Blackwell's Bull Durham VS ; Jfr Great Bull flovement." Sold wherever tobacco is smoked . BULL DURHAM is a mild and pleasant stimulant which quiets the nerves and in no way excites or deranges the system. In this respect it 13 distinctive. It gives the most solid com fort vith no unpleasant efTects. Made only by BlackwcU's Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, N.C. For Atchinsoii, St. Joseph, lnven worth, Kaunas City. St. Louis, ;ml all points ii'-'-th. oast south or west. Tick ets sold and bnir fiifxe checked to any point in the United S t a tes or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO KATK ANl KOITTKS Call at Iepot or address H, C. Townsf.m, ;. I. A. St. Louis, Mo. J. C. I'lllMJI'I'I, A. G. 1. A. Omaha. H. D. Ahcak. Ajrt.. IMattsniouth. Telephone, 77. MEAT MARKET SIXTH STREET F. II. KLLKN1JAUM, Prop The best of fresh meat alwa'S found in this market. Also fresh Kg and Hutter. Wild bailie of all kinds kept in their v season. SIXTH STREET Meat, market CSSS.-.-'s;-. SCHIFFM AK?J"S Aitftrrsa Cure Xtmr fail tn tfive im-tant r-licf in th wnrrt rjaa in. ami alfm-ta ram u !- ImII. Trial M I'UCK DmacMa hj MM. Hi DR. K. BCHIFFMAr.N. 8t urn, !. Hftgwi Bare, Yrompt; Toltl " i W i '" ImpoUnea, Lota L K P 1 of Monkood, Semlncu Jyevshxaf. F.-i'isiom. Sosrmatorrhea. ficroousnes. Self Distrust. 0lau Aon. Prlcu 91.VU. a h carh dor. Address 29IO LUOMAVt. ST. LOUIS. ua- Qiamborlain'g Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Oh Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Soro Nipples and Files. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of eases have been cured by It after all other treatment had failed, It Is put up in 25 and SO cent boxes. iPnn MEM OFJIV YOUNG MEN OLD MEN mt TUI TDII I Of TMt SfBPEITS Of IISEASC TBT Mnil inon irwm imiiiin., 1 . . k . h.. a nMMlfltlv SHAKE OFF THE HORRID SNAKES t j 1- MMk lata an Mrl OUR NEW BOOK .... It I i I mi TT Kl M tk. phllMopby ! DIMS ..4 IMlrtlAM Of til. Or(ui of M . !r unuc TariTlimT ,n, th. worst of Lost or iiib Gart,l 4 M.romi i Do- : bintr. wo I Ul lit.. " 1 or xe. tmo4 or ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFF Alw,ri.T HAVF H youM r t l3 H- k4i!KV C nil mm Smoking Tobacco Made a record long years ago, which has never been beaten or , approached. It. has not to-day, a p-nrx! second in nonularitv. Its o r-r j - peculiar and uniform excellence y pleases tne men or to-aay as it did their fathers before them. . Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing. Cures Chapped Hands, Wounds, Burns, Etc. Removes and Prevents Dan droit. WHITE RUSSlAfl SOAP. Specially Adapted for Use in Hard Water. BO Ur'C WATER OR MILK. E P P GRATJ5UL COMFOKTING Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only. P33 J5 BfjN ESS HKAD?!OISKS CURED ?5 tj A s '"' lnn.it.lr Tabular tar tnb- i."J Ta i( lim. WbiipOTa brard. Couifortak!.. fu. i .i :uiwhr-al lr.-iii.-ilu--.fail. Sold by F. II!irox,orlv, CDCC i?53 .Iruatlway, .Vw lurk. Wnia fur bouk of pruuf.rilCl. im PARKER'S v-vCvl HAIR BALSAM Gray 'jUei i-urt-n Fu!p d:E4-aM-s hair laUuiir. . HOI.' L J All. 1UU1111U1 . t .im-4, t hiiiiv, I'tiLLrMion, i'ain, Take 111 ti:ne.cts. la-; litre Tonic. ii fim-3 tim uois.;i CotiL'h. !f?DIKCOSKS. The onW ntre cure for Corns. ;.5 :..; paitL ic at JJrurits, or lilsC'UX t CO.a N. V. How Lost! How Regained! KNOW THYSELF. Or SEL.F-PRESEI1VATTON. A new and only Gold Medal PKIZE ESSAY oa NEttVOUS and VIIYSICAI DEKIL1XY, EKKOKS of YOUTH. EXTTAUSTEI VITALITY, PRE NATUKE DECLINE, and all DISEASES ind WEAKNESSES of MAN. 300 pages, cloth, Ut; 125 invaluable prescriptions. Only $1.00 y mail, double sealed. Descriptive Prospect us with endorsements rn r" r" I QFNn ef the Press and voluntary kUk I Snui testimonials of the curei " HUWi Consnltation in pereon or by msil. Expert troafc mcnt. INTIOLAULE SECKECY and CEll tiim I-Ita.'. Ail(!rMi Dr. W. U. PBrker. or f The l'eabody Medical Inittitule, No. 4 Bulliuch St., lioHton, Mi. s The l'eabody Mtnlicjil Institute has many imi tntorn, bnt no equal. Ihrald. The Science of Life, or Self Preservation, ia a treasure more valuable than l-oKI. Kcail H now, everv WEAK and NEHVOl'S man, and K-arn to be SIKOXG . Medical Urinr. (C'opi riirhted-.' Morninsr Noon Night Good all the lime. It removes the languor of morning, sus tains the energies of noon, lulls 0 the weariness of night. t- Been delicious, sparkling, appetizing. J Don't be deceived if a t'eaK-r. for the sake cf l-ircr (.rol'iT, tci!- yi.u s-me other kind ju.-.t :is i;'ioi " 'lisi.ilb'". No iutiUiliun AGEXTS to sell ourclioicc tiurerv stock. Many fine secialties to offer write iuick ami st-ctire choice of territorv MAR BROS. X L' K SEKYM E X . K'ochester, X. Y C0 COCOA ' F - '.T T-fi Prtiiiion-, a Inxu.-iant frwth. T . i. " - s3fi Ncv?r Fails to KcBtaro oire M A ii VV A DIAGRAM NEEDED. Embarraaaintr Effort of Two Young So clety Ieolo to Att-ml Wedding. Not loii"; ho u prominent young bo ;iety Lilyof a neihlxriiig city was stop ping with friends in this city at one of :lio leading hotels. There is utthing particularly Kt range in this, except the fact that she was hero led to an extreme ly unusual and amtibing1 incident. Stop ping at tho same hotel was a society gen tleman of large acquaintance. Not Iortg igo it haiKned that two wedding nt ('i tions, both in hijrh society, occurred on tlio same evening. That evening, as lie left the dining room of the hotel, tho gentleman wlio figures in this story met tho young lady alovo referred to, and ifteran exchange of courtesies asked her if sho was to attend tlie wedding recer tion. .She replied that such was her in tention, lie then asked if he should call for her ami received an allirmative an swer. Promptly at 9 o'clock a carriage rolled np to tho hotel entrance, a young man lighted, was whisked up to tho first floor parlors in the elevator and in a few minutes came- down with tho young lady, attiretl in a bewitching costume, upon his arm. The carriage then sped away to the northward ami in a very. ihort time halted before a large resi dence in a fashionable part of the city, from the windows of which many lights streamed. The young lady and her escort were at once shown to up stairs rooms, where the' could divest themselves of their outer wraps liefore descending to the parlors. While the gentleman was waiting in the hall for the young lady sho suddenly api-ared with a scared look on her face, and motioning him out of hearing of every one excitedly ex claimed in a stage whisper: "Do yon know where we are?" "Why, yes," said the gentleman, with a questioning look on his face. "We are at Mr. T 's." "Well, 1 was not invited here," said the young lady, with growing alarm. "Well, what did you come for then?" "I thought we were going to the re ception at Mr. M 's. I knew nothing alxut this reception." "1 knew nothing about that recep tion," said the gentleman. "1 was not invited there. I supposed you were in vited to this one." "And just to think," exclaimed the young lady, almost on the lxnder of tears, "my sister expects me at M 's. What shall we do?" The situation was so funny that loth laughed. The young man had been in vited to one reception and the young lady to another, and neither knew that there were to be two receptions on the same night. "I'll take you over to M 's," said he. At first the young lady thought she would go, but changed her mind, and Ixjth returned to the hotel to await the coming home of tho former's sister. A consultation was held and it was decided to keep the affair secret, but the story was so good that first one and then an other were "put on. The young man has registered an eternal vow that the next time he in vites a yonng ladj to attend a reception with him he will furnish a diagram show ing the rame of the" family and the number of the house. Indianapolis Journal. Savage Legends. The savage islanders of the south Pacific believe that the world is a cocoa nut shell of enormous dimensions, at the top of which is a single aperture comm'unic-ating with the upier air, where human beings dwell. At the very bottom of this imaginary shell is a stem gradually tapering to a point which represents the beginning of all things. This point is a spirit or demon without human form, whose name is, "Root of All Existence." By him the entire fabric of creation is sustained. In the interior of the coeoaimt shell at its very bottom, lives a female demon. 3o narrow is the space into which she is crowded that she is obliged to sit for ever with knee and chin touching. Her name is "The Very Beginning," and from her are sprung numerous spirits, Thev inhabit five different floors, into which the great cocoanut is divided From certain of these spirits mankind is descended. The islanders, regarding themselves as . the only real men and women, were ' formerly accustomed to regard strangers as evil spirits in the guise of humanity, whom they killeu when they could, offering them na sacri fices. Exchange. I : t The Growth of Seaweed. M x Seaweeds vary surprisingly in their habits of life. Some species grow alto gether leneath the water, attaching themselves below the lowest tide level others frequent heights where they are left dry at every retreating tide, while others yet are found in situations where they are scarcely ever covered by water. Whereas most of them attach them selves to rocks or solid bottom, keeping to the shallows, there are exceptions to the rule, among which the most remark able is the "sergasso," or "gulf weed,1 which floats on the surface of the ocean Immense fields of it are seen by the navigator, extending as far as the eye can reach. It is sometimes so abundant as seriously to interfere with the prog ress of ships, and it was this which so alarmed th crew of Columbus on his first voyage of discovery. Interview in Washington Star. A Self Sprayer. M. Monnet, of Lyons, now prepare: chloride of ethyl by the action of chlor hvdric acid on alcohol. A trlass bolth y has leen devised ou the mouth of which a nozzle can be screwed which throws a fine jet on the skin, so that the remedy can be applied by any one to his own skin. New York Times. How Florida Crackera Got Their Nam. The drivers of the work teams in Pari. can beat the "crackers" of Fl.nhla ai cracking their whips. This is savin,, much, for the latter got their peculiai designation from their skiil in that di rection. New York Sun. SINGING TO CONVICTS. YOUNG WOMEN WHO DEVOTE THL'Kl TALENTS TO CHARITY. Mary itxxd. L.tzz'.e Ros&ttc-, H-t.ir.l Work In Hrooklyii'n I'rin Hltnti Init l-lalVHr Their Experience AiiitmK the Outcitxt f So-li-ry. . Th re are two yoliuft vwineij in Brook lyn who have laid out for themselves a iuost unusual lino of duty, and who have so modestly and quietly pursued it that this is probably tho first time their names have ever come In-fore the public. These noble young women are the. Misses Mary and Lizzie Borneman, who have consecrated their lives to work among prisoners and the very poor of tho city. They were lxrn in the old part of the city lying beyond Willough by street and Adams, and in that vicin ity their lives have been spent. For the last five years they have lived with their parents and sisters at :JG1 Jay street, and are very domestic, industrious girls, eat ing for their younger sjsturs and aiding their mother in a good old fashioned way so seldom in vogue now. Of all tho family they two alone aro endowed with the gift of song, Mary having a strong, clear soprano and Liz zie a contralto of wonderful strength and beauty. To them the gift seemed to be divinely given, and they decided even wliile children that it must be used for some good end, some purpose. For a time they sang in churches, re ceiving large salaries for their services, but this seemed a selfish use of their beautiful voices, and even against tho wishes of their parents they began on Easter Sunday, ten years ago, to sing in Raymond Street jail at Chaplain Bass' morning services, and from that time their talents have been devoted entirely to this work. Every Sunday morning at S) o'clock they are admitted to the corridor of the jail, and every Tuesday evening, and no prisoner who has been locked within those walls during the past ten years but has been comforted by the sound of their voices. Once in the month always, sometimes twice, they sing in the Kings County peniten-ti-ry in the afternoon, and since tho In dustrial homo has been started they sing there Sunday and Thursday even ings. Aside from these services they sing often in concerts given for chari table purposes. Nor are their duties entirely confined to singing. Often they are sent for by some poor prisoner, and never a call comes in vain. At any time they are ready to go with words of comfort or little gifts of some kind to the darkest cell, to the most desperate prisoner. Next to Rev. Mr. Bass himself, these two young women aro best known an J best beloved of any persons in Brooklyn by the outcasts of society. "Not a few times," said Miss Lizzie to a reporter, "have we acted as brides maids in the jail and penitentiary, and have signed our names as witnesses to the marriage contracts. Quite as often, too, have we stood as godmothers to poor little prison born babes. We are often sent for to sit beside the sick pris oners, and have seen deaths, too, within the prison walls." "Have j'ou ever known many of the famous criminals here?" "Oh, yes. The saddest duty we ever had to perform in our lives has been to visit some of the condemned men in Raymond Street jail. I shall never for get the morning Mills was hanged. He was convicted of wife murder, and be fore his death was converted to Chris tianity through Mr. Bass' efforts. lie often wanted us to sing for him, and to the last we went. The little organ was placed just outside his cell door, and there we would sing and Mr. Bass would talk to him. It seemed always to cheer him until the day before the execution, when, while we were there, the clothes he was to wear, even to the slippers and hose, were brought to him, and then he seemed stunned and was like one turned to stone. He seemed then to fully realize his position, and from that moment lost all of his cheerfulness. It was his wiih that we come again in the morning, and of course we went and sang as long as we were permitted to staj" "Were you with any others at such a time?" "Yes, we were with Jefferson before that. "We were afraid to go near McElvaine's cell. He was so coarse and brutal that his language was not fit for us to he ir. He is the only prisoner we have met who has not behaved like a gentleman in cair presence. When we were visiting Mills, ever day Kramer, the burglar, occu pied an adjoining cell and used to hang a blanket up to his door that he might not see us, and we were very careful never to look toward his cell. One day, however, Mills told us that Kramer wanted to speak to us, and we noticed then that there was no screen at the bars of his cell. He asked us to sing 6ome favorite hymn of his, and from that time seemed very friendly. He afterward was sentenced to two years and a half in the penitentiary, and while there sent for us to come to see him. He was a desperate man, and had broken out of every prison in which he had ever been confined nd had won for himself the sobriquet of Bolts and Bars.' " Few young women truly have wit nessed such scenes as have these young singing missionaries, and their home is tilled with little gifts, tokens of gratitude from prisoners. New York World. lie Never Lost a Hook. I once heard of a fine old bibliophile vho had the price put inside all his vol umes. When asked to lend one he would look inside it and say: "Yes, with great pleasure. I see the price is thirty shillings, which will le refunded when the volume is returned." He ar gued that if the book were really required the money would be cheerfully paid; but he found these occasions were few and far between, and, what is more, ho never lost any of his books or had them returned in a dilapidated condition. London Graphic. No Hard Eerllaga. A man about forty-five years old. hav ing three new scytho stones tied up with a string under his arm, got altoard the train at Smith's Centre, and as ho pissed down thtf car to find o seat, a passenger who was considerably young er, and who also apj.K-afed to .be a far mer, called out: -a'AVaU, I deel.u-'. but who exacted to see you here! How aro ye, Jim Tomp son'f" "Oh,tolerllo well, eonsiderin," was Ihe reply of the newcomer. "How's all your folks?" "Able to lo around, thank ye. (lel tin ready to shartieii up, I see?" "Ya-as." "Look here, Jim, I want to talk to ye a bit. Folks is tellin 'round that you'll mo is mad at each other an ready to fight." "Ya-as, I've heard.it." "But it ain't so. I ain't mad, and 1 don't know what you've got to git nnul over." "Oh, I never thought of git tin mad." "It's jest tho gossips, who want sum phin to blow about. I married Mary J ano Hopkins. We lidn't hitch very well, and I got a divorce. Then she married you, and that set folks to thinkin we orter bo mad at each other. Lands alive! but it would take inore'n that to make me mad!" "And hero too." "How is Mary Jane now?" "Fust rate fust rate." "Does sho git mad and go into hysler icks?" "Hasn't yit." "How's her breath?" "Improvin right along all the time." "(J lad to hear it. Willin to git up in the mornin?" "Perfectly willing?" "Kick any 'bout milkin tho cows and feedin tho hogs?" "Not a kick." "Waal, I'm glad on it. We couldn't hitch, but 1 ain't got a word to say agin Mary. Somebody had to marry her, and it might as well be you as any one else. Don't you mind what folks say. I ain't mad nor goin to git mad jest 'cause you married my old wife. I'm after another, and as soon as I git her you'n Mary come over ami stay all day, and we'll make it pleasant for ye." New York Herald. Lost a Valuable Kclic. When the Army of tho Potomac, in the spring of lsG12, moved into the fortification at Manassas and Centre ville, the boys spent much of their time gathering relics from the battlefield of Bull Run to send home to their friends. One day a gawky member of the Fourth New York brought in an unex ploded bomb and started to extract the load lM'fore sending it away. Ho should have taken it to an artilleryman, but in stead took it to a blacksmith shop and, with a hammer and cold chisel, sat down on the floor, took the bomb Ihj tween his legs, placed tho brass screw at the point and gave it a heavy blow. The next instant tho atmosphere was dense with disintegrated blacksmith shop. A section of the batting roof had business over in another country, and a chunk of tho side wall went down to visit the neighboring camp. Pieces of iron and steel that were once tools took an immediate vacation and fled to parts unknown. When the boys rushed to see what was the matter there tho man sat bolt upright in the midst of the debris, with his legs stretched out, a hammer in one hand and a chisel in the other. "Gosh," he said, as he slowly crawled to his feet, "I guess the folks 't home'll have to get along 'thout that shell." The only injury that had been done him was the singeing of his hair and whiskers. He wasn't even very much frightened till the next day. New York Recorder. A Dinner at an Installation. If the dictum of the Vicar of Bray be true, that he "who lives a good life is sure to live well," then George Nevill, who was archbishop of York, must have been a very good man indeed. At his installation a big banquet was prepared, and the mere perusal of the bill of fare is calculated to give one an appetite. It reads: Three hundred quarters of wheat, 330 tuns of ale, 104 tuns of wine, 1 pipe of spiced wine, 80 fat oxen, 6 wild bulls, 1,004 wethers, 300 hogs, 300 calves, 3,000 geese, 3,000 capons, 300 pigs, 100 pea cocks, 200 cranes, 200 kids, 2,000 chick ens, 4,000 pigeons, 4,000 rabbits, 204 bit terns, 4,000 ducks, 200 pheasants, 500 partridges, 4,000 woodcocks, 400 plovers, 100 curlews, 100 quails, 1,000 egrets, 200 rees, above 400 bucks, does and roe bucks, 1,506 hot venison pasties, 4.000 cold venison pasties, 1,000 dishes of jelly pastes, 4,000 dishes of plain jelly, 4,000 cold custards, 2,000 hot custards, 300 pike, 300 bream, 8 seals, 4 porpoises and 400 tarts. The waiters numbered 1,000, the cooks 62. and the kitcheners 515. London Tit-Bits. A Chameleon's liite. The bite even of the largest chame leon does not fetch blood, though the teeth leave indentations. I often pro voke them to bite me in order to observe their habits, and only once, when one caught me between the fingers where the skin is tender, was I really hurt. On this occasion the thing held on so persistently and firmly that I could not for some time free my finger. At last I was obliged to call some one to get it off by forcibly opening its mouth. Even then it did not pierce the skin; its teeth are too fine and regular, but the dotted triangular impression of the lit tle teeth was very red and distinct for Borne minutes. Cor. Forest and Stream. The Invention of Paper. The invention of paper was perhaps more useful to the world than that of printing. It vastly increased the spread of knowledge, making possible the pos session, upon the payment of a few cents, of knowledge which in the Four teenth century, the day of rare and cost ly manuscripts, could only le procured upon the payment of a large sum of money. New York World. I TTOKNKV A. N. SULLIVAN. Attorney hI-I.hw. Will Mvv prompt Ul tent lot .. all t'tipinef ent rnr-liil to liiui. Olliee li 'uloii block, I'iart MUJr. I'lattMuolilb, Nelt. HENRY BOECK Tho Lending FURNITURE DEALER ANO UNDERTAKR. i onstaritly keeps on Lund everythin you need to furnish your house. COIINKK SIXTH ANI MAIN HTKRKT Plattsmouth Neb: F IK'ST : NATIONAL : HANK OK I'LATTSMOUTII. fS'KI'.KAHK A faid up capital Slllplilf Ji.(iO,0 1 0.0(10.0 rs the verv bft fivcllltleH for the promri traiif-actiou ol nominate Banking Business Stock", bonds, kI1. government and local i -urif ios Ixititilit and Hold. OepoMltit renelve .!il intercut allowed on tli certlHcHU 1 )rats drawn, available In any part of Hi ' Minim NalM anil ail t In; principal twnn ilurope. 0OLLKCTIOM8 MAOK AND I'UOMITI.V KKMI1 TK1. ailiesi market price paid for County Wai rants, Htale an County bonds. 1)1 RECTO ICS John Klt7.(ral(l I). Ilawkaworth Sam WauKh. K. K. Willi Jeor;e K. Dovey John Fitzgerald. S. Wangli. I'rec ident C' t tf W. II. Cushim;, I'rcnitJt ill ', J. W. John. so? Virv-l'liuhleiit. -ooOT EOoo- rLATTSMOL'TH NKHKASKA i Capital Paid in $CO,OC U ;iitlmi;in. .) W Johnson. E H (lieu Henry Kikenbiiry, M W MoifHli. J A Connor. W Wellenk. inp, W II CusiiiiiK A general bntiNiii- Ihihi'im sh trai ;ictel. IntercHt allowed on posites. Always 1 in si on liiind n full stock FLO UK AND FKIJD, Corn, Hran, ShortH Oata and Hal Hay for sale as low uh the low and delivered to nny part of 1 city. CORNKK SIXTH AND VINE Plattsniotilli, Nebras I PLACKS OF WOKSIIIP. Catholic St. Paul's Church, ak. belt Fiftli anil Sixth. Father Cainey, Pan Services: M'hsh at R and lo :.'iO a. M. Sufi School t 2 ::, with benediction. Chkistian. Corner Locust and Kil'th Siervices moriiiuK fcud tvenlnj:. Klder Calloway pastor. Sunday School 10A. M Episcopal. St. Luke's Church, corner!', and Vine. liev. 11 K. liuitepc. pat-tor. vices : 11 A. m. and 7 :30r. u. Sunday Sc at 2 :30 v. M. (tKk.man JUktiiodist. oorner Sixth f.t. Granite. Kev. Ilirt. Pator. Services : 11 and 7 :30 r. m. Suoday School lo :30 a.m J -I Pbkshvtkkian. Services m new churchy ner Sixth and Granite su. llev. J . T. R.- oastor. Sunday-school at 9 :30 : Preac at 11 a. in. aud x l. in. I The . H. S. C. E of tble church meets e, S:.l.ti:itli evciiiiii' at 7 1.1 ill the baxemei thechiicih. All are invited to attend tA meeting. M First Mfthouist. Sixth St.. betwen and Pearl. Kev. 1.. F. Britt. I. U. ua. Service : 11 A. M.. 8 :W P. M Sunday ScH 9 :30 a.m. Prayer lueetn k v ednesday e.' ini M liKit.MAX Pkhskvtkki an. Corner Main -I Ninth. Kev. Witte, pastor. Services i;J hours, ftunuay r-cuooi a ujo a. m. Swkkdmi Conokfoational. Granite.:i tween Fifth and Sixth. Coloi;ki Haptist. Mt. Olive. Oak. bet! Tenth and Eleventh. Kev. A. Hoi1 well, -J tor. Services 11 a. in. and 7 -M p. in. F.J meetiriir Wednesday eveninii. "T . iJ VoO'O Mfx's Chkistiax Ahsociat Koonis in Merman block, Mali) street.) pel meetinc. for men only, everv Sunda ternoon at 4 o'clock. Koom open weekj from 8:30 a. in.. .o 9 : 30 p. in. Ir SofTH 1'AKK TAIiKKNACXE. Kev. .t Wood, Pastor. Services: Sunday B. in. in.: Preach inr. 11a. m. and 8 P prayer meetinjr Tuesday night ; choir tice Friday night. Al! are welcome. Every Month many womru suffer from Escooalve or Scant Menatration; they don't fcnowr who to conftda to to set proper advico. Don't confide in anybody but try Bradfleld's Female Regulator Specific for PAINf UL, PROFUSE. SCANTY. SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION. Hook to "WOMAN" mailed free. BHADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlasls. Cs. iM bjr all Itr.nUtt.