The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, February 07, 1892, Image 2

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The Plattsnnlll'v.
Mine
s.
P BV II. Rll.r.lt IIAOOAKI).
BOlM 111:111 w.in me iiiosi -nl rvu
oimt-li:ii:-r. v.. ll.l'l , T ih'llH.l.
were as li.i"!. a, ;i n.- Hi. ihm
rill! lipS
v..ts Hal,
(.r t!u:
it hail 1iiI win- :ii:im:it- Mark )?
thfr was ri: ij-n:-l lv a hollow
in tie
--;. i . .1 ; i'.r'vs;n was
ami si-M-ual to a I'i.:ii tin
he il m-.e a in. usia-.-iit i.lunm ol
. .1 : -i.n
oru-l
w IlIlL'
strie.i featticrs, the boiiy was flail in a shirt
of xliniin chain armor, wliiNt romul the
waist aiicl rii;lit kiif-was the usual garnish
'ox-tail. In tli rit;ht hand w is a liui
C-ar. ICoiunl tin; ii-4'k was a thick torque
of KoM, ami boumi on to the forehead jvaa a
intcle and enormous uncut diainoii'l.
Still there was silence; but not for lone.
Presently the limine, whom we rightly
guessed to be the king, raist-xl tin; great
Iear In hi hand. Instantly elht thousand
Slcara were raiied in answer, and from eight
thousand throats rang out the royal Hilute of
Kooiu." Three times this was related,
and each time the earth bliook with Uie noise
that can only be compared to the deepest
notes of thunder,
"lie bumble, oh! people," piped out
tli in voice which wemed to come from tin
monkey in the shade, "it is the king.
"It is the king," boomed out eight thou
sand throats in answer, "lie humble, oh.
cteople, it is the king.
Then there was silence again dead
silence. Presently, however, it was broken.
A soldier on our left dropped his shield,
which fell with a clatter on the lime-stone
floor.
Twala turned his one cold eve in th
direction of the noise.
"Come hither, thou " he said. In a voice
f thunder.
A tine young man stepped out of the ranks,
And stood before him.
"It was thv shield that fell thou awkward
dog. Wilt thou make me a reproach in the
eyes of strangers from the stars? What hast
thou to say?"
And then we saw the poor fellow turn
pale under his dusky skin.
"It was by chance, oh, calf of the black
cow." he murmured.
"'I hen it is a chance for which thou must
pay. Thou hast made me foolish; prepare
for death."
"1 am the king's ox," was the low answer.
ocragga, roared the king, "let me see
tiow thou canst use thy spear. Kill me this
awkward dog."
Scragfta stepped forward with an ill-fav
ored grin, and lilted bis spear. Ibe put
victim covered his eyes with his hand and
stood still. As for us we were petrified
with horror.
"Once, twice," he waved the spear and
then struck, ah, God ! right home the spear
etood out a foot behind the soldier's back,
lie flung up his hands and dropped dead.
rom the multitude arose something' like
murmur; it rolled round and round, and died
away.- The tragedy was linished; there lay
the corpse, and we had not yet realized that
it had been enacted. Sir Henry sprung up
and swore a great oath, then, overpowered
by a sense of silence, sat down again.
"The thrust was a good one," said the
king; "take him away."
Four men stepped out of the ranks, and
lifting the body of the murdered man, car
ried it away.
"Cover up the blood-stains, cover them
up," piped out the thin voice from the mon
key-like figure; "the king's word is spoken.
the king's doom is done.
Thereupon a girl came forward from be
hind the but, bearing a jar filled with pow
dered lime, which was scattered over the red
mark, blotting it from sight.
Sir Henry meanwhile was boiling with
rage at what hud happened; indeed, it was
with difficulty that we could keep hi in stilL
"bit down, for Heaven's sake!" I whis
pered; our lives depend upon it"
He yielded and remained quiet
lwala sat still until the traces of the
tragedy had been removed, then addressed us.
"White people," he said, "who come
hither, whence 1 know not, and why I know
not, greeting.
"Greeting Twala. King of the Kukuanas,"
1 answered.
"White people, whence come ye, and what
seek yer"
"We come from the stars, ask us not
bow. We come to see this land."
"Ye come from far to see a little thing.
And that man with ye,:' pointing to Umbo
pa. "does he too come from the stars?"
"Even so; there are people ot thy color in
the heavens above; but ask not of matters
too high for thee, Twala, the king."
"Ye speak with a loud voice, people of the
stars," Twala answered, in a tone which 1
scarcely liked. "U-'inember that the stars
ure far off, and ye are here. I low if 1 make
ye as him whom they bear away?"
I laughed out loud, though there was little
laughter in my heart.
"Oil, king," 1 said, "be careful, walk wa
rily over hot stones, lest thou shouid.st burn
thy feet; hold the spear by the handle, lest
thou shouId?t cut thy hands. Touch but one
hair of our heads, mid destruction shall com?
uioii thee. What, have not these," pointing
to lnfadoos and Scragga (who, young villain
that he was, was employed in cleaning the
blood of the soldier oil his spear), "told thee
what manner of men we are? Hast thou
ever seen the like of us'."' and 1 pointed to
Good, feeling quite sure that he had never
t-een anybody before who looked in the leasl
tike him as he then appeared.
"It is true, I have not." said the king,
llave they not told thee how we strike
witli death from afar?"
"They have told me, but I believe theru
not Let me see you kiil. Kill nie a mau
among those who stand yonder" and he
pointed to the ppjioMte side or the kraal
and I will believe."
"Nav," I answered; "we shed no blood of
man except i:i just punishment; but if you
will see, bid thy servants drive in an ox
through the kraal gates, and before he ha?
run twenty paces 1 will strike him dead."
"Nay." laughed the king, "kill me a man,
and I will believe."
"Good, oh, king, so be it," I answered,
oolly; "do thou walk across the open space,
and before thy feet reach the gate thou shalt
be dead ; or it thou wilt not, .send thy son
Scragga" (whom at that moment it would
have given me much pleasure to shoot).
Oa hearing this suggestion Scragga gave a
sort of a howL and bolted into the hut
Twala frowned majestically; -the sugges
tion did not please him..
"t.et a young ox be itriven iii," he said.
Two men at one departed, running swift
ly. - -' - - - ' ' '- i
"N"ow,'Sir Henry ,'T said-1, "do you shoot
1 want to show this ruffian that I am not the
only majrrdaB of the tarty. "" .
Sir Henry accordingly look the "express,"
and made ready, .
. ' hope J . jpnair make, a ceod shot," be
groaned.
"You must," 1 answered. . "If you misa
witn the tirst barrel let him hv the second.
sigut iorone iiunaieii ami niry yams, anu
wait till tiie beast turns broadside on."
Then came a pause, tiil- presently we
canifht sight of an ox running straight for
the kr.tal gato. It came on through the gate
and then, catching sight of tin; vast con
eonrsw of )HHp!, Mopped stupidly, turned
rouml, n ii-l bellowed.
"Xow's your time," I whispered.
Up went the Title.
H thii'l ! r.ti I thn ox was kickinx tn
his I) :ek, .sii'.t i:i t i"iil)s. The mmi-!io!!ow
tut le: h i I ild i in v.'-.rk weil, a:i I a sili of
:: lo:.i !itn -lit Went iiii from the usseiubied
t.'..:!l-.!li N.
I liiiie rfiollv ro'liut
"II in- I lied, oh, kin.? '
"N iv. white man, it is a truth," was the
somen hat awed au-vWer.
"Listen, Twala," I went on. "Thou hast
seen. .Now know we come in peace, not in
war. .See here" (and I held up the Win
chester repeater); "here is a hollow staff
that shall enable you to kill even as wo kill,
only this charm 1 lav upon it, thou shalt kill
no man wuu u. ii inou niiesi it against a
man it shall kill thee. Stay, 1 will show thee.
Hid a man step forty pae-s and place the
shaf t of a sjear in the ground so that the tiat
blade looks toward s."
In a few seconds it was done.
"Now, see, I will break the spear."
Taking careful sight 1 fired. The bullet
struck the flat of the spear, and broke the
blade in fragments.
Attain the sigh of astonishment went up.
"..Now, lwala" (handing him the ride).
this magic tube we give to thee, and by and
bv 1 will show thee how to use it .but be
ware how thou usest the magic of the stars
against a man of earth," and I handed him
the rifle. He took it very gingerly, and laid
it down at his feet As he did so I observed
me wizeneu mon aey line ngure creeping up
from the shadow of the hut' It crept on all-
fours, but when it reached the place where
the king sat, it rose upon its feet, and throw
ing the furry covering off its face, revealed a
most extraordinary and weird countenance.
It was (apparently) that of a woman of
great age, so shrunken that in size it was no
longer than than that of a year-old child.
and was made up of a collection of deep yel
low wrinkles. Set in the wrinkles was a
sunken slit, that represented the mouth, be
neath which the chin curved outward to a
point There was no nose to speak of; in
deed, the whole countenance might hare
been taken for that of a sun-dried corpse had
it not been for a pair of large black eyes.
still full of fire and intelligence, which
gleamed and played Under the snow-white
eye-brows, and the projecting parchment-
colored skull, like jewels in a charnel-house.
As for the skull itself, it was perfectly bare,
and yellow in hue.
' The figure to whom this fearful . counten
ance, which caused a shiver of fear to pass
through us as we gazed 6n it belonged,
stood still for a moment, and then suddenly
projected a skinny claw armed with' nails
nearly an inch long and laid it on the should
er of Twala, the king, and began to speak in
a thin, piercing voice:
- "Listen, Oklng! Listen, O people! Lis
ten, o mountains and plains and rivers.
home of the Kukuana race! Listen, O skies
and sun. O rain and storm and mist! Lis
ten, all things must live and die! Listen, all
dead things that must live to die again ! Lis
ten, the spirit of life is in me and 1 prophe
sy I"
The words died away in a faint wail, - and
terror seemed to seize upon the hearts of all
who heard them, includiu.3 ourselves. The
old woman was very terrible.
Blood! blood! blood! rivers of blood;
blood everywhere. 1 see it, 1 smell it 1
taste it it is salt; it runs red upon the
ground, it rain3 down from the skies.
"Footsteps! footsteps! footsteps! the
tread of the white man comes from afar. It
shakes the earth; the earth trembles before
her master.
"Hiood is good, the red blood is bright;
there is no smell like the smell of new-shed
blood. The lions snail lap it and roar, the
vultures shall wash their wings in it and
shriek with joy.
"1 am old ! I am old ! I have seen much
blood; ha, ha! but 1 sh til see more ere 1 die.
and be merry. How old am I, think ye?
i our fathers knew me, and their fathers
knew me, and their fathers fathers. -1 have
seen the white man, and know his des res. I
am old, but the mountains-are older than
1. Who made the great road, tell me? .-Who
wrote in pictures on the rocks, tell tte? Who
reared up the three silent ones yonder, - who
gaze across the pit tell me?" (And she point
ed toward the three precipitous- mountains
we had noticed on the previous night)
i e know not but I know. It was a white
people who were before ye are, who shall be
when ye are not who shall eat ye up, and
destroy ye. . Yea ! yea ! yea !
"And what came they for, the white ones
the terrible ones, the skilled in magic and all
learning, the strong, the unswerving? What
is that bright stone upon thy forehead, O
king? Whose hands made the iron gar
ments upon thy breast O king? Ye know
not but I know. 1 the old one, I the wise
one, I the isanusi!" (witcn doctress).
Then she turned her bald vulture head to
ward us.
What seek ye, white men of the stars
ah, yes. of the stars? Do ye seek a lost one?
i e shall not find him here. He is not here.
Never for ages upon ages has a white foot
pressed this land, never but once, and he left
it but to die. Ye come for bright stones; ye
shall find them when the blood is dry; but
shall ye return from whence ye came, or
shall ye stop with me? Ha? ha! ha!
And thou, thou with the dark skin and
proud bearing" (pointing her skinny finger
at Umbopa), who art thou and what seekest
thou? Not stones that shine, not yellow metal
that gleams; that thou lea vest to 'white
men from the stars. Methinks I know thee;
roethinks 1 can smell the smell of the blood
in thy veins. Strip off the girdle "
Here the features of this extraordinary
creature became convulsed, and she fell
to the ground foaming in an epileptic fit
and was carried off into the hut
The king rose up trembling, and waved his
hand. Instantly the regiments began to file
off and in ten. minutes, save for ourselves.
the king, and a few attendants, the great
pace was lett clear.
" niie people," ne saia, "it passes in my
mind to kill ye. Gagool has spoken strange
words. hat say ye?"
l laughed, "lie careiui, u king, we are
not so easy to slay. Thou hast seen the fate
of the ox; wouldst thou be as the ox?"
The king frowned. "It is not well to
threaten a king."
We threaten not we speak what is true.
Try to kill us, O king! and learn."
Tb great man put bis hand to his fore-
head.'"'"' ' ' ' :' ' '- '
"Go in peace," he sakl at length; "To
night is the great dance. ' .Ye shalf see . it
Fear not that 1 shall set a snare for ye. To
morrow I shall think." -
It to well O Ida. v lamwered. uncon
cernedly.; and .ttwn. accompanied by Jnf a?
coos; we rose, and wept back -to ruL kraak
. i -. - - i -
- i : t
" ' CHAPTER X. .
TUI -WITCH-HlliT. -
Oa reacuiag "ur hut I motioned to lnfa-
dooa to eair with us.
I said, "we would
"Let my lorda say on."
"It seems to us, Inradoos, that Twala, the
king. Is a cruel man."
"It Is so. my lords. Alas! the land cries
out with his cruelties. To-ni-ht ye will see.
It is the great witch-hunt mid many will Ikj
Miielled out as wizards and slain. No man's
lite is safe. ' If the king covets a man's cat
tle, or a man's life, or if he tears a in in that
he should excite a rein-Minn against him,
then Gagool, whom ye saw, or some of the
witch-tindin women whom she lias tuizht,
will miic.1 that iniii out as a wiz in I, ami lit
will be killed. M my wiil die lie fore the
moon grows pale to-nih;. It is ever so.
i'- rhaps I shall U; killed. As yet I have
been spared, because 1 am skilled in war.
and beloved by the soldiers; but 1 know not
how Ioiil; I shall live. The laud iMoans at
the cruelties ol Twala. the king; it is wearied
of him and his red wa. s."
"Then why is it lnfadoos, that the people
do not cast him down?"
"Nay, my lords, he is the king, and if he
were killed Scragga would reign in his place,
and the heart of Scrat:ga U blacker tiiau the
heart of Twala, his father. If Scragga wer
king the yoke upon our neck would be heav
ier than the yoke of Twala. If Imotu had
never been slain, or if Ignosl, his son, had
lived, it had been otherwise; but they are
both dead."
"How know you that lgnosi is dead?" said
a voice behind us. We looked round' with
astonishment to see who spoke. It wasUin
bopa.
"What meanest thou, boy?" asked Infa
doos; "who told thee to speak!"
"Listen lnfadoos." Was the answer, "and
I will tell thee a story. Years ago the King
Imotu was killed in this country, and his
wife fled with the boy lgnosi. Is it not soT
"It is so." -
"It was said that the woman and the boy
died upon the mountains. Is it not so.
"It is even so."
"Well, it came to pass that the mother and
the boy lgnosi did not die. They crossed
the mountains, and were led by a tribe of
wandering desert men across the sands be
yond, till at last they came to water and
grass and trees again."
"How knowest thou that?"
"Listen. They traveled on and on, many
months' journey, till they reached a land
where a people called the Amazulu, who
too are of the Kukuana stock, live by war,
and with them they tarried many years, till
at length the mother died. Then the son,
lgnosi, again became a wanderer, and went
on into a land of wonders, where white peo
ple live, and for many more years learned
the wisdom of the white people.
"It is a pretty story," said Infadoos, in
credulously.
"For many years he lived there working as
a servant and a soldier, but holding in his
heart all that his mother had told him of his
own place, and casting about in his mind to
find how he might get back to see his own
people and his father's house before he died.
For many years he lived and waited, and at
last the time came, as it ever comes to him
who can wait for it and he met some white
men who would seek this unknown land.
and joined himself to them. The white men
started and journeyed on and on, seeking
for one who is lost They crossed the burn
jng desert they crossed the snow-clad moun
tains, and reached the land of the Kukuanas,
and there they met thee, O Infadoos!"
Surely thou are mad to talk thus," said
the astonished old soldier.
"Thou thinkest so; see, I will show thee,
oh, my uncle. 1 am lgnosi, rightful king of
the Kukuanas I"
Then with a single motion he slipped off
the "moocha" or girdle around his middle,
and stood naked before us.
"Look," he said; "what is ihis?" and he
pointed to the mark of a great snake tat-
tooted in blue round his middle, its tail dis
appearing in its open mouth just above
where the thighs are set into the body.
Infadoos looked, his eyeS starting nearly
out of his head, and then tell upon his knees.
"Room! KoomP' he ejaculated: "it is my
brothers son ; it is the king."
"Did 1 not tell thee so, my uncle? Rise;-1
am not yet the king, but with thy help, and
with the help of these brave white men, who
ar my friends, I shall be. But the old wo
man Gagool was right the land shall run
with blood first &nd hers shall run with it,
for she killed my father with her words, and
drove my mother forth. . And -now, Infa
doos, choose thou. Wilt thou put thy bands
between my hands and be my man? Wilt
thou share the dangers that lie before me,
to overturow wis tyrant ana murderer, or
wilt thou not? Choose thou." - - -
The old man put his hand to his head and
thought Then he rose, and advancing to
where Umbopa, or rather lgnosi, stood, knelt
before him and took his hand.
lgnosi, rightful king of the Kukuanas, I
put my hand between thy hands, and am thj
man till death. When thou wast a babe 1
dandled thee upon my knee, now shall mj
old arm strike for thee and freedom."
"It is well, Infadoos; if 1 conquer, thou
shalt be the greatest man in the kingdom
after the king. If 1 fail, thou canst only die,
and death is not far off from thee. Kise, my
uncle."
And ye, white men, will ye help me?
What have I to offer ye ! The white stones,
if I conquer and can find them, ye shall havt
as manv as ye can carry hence. Will thai
suffice ye?"
I translated this remark.
"Tell him," answered Sir Henry, "thai
he mistakes an Englishman. Wealth ii
good, and if it comes in our way we wili
take it; but a gentleman does not sell him
self for wealth. But speaking for myself, I
say this. 1 have always liked Umbop?. nnc
so far as lies in me will stand bv hi::i in this
business. It will be very pleasant to me t
try and square matters with that cruel devl
Twala. What do you say. Good, and you
Quatermain?"
"Well," said Good, to adopt the languag
of hyperbole, in which all these people seem
to indulge, "you can tell him that a row if
surely good, and warms the cockles of the
heart, and that so far as I am concerned l'rc
his boy. My only stipulation is, that he al
lows me to wear trousers ."
I translated these answers.
"It is well, my friends," said lgnosi, lat
Umbopa; "and what say you, Macumazahn,
art thou too with me, old hunter, cleverei
than a wounded buffalo?"
1 thought a while and scratched my bead
"Umbopa, or lgnosi,",! said, "Idon'tlikt
revolutions. S am a man ot peace, and a bit
of a coward"' (here Umbopa smiled), "but
on the other hand I stick to my friends, lg
nosi You. have stack to us and i played -tne
part of man, and I will stick to you. But
mind you 1 am a trader, and have le nak
my living, so I accept your offer aboul
those diamonds in case we should ever be Id
apesitton to avail ourselves ef - JUc Anotbec
thing, we came, as you know, to look for
Incnbu'r (Sir Henry!) ' lost' brother.- You
aostlnrtp oetofindhimJ?i rtf.
' Taat will rarinawetI lXBOSL,5ay
Inf4oom;by be s4g?otbe snake round j
mtdn t.a 't tojta- t Haaany white
asjBTiortkr kno(wtodfe, set r.hiafooV within
the tandT . i.y . ni.iyi.i !-. .t.
-T pjoniinaed M ct Page.
"Now. Inradoos,"
speak with thee."
I Safe and Reliable.
"In buyinc: a coujrh medicine for
I .... r A Ufol Ira a
Children, says xi. ""ffV
prominent drupst. of Otfden,
Utah, "never to be afraid to buy
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
There ie no danger from it and re
lief ia always sure to follow. I par
ticularly recommend Chamberlain
because I have found it to be nafe
and reliable. 25 and 50 cent bottles
for wale by b G. Kricke & Co.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
Thk Ukst Sai-vk in the world for Cut
Kruifws, Sores, Ulcers, Silt Kht-um. Fever
Sores, Ti tter, Cmcd Hands, Chilblains,
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi
tively cures riles, or no ay required.
It in guaranteed to give finti!faclion, oi
money refunded. Trice 2 cents per lox
For sale by F. O. Fricke
January is gone, yet Home papers
utiii Ttijiiiistuuir inose iisia ui
marriageable young men.
Do not confuse the famous Illush
rf HoAtH with the many worthless
nnlnia. nnwders. creams and
bleaches which are flooding the
market. Get the genuine ot your
druggist, O. II. Snyder, 75 cents per
bottle, and 1 guarantee ii win re
move vour Dimples, freckles, black
heads, moth, tan and sunburn, and
give you a lovely complexion, i
Electric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well
and so popular as to need no special
mention. All who have used Klecl
trie Hitters sing the same song of
praise. A purer medicine does not
exist and it is guaranteed to do ai
that is claimed. Klectric Hitters
will cure all diseases of the liver
and kidnevs. will remove pimples,
boils, salt rheum and other affec
tions caused by impure blood.
Will drive malaria from the system
and orevent as well as cure all ma
lafial fevers. For cure of headache,
constipation and indigestion try
Electric Bitters. Entire satisfaction
guaranteed, or money refunded.
Price 50c and $1 per bottle at F. G
Fricke & Co's drugstore. 5
Church Howe has $100,000 invest
ed in his Nemaha county stock
farm and has 125 head of trotting
horses.
A Fatal Mistake.
Physicians make no more fatal
mistake than when they inform pa
tients that nervous heart troubles
come from the stomach and are of
little consequence. Dr. Franklin
Miles, the noted Indiana specialist,
has proven the contrary in his new
book on "Heart Uisease ' wnicn may
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who guarantee and recommend Dr.
Miles7 unequalled new Heart Cure,
which has the largest sale of any
heart remedy in the world. It cures
nervous and organic heart disease,
short breath, fluttering, pain or ten
derness in the side, arm or shoulder,
irregular pulse, fainting, smother
ing, arops3r, etc. ms Kestorauve
Xvervine cures neaaacne, ms, etc.
It Should be In Every House.
T. B. Wilson. 371 Clay St., Sharps
burer. Pa., says he will not be with
out Dr. King's New Discovery fc?
Consumption, Coughs and Colds,
that it cured his wife who was
threatened with .Pneumonia after
an attack of "La Grippe," when
various other remedies and several
physicians had done her no good
Robert Barber, i of Cocks port, Pa.,
claims Dr. : King's -New. Discovery
has done him more good than any:
thing he ever used for J,ung
Trouble. Nothing like it. Try it
Free trial bottles at F. G. rricke S
Co's drugstore. , Large bottle, 50c.
and $1.00.
The girl's industrial school build
ing at Geneva is well along toward
completion, and is said to be admir
ably arrangek for its purpose.-
A Mystery Explained.
The papers contain frequent no
tices of rich, pretty and educated
girls eloping with negroes, tramps
and coachmen. The well-known
specialist, Dr. Franklin Miles, says
all such girls are more or less hys
terical, nervous, very impulsive, un
balanced; usually subject to nead
ache, neuralgia, sleeplessness, im
moderate crying or laughing. These
show a weak, nervous system for
which there is no remedv equal to
Restorative Nervine. Trial bottles
and a fine book, containing many
marvelous cures, free at F. G.FricKe
& Co's., who also sell and guarantee
Dr. Miles' celebrated New- Heart
Cure, the finest of heart tonics.Cures
flutteringshort breath, etc.
Cough Following the Crip
Many person, who have recovered
from la grippe are now troubled
with a persistent cough. Cham
berlain's cough remedy will
promptlj loosen this cough and
relieve the lungs, effecting a per
manent cure in a very short time.
25 and 50 cent bottle for sale by F.
G. Fricke & Co.
The principal of the Ul3'sses
schools has been arrested on the
charge of unmetcifully beating his
pupils.
Startling Facts.
The American people are rapidly
becoming a rase of nervous wrecks
and the followtncr suggests, the
best remedy: alphouso Humpfling,
of Butler, Penn, swears that w"hen
his son was spechless rrom st. v nus
Dance Dr Miles great Restorative
Nerving cured him. . Mrs. ,J. L.
Miller of Valorai and. T. D. Taolnr,
of Logansport, Ind each gained 20
pounds if an taking it Mrs. H. A.
Gardner, of Vastulr Ind, was cured
of 40 . to 50 convulsions easy and
much aeadach, dizzness, bockach
and 'nervous proatiation by-one
bottle. Trial bottle and fine boek of.
Nervous,curea free a t F. CFricke, &
Co.. who recomends this unequalled
remedy.' - -
: fely a Cream " Balm is especially
adapted as" a remeby for catarrh
which y is aggravated by alkaline
dust and dry winds. V. A. Hover,
Druggist, Denver.
ChaTfiTi
AeertaA
Tetter,
Chronio
Itch, Prairl
and Piles.
Hundreds oil
tt after alio J
Itlaput up.
Vl ft
tun ( iulwiiert-J Ir
US 3 Uruwiws, Kr
"By a thoro?
laws which go
anu nutrition. a
the fine Drooert
K?ps has provide
delicately flavored
us many heavy doct
linix us of nnch nr.
oitutiou may De irrad
enough to resist evl
Hundreds of subtl-
around us ready to attJ
week point. We may
shaft bv keeiinirourilvt
pure bloo and a properly!
Civil Service Uazette.
boiling water or milk. Sold A
tins. lv groceries, labelled tl
JAMKs EI'PS & DO., Iloma
How Loot ! H6w nfjol
irfTriTriYariCL
Or 8EtF-PKE8EBVATTONi A nw arid only
uoia Mea&i rMLULta ussai odbbhuuvhim
PHYSICAL DEBILITY, KRROBS of
YOUTH, EXHAUSTED VITALITY, PRE
MATURE DECLINE, and all DISEASES
and WEAKNESSES of MAN. 800 pages, cloth,
flit; 126 invaluable prescriptions. Only $1.00
j mail, dcrabl sealed. Descriptive Prospect'
d with endorsements wt rr I CTkin
of the Press and voluntary -KI I ?irtw
testimonials of the cured. I lll-bl NOW.
Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treat
ment. INVIOLABLE SECRECY and CER-
7AIN CURE. Address Dr. W. H. Parker, or
he Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Buliinch St.,
Boston, Mass.
Th Peabody Medical Institute has many imi
tators, but no equal. fltrald.
The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, is a
treasure more valuable than gold. Kead It now,
every WEAK and NERVOUS man, and learn to
be STRONG . Mtdicul llevirxe. (Copyrighted.;
ffHiCHesreR'S Fnqlish.
THE Aif:!t.AL INt) (.FMUlNf!.
('e Parker' (iintf
Weak 1-hii, Dcbilii)
HINDERCOl
Slupa all pun. lie. V
GRATEly
1
V
i
I
I
V
i
IfOFj (life 1 1
IWf )k US'
1
A Regular
That Sweeps
These will almost
very productive, high quality ,and sugar flavor. Has great staying qualities. Vines 3H to
4 ft. high. In season folio w'5 Lime cem ana oeTore ine unarnpion oi tngianu. e
have thoroughly tested it, ard confidently recommend it as the best ever introduced.
Price By mail, per packet, 15 cents J pint, 75 cents.
GIVEN FREE, IT DESIRED, WITH ABOVE,
VICK'S FLORAL GUIDE 1892,
which contains several colored plates of Flowers and Vegetables. 1,000 Illustrations.
Over 100 pages 8 x lo inches. Instructions how to plant and care for garden.
Descriptions of over 20 New Novelties. Vijck'.s Joral Guide mailed on
receipt of address and 10 cents, which may Le deducted from first order.
JAMES ViCK's SONS, Rochester, N.Y.
can
XV-
M
ustang
Liniment.
A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the
Stock' Raiser, and by- every one requiring an effective
liniment-, . ' '
No otlier. application compares with it in efficacy..
This well-known remedy has stood the test of years, almost
generations. , V.
No medicine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustang
Ljkimxnt. 1 . . -
Occasions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it.
V
YOllrv
SCHIFFV
Never fails tl
esses, and i
Trial rackacaX
lUmDR, n.
Red CROSS
Th anil 8fe. tIUH od VfUalZr K J"fcr til.
all before it;
melt in vour mouth. The Charmer- is
V
Scimitar