Walker County messenger. (LaFayette, Ga.) 187?-current, May 31, 1883, Image 1

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jjamaijun T-icrvine. 0 The only known specific tor Epileptic FU*.“\J AJao tor ti-tum* aud railing Blcknca*. Kcrvoua Waakoea* It InMant!/ rrUwrrm and rare*. Cleanse* blood ami quicken* alngglali circulation. Keutra- <i:aJba# and sarea dckneM. Cure* fIA SKEPTIC SfllDl] ut ly Mote he* and stubborn blood sore*. Eliminate* Botla, Carbuncle* and Scald*. tyPerraaocntlyaad promptly cure* paraly.'l*. Tea.it ia a charming and healthful Apcrii at. Ml*Scrofula and Kln|* Eviy twin brother*. (liangea bad breath to goo^rtniof ‘"'"SgW htg tne canae. flout* billon* tandencles and make* clear complexion. Equalled by none In the delirium offerer. A charming nv-olrcnt and a mate hire* laxative. It drirca Sick Ilcadacho like the wind. tF"Contain* no draatlo cathartic or opiate*. EO; [WGREIiTi Here* the bralaof morbid fancle*. Promptly cure* Rheumatism by routing It, Restore* lifc-glrlng properties lo the blood. I* guaranteed to cure all nervous disorder*, fT Reliable when all opiate* fall. Refreshes the mind and Invigorate* the body. Cure* dyspepsia or money refunded. msssm. Disease* of th* Mood ovrn it a conqueror. Kn domed In writing by over fifty t housand leading cltl* xens. clergymen and physician* in U. 8. and Europe, gy Tor sale by all leading druggist*. $1.50. (83) m Dr. S. i. Bic&mma Met. Co., Props., St. losept, 10. For teatlmoDlsl* and circular* aend stamp. Charles V. CrKtenton, Agent, New York City. Attorneys. TH OMAsTk. V?lithT Islicitoi of Paten. Caveats."* Trade marks Copyrights, WASHINGTON, D. C. Office St. Cloud Buiidinir. Corner 9th and F Streets. Opposite U- S. Patent OSse. jeiiiv n an, addox, iTTtmxtY ai r.aw lUMMESVILLE, - GEOIWA, Will prat-lice in the Superior, Coun ty, and District Courts. P.H. EDWARDS? ATTORNEY AT LAW. LaFuyette, - - G». Collfdtinea specialty. Often ea.t side of the -juare. ••pt 7 83 H. X Henry, Attorney at Lnw, BtJMMEKVII.I,B, - - - - GEORGIA. nVTILL practice in the Home amt adjoining Cli YY *ulu. Ceilee * a specialty. T. W. Copeland, Attorney at Law, LaFayectk, - - - Georgia. WILL practice In the Superior Courts, of Rom* Circuit. Eliewb-re by special agreement. Col aaaon* a upoeialty. (Office up stair* of Dickson’* M.) It. P. Lumpkin Attorney at Law, LaFayette. - - Georgia. VI ILL sive prompt attention to all basin*** YY ♦utirustvd to bun. ft/- Office lit the MEjMENGF.K Building. Robert M. W. Glenn, Attorney at Law, I.aFayettk, - - - - Georgia. Will practice In the Superior Courts of the Rome and adjoining circuit* and In the Supreme Court of Georgia Of fice on eait side of aquare in building with Dr. G. W. McWilliams. 1 as 3tn. Sliaoellaneous Advertisements. DR. J. S._ RHEA, RESIDENT DENTIST. Rimnggold, - - Georgia. *QA Offers servicer in all branch- of his profession to the eitiZeb* of Walker and Ctoosa Coun ties. W rk promptly done at moderates prioei. All w.ik warranted. Cftoe oh Nash ville street, first building west of W L Whitfflao’s store. New Boarding House Mil*. <2eor,9ia podges, Cor- Market St., ft Montgomery Avenue, CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Will furnish excellent meals and cotnfortable lodging at one dollar per da /. Don’t fail to stop with her when yon go to Chattanooga. apl263m Hamilton House, D. B. RAGSDAT/EJ, P('o|A., CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Oantratly Located, Good Aocommod*. tlona, Ra'e* Reason .hi«». Free Omnibus to and From all Trains •pi 26 Sra Jfain Killer. CAUGHT' 1 A BAD COLD The SUMMER COLDS and Coughs are quite as dan gerous as those of midwinter. But they yield to the same treatment and ought to betaken In time. Poe all dleeaeea of THROAT, NOSTRILS. HEAD or BREATHINQ AP— PARATUS Perry DavissPainKir 1 Is the SOVEREIGN Remedy 1.,. —. .1- | ALL DRUGGISTS KEEP PAIN KILLER’t I JOB WORK neatly executed at j hia office. Bl inks for Jusiires’t always on baud. Give us a *r.*l. Walker County Messenger. VOL. VL THE MESSENGER. LAFAYETTE, GEORGIA. SUBSCRIPTION ! One Year - - - - $1 00 Six Mont ha ... 50 Cents. Th ice .Months - - - 25 Cents. COMMUNICA TED. Soochow China, March 21. Editor Messenger: Dr. Lnmbuth has gone on a cjuntry trip for a week and left mo in the sprouts as it were. I have my hnnds pretty full. Am just in from the dispensary where 1 have been doctoring Chinese for the last two or three hours. Hud forty three patients te-day, and took in 1035 cash. It takes 11 cash to make 1 cent. We charge them 10 cash a visit, sell them bottles for 15 cash, and enough cinchouidia to break a chill for 40 cash. All ether medicines free. We hate to charge such enormous fees, but we arc compelled to do it in self de fence, for if we did not cnarge any thing we would be literally over whelmed by them. We have some strange pa'ients. Our latest is a man with horns or, rather, with one horn, for though he originally had two, he had pull ed one oil’. They came out one on each side of his face just in froi t of his ears. The one we saw wa3 a real horn obout half an inch in length, rough, something like the half of a right new finger-nail, only darker, ft evidently '‘sprung from the deeper strata of the mu cous layer of the epidermis, and consisted in a hyperplastic growth of cells arranged upon one another in an imbricated manner.” The man had an ugly looking sore in the place of the horn he had pulled off, and he came for us *o treat this sore, and no’, as we had sup posi d, to get us to remove the re maining horn. A good many of our patients are afflicted with phtheiriasis, or, in other words n:e inhabitid. They sometimes, wbilo waiting for their turn to come, get out in th warm 3'trhsbine in front of the dispensary door, j.iilT off their civthes and pass the time hunting and killing the natives! I will simply remark here that a Chinaman, in ordinary weather can pull off half a dozen garments, more or less, and still be pretty well dressed so far as appearances are concerned. When a Chinaman is talking abolil a disease it is hard to tell weather he means himself or some one else. One day a man ermefor some medicine for the toothache, and from the way he talked Dr- Lambuth feit sure he wanted it lor himself. The doctor wanted to pull his tooth, and as several pa tients had refused to have their teeth extracted when they saw the forceps, he determined to take this feliow by surprise and pull bis tooth before be knew it. Bo he got bis forceps-and holding them be hind him, he walked up to the man and asked him which tooth was giving the trouble. The mnn op ened his mouth and pointed to a jaw tooth, meaning that it was a jaw tooth in the head of bis friend was misbehaving itself. But the doctor did not so understand it, and furthermore, when he' looked in the man’s mouth he saw a de cayed tooth. Never suspecting for a moment that this was any other than the aching tooth, tie laid hold on it w th his forceps and btgin pulling just like be intended to bring it out. The man jelled like a tiger, and seizing the dictor’s hand managed to keep him from finishing the tooth, cryiog all tbe time at the top of hia voice, “vezm yno, vent gno. gno kup bang yeur,’’ not me, not ms, ils my friend. An other roan came in some time ago for a threat tremble. We examined bis throat but could detect nothing wrong with it. O, he said, we might net bO able to 6<e anything, but it was a wonderful throat for all that. He was in the habit of getting all sorts of things nut of it, among others, a piece nf brass, some silver, and a lot of old irons, and only last week he brought ont a real genuine bomfile fish! He was a nice looking ol > man, to all j app aracces perfectly sound, and j LAFAYETTE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1883. when the pfople around began laughing at him while he was de scribing his symptoms to the Dr. I grew quite indignant and felt like giving them a few —I did not know what he was saying. But the man who canie to Dr. Lambuth when be was out here before, is ahead of anything we have had yet. He said he was in a very bad way arid yet he Could hardly cunt himself sick. His trouble was that he wanted to eat and sleep too much. His arpetite was enormous, he was about to eat up everything he had. And as for sleep he c uld not get enough of it. In short, when he wasn’t in the bed he wanted to be at the ta ble, and when he wasn’t at the ta ble he wanted to he in the bed. He s lid his friends told him lie was lazy and he reckoned it was so, he was lazy, and if the Dr. would only g.ve him some medicine to cure him of it, he would be ever lastingly ob iged to him, for he was very miserable and did not know what to do with himself. If you and your readers are not tired out already, I will cloFe this letter with some Chinese ideas on Hydrrphobia. When snakes go into their winter quarters they take a lump of mud iD their mouths to amuse themselves and drive off hunger during their long sleep. When they come out in the spring they throw this lump of mud away ; dogs get it and eat it, and then tbey go mad. As soon as a mad-dog bites you, get somebody to look in the top of your bead and they will find a red hair which must be pulled out and thrown away. Then you must go to a drug store and get seven big, long, black worms, (rot a difficult thing to do in a Chinese drug store, as their stock consists mostly in worms, snakes, lizards, terrapin shells, tiger claws, lion teeth, elephant tusks and such things) put’hem in a pot of water, add rice flour, boil for two hours, strain and drink. If this does not physic you pretty strong ly the whole thing must he repeat ed next day. Then you must go way off in the country and never hear the sound of a gong. Having fol lowed all these directions implicitly you stand one eb’ance in eleven of not having hydrophobia. W. Hector Pare. W EATiiKUFoxr, Tex., May 17tb. Editor Messenger: The crop prospects in Texas are as fine as I ever saw. Wheat will make from fifteen to thirty bushels per acre tbrougheut Western Tex as. Times are tolerably good, money plenty and wages good. Corn is selling from 40 to 60 cents ; bacon from 10 to 12. Ca’tle are high, ranging from 815 to 820 per bead. I would be glad to say to all poor homeless Georgian’s, come to Tex as I Come to Texas 11 Where you can obtain homes without money or price so to speak. Land ranges in price from 81 to S 3 per acre, od five and ten yeajs time, We haye good schools and churches and ev erything else that heart can wish for. I learn that Mrs. ‘‘Wind Hater” has landed back in old Georgia, I reckon sbe will stay for awhile, for she has made three trips to Texas. B. F. Blackwell is etiil here ad vocating the grand cause of Texas. I send my best regards to ail of my old friends. Any one wishing information from Texas can obtain it by ad dressing tbe under*! ned with stamp. Fraternally ycor*. James M. Maddux. The Missing llad rshlrt. '1 he morning was warm, and he imprudently made a change in his underclothing. Our climate is deceptive. Before evening there came up a chilly storm. An at tack of sickness followed of course* But Perry Davis’s Pun Kili.br was used for relief, with the hap piest effect. In these Bummer months of suddenly varying tem perature, everybody ought to keep a bottle of this Valuable remedy within reach. To remove print: Sit on a fresh ly daubed cellar door, or kiss the - rosy cheeks of a sleeping beauty. Taking’ Boarders. ‘lt was a scandle,’ the neighbors said, that Miss Delia should be obliged to take boarders, after all the had been through; and heaven knows boarders did not help a bo dy to work out her salvation. And so much money in the family, too, taking it small and large. Wasn’t her uncle Kbcn, over at Dov< r, well-to-do, and not a chick of his own to care for, except the boy he had adopted, who was no credit to to him? It was odd, now, that a man with poor relations should take a stranger when hi* oWn flesh nnd blood was needy, hut somo *ime6 it does seem as if folkes had more feeling for others than for their own kith and kin. Then there were cuu.-ins in the city, who were never worth a row of pins to Delia, and there was her great uncle John's widow n-larkin on the continent, a gaining at B.tden- Baden, and trving tbe waters of every mineral spring in the three kingdoms, for no disease under the sun but old age. She had boon known to say that her were too rich already and probably slm would endow some hospital with her property.' Plainly, wealthy re la’ives were ot no value to Miss Delia, To be sure she had never seen ter great aunt since she was a child, when her uncle John had brought her into their simple life for a month’s visit, and her French maid and drekses, her jewels and fallals, which won the heart of her namesake. Since then Jncle John’s Widow had become sort of a gil ded creature, always young and beautiful; for though De ia had received little gifts from time to time across the seas for the last fifteen years, she had neither heard nor seen anything of the being who hud inspired her youth ful imagination, and "7as quite uncertain if Eueh a person as Mr. Uogersori was in the land of the living. Dead or alive she seemed to have made no material differ ence to Delia’s humdrum life. After nursing her father through a long sicltnbss, Delia found that he had left a heavy mortgage on the homestead, and her mother and herself on the birrh road to the poor house, unless they would bestir themselves. Asher mother was already bedridden, the stirring naturally fell upon Delia, and she advertised for summer boarders. ‘Good board in the country to the riverside, at seven dollars a week. Large chambers, bread pi azzas, fine views, herries and new milk. One mile from the station. Addross, Delia Rogerson, Crafuborough. Maine.’ ‘Cheap enough 1’ commented an elderly lady who happened upon it. ‘Delia Rogerson. An old ma d I suppose, obliged to look out for herself. I’ve a mind to try her broad piazzas and new milk. If 1 don’t like it, there'll be no harm done.’ And so Delia’s first boarder—an old lady with false front hair, brown wrinkled skin, faded eyes a black alpaca gown and a hair trunk. De lia made her as welcome as if she had been a duchess; lighted a wood fire in Mrs. Clement’s room as tbnnight was damp, and brought out her daintiest cup and saucer, with the fadeless old rr-sei wreath ing them. ‘Wonderfully kind,’re flected Mrs. Clement, as she comb-- ed out her wisp of gray hair and safely cod fined the false front to a box, ‘Wonderful kindness for sev en dollars a week ! 8- e’s new to the trade. She’ll learn better Hu man nature doesn't change with latitudes. Bhe’ll find itdmsn’t pay to consider the comfort of a pover ty-stricken old oreature.’ But in spite of her worldly wisdom Mr*. Clement was forced to confess that Delia had begun as she rneaut to hold out, although other boarders Came to demand her attention and to multiply her cars*. The fret and joy of conflicting temperaments un der roof Was a new experience to Delia. When Mrs. Gresome com plained of the mosquitoes, with an air as if Miss Rogerson were res ponsible for their creation; of tbe flies, as if they were new arquain tanccs; of went of appetite as though she had agreed to supply it, j ak-fift wfih’ berries and new milk ; ol tlie weather, as if she had p'edg ed herself there would be no sud den changes to annoy her boarders; of the shabby hou-eand antiquated furniture, 'too old for comfort and not old enough for f shion'—then Delia doubted if inking boarder* whs her mission. ‘What makes you keep us, my detr?’ asked Mrs. C eraent, after a day when every thing and everybedy had seemed to go wrong. ‘Why di in't you never marry? You hud a lover I dare say.’ “Yes, a long time ago.” “Fell me about him—it?" ‘There isn't much to tc 1. He asked me to marry him. He was going to Austra'ia. I couldn't lca7e father and mother you know (‘hey were both fo-ble), and he cculdn’t stay here. Thai’s all.’ ‘And you—you —’ ‘Now all men besides aro to me like shadows.’ ‘And you have never heard of him since?’ 'Yes. He wrote; bit where’s tho use? It could never oome to any thing. It was better for him to forget me and marry. I was a millet: ne about his neck. I didn't answer his letter,’ ‘And supposing he should re turn some day would you marry him?’ .‘I dare s'fi'y,’ laughed Delia, gen tly, as if the idea was familiar, ‘let the neighbors laUgh ever so wisely. I’ve thought of It, sometimes, sit ting alone, when tho world was barren and commonplace. One must have recreation of some kind, you. know. Everybody requires i little romance, a little poetry, to flavor everyday thinking and do ing. I’m sTraitf you think me n silly old maid, Mrs. Clement.’ ‘No. The heart never grows old- The skin shrivels, the color departs, tbecy*s fade, the ihatures grow pinched; but the soul is hair of eternal youth—it is' as beautiful at fourscore as at sweet sixteen and twenty.’ Time .makes amends for the ravages of ifce body by d< vel* oping the spirit. You didn't tell me your lover’s name. Perhaps you would rather do^.’ ‘Hi* name was Stephen Lang don. Sometimes Capt. Seymour run* against him in Melbourne and brings me word how he looks and what he is doing; though I nover ask, and Stephen neyer asks for me, that I enu hear.’ Delia’s summer boarders were not a success, to be sure. If th -y took no mon4y nut of her pocket, they put none in. She was übliged to eke out her support by copying for Lawyer Dunmore and embroid ering for Mrs. Judge Doir. One by one her boirJers dropped away like autumn leaves; all butold Mrs. Clem4flrt. ‘I believe I’ll stop on,’ she said ‘l’m get iog too old Iff move often. Perhaps you take winter boarders at reduced rates, eh?’ ‘By no means. But when one’s purse is low ’ ‘Yes, I know. Do stay at your own urice. I can’t spare you.’ She had grown strch a fondness for the old lady that to have refused her at her own terms would have *eemed Hkc turning her own mother out of doors, heßides one mouth more w- uld not signify. But she found it hard to make both ends meet, and often wont to bed hung'jr that her mother and Mrs. C ement might enj jy enough, without there appearing to le 'just afpa.iern.’ At Christmas, howev er, came n ray of sunshine for Delia, hi the shape of a hundred dollar bill from an unknown fraud. ‘lt can’t bu meant for me,’ she cried. ‘lt’s directed to Delia Rogerson,’ said her mother; ‘and there’s no body else of that name, now tfiat your Aunt Delia is dead.’ ‘We are not sure she is dead,’ ob jected Deli*. ‘Don't you know whether your aunt is dead or alive?’ asked Mrs. Clement, rr. a shocking tone. ‘lt isn’t our fault. She is very rich and lives abroad. I was nam ed after her. I rued to look in tbe glass and try to believe that 1 would inheiit l.er beauty with tie name, though she Was only our gnat ud.'le’s wist NO. 44. ’She ought to be doing something for jou.’ ‘How can she, if elie is dead ? I don’t blame her any way. Her money i* her own to use according to her pfoneuro. Unci’John made it bunaoll and gave it ’o her.’ ‘But if she should come back to you, hav.ng run through with it, you’d divide your last crust with her, I’ll bu bound ‘I suppose I should,’replied De lia. The wilder, wore away as wiutc s will, and the rairnc’es of Spring began in tbe fields and wayside; and Delia's boarders returned with the June roses, and dropped away again with the fa ling leaves, but still Mrs. Clements stayed on and on. Just now ehe had been some weeks in arrears with her reduced board. No money had be>n forth coming for some time, ar.d she was growing more fie hie daily, need ing the luxurie.'. of an invalid and the attention of a nurse, both of which Delia bestow-d upon bar, without tuking thought of the m< r row. ’I must hear of my man’ of busi ness to-:hurr«w, Delia: I’m knts dtep in dtbi to you,’ she began otu night. ‘Don’t mention it t’ cried Delia, I’d rather never see a cent of it than have you take it to heart. You aro welcome to stay and (hare pot luck wi'h us; you are such ioarvpany for mother and for me.’ ‘Thank you my dear. I've grown as fond of you as if you were my own fl-ah and blood. There, turn down the light, please. Draw the curtain, dear, add put another stick on the fire please. It grows chil ly, doesn’t it? You might kiss mo just once if you wouldn’t mind. It’s a hundred yenrs or sosineeany one kissed me.’ And noxi morning when Delia carried up Mrs. Ciemsnt’n breakfast her boarder lay cold and still upon the pillows. The first shock over Delia wrole to the lnwyer of whom she had heard Mrs. Clement spenk a* hav i ig charge of her affairs, begging him to notify that lady’s relatives, if she had any. In reply Mr. Wil lis wrote: ‘The lute Mrs Clement appear* to have no near relatives. Borne distant cousins, who have an übundanct of this world's goods, yei served her shabbily when she tbrir tes.ed genero ity.as she tried vours, are all that remain of her f mily. In the meantime I end se you a copy of her last will and tes.- timent, to peruse at your leisure.’ ‘What interest does he think I take in Mrs. Clement's will,’ Delia thought; but she read, neverthe less. Being of round mind, this 16th day of Juno, 18—, I, Delia Roger soq Clement, do here by leave one hundred dollars to each of my cousins and bequeath the resid ie of my property, viz: Thirty thousand dollars invested in the Ingot Min ing Company, fifty thousand dol lars in tbe United States bonds, twenty thousand in the Fortune Flannel Mills, and my jewels, to the beloved niece of my first bus hand, John Rogerson, Delia Rogfi- j sm, nf Croftsbcrovgh, M vine. F->r I was a strung'r, nnd ye took me in; hungry, and you fed j me; sick, and jo ministered unto me.’ ‘Goodness alive!'cried ‘he neigh bors, wbsn the facts reached their ears. ‘What a profiubl) thing it ii to take boirdern! Evorbody in town will be trying it. Os course Steve Langdon will come and m ir ry her, if she were forty old maids You may s'iek a pin in there!’ Doiia did not open her house to boarders the next season. She found enough to do in looking iff ter her money and spending it; in replying to letters from indigent people, who seemed to increase alarmingly; in receiving old friends who suddenly bad time to remem ber her existence. And, sur-i enough, amoDg the feet, appeared Sieve Langdon, and all the vidtfjge | said, ‘I told you so.’ ‘lt’s net my fault you and I are (ingle, Delia,’ he said. ‘And we are too Old tothink of it now, Steve.’ ‘Hon genet!’ It's ntfver too late , to mend, l’ui not riOh, Deli*, bat ( I have enough for two and to a are.' *1 wouldn’t bo contented out to diive in na y ourrixgu ami haves r vnots under me now,’ laughed Deli*. ‘lndee. t’ Then perhaps you have n hotter match in view. Captain Bt.yir.our asked mo. by the way, if I had come to in’erfere with ‘Sq-ire Join s' interests.’ ’Ye*, ’Squire Jones proposed to me last week.’ 'Now, see here, D» Im. H •»ri I come all the way from Melbourne on n f ml's i trend? There [ was growing used to misery and lone liness, when the mail brings in a letter i i a strong- hand, which tells me that my dear love, Delis It >ger son loves and dreams of nri s'ill, is poor, and alone, and nc -<ls mo —mel—And the letter ia aignei k-y her sent Mrs. Clement, who ought to know. I packed my houscho'd goods and came.’ 'l’m glad that you did.' In order that I may congratul its 'Square Jonekt' ‘Bih* I haven’t accepted him. In faot I've refused him—be cause—.’ ‘Because you will merry yonr old love, like the lass in the song, Delia?’ In Croftsborough people are not yot tired of telling how a woman made mone/ by taking boarders. WoidbiiCwe’rkTot Mem The well-known saying, ‘A man must ask his wife’s p< rmission to become rich,’ might, very properly, be so enlarged as to include every object of Lis ambition. A popular' lectori r on religious and scientific •uhj< cts, in this country, speak's of his wife as his admirable and in dispensable help-meet, and lores to tell of the watch and care she takes of him, her ‘big boy.’ She looks after his correspondence, guards his hohrs of study, and ex ercises n gentle supervision of all his interests in away that is all the more effective for being quiet and unobtrusive. Mr. Emerson owes much to the fuilhftilncjs of his daughter Ellen, of whom some one rays that she 'haa the face of a saint and the garb of if Quakeress.’ He neyer appears in public without her. For he is seventy-seven years old, and his memory plays him such tricks as would put him into confusion, wore his dau jSi&r not his other and more retentive memory. He finds it difficult to grurp a new name nr to recall technical words. ‘What Is your brother’s profession* Rlliu?' ho asked h c-nlly, after try ing to mention his son's business and liilin . ‘A physician, father,’ said the daughter. Ellen has charge of his manuscripts, and when asked what 'eoture her fath er would deliver before the Con cord School of Philosophy, replied, ‘I have not decided, and I may not let him lecture at all.’ These noble women may arrve to illustrate the active help which' man receive from wivesanddaugh- . 11. re. But Hint is a small part i-f tiie aid they give to husbands an I fathers. For their influence in making men over and stimulalrn/ them to become wiser and tetter id quiet and constant. An Hlnatrit tion of this ever-present, ever working, all-surrounding influence ia given in the reply of Mr. Bur dette, the humoriat of the Hurling l ton Hawkeye, declining to attend a reunion at Chautauqua on ac count of his wife. He wrote: ‘Her little serene highness is in utter helplrksnes*, unable to stand al >m; for years she hpe been una ble to walk, her helpless hands fol d d in h<r lap. Ste must U» iires*cd. carried about, cared for like n baby, suffering fri-m count less pains, odhts, day and night, and I cannot leave her even for a few duys. Her life baa bem a fountain of strength to me. In ten long years I have never seen the look of pa;n out of her eyes, end for more than half ns long I have seca her sitting in palient helpless ness. and I haye never heard a complaining murmur from her lips While she has served as those who only stand and wait, never doubt ing the wisdom and the goodue s of the Father whose hand has been laid on her „o heavily.’— Youth'* Companion. A Traveler’s Guide. The Hon Kenneth ftayrCt' en dorses it. Trave'ers shbtild ha'vd a' sure and speedy cure, for such o-m --pluiiite as Chulera, Diarrhoea, Pains’ t.f the Stomach and Bowels. I>'«v Worthington’s o'd and r*li 0 101-ra and !)i irrho-a Meth irrt can tie oarried irt t e frn-s-f.- f’r.ifi 2o .iud 60 o-nit-i '»• ■> »o. Giveuey -f