that gives zest to
over her lase, and hurries on, the viands, 4ftor supper, retreated
She is in eseeUent time, She takes and invigorated, she is ready for a talk,
,ler ticket, and, hidden behind her tbiok but Jemima, with geutle ittsistance, puts
veil, waits. No one elle knows is at the it off until to -morrow*
station ---'the village folks have seen "There is pleuty of time, Mias Suow-
ve;tyl'ittle of her (luring her brief reiggt ball; I ata iu na burry to go now that
at the Manor House. Presently the you aro here; tomorrow will be_ inline
train mime in; alae slips into an empty 1°4'1°41' nd ll a aU aavebout after e bto-nasi b
carriage; a moment more and she is
are used
speeding on her London way-•-Eyingt.
to, but it ne is ais as bander an as c10 n,bed thantand otter
frons Valentino --free 1 ten there is no quieter or rospectabler
court in London than this. So undress
and lie down. You do look just fit to
drop,"
Dolores obeys passively. She lies
down on the little hard, clean bed, and
holds out her bands, like a child, to her
faithful attendant,
" Dear Jemima,," she says, `" what
would I do without you? I+.lsa nie
goodnight."
" 1•Iy own darling ;hiss Snowball 1"
Jemima says ""Ohl" wider her
breath, watching the sweet, wan face,
the tired blue oyes slowly closing, " to
thick there should be a man ni the
world hard and cruel to you 1 But Sir
'Vane Valentino is not a man—he is a
brute !" •
And thus the answer to Jemima's Lot-
ter conies.
Next day dawns foggy and raw. The
rain is pattering on the window -panes,
when, quite late, Dolores opens bet
eyes ou this nlorttal life in the " three
pair front." ,outside there is wind,and
wet, and mod, and fog; iuside, a brisk
little fire blazes in the arae—a glow of
hospitable warmth, au welcome, and
sunshine, in itself—an aromatic odor of
coffee perfumes the air, hot rolls are on
the table, and her clothes, all brushed
CHAPTER XKXVII.
"AFT&R LONG GRIEF AND PATS." '
The close of a murky London day.
Over the cbimuoypots a sky .of dullest
drab is settling dowu ; from the court
below the voices of women and children.
come up, In her room --bedroom and
sitting -room in one—Jemima, Ann leans
out of the little window and tries to
tome, Dorothy, we, shall certainly mica ` catch it breath of air. On her knees, her
tsar train." • foldedarms on the sill, dejection in ha
„ You really think, thou, Camilla, that face, elle watches the matrons laden
Van,: would prefer us to go and leave with babies in arms, and the tattered
Dolores 2'" Asks the perplexed Dorothy.
She has much faith in Camilla Routh's
opinion whore Vane is concerned, much
children at play on the flags. For she
is homesick and lonely, and longing for
a word of faaxewell from her darling ere
faith in her influence over him. she starts on her long return journey
'" Certainly Ido,"MissBouthresponds, across the Atlantic. That weever was
parr, ,tl ""I not and sure be wenn due two days ago, and has not yet ap-
p l , y+only rived. She is sufficiently well provided
prefer it, but that he will be Maimed, as with money—Dolores has ever been a
well as angry, if we do not. Adieu, generous mistress—but sho feels this
Dolores uhtrr•i*-be ready to come with week must preforco bring her waiting to
Vane to•nrorrow, Now, Dorothy !" Her a close,
tone is sirups?, she moves away ,impui- She so longs to get away from the
sively, she ,,opsins of the ,till doubtful, sights and sounds offthis groat grimy
till d, illlts,.d to linger Dorothy before t city, from these innumerable strange and fresh lie .011 a chain beside her,
there i+; time for.further (discussion. The faces, from the land that holds the one >
carriag . is tt the door, they are in, and sho loves beat on earth, and yet 'She has nearly dressed when Jemima
whirling raridly to the station. There keeps leer so far antsy. Slid will fie enters, rosy with ram andrapid walking;
is time to g e : - tickets, to'take their
places in the compartment, and no more.
The door shuts upon them, the whistle
shrieks, and they are flying along Corn-
wall -ward almost before Dorothy Valen-
tine has had time to catch her bewilder-
" ed breath.
" We have done wrong to leave her,
Camilla," she gasps, flurried and breath-
less. " We might halo telegraphed to
Vane, and waited lead' tomorrow. We
have done wrongs. Sano will be very
angry."
Routh laughs= -a ]augh neither
anirthfid nor pleasant to hear. ." Yes,
Dorothy," she says, sweetly, " I think he
will. Bet 1.Jt with us. We have obeyed
orders. lees, he will be angry, and I think
—I think with reason."
"Then why," demands Miss Valen-
home•-.-nay, she has no home—but to laden wltn npgs, dna marmalade, ant
cool, pink radishes.
New York—it will seem home to her "Now, now, Jemima,'" Dolores re
after London -and take a new service monstrates, 'laughing, the matutinal
there, -greeting over, "" this will never. do.
If Miss Snowball `Would but write that What sort of a gourmand do you take
good -by she so hungers to hear- Ali me for, that you must' rim out in the
day long she has been listening for the rain like this in search of delicacies 2 I •
postman's knock -- listening in vain, shall need no tempting after this, re -
Even the illustrated "peuny dreadful" member—my appetite has not been left
she has• gone out and; bought, with its behind at Manor Valentine. ^ And you
four panes of thrilling narrative, has are not to waste your substance in riot -
failed to interest her. And now, disap- ous living for me. We are going to get
pointed and discouraged, hope has left on plainly and economically, you know,
her for the fey. She does not blame dna save our money and return to near
her young lady—it is the .doing of Sir New York as soon as May be. And I
Vane and theee two cantankerous Old shall wait upon myself after 'this --we
mauls. Only she feels it will go nigh to are friends from henceforth, recollect,,
break her heart altogether if sho has,to friends and equals -no more mistress
leave London withotta word.
tine, with'acerbity, "did you urge me to The gray evening grows grayer; the and maid- 'liiylady' is dead andburied
come? I would have stayed' with her, leaden sky threatens speedy rain.. The down there in the dreariness of Valen-
butyou said --'1 • mothers and most of the children go in- tine. This is Snowball -your friend—
"I said -Vane had ordered{us not to doors to slipper • and Jemima ° Ann who has no friend in the world to whom
stay, and I said truly.' .We have. done as opines:that se Neill light her candle, she can turn but you, dear old Jim !'"'
commanded -he has no right or reason and ha'r a cup of tea, and another try Jemima Ann laughs gleefully. To
to find fault with us. To -morrow is but
ane more day—to-morrow he will re.
tarn for for her, arid then—"
.. ;1Weil; and -then?" -says the elder Ivo.
man, struck bythe strange look Camilla
Reath's face vearrs, :.
"And then, he will • bring her to Flint-
barrow—perhaps, ' says Camilla, with
her most dug estive smile.
* ,• * * . *
•Dolores' excuse. has been something
mere: than amere excuse; her head does
-ache with, a;dull, persistent pain. But
as the carriage. rolls .:away she ,gets up,
,and dresses -not he one of her pretty,
-much--embroidered morning robes, but
in the plainest travelling' suit her ward-
robe contains.
For she is going on a journey today,
though not .to Cornwall—a very'loo
g g'
at the illustrated penny work of light
literature. The sound of wheels ; of a
cab' drawn up • at' the ,entrance , of the
court, fails to attriet' her notice it is
only a •sight of a;.lady eintering, and
making her way -in the dingy dusk
down the `court, that ;rouses her, out of
her apathy. •
A lady,even in that murky'light—
slender d tall -who pauses task her
way of the childreJenxin'ia ` Ann
hears the answer,' ,'!:17 then, stairs—
three' pair front—there she as at the'that brute Sir'.' Spline1 green,eyred cat,
window," and starts wildlyto her . feet. Miss Routh!' that sour `old Tartiar', Suss
Is it -can it be possible tat this is the Valentine ! Ah 1 it is a bletaetl+escape
answer to her letter ? She..dashes to to have cut the cord, and'got:ii,�va'�froin
the door,opens `i and encounters en ' tieet,dismal old;house.: r•
the landig a lender oun"'dad. with a Miss Snowball; has; clone right,.; of
s course she has done right: What 1 go
pale and weaiy face, but �'faco whose g `
like ' Jemima Ann rapturously thinks; , ani. be buried alive, . in a drearier atle-
the wide earth' againidoes: not hot th M Y l ntin `with
see her darling happy is bliss=she asks
no more of fate. •
They breakfast . well and leisurely.
Over the coffee and rolls :Dolores tells
her story—all of her story at least that
she can, or may ever,' bring, herself to•
reveal. There are things' she Will never
be able to think of, much less speak of,
without a pang of the old bitterness and
cruel pain.: Jemima, listens—lost in a
medley of, -wrath; and ,Rity,,and anger
and love. Dearest deers bilis: Snowball!
d.1 aeon even au noes a e e, R i r
+, Sir Vane for her jailer, and Miss $' birth
exulting and triuitaphant !'"• Better„ploy-
'ert , better hard' work; better the';wors '
that life can bring; •'than auoh death tin
life: as that.
They sit together through the' .long,
drill, rainy day, and diisculiti their plans.'
1 lne is
,,
and Manor Ya ent to h*Snowball! hn O dear,dear :Mum n ball
.M S
journey, , myt , w.
This is the end. All now her no more. phecries out, ;n ;a transport of „amaze
''she can. bear she has borne; flight alone and joy She has her hi her little
is left. Death were better than' what room, the door, shut, seated; in a chair,
awaits her in that desolate house. down she hetaelf kneeling ° at' her feet, her
b the Cornish sea. Life. bythe side of arms clasped about her, crying, hugging,
"Vane; Valentine is at an end :for all time.
Outrage, insult, sneers, neglect, ;have
been her portion from the first 1n ,.this
hated house -this house to which neither
`sten per;the` Man wW s',herh islsa11d has
a ',±'.; ]i8;: • •bits•! its
any longer'claim. ""t'o�da g e 'quite
return no more. , ' tits t d” " over during Hese "" D' r J"emuna't 'her young mistress
all"in a ]heath
bell,' T : think your coping nurse if . are safer; hidden' away'here#•in this' ob.:
: , lt' t , long . a . , y , g y l
11+ chis, to Rva, o . find out poor scute nook of ' the; great, city, than in
.Ansi Of ... -,,g ; P 'seeking' i ` irV ne •'will
..further.. Right; .$ a
Jeml a nn txave� hundreds
and
lm •�', ' - - e ,. ' : . ° - , : - 'rch. or•his wife 1wil1. 1 ve no., tone
�yy jiandreds o� milea'to say good-liy.,to,, sea' f• . .• ,,•_.•� .!Pif'ra, �., .s '
to t Shehas thou ht' it your; or 'rl who loves you so much.'" ; unturned in his efforts , to trace her.
• He wall move the whole detective force
"Oh ! my dearest darling Miss Snow
It will riot do to depitit''at once.; they
Yeunonfs Great chemist.
"I find, on analysis, that the Boyal Baking Powder ad-
vertised as "absolutely pure" contains "Ammonia," Am-
monis is a DRUG which should, never be administered to
a well person. This, with the fact that bread baked with
such powder retains the anlu!Qnia,; indicates that the less
medicated bread we have the better for public health."
"DR. PR.4CE'S CREAM BARING POWDER does
not contain A'i1IuNIA, but is a scientific' combination of
wholesome Materials."
0HR S. BOYNTOIN, M. 1
Analytical and Consulting Chemist.
Brandon, Velimont, June 2, 1884. '
The Roel
"Ammonia,"
PRICE'S
43 of
t.
ug Pow ler Co. cannot evade this issue,'
ny Of their tricks, crying Lime. DR.
BAKING P(lWICER, does not contain
that the "Royal Co." defend
Ammonia.
• t 0'CTB WORT) FOB IT.
Every bou ;ekeepeeper can prove the truth of our statements
by placing a can ,of the "Royal," top down, (NIA: hit stove
nutll heated, then remove the cover and smell 'IA."
This test will s ,ew that the "Royal" contains AMMONIA
that DR. PRI '."S CREAT , BAKING POWDER' does not
contain Ammonia, The strength of our powder can be prov-
en by the consumers' reliable test,
capture ter it ale can. If he can 1 Do•
lyres' eyes flaell, her hands clench at
the thought,
"I will din Drat!!" she cries, and sho
Kingston Women's Medical College,
fAn atitliation with Queen's University)
KINGSTON, ONTARIO.
means it, i"I will never go back. Ho j u IL1''I:, L. 1rrsiRllontT(h!acu typ°rn"ra
Islay Id what ho Mites. 'rho law that ' departments, with highly competent l,rofeseor
takes the part of the husband always i to i' a s, including lady graduate is chair of
against the wife, may do its utmost. I • rr,dnata t threwh ales at Aura coovxtion,
will bear all things, but I will never go college open Oct.9d, next, with drat, second
back."' third aucliourtit year olasaos. Annual Galen -
They decide, therefore, that for tho,1,srmaybe had front A.P.Ii.NIGIEL,Registrar.
present masterly inactivity will be the' Health is weave,-
tb
safest. After an Interval of a month or
so, under astunied names and more or
loss disguised, they may go to Liver-
pool, or cross to Havre, and take passage
for New York. Once there life will bo -
gin anew. Werkt Work is nothiug,
Dolores' thinks, with eagerly flashing 1.
eyes ; she is young, sho le • strong, she is
full of confidence in herself; her tastes l
are sim le her wants few. In New
York, and together, they 'will be quite,
quite happy again. If only the good
time were nearer, and they were on
their way.
" Some people are born to he obscure,
end some have obscurity thrust upon I
them," she says, laughingly, to Jemima.
"Lam of the former. The happiest
time of my life was on Dree Island, in a
Holland frock, helping Ma'am 'Wee*, to
shell peas andtoast the bread, and dig-
ging
idging for clams, and scouring Bay Chal
ette In a batteau with the boys. What
a lifetime ago all that seems now. To
go back and live in the little white cot-
tage, with the solitude shutting us in,
and all this big, turbulent, troublesome
world shut out, listening to old Tim
croak and Weesy scold, with you to
chatter to, and Irmo Desereanx and
Pere Louis, my only visitors. Oh, that
would bo a foretaste of heaven !"
"Where 1 ani the groat and noble
Tell need renown and fame,
And the red wino sparkles highest
To do honor to my name.
Far away apiece is vacant
By an bumble hearth for me,
Far away where tears are falling
,Ther)) I fain would be." .'
She sings the words under her breath,
then sighs impatiently, and gets up,
pushing back all the soft rings of fair
hair, and walks up and down, a lofty,
slender, gray -clad figure, in the narrow,
dingy room.
".:Ifone could forget! If I could but
shut out the last horrible year, ;with all
its hateful remembra5need, its ibitter
humiliations, its , heart•burnings, its
shame, its, insults Bet will carry it
with me'"always, a plague -spot in my 1
life, down to its ver'chyend. ..And though
Ihave snapped myaitn, r •shall`'• carry,
ms halfClanking with me to the grave.
'What latent possibilities of evil lie un-
dreamed of within us. I am afraid of
myself when I think what a' few months
more of that life might have madame.
1 dola't' wonder women go wrong' so
often through sheer;;desperation.• , I have
felt the capabilitywithln myself. Thank
filed! Nall these evil thoughts of hatred
...filed!
"igdance have b Ir left °Mini,.
I am conscious" `of nothing new but an
unutterable longing to be out of England.
G)o
white I may, endure' what T:Will, l
can nearer suffer' again: as havo'suffered
here."
And now the days of waiting begin—
wet' ydays, when they •it 1 - ther dull
• tl {h t; a.,frott ,and `aievgr";•'stir
u 'e o : iiSj cif )'e'early da ,
p ,�'a ,�,{� � a
t
n, k e
o le4are
abroad. Under ,assumed names and
characters, the long sumnier days drag
therde lves'oct-oneby'aur,. „Noonedis
turbs them, no suspicion follows thiol,'
that they,, can.; see. Hoe buoys thein
r
r eboar
a yes r�.t >r
:iP
t
r ?I'
n
""^coffliteir ent ' 'With -but
presidia'"'e'
harm to health. Only at intervals pro
found de it'ehsioa,”' depoly apathy, pas-
sionate regret for her wrecked life, lay
•u over an .again, ea hold u on Dolores .and for the
retie Silent, secluded . aye': no one shall 'says, her head drooping wearily on and spend his beloved money lavishly to tame she sinks and droops.
their p, +
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r. t1 ts., •i1 r,•1ieved my lungs, it d:wcd
s
mai i a,i+d' me• the rest'Leel#, 1t• '
for '1 „• t 1••ry of my strength. 1 110.
cam •1 ,r, . r the PEerotttL a p e n ,a -
,•t.1.. mimed. •era now',f y{ ;s•..
n1 . r•., • hea,•ty,,nnd am satisllet your v
.: t• saved ino.-
• •, ••1,URAon ratunroinim."
lioulae7ih ,a,, Vt., July1K, 1682:
Y:ioi,i,.—A,Motlierre Tribute.
.'1 i.+ 1i;•• ,•.,uutry lnstwinter my -little
L tan •, .• III, was taken 111 wit 11 creupl
it n1 • ;4 1. would dio from atriutgu•
h ,,, f.tit,jly sugge ted the use
r i 1 : , ,t,:;., 4 PEcrouAs a b, the of
t, • + i:opt in the `house. ibis
t • ,t, I r. t., i::I1 }nut frequent -doses, and
to a" . , l I 'in . r tb812 1,,,1f ni01.our the
lr ,. • i . , 1., 1 , I,trop It ,It•. The doe
tot 88:I t r t ta•. . c,:t 3 ,tare,, had
q11, t'•,. pt i, i}. + 111.-1.•11,")1.1u solider at
.4L1.• ,. 1 , 11 P nKRv: "
159 V, r"i 1_:'11 411., 2 o,i : , .- • ?.'„g i8, 1882.
•iii ;`I; i •, i„I 40' not
1 , u'stuat
1 ;J, ,,r w,•,`u, Nil', 1 4 i .:,ve ever
t. ..1,1.451:.
Lt,+CIt ci,Allin1:;1(1a'r,1411 tret!.
1.4a tar„ 1,r c • ,v {ar
s,. 4.4 s 4 , .1 1 0 suc-.
s u. ".i.rl , 111 1,'.'. ; (Mtn
i
nl.la .
,;.t1 i 1 t
-
1..75 i,•R10. ,that ..<
iau nil,t`, , ,(,u..t,••Jd'��,r .r;lilta•b',tiied',_.
le . un � t
M1.l' 1.,,. , , ... ., Liprll; k a
No case of an
ailoetiaiti.` o the' throat ;oi
{' loll sexists-uli est o8tinh ,`<:,re1d1yreliilved
• by talo.inc of'.t%rn s l'. °t •, '; 17.E&GRAL', •
#1sd•at,u tll •chi'a:p8 •o,e're ,w1:t: 4 the disease is,'.
already be}•end the coni,,'u1of iuedlciue - •:
�.,
I'SI`l'.,F,ity;'p.,HY '.
Dr. J. C. Ayer d, Co., Lowell, Mese.
Sold by all Druggists.