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"Yes, in part Of course he cannot s; but that he believes you had a wife before Katy, I am sure, just as I ae I knew Dr Grant before you did, and there are fewwhom I respect as much, and no one whoh co next how she

"That was easy, inasmuch as he believed it an insane freak of Katy's to have no other physician than her cousin It was quite natural, he said, adding that she was as safe with Dr Grant as any one So that is settled, and I was glad, for I could not have a stranger know of that affair If I thought it would save her life to retain him, I should feel differently, of course"

"Yes, certainly," Wilford rejoined, while at his heart there was the gered, would al self-love and honor in the eyes of the world

Few h he was verya secret which, if known at this late day, would subject him to much censure and reproach, than he did of her So when his mother told him next that Helen had been sent for, hisanother here?" he asked, so indignantly that tears sprang to his mother's eyes as she pleaded her oeariness and inability to reratitude for all she had done in his behalf

Wilford could not afford to quarrel with histhat if she must have an assistant he would rather it were Helen than Bell or Juno, or even Esther, who, in spite of the alarly have ad o up now," Mrs Cameron said to her son, when peace was fully restored, and a hted roo to the hospitals, and of Marian Hazelton, and was only kept upon her pillow by the strong ar her to "wait until to-morrow--it would be better then, and she had not seen her husband yet"