J V 2 bess Every Smoker's Nose knows when it is pleaseJ. It Is always pleased with the fragrant and peculiar aroma of Blackwell's Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco Which has been for more than a quarter of a century the desire anj delight of comfort lovers everywhere. It strikes the taste of many fastidious smokers. Try it. Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Co., DURHAU, N. C. A HISTORIC HIDE. RIVAL EXPF.ESS COMPANIES RACE. THEIR MESSENGERS. u yjf lx-t ssn aw Kill Lou-ileit Ti-lU the Story of an F.ver.t That 'im.i IrtJ-M-veji V ! Ai Stirred l"p th People 'f I'miiic M;it-H. A Gre.it I J mi. lie. 1 Mllti Kiln. pyo amp H It 15 THE MAfeOX k EAIS5 T HAMLIN PAYMENTS. C . now ..ilVr to rent their famous Orguiis r Iau t'.r any one of three m ut!i-;. ivhiir the jier.-oii t 1 1 - kiriW them full om.ortm.itr to tet it thoroughly in in- un n noire 1 Teturu if lie loe n..t longer want it. 1 he x'muy, to want it amount? t. tiie price oi n,'. inM.ru ' m... WITAOLT FUUTHKi: I'AIHKM. -mus- matil the aireate ot rent am pn It iivi'iiMKS HiS PU il'KKTT trated catalogue, with net price tree. Mason & Hamlin Orgj n and Piano Co IJOsTON. NEW YOIiK CHICAGO. rr. .: L. v in 1(11 TI For Atcbinoii. St. Joseph. Leaven worth. Knn City. St. I.oui, and all 'joint. n" "th. est south or west. I icl--etr t?oll aiul lai iayre chvckeil to any pint the United St a tes or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO KATK AND KOL IhS Call at Depot or address C. Towxse.ni. G. P. A. St. Loi?. Mo. J. C. PllILLlPFI. A. G. P. A. Omaha. H. D. APGAR. Aprt., Platt?montb. Telephone, 77. m MM 0 YOUNG MEKOID MEXm 8ST II THE TOILS Of TIE StlFEaTS Of tiSlkiK. YhJ B&k karoi aaorta to ttM tttcauciru, cfv tmi aot knowing haw to niful;f SHAKE OFF THE HORRID SNAKE. gir Op ! OMfiUT Di " w7 rm wiMHMUivanMnBiButt DCS NEW BOQiC tka siuloaopbT of Dl- HOME TREATMENT. laat or railing Mimhooi, Stunl ul HeroJ lit- - u4 Mima. &MIct of Error ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFLO.M.T, iUSKY i IAOip ! iliiis nitr Healthfi:!. Arseasle, Cleansing. Curss Cbanped Hands, Wotmds, Bums, Etc Removes and Prevents DandruH. filler rff?iaPl CftRQ Specially Adapted for Use in Hard Water. 'O Li C WATER OR MILK. EPFS' GRATEL'L COMFORTING ifc I ft r w -c-i tI-A All ovt-r Californi.i anl in-rhaps in every one or um x'uvum sxa;?s uivu u livi:ic tx!;iy v.-h re;m-iiib-r I lie wcntJr ful Iciit f horst-'iiJiinhhiji known :s -L;il L.r.V'ien"s IU1.-," w'.iicli w;is iir-fui-nicl thirty -seven years u.o. Tehama, on tin-Sa.-ra' i-lit-i river, w:us the HtarT in n'jint: Weavvrville. in Trinity coan tv. tiiu terminal jiie. The distance was a ifoo.l lwo miles, m st of tlio last furi In-in i.iaue in the niht over mountain trails and through heavy timber. The li.-taiu-e was aecomi.lished in five hoar ami thirteen minutes unexamile.l tn. e forarhleof 100 consecutive miles un der existing circumstances. We let Mr. Lowdeii tell tlio 6tory of his wiM ride. "In th latter iart of the year 1A Adams & Co. and Wells, Far.o & Co., the rival exi-rusu companies, with Cram, llodgers i'v- Co. and Kholes & Whitney, the. coimeetimr comnanies between Shasta and Weaverville, commence! racing their exresnes with horseback messengers. After many hard races had been run, first one and then tlie other winuintr, in December, lbol, it seemed to have been arranged by the chief companies that they would run the president's message from San Fran cisco to Portland on the arrival of the mail steamer and then stop racing. Great preparations were made for the race, and all the fast horses along the road were pressed into service. As high as $100 vas paid to owners of horses for the privilege of ruling them troin three to five miles. Everything was in readiness about the 28th of December. Uorses were placed about four miles apart by each company, every horse hav ing a man to care for him, with an extra horse to ride himself. At least that is the way I had my stock arranged. Both relays of horses were under saddle from the 2Sth day of December, 1854, until the 2d day of January, 1835, on which date 1 made mv part of the race. I rode for Adams & Co. "The race was a very close one from San Francisco to Tehama. Wells, Fargo & Co. led tnMarysville. Between Marys- ville and Tehama Lusk, Adams tv Co. s messenger passed Wells, Fargo & Co.'s rider, and the Mexican who took the bass from Lusk reached Tehama hrst and crossed to the Tehama side of the river just as Wells, Fargo & Co.'s mes senger an-ived at the opposite bank and jumped into the boat. Now mv race commenced. 1 sprang into the saddle, with saddlebags weigh ing fifiv-four pounds, and rode nineteen horses to Shasta without touching the ground but once during that part of the race. That was at the Prairie House, where Tom Flinn, the man in charge of my horse, had got into a fight with tuo man wiio Kept w ens, r aro a horse, and had let my horse (Tom Mc Turk's gray) get loose. I saw the situa tion, and riding my tired horse a little past where the right was going on, sprang to the ground, caught the fresh horse by the tail as he was running a way from me and went into the saddle ovjr his rump. 1 turned to the horse I had just left wi;h the express bags, pulled them over to my fre-.n horse ana went on. I lost about one minute here. All other change.-; I m.ide while the horses wfri rvmni:! -. the keeper leading the A Irowuing Man's Eprlnce. To prevent any person from interfer ing with my design 1 jumped into the river late in the afternoon Friday. No one apiared to be altout at the time. When 1 struck the water I immediately sank, going down and down, and yet being carried forward until I thought 1 would never again arise. A s"Xind roared through my head; it seemed to mo it would burst. 1 opened my mouth ant ; attempted to breathe, being unable to J endure the "pressure longer, but tuo . water rushed in and 1 closed my mouth. I was again compelled to oieu it. More j water entered. The feeling was horri- I ble. Just when 1 thought all was over 1 , reached the surface of the water alxait j fifty feet from the shore and U0 feet j from where I had jumiied in. Near by was a steamboat on which stood a man with a long iHle with an iron hook on the end. It took only a second to see th se things, and in fact I had just time to get one breath when I again sank with iny mouth open. My past life flashed before me, and I was again a child. The picture of my father and mother stood out in lxld relief. I reached out my hand to them. The roaring of the water sounded like the sweetest of music. Suddenly I saw light and thought 1 was in paradise. A large green held covered with roses ami other flowers, whose fra- i i - l ..I..... T grance 1 couiu smen, came iu view. felt as if I was being borne up ty some winged messenger whom I could not see, but whose presence I could feel. I remembered nothing more until I felt a rough jerk. My rescuer had suc ceeded in fastening the boathook in my clothing. As my body was being pulled from out of the water the picture changed; instead of paradise, the place in which the devil dwells, with all ite fires and swarming with hideous, red dressed creatures and other things, pre sented themselves in my mind, only to again quickly disappear and leave me in darkness. When I came to I was sur prised to learn I had been unconscious. Every muscle in my body pained me, but my brain was perfectly clear. Drowning, after the first stages are past, is pleasant. St. Louis Republic. A Audirona as Ornaments. Genuine antique andirons are compar atively rare in New York, and they are for the most part of simple design, al though ornate in detail often. The very earliest andirons were of wrought iron and few of them have come down to this century, especially in America. One characteristic of early forms was the curved top, ending in a diamond shaped mass of iron, from y2 to 3 inches in diameter. The goat's foot, not with ."Hvidfd hoof, however, is a common characteristic of early form, in brass well as iron. Whm the andiron was developed as an ornament, small andirons, called creepers, came to be used with the large ones. The latter were for show, the creepers were to hold the logs, and per haps to prevent them rolling out upon the floor. The creepers were of wrought iron, with fivut only ten or twelve inches high, curving into a hall. J-ater tney were used alone in small fireplaces and imitHted and elaborated in brass. They aro not uncommon at the antiqiie shops, and they are exactly imitated iu wrought iron by modern manufacturers and sold at from $1.50 to 3 a pair. Another comparatively early form is a wrought iron strip with simply wrought iron feet and a brass knob at the top. New York Sun. One of Loboucliere's Stories. One of Labouchere's stories about the Remit I.Ik oinii-e. On bluff of the Tipiecaiioe river, bo-twe.-n lloch. .-icr and i;luiiisbur,, i a solitary Krve. It is iu a grove aU.iii; the roa.l'-idc. Standing by it one may see a magnificent stretch of river, whh woodland I vyond. Every one who trav els that way often knows the spot, and has heard the story of the death or u.t , grave's occupant. I Manv years ago a mover was pa-M-- ! along that highway with his family. II- j had neither friends nor acquaintance:- ' in the neighborhood, and. in fa t, the population was spar.-e. His wife tooii -iek on the way, and Re laid by on hi- , journev at this place, towering far alo "the beautiful river. He found no remedy i for his wife's illness and she died. With- ' out help, and with n lookeron save hi daughter, then a little girl, he dug a ; "rave and buried his wife there. TLe . headstone, U there ever was one, cayed, and all trace of the identity ot ; the dead was lost. Bnt every one re- j spec ted the burial place. . Among those once familiar with this j - - -sa-.l 411 I neighborhood was .Mrs. .Marina -uh- man, now of this city. Last week sh j was talking with an Indianapolis friend ( of childhood associations. The new ; friend in the course of the conversation ; said: j "There is one thing that clouds my early life, and that is that I do not know where my mother is buried, l was ssiu young when my father died in the new community where we had settled. My mother had been dead some years al- ready. All I remember is that on a long journey m a great covered wagon we stopped on the banks of a river, mere, j after some days, my father dug a hole in the earth, and I have faint recoliec- tions that it was a time of great sorrow. for mother had died, and there father all alone had buried her." "Was there a great bluff along the river and a road running near the spot through the woods':"" "Yes; I can see the senenowpictnred in my mind. I remember the road and the bluff distinctly." "Then, mv dear madam," said Mrs. Alleman, "I can tell you where your mother is buried." And she related tne : story as above. I The lady will go to Rochester and thence across the country to her mother's grave. Indianaiiolis News. I Every Month many womea suffer from Eiceaaiv or Scant Menatraation; they don't know who to conflJa in to jet proper advice. Doa't confide in anybody but try Bradfield's Female Rogulaior, Specif c lor PAINFUL, PROFUSE. 'CANTY. SbPPitESSLO and IfiKCUliLAR MENSTRUATION. "look to "WOMAN" mailed free. BKADF1ELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Ca. fold It? Mil IIpuiiI.IL II OKN.'V A. N. SL'hLlVAN. Ttoii;ey ;t!-l.!iw. Will five il'iinl ' KliMoc. I mi !! Wi-lie-i-s Mrt.'-P-il t line. o(iW:e ;: I i.Iuloii lil.;!i. Kilft riiitt-rnoutli. Nrt. HENRY BOECK The Lnrlina FURNITURE DEALER AND mm mmmm UNDERTAKR. Constantly keeps on hand everythin you need to furnish your house. COKNKR SIXTH AND MAIN HTHKKT Plattsmouth Neb IRST : NATIONAL : HANK OK FLATTsSMOUTII. NEBRASKA faitf up cair.tal .... Surplus . .SeiKiO.Of .. lo.ixiu.ot1 Curiou Fate of a Shark. The steamship Kansas City, of the Ocean Steamship company, which ar rived here on Wednesday night from ; Savannah, caused the death of a five ! foot shovel nosed shark in a somewhat ; unusual manner. Off Hatteras Shoals, ' steaming along at the rate of seventeen ; miles an hour, the steamship ran its cut- ' water into the shark, striking the fish ' square amidships so to speak. The shark was unable to extricate itself . owing to the intense pressure of the , water. In a few moments the sharp stem had j cut the flesh to the backbone, and this ( in turn breaking under the strain, the ; shark assumed the shape of an inverted V, hanging on either side of tiie bow like an old rope, the head and tail being still connected by the muscles of tha , back. Caught thus, the shark was towed along by the steamship for some 300 miles, and "until the stop at qnaran- ! tine, when, released from the pressors of the water, the body slowly sank. New York Sun. rsthevry te-t facilities f-r ti e pruirij transaction of linitimut- Hanking Business cltoek, bonds, noM, jjovvrnineat and lo:p.l -e-untief txm;lit i-. tit ii-iosit! reoeiv l vd it.ter.-M ail.'we.l eu tlie cert u;c Drafts drawn, available In any part ! ne United HUUen and all tlie vrlncipai town r,, Suiope. lOIAKCIIOVB MADK M PKOMITI.Y KFIHI TK1. HiKl't-st ll.rtrket .rl.-e , .:! tor I'miMj W rants. State ann County n.iil-. UIKKClOhS John Fttzuia!d '"" ' Sar.i WhUKli. 1 ;-ort.'e K. Uovey i"'i.'.f-nt c w. n. ccsiiiNti. 1'yi iU ft , . w. I ' in . iii i ut -ooOT El)i - BLY a n l a" 1 , LLXTrsYi wmm. horse I was to ride and riding his extra admiralty ami uie xvx.v ; , oTie. I could make my coming known with a whistle my about one-half mile be- Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only. b..:..:vr. ..it :t txl. SoidbrF.iairoa.only fc. Mioway, r Iwk. iVnw for bot- ot pruotx .FREE :175. organ-fi"-- Want agts. c atl'gtie fi-..i- Ail. r --s Dan i t I leat ty. wasli ingtoti X. J. PIANOS : Chamberlain's Eye and SHn Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Sere Eyes Tetter. Salt liheum. Scald Head, Ol Chronio Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie. Scratches, Sore Klpplea and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by it after all other treatment had failed. It is put up in 23 and CO cent boxes. rt t HAIR BALSAM .'ai..-. anU Uv i W.iir. V--:.i-iai a luxunwii: privt.t. -f.r to its Youtl-.ful Cciir. , l'..i:cci".n. iail:,Tak intilur.OOcU. The onlr nm- cure for Coin, or 1USCOX u H- 1 . fore reaching the change, giving ample time to tighten the cinch and start the fresh horse on tiie road, and by the time I overtook him the keeper would have my horse in a gallop. "I reached Shasta sixty miles in two hours and thirty-seven minutes. I was detained there about two minutes to di vide the express matter, 1 taking the Weaverville portion and Jack Horsely the through pouch for Portland. nine changes of horses between Shasta duct their labors at Whitehall is as fol lows: A few years ago a gun was lost by bursting in the Sea of Marmora, and upon reading the report of the admiral in command of the fleet "My Lords" were moved to telegraph to ask whether there was any chance of the muzzle of the nn being recovered. The answer wa? that in view of the fact that the gun had been lost in eighty fathoms of wa ter, nearly out of sight of land, where I had I no cross bearings could have been taken. 1 lilts uneiiiieHei ui . j " ..-mm- f -I J. .1 and Weaverville and reached the latter remote. '1 hereupon -jiyuoru. aiite place in five hours and thirteen minutes to know why no engineer's accounts had t. tiia i te-ft Teh.iina. From been sent in from the vessel in question, Shasta to Weaverville, forty miles, the ! but they ce?-ed telegraphing when the ride was ma'.ie after dark, with a light snow falling, but when 1 reached the i mountains and had my faithful horses to j . . . - -. . i , ' i. . ... .i t ride wildcat;, louiuucub, uiciuuuhu, admiral replied that the ship had beer. for ten years a sailing ship! Cor. New York World. tMIAIKIIHIfo)WJ How Lost ! How Regained1! OF 41 LIFE aa KIlOl? THYSELF. Or 8KLF-FKESEKVATTON. A new and only iolrt Medl PKIZK ESSAY onSEKVOUS ana PHYSICAL 1EBII.1TY SIXTH STREET - " F. H. KLLKNBAUM. Prop. The best of fresh meat a! way found in this market. Also fresh and Butter. Wild jrame of alt kinds kept in their season. H SIXTH STK'EET EAT MARKET ERRORS of YOl'TH.EXHAUSTEU TITALITY, PRE MATURE DECLINE, and aillISEASES and WEAKNESSES of MAN. 800 pagea, doth, cilt: 1 lnrataabla prescription. Only $1.00 by mail, doubts aealed. Deacriptire Prospect ca with endoraementa rnriTI SEND of the Preea and Yoluntarr l-Kt t I NOW testimonial of the enrei 1 Tli-I-. W"W Conaaltation In person or by mail. Expert treat menu INVIOLABLE SECKKCY and CER TAIN Cl'KK. Addretw Pr. JV. H. Parker, or The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulfioch St.. The Peabody Uedieal Institute ha many iml. tators, but no equal. llerul'l. The Science of Life, or Self-Preaervation, la a treasure more Talnable than Bold. Kead It now, everv WEAK and NERVOUS man, and learn to be STRONG . Mfiicul Revietc. (I oni nithted. Stxr?, protept; Yockt Curt far Imootence. Lota of manhood, Stmlnal f-nltii.-i.-i-.. Smnfiatorritta. "Tl Hirocutnrtt, SelfDittmtt. i Lote of Kemory. Ac. WUI 7 nxme ou a STRONG, Vigor- out man. mo r.(A o no. S racial ptmtkmt maftej tpltf naeti Bom. tflaaia fiat& aav UsbBtat Oo-, 50i0 LuoaoAvC. ST. LOUIS. MOr Pompev. Jack and the Bill Klix herse - a little snow did not make much differ- r . T , 1 V 1 ! ence in speed. lur l was mysen u oau I condition at the end of this ride. I had lost my cap and my hair was a solid mass of ice. I wore no clothing except flannel drawers, undershirt and boots, unless my belt, with pistol and knife, might be considered clothing. The cold first, seemed to penetrate me when I threw the express bags into the office at Weaverville. I had not felt it before. "I was so far ahead of Wells. Fargo & Co.'s messenger at Shasta that they stopped the race so far as that company wa3 concerned. It was well tuai iney stopped, for Jack Horsely made a splendid ride to Yreka, and was half way to that place when Wells, Fargo & Co.'s messenger reached Shasta. My stock and help for this race cost Adaias & Co. about s2.200. 1 made other races, loug and short, but considering the weight 1 carried, the weather and The time of day that 1 made it, 1 have al ways believed this to be my best one.'" More may be said in regard to the narrator's condition on arrivit.g a; Weaverville. The five hours srra-.n u nerve, mind and muscle had produced complete exhaustion, and it was always related that when Mr. Lowden sprang, or rather sli. from his horse he dropped to the sidewalk, and had to be as.-m?d to bed. But a thorough rubbir.g. oc casional potion of "Mountain B.dui" and a good Eeep soon revived the hero of the greatest race ever made in norta ern California. Rohnerville Herald. Abul-Hassau, an Arabian h-:oigi?t who lived in the Thirteenth c niury, was the first man to introduce the equal hour theory". A Toy Imln-try Festival. A remarkable token of the iniportanca of the toy industry in the ancient city of Xuremburg is afforded by the great gathering in one of the public halls at a banquet in celebration of the completion of the 300,000th model steam engine by a well known maker. Among the guest s were the heads of the municipality and several industrial and commercial cor porations. The little model which marks this stage in the toy making industry of the Xuremberz firm was constructed with the latest improvements. It was adorned j with a l.-mrel wreath, and exhibited in ; the hall side by side, in order to show the progress in construction, with a model of the date 115. It is said that this f actor3 alone has also turned out more than bio.OOO magic lanterns. Lon don Optician. 'LATTSMOl'TH Capital Paid in $50,000 F 11 Cutlinian J W ,l..M:-n. K Hei.ry hikeubarv. M V Morn A toiiiior. W V.'"ttenk n.' 11 (.'usliiu; a:i. .1 . V- A general banxing- bnsim s- trails acted. Interest allowed on b-poitepj. AtlileUcs In a Theater. On one occasion during Mrs. Langtry's tenancy of the St. James' theater, ath letic sports were held on the stage after the evening performance, in which not only the members of the company, but also Mrs. Langtry and her sister took part. One rather novel event, which was confined to the stage hands, was a race from the stage to the gallery, in the center of which Mrs. Langtry's hand kerchief had been suspended. This was awarded to the fortunate winner, to gether with a substantial monetary ad dition. London Tit-Bits. Cumbersome Theft. Poets find sermons in stones, but thieves (and philosophers) look for con- j tents of a different kind. On Friday tha I Earl of Lathom laid the foundation i stone of a new lodge at Cambridge, j Vptpr.biv evenincr the stone was found Always has on band a full stork FLO UK AND FKKD. Tirjui. Shorts Oats and Hal Hay for sale as low n the and delivered to any part city. COKXEK SIXTH AND VINE lowe-f Of tli Plattsmouth, Nebrarr.i PLACES OF WORSHIP. Snakes That Climb Trees. - Those pit vipers without rattles which belong to the Old World (Trimeresuri) are Indian, and a dozen different species are iriveu and described by Mr. Boulen- Tliev are robust snakes, with rather ! short tails, which can strongly grasp, and thus they are enabled to climb about trees which form their natural nabitat. Quarterly Review. Perfumes Sometimes Injurious. As a rule whatever perfume is un pleasant to the individual should be avoid ed, but as exceptions occur to every rule,' nervousness or debility which cannot be accounted for may sometimes be explained by the use of a well known perfume. St. Louis Globe Democrat. A Charming; Tribute. Papa," said a little girl who had been getting a great many satisfactory answers to a great many questions, "what's the use of our having a dic tionary in the house while you are here?" Harper's Bazar. ' to have been nodiiy removed. iu stone, according to the custom observed j on such occasions, contained a bottle in which coins of the realm were duly j sealed up. The laborious method adopt- . ed by the thief is quite on a par with the I historic mode of roasting pig immortal ized by Elia. London Globe. j Car Rails Five Miles Long. The electric welding of street railway rails, as a substitute for fish plates, has . been the subject of experiment for some time. The process is now said to be en- i tirely successful, and it is possible to ! weld by electricity two pieces of steel of j twenty-five square inches section, and , therefore a solid rail four or five miles long can be had if required. The test are also said to prove that the necessity , of joints to provide for contraction and I expansion is not so apparent as engineer ? j have supposed. New York World. Six Kducated Toads. ( Landlord J. W. Steen, of the Law- j rence Junction hotel, has six well train- I ed toads, which he has been instructing for three months. The reptiles are train ed to march, or hop in squads to catch : roaches. One has been trained to climb a ladder, while another turns the crank of a small churn. Cor. Pittsburg Dis- I patch. Southampton Losing Its Shipping. ' N only have the peninsular and oriental steamers ceased going to South amptou. but other companies owning large steamers are now threatening to go elsewhere and abandon the use of tb3 Southampton docks. New York Timee. Catholic-!. Paul's Church, ak. Let -r Fifth and Sixth. Father Cau.ey, Pastor Sei vice : 'hss at 5 Hlid 10 -.30 A. !. Sul.aay School r.t 2 :. with benediction. jhhitia'. Comer l.Ji'Ust h:h". I i-htl .-t Service mornim J-.nd eei.!hu., l-.i'.ei A iitl oway pastor. Sunday Sclioo. i'. a. M. E -is' OPAL.-St. Luke's Church, col i.er '1 lii'-r and Vine. Hev. H B. Bu.e l a-'--r Ser vices : U A.M. ai.d 1 :30 F. M Sia aa .v:Uoi. at 2 :30 P. M. Gkhman Mkthodist. . jniei Six.'.t. ft !. tiranite. P.ev. Hilt. t'Hti . -rv:f-e : 11 a. and 7 :30 P. M. Suuday School 10 :3 ) a. x v cr.i'r 'M Y..T T.Hu-.a. (; i i----1-'. PKKSHVTKKI AN,-Services Jli V iier Sixth and Granite te. It rn'-rnr M:i!day-scbKil "' '' at 11 a. in. f.id p. in. The . K. S. C. E of thi church ireeo-. rr c...v...- cvoiiiiic r 7 Mfi in the teener t . ti.e clnierh. All are Invited i at t neetins. the FIRST MKTHODIST. Sixth St.. betv-ei, 'aiO and Pearl. Kev. b. F. Britt. l 1: b;t'.r . -ervicef 11 A. M.. 8 :0) P. M Suvda- SclK.O 3-.3fiA M. Prayer nieetirgWedi.es'lveveii inir. Gkkman I'kfsiivtk.kian. Coixer Main a;. A Ninth. lr. Witte. pMstor. Services us-' A hours. Sunday school u :30 a. M. 8WF.EDISH ONUKKSATIONAU Clrr.iU', bl teeu Fifth aud sixth. ' Coi-okkd Baptist. Mt. Olive. vtk. itwi-s tor. Servire 11 a. in. and 7 :30 p. meetir.e Wednesday eveninc. I'taye it !! y(ivr, Mfs's Chkistiai' Assoiiaiiom Booms in V. atennau block, MaiQ btreet. (.us -pel meeting, for men only, everv Sufaday al teriKK.n at 4 o'clock. Koom open week iufx. from 8:30 a. in.. 13 9 : 30 p. in. South Pakk Tap.krxaclk. Her. J. W. Wood, Pahtor. Services : Sunday Bctjoo i9. m. : Preaching, 11a. m. and prayer meeting Tuesday nipht : ebo pm: -uce Friday niht. AU are welcom.