THE PRINCE OF WALES SMOKES. d n?$p T H E b I T !6uMkiVcty V if SflOKINQ TOBACCO is not like oilier kinds. It has peculiar fraranc; and peculiar flavor. Its peculiar uniformity always gives peculiar lomtort, and has made it peculiarly popular. Sold everywhere. M de only by BLACKAV ELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO., Durham, N. C. Mexican Mustang A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast A brigMe.-tcd pain reliever. It. t:sc is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the st.k Kaiser, and by every cue requiring an effective iiriment. ii.in'r application compares with it in efficacy, i '.i-- ,v...!-l:novn remedy has stood the test of years, almost ;i ;u rations. m-ine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustano . :tii:nt. ir.s arise for its use almost every day. ' .1 lit-.ists and dealers have it r, THE POSIT! BOXING WATER OR MILK. EPPS'S G R A T E U LC O M F O K T I X G COCOA Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only. HAVE Mill? YOU SCHIFFMAhN'S Asthma Cure! Imemt tail, to kit. tntiiot rl f in the worst! MM, .ml euY'ta i un a nunc olio r IWU. I , Trtal rkw Mil'K f l)nuttU r t l.ll. I IliliW, I)H. K. flr-UIPKMANN. Ht Puil, Ulna. I Scientific American vP, Agency for FFr'J:rl:i3a uesnii r- i n r i a a, HyiVN -.-.DDir.uTS ..kAAMa.. 5 PVir Information nnd free If Hnilhnnk write to MINN CO., Wl Hll,MIWAV, Nk'W YllKK. OltlMt btirenu for (Ms-iinus pMcnt. In America. Evury patent taken out hv n I. l.iou,:lit l.eforo tho ibllo by a notice given f i ee of ch-irce lu tho 'cicutific American l Ijvnrpt rtrculotlnn of jut n'lontirlc pnpor In t h . w i. rKI. Spli-niliilly IlliirinitU'l. No 1 1 1 1 , I : , 1 1 . t A nimi .lioulil lie wlllioul It. WiH-k'r. :t.(ll a yimr; II.VI six month. AiMrw MllNN & CO, I'l iil.tMiKUs, i 1 UroitJway, New Vork. Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain euro for Chronic Scro Eye! Totter, Salt llhoum, Scald Head. Ol itcii, lTaino fcentches, oro I.ippka and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundredaof case3 havo been cured by after fill other treatment had failodL itla xut up in 23 and CO cent bosoa. YOUNG MEN OLD MEN" , ttll II IMt TOILS OF THE SERPtNTS Of DISUSE. TOfy mk. atrole tllnrta to frit tlt(imilTi, , vv, bui Bnuwioft dow 10 lorreiirQiiv JSHAKEOFFTHE HORRID SNAKES wy lire up 10 a. .Pir ItI i :ll DW ,n ,,T i. nouuKuuvn.iuniiHKLril OUR NEW BOOK atrtt fr. rctt P1'1, (n)"1I f rs Itmlttl llni. 'Mtiil tbt philopophyof D I a& Affliction! of th Orrn of Man, nd hnw hj HUMt IKtAIMtNl, by molhoditicluilMlf oar own, h wont rnmtm of Loot or rlUti(r Hftobood, Otncrtvl nt Mrvoit Do btlitv, Wtftkmu of Bodf tnd Mir. J. Eaoctiof Erraro or EictiMi. BtQBlcd or How to EnUrirf nd 8trnt hen WE AS. UNDEVELOPED f)K0AN8 PARTS of BOUVmdopllutonU iDUrt.ud, Mtoiritii iron w titst. Trrriiori min fvtikd aDiri, n ntn wrlu thfio. Pnr Hook.fuU-tp'iriftiton fit rrfifi 1'1rM ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO, N.Y. FORMER ONLY 1 JF 'wc r n v : x j 7 Liniment. V; !ilia PPNESS8F1DI0I8HCURED bJtS K' P"!l ''' loiiiblTbUr Kr Co.k- p.i.., .i.oir,i,f,.t,(Wi. s.idbe.iiiMi,oni,rnpp f 53 llr.l,;, r lor.. Writ, (ur bonk u( tuutiijinCC -?-v:. HiS PAR! ;3 HAIR BALSAM , . ... - . n. 1 .r OBIT. 1 rnu..hi a inx'iiisDt ertiwtlt. ivrr Fails to liostoro Gray IUii to iitc Youthful Color. i .ii-kci o fct-r i unit1. I. 1 i.r . wot .I (. ,.i,t n, A .k I. hi, .. b l.ili'v, 1 t, j. Minn, I'ani, J'nkv in tuiic. .V tn. (n!r mire rnrr f..r (Vnn. .WAWMrtfoXoloH How Lost ! How Rogainedl KNOW THYSELF. Or KKLF-l'KKSKKVATTON. A new ntl onlT iold.Hell VMI.K f)SSA V on KKItVOITS and 1111 Ml AL lKltll.H V, KKKIIKS of YtH'TII, KXHAl'KTK.O VITALITY, I'RE- iTii i i nr. ni-.t 1,1 ims, ana all IMSKAMKS and UKAKNKKS18 of MAN, 800 paisw, cloth, pilt; Yt6 lnvaluahle pnucriptionn. only jl.uu by mail, donbia gonM. Ueacriptlvo lropcv. tii with endoraementa rnrr t CTKin of the Inland voluntary hKrl I r,7k,. tt-fitiiunnial of the cuni. IIILUI NOW, Cousultntlnn In perunn or hy mall. KxtHTt troat mont. INTIOLAI'.l.U SU'KCl'V and CKH TAI ( I KK. A,1.lr.. Ur. W. U. 1'nrker. or Thu lValxnly Mt'dlcal Intituto, Nu. 4 lliillinch yt., lioatotl, M.l.K. The l'cnlnxly Mcdiral Iiwtltul h.m many Imi tator., but no cqtial. mihl. The Science of Life, or S lf 1're.ervation, I. a trmioire more viihialilo than oli. RimiI It now, every WK AK and M;UOI !S tnati, and h-arn to be M'KO.VK . M, Jie-il l.'rri, if. (l'oiyrU'hted.' 4&.k.8).'f.:.i9V ..4VljOLk..V $Mornin$r $ iNoon t Good all the time. It removes d 4 the hinguor of iiioniing, sus-1 the weariness cf night. r IHir Roots Beer dclicioui. si'rrkiir!'', ';7"cl7.i.',. t1 i f l.i r -it ;r.r, t ' , ! ... i;. ,.,! r !. ;:d 'r $ i 'jnsi,is .-'i'i.. '., i... i;t.i', rt isasTid .. . .: f i I T 1 0 AdK.NTS to sell otiri'liiiicc nursery Murk Muny line Hpei'liiltiex to oiler write (iiii k iiuil bectire clioiie of territory MAR BROS. Mh'SKIVVM KX Kotliester.X. V A COSMOPOLITAN SCHOOL, A Qurr Mlitnr of Chllrlrrn In On of New York'. 111K School llnildinica. Until abont a year ngo the principal of wiiril peliool No. New York, tiki not realize what u queer lot of pupils lie had, although he bntl soinetiineslauu'lit'il over the strange collection of names njHm the rolls. A year ;o h took a census ainl carefully traced out the exact part of the earth from which t he parents of each f his pupils had come, lie found that there were in his school no les than twenty-seven dif!V,vnt na tionalities. t-peakiiiLr about twenty-five, lanirnages oilier than Kmrlisli and its dialects, lie found that of these sixteen were in thy primary department alone. So n, ii lorn,' afterward lie arranged a novel feature to one of the school enter tainments. At n certain place iu the programme each child anise, holding ill ills or her hands two Hairs. One was the American tlai:, the other the Hat, of the nation from which the father had come. The visitors to the school were astonished. They recognized half a dozen flairs well known as the banners of European nations Italian, (ierman, Spanish, French, Swiss and the like. Then they saw nearly a dozen others, recognizable from their shapes and colors and designs as the banners of barbaric or semiharbaric countries, known tons in a vague way as heathen. When these children, none being un der five years of age, fir.-t come to this school tl ley are foreigners to the very core. They speak the language of their fathers, and perhaps have never even heard the sound of an English word. They are of the country from which their parents came both in customs ami ideas. Their clothing alone bears the stamp of America, and that so out of ac cord with their faces ami expressions that they seem ill at ease, and even more poorly clad than they really are. They enter the primary department. And here it may be said that, although the youngest are live years old, the ages of many extend upward toward eighteen and twenty years, It is the 1 iness of iMiss Hose O'Xeill and her seven assistants to teach these children the English language, and then to make American children out of them. ( io into the school at the beginning of the school year, and you will think the task hopeless, impossible. Come back at the end of six months, and if you close your eyes and listen to the reading exercises you will not bo able to dis tinguish Chinese child or Arab child or Tunisian child from the few pure blood ed Americans who form the curiosities of the school. Then yon will wonder how the miracle has been performed. Harper's Weekly. Educate Children to High Ideal.. We are too ready to impart instruc tion to children from low moods and on a low plane, because wo do not ourselves habitually dwell in the latitude of the uplands. Motives of policy, of vanity, of seeming instead of being right, enter iuto our own lives and, alasl poison the lives of the little ones at the fountain. A grand life, a brave example, a splen did instance of fortitude, of self abnega tion, of courage against odds is never in vain. It is an object lesson that flames out from the sky, as the planet amid tho host of lesser stars. Whether it lje an arctic or an African explorer, the leader of a forlorn hope, the missionary living among the island leters, or the army nurse, leaving home and luxury to min ister to the wounded ami soothe the dying, the noble ideal is uplifted before t lie eyes of loose who are yet in the in itial sta'.'os, and whose characters are not yd ia the mold of destiny. This thou-rht of the lofty ideal gives the chief valiie of our annual Decoration Day, giving us pause amid the pomp and ease of pi ;ice. that we may think not of th" pageantry of war, but of its suffer ings, its fever and thirst, its rigors of cold ainl furnace beats, its weary marches, fierce battles and the patriot ism which alone condones its bitter woe ami the mourning that follows in its track. Harper's Bazar. Powerful Indian Air fount. The Indians along the Mirida river hunt with blow guns made out of the young stalks of a certain kind of palm, from which the pith is removed. The arrows employed as projectiles are sim ply splinters of reed, sharis'iied at one end, the other etui being wrapped with em mgh silk c it ton obtained f r, m another kind of palm to fill up the bore of the blow gun. The arrows are about ten inches long and very light. They are tipped with the famous and deadly 'woorari" poison. Used by one of these naked savages the blow gun is a weapon of great accu racy and effectiveness, even a small bint on a treetop being brought down by the skilled shooter with reasonable certainty at the first try. Interview in Washing ton Star, A Ciiriou SaUnue duo, Perhaps the most curious salvage case on record is that of the ship Two Friends, which stranded on the coast of Cuba uiul was abandoned by her crew, Another ship, the John Ulake, met a similar fate, and her crew, in attempting to find a landing place, came across tho Two Friends, which they managed to get off ami to navigate to England without fur ther mishap. The judge who tried the case decided that salvage services ha, been rendered, but of only ordinary difli culty and merit, inasmuch as the crew of the John Plake salved the Two Friends in order to save their own lives. The owners of the John I'.lake of coiuo got nothing, but the s-alving trow re ceived l':r0 out of the total value of i'l.WT. Xew Orleans Picayune. Tim Art of Coin its. ,1 ion, Conversation, "says a brilliant Amer ican humorist, "is, in this generation, ii lost art." It was an art which our grandfathers studied perhaps more than any other. A gentleman, in t 1it beginning of this century, was usually more ambitious to tell a story well or to state his argument clearly than to understand science or statecraft. Youth's Companion. Prayer i Dkui.nfd. A missionary had taken his wife with him to Indiik. There ehe died, and the brokenhearted widower received permis sion from the missionary hoard of his church to come home. Here he promptly consoled himself, and with his second spouse returned to the field of his former lalsir. But fate was still uuk'.nd and at the end of a year he was once more be reaved. Again he besought the permis sion of th board to return home, but this time they gently but firmly de clined, saying that they did not feel justified iu the expense of giving him two vacations within two years. Tkev suggested, delicately, however, that if his d, sire was to recoup himself for his recent loss it was possible for him to deputize a friend to secure for him a new partner of his joys and sorrows. This lie accordingly did. The day the steamer was signaled the bridegroom elect Weut down to meet it, accompanied by a married friend. When the latter returned lie was pounced upon by his own wife, who demanded all the particulars of the mooting. "Did Dr. Smith seem much overcome when he saw Miss Drown'.-" was tho first tpies tion. "Well yes -a little." "Wasn't he overjoyed?" "Well overjoyed is not just tlie word, perhaps." "Why, didn't he say he was delighted?" "Well no net exactly." "Hut, nt least, he seemed pleased?" "Weil I don't (plito know." "For mercy's sake, tell me just what he did say and do." "Well'' with evi dent reluctance. "When he saw her she was at the other end of the deck and she was pointed out to him by the friend she had traveled with. Smith looked at her for a minute, ami then he passed his hand over his eyes and 1 heard him nmriunr, 'Red hair-for the third time and after so ntnch prayer!'" Pittsburg Dispatch. Ill Iii linko. Much of the miisio sung in city churches would scarcely bo character ized as "saered" if it were heard any where except in tho house of (iod. And there are some' odd people who even in this ago of progress consider that such music belongs rather to tho concert room than to the church. Parson Snow was one of those people, and when he "exchanged" ono Sunday with an old college friend who was set tled over a large city parish ho was both amazed ainl shocked by tho vocal dis playthe anthem with which tho members of the choir electrified the con gregation. "They had fino voices, tny dear," ho explained to his little wife when he was safely back in his own home, "and 1 presume they wanted to bIiow them off, and so took advantage of a timo when their pastor was away. I thought at first of rising and requesting them to desist. Then I felt that perhaps it would bo my duty to report the matter to Doctor Green. "But I finally concludod that, as it was undoubtedly a first offense and caused by an almost pardonable vanity, I would deal gently with them. So I waited until they had finished, and then I rose and said, 'We will now begin the religious services of the morning.' "And I feel sure," concluded the sim ple minded pastor, "that they felt my rebuko and will not let such u thing occur again!" Youth's Companion. The "I lmt Edit Ion" C'raie. Is this hankering after first editions but a mere craze or fashion? in which case I would venture to predict that when the book loving and book buying public once begins to consider seriously what it is that really constitutes tho valuo of any first edition the ridiculous and artificially enhanced prices of such issues will fall. Upon this public weakness, whether fostered by sentimental or any other feeling, the booksellers are now trading and are in the habit of calling attention in Roman capitals in their catalogues to first editions of nlniost every conceiv able hook of course at the same time adding a correspondingly increased price to books which are- hardly worth purchasing in any edition. For the present great demand for first editions tho keen competition among English speaking peoples from abroad for any book of special value now offered for sale may bo in a great de gree responsible, aided by a largo class of unreasoning beings who buy Ixxiks merely because they aro first editions, and who by dint of their long purses nre able to "rush in whero angels fear to tread." These are they upon whom ordinary book lovers look with dread, and tho booksellers not always with approval. Notes and Queries. A Hit of rorrt'Hpoiiilcnet. A remarkable correspondence has been published, ending in a true Irish fashion. It begins: "Mr. Thompson presents his compliments to Mr. Simpson, and begs to request that he will keep his doggs from trespassing on his grounds." "Mr. Simpson presents his compli ments to Mr. Thompson, and begs to suggest that in future he should not spell 'dogs' with two gees." "Mr. Thompson's respects to Mr. Simpson, and will feel obliged if lie will add the letter 'e' to the last word in the note just received, so as to represent Mr. Simpson and lady." "Mr. Simpson rnturns Mr. Thompson's note unopened, tho impertinence it con tains being only equaled by its vulgar ity." London Tit-Iiits. Ventilation liy Window. It is always proper to resort to window ventilation if no other means of ventila tion is attainable. Lower the windows from the top; if possible open one win dow from the bottom, but choose a win dow the opening of which will not create a draft. Heated air rises and will escape through the low ered windows, while the fresh air will enter through the raised windows. New York Sun. rroffxitioiiHl I'rlde. "Why do you children wear such dreadfully long hair?'' "How are folks to know that our father is an artist?" Clk. A KENTUCKY MULE. A Gray It at re,! Ol.l Fellow Treed a n.tr ml Finally Killed It. Sam Parson's gray mulo Zeke is old and gray, but he possesses great strength, i both of understanding ami of Wly. j Saturday old Sam concluded that he wouldn't Votfc, and accordingly ho shouldered his muzzle loading rillo and I went hunting. But before departing lie j turned Zeke out to graze. I Finding the grass around the parson's cabin rather scanty, Zeke wandered down the edge of tlie creek next to the mount. tin side. There within the shad ow of the woods lie st ruck a nice, ton- t tier clump of grass and immediately be- i gan to eat it with gn at delitrht. While engaged in this congenial task a large ( black bear came down the mountain side and nppr--ached Zeke. Zeke had probably n' er seen a bear before, as tin ' uisiua tribe lias loin; been scarce iu tlu -i ' mountains, Xof is it likely that tin be;.i had ever on any previous occasion look ed upon a mule. Hut this bear was Hungry ami, wiuie .eke was Piggei game than he had bargained for, he evidently thought it worth while to take a look at him, for he came a little nearer, Zeke was not a bit afraid. He had never stood in awe of manhood, not even Old Sam, his master, and it was not likely that at this late period of his life he would be afraid of any four footed creature that walked the earth. Zeke calmly went on with his pleasant task of eating grass, lhe bear edged tq another vaid. eke switched his t 1 I ami cleverly knocked a tly oil' his back, and being relieved of the burden of the insect still munched the grass. The bear liegan to grew inquisitive, He evidently did not understand what kind of an animal Zeke was, his studies ill Zoology being limited. lie stood Upon his haunches and growled, not as a threat, but as a kind of friendly salute. Zeke did not raise his head, ami still munched the grass, The bear stopper! growling and walked iu n respectful cir cle around Zeke, studying him from every corner. He might have been a hundred miles away for all tho notice Zeke took. The bear was puzzled and uttered another growl of interrogation. Again finding himself unnoticed ho be gan to grow angry. The bear went around behind Zeke and came very close, evidently deter mined to try by touch to amuse the strange animal. Suddenly Zekedoubled himself up in a knot and leaped high in the air. Two legs flew out of tho bunch like piston rods and caught the bear in the side, whirling him over in a com plete somersault. When ho struck the ground he righted himself and rushed away with a growl of pain. But Zeke was hot after him, and the boar, seeing that he would bo overtaken, scrambled up a hickory tree, barely missing a terri ble drive of Zeko's hind heels. Noon camo and still Zeke was under the tree. The afternoon passed. It was almost Btiudown, but still Zeke was there. Tho bear could stand it no long er. Zeko was about twenty feet away from tho tree, apparently taking no no tice, and accordingly ho crawled down tho trunk as quietly as possible, intend ing to slip away in the forest. Barely had ho touched the ground when Zeke turned with a snort and leaped upon him. So fast did hishind legs flash back and forth that they looked like the driv ing rods of an engine. Iu a minute the bear was dead, every bono in his body broken. Mrs. Parsons, who saw it all from the door of her cabin, says that the bear didn't even have time to growl. When asked why she hadn't taken a gun from the house ami shoot the ltenriuthe tree for she is a girl woodsman and bold as a man sh replied: "I knowed Zeke didn't need no help, and besides I didn't want to spile the fun." Pond Creek tKy.jCor. New York Sun, A Pitiful SIkIO. "I was at Sioux City during the rise in the Big Muddy," said T. P. Sinclair, a prominent farmer and stock raiser of South Dakota, "and there witnessed a sight that haunts me. Pretty much everything that would float came swirl ing down tho angry river wrecks of buildings, household goods and gods and among the drift was, what do you think? a cradle! One of the old fashioned, wooden sort, and in it sat a white headed little tot, apparently about a year old. "Thero was not a boat within hailing distance, the cradle was fully WW yards from shore and the river was running like a mill race. I started on a dead run down along the bank, hoping to find a lioat of soino kind, but la-fore I had gone twenty-five yards the cradle tipped over, spilling its little occupant into the mud dy waters. I am pretty well seasoned, let inn tell yon. I walked over rows of dead men at Donaldson and Shiloh, have shot Indians and helped hang cow thieves, but that sight at Sioux City broke me. I just sat down and cried like a woman." St. Louis ( lobe-Democrat. Fiitltily Sii 1 1 k II l. A suit had gone against the defendant, who arose and gave his opinion of the judgment, and was fined s0 fur con tempt of court. A bill was handed to the clerk which proved to be ijo. 'T have no change," said 1 1 1 1 1,-rk, tender ing it to the offender. "Never mind about the other was the retort. "Keep it : I'll taku it out in contempt. " Black and White. At I anliioniililo IMiiner Tui-tv. (ient (on the right) The weather, mademoiselle Lady 1 have already discussed that subject with my neighbor on the left. (tent (aside) The mean scoundrel! We had arranged In tween us that-he should talk about the dinner and I my self about tht weather. Huiuoristische Blatter. I'nreiilH nl (.recce. Ill ancient times (ireece possessed nlxnit T.oOO.HUO acres of dense forest, and she was comparatively rich in timber until about fifty years ago. Much of it has, howevti', now disappeared. Phila delphia Ledger. Every Month many womca sufTef from Eaceaaiva or Scant Men.trviation; they don't know who to co llide in to get proper advice. Don't conlide In anybody but try Bradficld's Femafs Regulator Specific for PAINFUL, PROFUSE. SCANTY. SbPPHESS.CD and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION. Hook to "WOMAN" mailed free. ERAOFIFLD RCGULAIOi! CO.. Atlanta. Ca. iltl h nil VruiftfUl. TTOKNFV A. X. SULLIVAN. itlon.e hi law . Will nvv prompt iitti-iitlon o nl! Mii-ine-s I'litnifti-d lo line (HIIch Iu Ini-iii liloi-k, I-lift Snlo, I'liitt-inoutli, Neh, HENRY BOECK The Leading FURNITURE DEALER AND mwm UNDERTAKE (..(instantly keeps on hand cverythin you need to furnish your house. COItNKIl SIXTH AND MAIN STMKKT Plattsmouth - Neb F IfiST ; NATIONAL : HAN K UK H.ATTMMOinil. NKBKABKA Paid up capital Jfto.neo.OO Nlirplui.. Kl.tMlO.U9 rs the very tiet facilities for the pronip traiinaetloii of llitltlliiate .tanking Jhisiness Htocka, honda, old. Kovernnieut and local mrltle. Iioiaiht mid .old. DepoHlttt received oitl niierem, allowed on the cerllllcste Drafts drawn, available In any part of the L nlted Htnte and all the principal towns of lurope. XH.LKCTIONH MA PR AND FKOMIT1.T REMIT TKP. 'IlKhesi market price pHid tor County War rants, Htnte ana County bonds. DIKKCTOKH John Klt?k'.rftld I). Ilnwk.wurtb Hani WatiKh. K. K. White denote K. Dnvey John KltZKeruld, H. WhiikIi. President ( I fe W. II. CTsiiiNU, J. W. Johnson, VUt-VrMtiilenl, I'rrriiU tit. -ooOT H E( )oo- ICijifccqs - T3cnli, PLATTSMOUTH NK Hll A SKA $50,000 Capital F'aid in K I! (liitliliiiin J W Johnson. F. H (iteiisel. I ll'-iay rikeiibnry. ,M IV Moinun, J I A ( oiilmr. VV "VA'clleiiki dip, W II ( IIMHIU A n'cncial batiNiiig- business irans-iicti-tl. Interest allowed on de positcs). FOlv' KHLIAIiLI- INSURANCE Call on SAM', I'TTLKSON I'liittsmoiith Xcliraskn I'LACF.S OF WOKSIIIP. Caiiioi.ii .-SI. I'aiil's ( Iiiik-Ii, nit, lietw ecu Kutli and Sixth. Tallin' t iuncy, Taster Si-ivic,- : .M iss at K ni,, In ;;;o a. ji. hninlay M i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 nt 2 ;.;n, wit Ii lo-1 1 t-l ii-1 0 1 1.. I imisiiAN.-i orner l.,n iist and Kilith Ms services morning and tvi-i lnt:. Mdei A (a:oHay pastor. Hiinda) bi-liool lo a. m. Kris oi-al.-SI. Luke's Church, corner '1 hint Hint tin. I.'ev. II II. r.iiiti-". paster. Set vices ill A. M. II! (I 7 :''. W Sinidaj Scl.no at -i :. v. i . (isnMAN M I i iioiitsr irner SiMlt ft. and lir.'llllO. la-V. Illlt. I'a-lol. Si t ICI'S ill A . M anil 7 ::;o r m. siiu,i,i 'clionl lu :;m a. m. l'HI-sl. I I I1IAN.- Services II i . v olo'ic!'. ii-r tier s;ti aed (.oiiiile si-. 'l.ltaTd, patol. Mniday-scl iiol at :i ; ' ; I'leaching HI II 11. Ill.ll'.ill S p. Ill, 'I lie . U. S. ('. Ii of 'hi chinch meet- evrty Saldialli eM-iiiiii-at 7 :l:i in the I'.'iM-ircnt u'l tin- ohm-ill. All are uiUtcd to attend lie llieetilll-s. Ficsr Mm iioiiisr.- Sixth St., Iietwen Mam and I'earl. Ilcv. I,. K. Unit, I). I). i:il . .r. Seivice-: II a . M., S :nn i i Siinila .si-liool tt ::;- A M . I'liiyrrincetii ediiesda) een- imr- (IKiiMVN I'll KsiiVTK.lo an. - Comer Main ami Nil, Hi. Kev. lite, pastor. HclMces us ,.ii hours. Mini, lay School ;i :3H A. M. S i t lilsti ( oNuitini noN.u.-Craiiile, l tween l-'lfth atitl .sixth. I'ol oitKli llAI'Tlsr. Mt . Olive, t'ak, between Ji-nth ainl lilevellth, llev. A. Itnsvell. pas tor. Services 11 a. in. mid 7 :M p. III. 1'raver ineetiiiit Wednesday cvelilini. VoCNi! MFN'S CltlttSTIAN ASSOCIATION Itnonis in W nteriniili block, Main street, (ins pel meet ill);, for men only, everv Sunday at ternooii at 4 o'clock. Kooin open week dai from :3U a. in., lu U : 30 p. m. Hoctii I'ark Taiikhnaclk Hev. .1. M.. W'.iod, l'astor. Hervlces : Sunday School .0 a . to. : TrenehliiK, 11 a. m. and 8 p. ai. ; prayer meeting Tuesday iilnlit ; choir pra nce Friday ninht. All are welcome.