KING, Sol n'sl llll! lir If. KINI It IIACiOARD. JLitother minute, ve ftnxl in t'ie most ivon dcrful plurc that the yen living in 1 n t-ver lit nu "I'll is is p'ttiiitf rather ghastly," said Sir Henry, peeping into the daik doorway. "Come on, QuateriiKiin nmtarcs priorcs. Don't keep the old l;dy waiting!" and he politely made way f r me to lead the van, for which 1 inwardly did not bless him. "Come, pet on, old fellow," said Good, "or we shall lose our fair guide." Thus adjured. I started down the passage. and after about twenty iaees found myself in a gloomy apartment some forty feet long. by tlnr.y broad, bv thirty hign, which in some past ae had evidently been hollowed. by Uanil-labor, out of the mountain. This apartment was not nearly so well lighted as the vast stalactite ante-cave, and at the lirst glance all 1 could make out was a massive stone table running its length, with a colos sal white figure at its head, and life-sized white figures ail round it. Next I made out a brown thing, seated on the table in the cen vter, ' and in another moment my eyes grew accustomed to the light, and 1 saw what all these things were, and I was tailing out of it as hard as my legs would carry me. 1 am not a "nervous man, in a general way, and very little troubled with superstitions, of which 1 have lived to see the folly; but am free to own that that sight quite upset me, and had it not beeu that Sir lienry caught me by the collar and held me, I do honestly believe that in another live minutes I should have been outside that stalactite "cave, and that the promise of all the dia monds in Kimberly would not have induced me to enter it again. Hut he held me tight, o l stopped because I couiu not help my 'self. But next second his eyes got accus- 'tomed to the light, too, and he let go of me. and began to mop the perspiration otf his forehead. As for GimmL he swore feebly. and Foulata threw her arms round his neck and shrieked. Only Gagool chuckled loud and long. It was a ghastly sight. There at the end of the lone stone table, holding in his skele ton fingers a great white spear, sat Death himself, shaped in the form of a colossal human skeleton, fifteen feet or more in height. High above his head he held the spear, as though in the acr to strike; one bony hand rested on the stone table before him, in the position a man assumes on ris ing from his seat, whilst his frame was bent forward so that the vertebra of th- neck. and the gri!:!rng. c!"ami:ig skull projected toward us, and ::xed its hoi iow eye-places uren us, t'.ie ja.. a little open, as though it were alwi-.t t . -;. "Groat l.e.:v- n "what can it beV said 1, faintly, at last. "And what are tht.se things?" said Good, pointing to the white company round the table. "Ai d what on enrth is that thing?" said Sir Jleurr, pointing to the brown creature seated on the table. "licet heel heel" laughed Gagool. Tc those who enter the Hall of the Djath, evil comes. Hec! ii.e! hee! ha J ha! ' Come. Jncu'.'ii. brave in battle, come and s:'e him thou sYwv.--t:"' and the old creature camriit his ooat in iier skinny fingers, and led him ;.wa v pi a r.l the table. We followed. l'resenr'v she stopired and pointed at the brown object seated o-i the table. Sir Henry looked, un 1 started back with an exclama tion; and no wonder; for there seated, quite nake l. on ihe taSie, the head which Sil Henry's battle-ax had shorn from the body re.-iiiig on its s. was the gaunt corpse or Twain, last k li r of the Kuku inas. Yes, t!:f-re, the he.n! perched upon tiie knees, it s;it in all its ligiines-. tiie verlebiaj project ing a full inch above the level of the shrunk en & mi of the neck. Over the whole surface of tha corpse theie was gathered a thin. glassy him, which made its apjH'aranco yet mora hii tiling, and for which we were, at the moment, quite unable to account, till we presently observed that from the roof of the chamber the water fell steadily, drip! drop! drip! on to the neek of the corpse, from whenee it ran down over the entire surface, and linally escajtcd into the rock through a tiny hole in the tabic. Then 1 guessed what it was Twala's body was being transformed iuto a stalactite. aptkr xvii. soi.omon's tkeasuke-ciiamber. While we had been engaged in getting over our fright, and in examining the grisly wonders of the place. Gagool had been dif ferently occupied. Somehow or other for she wxs marvelously active when she chose she scrambled on to the great table, and made her way to where our departed friend Twala was placed, under th dri;, to see, suggested Good, how he was "pickling." or for som.' d:ii".: purpose of her own. Then she came hobbling back, stopping now and again to address a remark (tho tenor of w hich 1 could not catch) to one or other of the shrouded forms just as you or I might greet an old acquaintance. Having tone through this mysterious and horrible ceremo ny, she squatted herself down on the table immediately under the white Deatli, anil be gan, so far as I could make out, to offer np prayers to It. The spectacle of this wicked old creature pouring ont supplications (evil ones, no doubt) to the arch-enemy of ' man kind, was so uncanny that it caused us to t-.asten our inspection.;.- "Now," Gagool," said I, in a low voice somehow one did not dare to . speak" above la whisper in that place "lead us to the chamber,'.' " :The old creature -promptly scrambled down off the table. . . . "My lords are not afraid?" she said leer ing np into my face. "Lead on." "Good, my lords;" and she hobbled round to the back or the great Death. "Here f i the chamber; let my lords light the lamp. I and enter,", and she placed the gourd full ot ( ol! upon the floor, and leaned herself against I the side of the care. I took out a match, ot ' ttfrtrm Mud. winch we still had a iewm a oox; an in the rush wi k, and then looked f r the door way, but there was nothing before us but thfc solid Toek. " 1 2 a goo! grinned. "Tne whj is there', my lords." "1) uot Jest' with us," 1 sal ! sternly. "1 j fit not, in y lords. See!' and sh ! pointed at the rock. As she did so, on holding up the lamp we pen-rived t:iat a muss of stone was slowly rising from the Hour und vanishing into the rod: :.'. ve. v. ii- n; doubtless there was a cavity pr :ur ! to ivceiw it. The nius wai Hi' tiie wi.iih i a uoimI-s:.' 1 door, alxut ten le. I 1 1 x i i and not !es than fiv fe.-t thick. It liiu-t have ! :;t leu-d I '.'ill1, ol thirty tons, an I w..s cI.Mrly :i;ovc-l upon some simple balance principle, pr t:tbly tiie same as that upon w hich the oji 'Iiiiilc and shutting of an oidinar. modern window arranged. How the prinriple was set in mo tion, of course none of us saw; Grzool was careful to avoid that; Itui. 1 h iv - iiitie doubt that there was some very simple lever, which was nioveii ever so lilti j lv pressure on secret spot, thereby throwing aduitional weight o:i to Ihe hidden t-ountmbalanees, and causing Ihe whole hiig mass to be lifted from tiie l'i- mud. Verv siow y and gently the great -lone r-iised its-lf, till at last it had vanisheil a. together, s-.ml a dark hole pre sented it-c,f to us in the place w inch it had tilled. "Enter, white men from the stars," said Gagool, advancing into the doorway; "bul first hear your servant, Gagool the old. The bright stones that ye will see were dug out of the pit over which the Silent Ones are set, and stored here, I know not by whom. But once has this place been entered since tiie time that those who stored the stones de parted in haste, leaving them behind. The report of the treasure went down among the people who lived in the country from age to age, but none knew where the chamber was, nor the secret of the door. But it happened that a white man reached this country from over the mountains, perchance he, too. came from the stars, and was well received by the king of the day. He it is who sits yonder," and she pointed to the fifth king at the table of the dead. "And it came to pass that he and a woman of the country who was with him came to this place, and that by chance the woman learned the secret or the door a thousand ye.irs might ye search, but ye should never lind it Then the white man entered with the woman, and found the stones, and tilled with stones the skin of a small goat, which the woman had with her to hold food. And as he was going from the chamber he took up one more stone, a large one, and held it to his head." Here she paused. "Well," 1 asked, breathless with interest as we all were, "what happened to Da Sil vestra?" The old hag started at the mention of the name. "How knowest thou the dead man's name?" she asked, sharply ; and then, with out waiting for an answer, went on: "None know what happened; but it came about that the white man was frightened, for be flung down the goat-skin, with the stones, and fled out with only the one stone in his hand, and that the king took, and it is the stone that thou, Macumazahn, didst take from Twala's brow." "Have none entered here since?" I asked, peering again down the dark passage. "None, my lords. Only the secret of the door hath been kept, and every king hath opened it, thought he hath not entered. There is a saying that those who enter there wilt die within a moon, even as the white man died in the cave upon the moun tain, where ye found him, Macumazahn. Ha! ha! mine are true words!" Our eyes met as she said it, and 1 turned sick and cold. How did the old hag know all these things? "Enter, my lords. If I speak truth, the goat-skin with the stones will lie upon the floor; and if there is truth as to whether it is death to enter here, that will ye learn after ward. Ha! ha! ha!" And she hobbled through the door-way, bearing the light with her; but 1 confess that once more I hesitat ed about following. "Oh, confound it all!" said Good, "here goes. 1 am not going to be frightened by that old devil ;" and followed by Foulata, who. however, evidently did not at all like the job, for she was shivering with fear, he plunged into the passage after Gagool an example which we quickly followed. A few yards down the passage, in the nar row way hewn out of the living rock Gagool had paused, and was waiting for us. "See. my lords," she said, holding the light before her, "those who stored the treasure here fled in haste, and bethought them to guard against any one who should lind the secret of the door, but had not the time," and she pointed to large square blocks of stone, which had, to the height of two courses (two feet three), been placed across the passage with a view to walling it up. Along the side of tiie passage wen; similar blocks ready for use, and, most curi ous of all, a heap of mortar and a couple of trowels, which, so far as we had time to examine them, appeared to be of a similar shape and make to those used by workmen to this day. Here Foulata, who had throughout been in a state of great fear and agitation, said that she felt faint and could go no further, but would wait there. Accordingly we set her down on the unfinished wall, placing the basket of provisions by her side, and left her to recover. Following the passage for about fifteen paces further, we suddenly came to an elaborately-painted wooden ' door. It was standing wide open. Whoever was last there had either had not the time or bad for gotten to shut it. Across the threshold lay a" skin ' bag. formed of a goat-skin, that appeared to be full of pebbles. "Hee! hee! white men."' sniggered Gaj goo!, as the light from th lamp fell upon it. "What did I tell ye, that the white man who came Here fled in haste, aud arooned the woman's bag behold it 1" jo ,ijoAi jo auojqi jrcayr,, siq joj luujetn t-iq Mjp uomojos rein aaojs Xjsa stn'i ihoji sn.w jt q2noqj y Mlfjtjwj -oil joj .qipj. irem v asvra oi sn gjoido aioai unoua sbm 'auoie 'ejaqj, -sa.ta jno oj ajqisiA X;iBnO jsjg 3ii jo sjjsni pajpunq a.g jo anoj jo t-pua atn uutj ssi uq 9.vq jou pjnoa ajqj inq jjocq um. Aaqj ivj Moq aas joa pjno O.W JO JOJ 'ALOU3 JOU pip 9M. OJdiV ajdtrj inaqj jo Aur.m motj -siisnj tucqdaia jo aonouoo pipuajds jooj aqj s q3iu Jdujo aqj no uo paaojs jq2is oju aaiw jjoqj jxk . vuenbs jaaj uaj uqj bjoui ion Aljuaredde pun "apoj Suiaij wrj jo ?no 0311 inooj sum pdi3.3j drattj oqj i"q usajJT iqSii IntBj jeq.waiuos ij jtnj tj jsju jv uaqtutqa-ainsvaq s.tiomcnoc ui SdAia&mo pnnoj pu 'spnotueip jt Seq qi jo haamoni aqt uoj 'injjiSjoj 4iu;q jjjj uf passand j a.oqv qjqqt.piaq"pdirA"BAjixjpBqj qSnojqj paditas aq.'pcroif sjooSvfj uioij auitrj pu -auii qi ta sajj ,;pi - pjo .SH9H Mfnuauvdcu . 4iuan its PPs ; ao o.. Apoq.av em e) qSnoua s spuoai -tp . jo , nm ai Huis jo apt aqj papu! ''pu ijadsrqAA pau u ui pnss aq u epuomcip jo jnj sji aAaijaq 1 jaAOf ifj., TlSuif pu Aaq cut li pU!l pu umop podotnt poof wnich there was not the like made m any kingdom. On the opposite side of the chamber were about a score of wooden boxes, something like Martini-Henry ammunition boxes, only rather larger and painted red. "There are the diamonds," cried I; bring the light" Sir Henry did so, holding it close to the top box, of which the lid, rendered rotten by time, even in that dry place, appeared to have been smashed in, probably by D.i Sil vestra himself. Pushing my hand through the hoie in the lid 1 drew it out full, not of diamonds, but of gold pieces, ot a shape that none of us had seen before, and with what looked like Hebrew characters stamped up on them. "Aii!" I said, replacing the coin, "we shan't go back empty-handed, anyhow. There must be a couple of thousand pieces in each box, and tuen; are ;ight.en boxes. I suppose it was the money to pay the work men anil niereh. uits." "Well," put in Good, "1 think that is the lot; 1 don't sei any diamonds, unless t!ie old 1'ortugucstt put them ad into this bag." "Let my lords look yonder, where it is the darkest, if they would lind the stones," said Gagool, interpreting our looks. "There my li-rds will lind a nook, and three stone ciiests in the nook, two sealed and one open." Before interpreting this to Sir Henry, who had the light, 1 could not resist asking how she knew these things, if no one had entered the place since the white man, gen erations ago. "Ah, Macumazahn, who watched by night," was the mocking answer, "ye who live in the stirs, do ye not know that some have eyes that can see through rock?" "Look in tiiat c irner, Curtis," I said, indi cating the. spot Gagool had pointed out. "Hullo, you fellows," he said, "here's a recess. Great heavens! look here." We hurried up to where he was standing in a nook, something like a small bay-window. Against the wall of this recess were placed tore? stone chests, each about two feet square. Two were fitted with stone lids, the lid of the third rested against the side of the chest which was open. "Look!" he repeated, hoarsely, holding the lamp over the open chest. VVe looked, and for a inoiiiont cou.d m ilce nothing out, on account of a silvery siieeu that dazzled us. When our eyes rot used to it we saw that the ciiest was three parts full of uncut diamonds, most of them of consideraole size. Stooping 1 picked some up. Ves, there was 110 mistake about it, there was the unmistakable soapy feel about them. 1 fairly gasped as 1 dropped them. "We are the rich -st men in the whole world," I said. "Monte Cristo is a fool to us." "We shall flood the market with dia monds," said Good. "Got to get them thero first," suggested Sir Henry. "Heel hee! hee!" went old Gagool be hind us, as she flitted about like a vampire bat "There are the bright stones that ye love, white nie:i, as many as ye will; take them,' run them through your fingers, eat them, hel hee! drink them, ha! ha!" There was something so ridiculous at that moment to 1113' mind in the id.'a of eating and drinking diamonds, that 1 began to laugn outrageously, an example which the others followed, without knowing why. -- TAW "Look!"' he repeated, hoarsely, holding Vie uimp over ine open cnesr. There we stood and snrieked with laugiiter over the gems which were ours, which had been found for ns thousands of years ago by the patient delvers in the great hole yonder, and stored for us by Solomon's long-dead overseer, whose name, perchance, was writ ten in the characters stamped on the faded wax that yet adhered to the lids of the ciiest. Solomon never got them, nor David, nor Da Silvestra, nor anybody else. We had got them; there before us were millions of pounds worth of diamonds, and thousands of pounds worth of gold and ivory, only waiting to be taken away. Suddenly the lit passed oft, and we stopped laughing. "Open the other chests, white men. croaked Gagool, "there are surely more therein. Take your fill, white lords." Thas adjured, we set to work to pull up the stone lids on the other two, first not without a feeling of sacrilege breaking the seals that fastened them. Hooray! they were full, too, full to the brim; at least the second one was; no wretched Da Silvestra had been filling goat skins out of that, ' As for the third chest it was only about a fourth full, but V.v ...,.:os were all picked ones; none less jhan twen ty carats, and some of them as large as pigoon-egg?. Some of the biggest ones, however, we could see by holding them up to the light were a little yellow, "off colored," as they call it at Kimljerley. What we did not see, however, was the" look of fearful malevolence that old Gago 1 favored us with as she crept crept like a snake, out of the treasure-chamber and down the passage toward th massive door of solid rock. ' Hark! Cry upo' cry conies ringing up the vaulted path. It H Foulata' vo ee "Oh, Bougwanf help! help I the rock falls!" "Leave go, girt T TTieu " "Help! help! sh Ikis stabbed me !' By now we are nrantag- down the passage and this is what tke light from the lamp falls on. The door of sock is slowly closing down: it, is' not three feet from the floor. Near it struggle rVtllataaudy GagooW t Tjie red blood of the former rum to' her; knee, but still the brave, girl holds- flier,' Jd witch, who, fighta- like a wildcat ' JHtl ,sh i f ree I Foulata falls, and Gagool throw-aerself' on the: ground," to' twist, herself, like a snake through the crack -of thekwing stone She is under ahw Ood.1 oo Jate 1 too late ! Tha stone nips her, and she yella in agony. Down,- down it flOmes; all the thirty tons of it slowly pressing her old body against the rock below,' Shriek upon shriek, such' as we never heard,' then a long sickening crunch, and we tWr was shut just as we. J Safe and Railabla. "In buying a cough medicine for children," Bays H. A. Walker, a frominent drug-gist of Ogden, Jtah, "never to be afraid to buy Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. There is 110 danger from it and re lief is always sure to follow. I par ticularly recommend Chamberlain's because I have found it to be Hafe and reliable. 25 and HO cent bottles for sale by F. (J. Fricke & Co. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Thk Best Salvk in the world for Cut Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Suit Hheum. Fever Sores, Tetter. Cliupped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and nil Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles, or no jmy required. It is t;iMranted to uive satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 2 cents per box. For sale by F. G. Fricke January ginie, yet some papers are still publishing those lists of marriageable young men. Do not confuse the famous Blush of Koses with the many worthless paints, powders, creams and bleaches which are Hooding the market. Get the genuine of your druggist, C). II. Snyder, 7." cents per bottle, and I guarantee it will re move j our pimples, freckles, black heads, moth, tan and sunburn, ami give you a lovely complexion. 1 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 exii-d. and it is guaranteed to do al that is claimed. Klectric Hitters will cure all diseases of the liver and kidneys, will remove pimples, boils, salt rheum ami other affec tions caused by impure blood. Will drive malaria from the system and prevent as well as cure all ma larial fevers. For cure of headache, constipation and indigestion iry Klectric Bitters. Kn tire satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded. Price rOe and $1 per bottle at F. G. .Fricke & Go's drugstore. 5 Church Howe has $100,000 invest ed in his Nemaha county stock farm and has 123 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 Disease" which may be had free of F. G. Fricke & Co., who guarantee and recommend Dr. Miles' 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, dropsy, etc. His Restorative Nervine cures headache, fits, etc. It should be In Every House. J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps burg. Pa., says he will not be with out Dr. King's New Discovery foi Consumption, Coughs and Colds that it cured his wife who wag threatened with Pneumonia after an attack of "La Grippe," wheri various other remedies and several physicians had done her no good Kobert Barber, of Cocksport, Pa. claims Dr. King's New Discovery has done him more good than any thing he ever used for Lung Trouble. Nothing like it. Try it Free trial bottles at F. G. Fricke & 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. i A Mystery Explained. n'fhe papers contain frequent no tices of rich, pretty and educated girls eloping with negroes, tramps and coachmen. Tiie well-known specialist, Dr. Franklin Miles, says all such girls are more or less I13-S-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 remedy 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 fluttering,"short breath, etc. ' Cough Following the Crip Many person who have recovered from la grippe are now troubled with a' persistent cough. Cham berlain's1 .cough remedy, will promptly loosen this cough and relieve the lung1, effecting a per manent cure i in a very short time. 25 and 50 cent bottle for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. The principal of the (JljsseS 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 followtng suggests, the best remedy: alphouso ilumpfliug, of Butler, Penn, swears that when his son was spechless from st. 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Mr. Kups lias provided our breakfast fall with a (lt-llcalely II vorct ticvcia'! um-ii mny avc us many li-avy doctor' bills. 1 1 is tv t lie judic ious use of huHi articles o' diet til t a enn h 1 tit i n may be gradually built up u: lil si row imhhil'Ii to "resist ev.-i s t- ndelicy in disease. Hundred of subli cl.iilte are tl.-atin f Hi'ound ns readv to aitaeK vl!T" t liere ih a week point. VVe may ee:ipe niaiiv a f;it;il shaft bv kee;inn i-uie vc wdi for ified with pure bloo mid a properly iniurislied l'a!iie." Civil .-ervi"e Caxette. Vadosi sinui'y with boiling water o- iiii'k. Sold only in liaH-pnuiel tmn, liv irroeeiies. labelled thin: JAMKs KITS .St HO., !lomeoi.;itliie I'lieail st J. 01. 'Ion. Kiland. How Lost! How Regained ! IfflOH THYSELF. Or SEW-PRESERVATtOPf . A new and only Gold Medal PK1ZK ESSAY on MEKVOVS and FHYSICAI. DEBILITY, KKROR8 or YOUTH, EXHAUSTED VITALITY, PRE MATURE DECLINE, and all DISEASES and WEAKNESSES of MAN. 800 pages, cloth, Ut; 125 invaluable prescriptions. Only $1.00 y mall, double sealed. Descriptive Proepect cs with endorsements pwpri TMn of the Press and voluntary l-Kl- H I 2nu testimonials of the cured. I IlkU! IMUW, CoDBUltation in person or by mail. Expert treatment- INVIOLABLE SECRECY and CER TAIN CURE. Address Dr. W. If. Parker, or The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bullluch 6c, Boston, Mans. The Peabody Medical Institute has many Imi tators, but no equal. lltrald. The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, is a treasure more valuable than gold. Read H now, every WEAK and NERVOUS man, and learn to be STRONG . Medical lU.zit w. (Copyrighted-.' Epos fjOGOS CMCHESTCFrx rrai.-c::. tea Cross VTS. Diamond Brko THE OR'OIKALNO r tn-i.T.. Th. i...jr . ? '' ' ' ' ' f-otil'. ai1! l-vriil rr ',itu:n-r.' . t'ti.r''4 r4.tJ -vo '. u I14-.I .'--t buiicfei'-l:irrr'r-vjl a ttLt. c t ..1 '' . tj- f '' ' " AH pi'Aa m -.iMViA pir m i.ir:t.i Jt r'i'- ntuu ii t t-.ir ., tv. '.. ' . . , -.. -' Ji.-.. Id 4 -.. -. ? ' r . I " b ' ' " ' A Regular Scimitar That Sweeps all before it. V-V These wjjj tffflost met in your mouth. The "Charmer" i( very productive, high quality and sugar flavor. Has great staying qualities. Vines 3J to, 4 ft. high. In season follows TLtttle Gem " and before the "Champion of England." We have thoroughly tested it, and confidently recommend it as the best ever introduced. Price by mail, per packet, to cents pint, 75 cents. GIVEN FREE, IF DESIRED, WITH ABOVE, VICK'S FLORAL GUIDE 1892, which contains several tolared plates of Flowers and Vegetables. 1,000 Illustrations Over 100 pages 8 x 10W Inches. Instructions how to plant and care for garden. Descriptions of over so New Novelties. Vick's Floral Guide mailed onj receipt of address and 10 cents, which may be deducted from first order. 1 James Vick's Sons, Rochester, N.Y:j ori n ustang Liniment. A Care for the Ailments of Man and Beast A long-tested pain reliever. ; Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the Fanner, the . J- Stock Raiser, and by every one requiring an effective liniment. No other, application compares with it in efficacy. ,. This' well-known remedy has stood the test of years, almost ( No medicine chest is complete Liniment. Occasions arise for its use almost AH druggists and dealers have it. HENRY BOECK The .Leading nmnTTmnn n pn A T T?T5 r iiii.ivi h LjiLU iriiii iff ai- v AND U NDERTA K R. '..nstMiitly keipH ti lmnd evtrythin yon no-11 ti furnish yur Iiouhp, OIIM--K MIXTf! AND HIIS HTMRKT Platttsrnouth Neb For Atcliinsoii, St. Joseph, Lrnrcn worth, K.insas City, St. Loiu. ;uid .ill points north, c:ist Hotith or v-s1. Tirk its sold :ml h'- a e;e chfcktl t o a n y jioilit in the United States or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO AND ROUTKS uatl ' Call at Depot or addrens II, C. ToiVXSENl), G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo. J. C. PlllLLIPI'l, A. G. P. A. Omaha. II. D. Al'OAK. Aft., Plattsmouth. Telephone, 77. ASTBW HAYE YOU SCHIFFM ANN'S Asthma Cure Nerar fails to give iimtant rnlief in ttm worn saaes. and clTt-u rrtM wberu others fall. Trial rcka t UER 1 UmtMi r fr - AAdrm DR. B. HOlilPTMA NN, HtlMoW T without a bottle of Mustako J every day. mtmm. a a r ntmm-.m 1 m i 1 1 1 1 m w I 'It tm .- viC