Black-well's Bull Durham Qreat Bull flovement.' 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 is distinctive. It gives the most solid com fort vith no unpleasant effects. Made only by BlackwelPs Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, N.C. """ If I ETC) For Atchinsoti, St. Joseph, Leaven worth, KaiiHart City. St. Ixmia, and all points ir -th.oH8t HOttth or west. Tick eta sold and bag gage checked to any point in the United St a tea or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO RATKS AND ROUTES Call at Depot or address II. C. TOWNSEND, G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo. J. C. PlIILLIPPI, A. G. 1. A. Omaha. H. D. Apgak. Aj?t.f Plattsmouth. Telephone, 77. MEAT MARKET SIXTH STREET F. H. ELLKNIJAUM, Prop The best of fresh meat always found -" in this market. Also fresh Kjjjjh and Butter. Wild tfaine of all kinds kept in their Heasou. "fiP SIXTH STREET Meat market HAVE YOU SCHIFFM ANN'S Aethrrm Cure Nfi fails tr giro knitlAnt rtrlirf in the worst Gmmrm ami ifM-tj mw 'jor ik-r fmil Trial r FKKC f P..-. r by flalL AWi DR. ft. RCHlKTOCANr. 9U rU MM. B0T9 TTonpt; JOsTtr Cirrs or Impolitic. Loss of Uanhood, Stmlnal Emission: Spermatorrhsa. UtrucAsneu. Self Distrust. Lost of Mtntortf, Ae. ' WWi mahe i.o a 8TR0M0. Vlgor out Mam. Pricm 91. OO, 6 Box. $& 00. Snrcitl Directions 10904 svitn eactt Bo. Addrss Hll SftJW t.lgirnst C-, 99tO LuoasAv. ST. LOUIS. - MO. Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain enre for Chronic Soro Eye Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Ol Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and Pile. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of eases have been cured by H after all other treatment had failed. It is put up in 25 and CO cent boxes. IFOR MEM OHLV YOUNG MENVOIiD EXE2T 111 IB III !". aw.-., m. TarT asrsis sawns so mm aaaaaaarov. bm ao kaewiac kn to nctwHUr 3SHAKEOF r THE HOKHIU wuku ' gtr apt saapatr aal riot lata aaaarly OUR NEW BOOK ll IM. a fM. Ihr a llsalt tlaaa.r'plaiaa taa pallewoar - . j ,tiaaa of taa vKSZr TQriTMEHT. my aiatkoda csclsatTaly mm an. tka warrt fait lat ar rUiaf MaakaaA. Oaaaral aa illtr. Waakmaaa ot Body Itottlf" tVLkSwTi.5 DEVELOPED CftTc MEDICAL CO. OUFFM.O.H.Y. assail , 1 Smoking Tobacco Made a record long years ago, which has never been beaten or approached. It has not to-da;, a good second in popularity.. Its peculiar and uniform excellence pleases the men of to-day as it did their fathers before them. Sold wherever tobacco is smoked. . Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing. Cures Chapped, Sands, Wounds, Burns, Etc. Remove a and Prevents Dandruff. white nussian soap. Specially Adapted for Use in Hard Water. BO LIVC WATER OR MILK. EPFS' GRATKUL COMFORTING COCOA Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only. "SsFWi n. P53NESSHED!I0ISKSCURED i'eck n Invisible TnbaUr r Cask. Ions. Whispers beard. Conifurlftble. lo..iwrniwtiereailrnneilieiifsll. Sol.1 by V. IliMox,only, rp rr CSS lirodwy, ttrm lurk. WriM fur bouk of prwutainCC PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clcaiue and bvnutitlvfl the hair. I'rotmHefl a uxuriaut growth. Never Fails to Beat are Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure .raJp dicaMa a; hair falliiig. S. and 1 at Dnnrrtntn r ri. ww v w v m m m i m j 2.l-fro.'B C-rixiirer Toiliti. it cures the wnrt Couti, i i:; lit;" IK'liility, l!HligMiua, l'atn,Take in time.OJcu. :!('h30tHCORNS. The onW nrt cure f.r Coraa. -jf. iui l-u'U. ic a XJruittB, or lilSCUX 4; CO.. N. Y. How Lost I How Regal nodi ICfiOV THYSELF. Or SELF-PKESEKVATTON. A new and only Gold Medal PKIZK KSSAY on SKUVOUS and PHYSICAt, DEIUL1TY, ERltOKS of VOITTII.EXHAUTKO VITALITY, PKE MATIIKE DKCI.INK. and all 1HSEASES and WKAKK KSSKS of SCAN. 300 pages, cloth, rilt; 135 invaloable prescriptions. Only $1.00 by mail, donbl sealed. DeacriptiTe Proepect n, with endorsements rmr"I" TlUn of the Press and oluntary l la a I testimonials of the cure. . NUW. Consul ut ion In person or by mail. Expert treat ment. IN VI OLA It I. K SKCKKCV and CER TAIN Cl'KK. AddriMia Ir. W. n. Parker, or The I'eabody Medical Ioatitute, No. 4 Bulliuch St.. BoHton, Maas. ... The I'eabody Medical Institute has many imi tators, but no equal. - era'. ' The 8cience of Life, or y.-lf.Preeervation, is a treasure more valuable tnun guld. Kead it now, every WEAK and N E 14 VI I S man, and learn tov be STROSO . JeJUul A'erieic. (Copyrixhtcd. Morning Noon Night Good all the time. It removes the languor of morning, sus tains the energies of noon, lulls , the weariness of night. Ji iiJiJL Beer1 delicious, sparkling, appetizing. Don't be deceived if a dealer, for the sake cf larger profit, tells you some other kind is iustas cood " 'lis false. No iautation is as good as the genulue Iliuus'. A 1 TED AGENTS to sell our choice nursery stock. Many fijie specialties to oiler; write quick ami secure choice of territory MAR BROS. XL'KSEKYMEX. Kochester, X. Y a r-1 w A MEXICAN LEGEND. A JVIyllilry4 Mory of an Illualva Volley of Cold In Eiutlerii Arizona. The etory of the famous treasure tf tlie "Madre l'(iro" is an oll one. It comes from this Aztecs of Mexico.. Some where, in southeastern Arizona there is a Kinall valley, alxut fivu miles lon ami two miles wide, walled in by tower inj mountains. The sides are no precip itous that it is iinioshiblo to climb down them, and there is only onu entrance, through a cave, which is carefully hid den by Indians, who guard the treasure for the second coming of Montezuma. It isrtaid that even among them tho entrance is only known to the three most aged ment and is never communicated exOjt when, on the death of one, it is necessary to give the knowledge into the keeping of another.. The valley itself, though surrounded by inhospitable, rocks, is a paradiso Watered by tho stream which flova through it, its soil is covered with llowerh and lx-autif ul trees, through the brancht of which nit bright lined birds. .The only reptiles seen are the gold snakes, wit" their glittering greenish yellow scales. Stretching across tho valley from ono side to the other is a ledge of pure gold, its masses of virgin metal gle;ming ani glistening in the sunlight. It is said t, lie live feet, ten feet, fifty feet, 100 feet wide. The gold lies in it in great veins and nuggets, imltedded in clear quarts, the sharp angles of which glitter in th. sunlight like gigantic diamonds. Across tho ledge the stream flows, forming a little waterfall, below which tho nug gttsof gold can lo seen in tho water and out. Ciold in the ledge, gold in the scales of snakes, gold in the stream, gold in the birds gold, gold, gold, gold is tho refrain of the golden story. Tho fearful precipices which surround tho place, tho strango ceremonies and horrid banquets which have served to keep the secret safe, the tribe of Aztecs, living only to preserve for their mys terious ruler this treasure house of na ture, have nJl aided in giving to tho story its strango interest. Small won der is it that the pulse should quicken and the eye grow bright as you hear the tale from the lips of men who more than half believe it. The lonely desert sur rounding you, with tho tall cacti look ing like ghosts in the half moonlight; the long drawn melancholy of the coy ote's howl, the prospector's fire of grease wood, the men with their rough cloth ing and quaint language, all vanish as you listen, and in imagination you are transported to the wonderful valley in which is the "Madre d'Oro," the "Moth er of Gold." Nor are they content to tell the story as an Indian legend. They cite instances of white men who have seen tlie pla-v who have descended into the val-'ey ru some way and returned with all the gold they could carry. The locution of the spot is always in a dangerous Indian country. I have been told twice that it wras in the Chircahna mountains. It is always said to have been found merely by accident by men who were either hunting or prosnecting for ledges, about the only two occupations which will make unscientific men climb the moun tains. It can only be seen from tlie up per end after the morning mists in the valley have cleared away. Then, as ono stands on the rugged peaks and looks down, he sees the great ledge spanning the valley below him, the virgin lneta'. glittering in the sunlight, and he knows that he has before him the place of which he has heard so much nnd dreamed go of tea. Interview in W ashington Star. Auierit-an Poi funics. "It does not follow nowadays," said the druggist, "that because a toilet per fume is made in France it is superior in quality to one of American reparation. Such was formerly the case, uu the art of making fine perfumes has leen car ried to such perfection of late years t:, our own country that not more than ore eighth as much of tho French prepara tions is sold in the United States tod ly as was sold a few years ago. Ne.ir'y 3,000,000 worth of homo distilled jte;--f nines are made in New York alone erj year. Chicago manufacturers pur one-half as much on the market, aui :here are extensive perfumery man.if ; c tories in Boston, Philadelphia, San Fran cisco, St. Louis and other large pl.;c s. New York Evening Sun. Modern Witchcraft. In divers villages in Pennsylvania, some of them in the Dunkard settle ments, are women who are supposed t i be witches. Some are shrewd enough not to apply their arts for strangers, bm to those whom they know, as stated in a nevspaier article some years ago, they will sell charms to ward off lightning from buildings, dry up the wells of th enemies of applicants, force cows to give bloody milk, cause sickness in the family, destroy beauty, separate man and wife and reunite estranged lovers. Dr. Buckley in Century. A Remarkable Growth. Wonderful things happen in Ireland as well as elsewhere, if the following can be vouched for, which is not likely. It is related that a gentleman in Ireland, on cutting open a potato at dinner, found in the center a half sovereign, around which the vegetable had grown. Though discolored, it was in a good state of preservation, and is now a pref. y ornament to a watch chain. FhiladfT phia Ledger. A II aril Question. Doctor My goodness! This won't do. Sou don't eat enough. iSick Boy You don't want me to ear., do you? Doctor Indeed I do. Sick Boy (angrily) Then why m t!.' naue o aense did you tell me to take a big dose o' cod liver oil before every meal? Good News. Had lieen There. Maiden (listening to Mendelssohn's "Wedding March") I don't see why tin v have the clashing of the cymbals. Young Mrs. Benedict Why, as a sj m 1k1 of the clashings which are to follow, of course. Kate Field's Washington. HE KNEW. HlravWa Not t All " Scared by the ,. . Xolara Down Mnlrs. It w:w 11 o'clock in the morning when Mrs. HiginlMitham shook her husband. "Ugh." he resKHideil unconsciously. " "Hiram! I lir.im!" she exclaimed in a whifijior.'" t "H-ngn," he observed. She gave him another shake. - "Hiring" she whispered," "thero'fe rob bers down s tail s.".- ' ' ' ".UgliWiw ventured-' again, this" time wltli a rising inflection indicating that ho was gradually absorbing tho idea tluit something was wrong. She gave him a tremendous shake. "Ugh," ho almost tdiouted, sitting straight up, "what in thunder's tho row, Maria?" She clapped her hand over his mouth. VSh sh!" tho whispered, "there's burglars down stairs." "Aw," ho growled, "we ought to be thankful they are not up stairs. (Jo to sleep!" and he fell back to tho pillow. "Hiram, I tell' von," she insisted, with another shake,' ''there's' burglars down stairs. 1 heard," them. You go down and see what they want." "Maria," he protested, "I'll do noth ing of the sort. If they don't seo what they want they can ask for it. That's business." "But you shall go down, Hiram, and see," she urged and pleaded at the same time. "I won't, I tell you, Maria. Because your father owns a dry goods store is no sign that 1 believe it is no tronblo to show goods, and 1 repeat, madam, if those burglars want anything they've got to wait on themselves. It's after business hours anyway. You must think we run an all night place. Go to sleep, I tell you." Mrs. Higinfiotham gave a sudden clutch at his arm. "There," she nearly screamed, "I hear them coming up stairs now." "Well, dear," ho said soothingly, "you'd better jump up and put on a dress. It will never do in the world for you to receive strange gentlemen in your present attire." "We'll bo murdered in our beds," she wailed. "Do you really think you will," he in quired with some interest. "I'm sure of it, Hiram," she sobbed. "Suppose j'ou get out and lie on the floor, Maria, and then you won't be," ho suggested heartlessly. "I'm willing to take mine right here in bed, where it's warm." Mrs. II. began to cry. "What's the matter, Maria?" Mr. II. asked, as if he had just that moment discovered her grief. "You're a mean, horrid man, Hiram Higinbotham," she said in her natural voice, and she began to get out of bed. "Where are you going, Maria?" he in quired uneasily. "Down stairs," she answered heroical ly. "As between you upstairs and the burglars down stairs, I prefer the bur glars," and down stairs she went, and the black cat in the preserve closet upset four jars of her finest quinces in its mad effort to escape. She screamed, but Hiram Higinbotham made no sign; ho knew he had forgotten to put the cat in the cellar when he slim the house up for the night and reported to his wife that everything was all right. Detroit Free Press. Home of the Sea Serpent. The question of the "great sea ser pent" has of late come before us with an episcopal sanction; but whatever may be the explanation of the various apiear ances which have given a certain cur rency to a belief in the existence of an unknown marine monster of some kind, that small sea serients exist is most cer tain. They are all marine, and with the exception of one or two species never quit the water. As might be expected under such circumstances they bring forth their young alive, and these can swim as soon as thej are born. Mr. Boulenger tells us that their home Is essentially the coasts of the Indian ocean and the tropical parts of tho west ern Pacific, from the Persian gulf to New Guinea and North Australia. One species, however, ranges from west and south Africa to the western coast of tropical America and extends northward to Japan and southward to New Zea land. Quarterly Review. Two Guilty Consciences. A Danbury youth went trout fishing and ventured to drop a sly line into a posted brook. Soon the approaching figure of the owner loomed up in the dis tance, and the Danbury youth knew he had been seen. He took incontinently to the bushes, where he spent a very miserable two hours in hiding and caught a cold that kept him two days in bed. Meanwhile the terrible owner, who was not the owner at all, had sought a similar refuge at sight of the original culprit, and not until his teeth chattered like a typewriter did he venture to leave the friendly but damp shelter and slink away from the scene. He was an elder ly man, and his share in the day's 6port resulted in a four days' rheumatic limp. Boston Transcript. Ancient Sacrifices to the Sea. The navigators of antiquity, to whose imaginative ignorance the ocean seemed peopled and beset with chimeras dire and supernatural agencies of all sorts, used often to sacrifice human lives to the mysterious water gods. It is regard ed by tradition that Idomeneus, king of Crete, vowed to sacrifice to Neptune the first living thing he met after escaping from a storm, and this happening to be his son, he fulfilled his vow religiously. Medea nearly became a sacrifice during the . return voyage of the Argonauts. Washington Star. Ko Reflection on Hi Character. "That stylish looking gentleman was under police supervision in his younger days." "Nonsense! You most be joking." "Not a bit of it; his father was a con stable." Dorfbarbier. In the C'tuntry Store. Some of tho snowlioiuid passenger! at ono of tho depots near Utk';i wero tell- iug stories tho other day, and a travel- i ing man was relating his cxierieiico in ; a country store in a. small town in Jef- , ferson county. He said. ho was there nearly the entire lorenoon, aim n.ei oc casion to note tho peculiarities of tho storekeeper, who carried a general stock, but a pretty small one. Kvery littlo while a customer would como into tho store and inquire for wmu article that tho merchant did not happen to havo m ; stclt. ' Tor instance: j "Havo you any dried beef, Mr. Casn ii rawer?" "No, wo havo no dried lwef today, but wo havo some nice codfish. John, show this lady the codfish." "Do you keep any such thing as wicks i for those big, round lamp burners:' "Wo generally do, but happen to bo out just now. Wo havo some fine cot ton clotheslines, though. John, show the gentleman the clotheslines." "My gals wanted mo to bring then homo some confectioner's sugar, llato you got any of it, Cashdrawer?" "Sold tho last ounce about an hour ago, Henry. We've got an. excellent quality of toilet soap, though. John, show Mr. Adams tho soap." "Do yon keep ready made flaunt 1 skirts?" "Have had them all winter, and sold three to a lady yesterday, which cleaned tho stock out. But we have a large sup ply of overalls. John, show this lady tho overalls." Utica Observer. Civilization nnd Wiltlt-riM-tis. Upon the 1,500 miles of tho shore of Lake Superior there aro living now l's.i than 150,000 persons, and these aro mainly in bustling cities like Duluth, Superior and Marquette, in industrial Colonies like Calumet and fled Jacket, or in struggling little ports like Fori William and Port Arthur. Even thero the wilderness and primeval condition'! are face to face with tho robust civiliza tion which is shouldering its way as cap ital is accustomed to do rather than as natural growth usually asserts itself. Not that it is not a wholly natural growth which we find at all points on the lako shore, for it is all in response totho inex orable laws of supply and demand. Yet tho communities there havo sprung info being far apart from well settled regions in answer to those laws. Thus it happens that today one may rido in an electric street car to tho start ing ioint for a short walk to a trout stream, or one may take the steam rail road and in an hour alight at a forest station, breakfasting there, but enjoy ing for luncheon a cut of tho deer or a dish of the trout or the partridge which he has killed for the purpose. It is, so to say, a region wherein tho wholesale fisherman with his steamboat disturbs the red man who is scaring a fish for mpper, where the wolf blinks in tho glare of tho electric lamp, and where the patent stump puller and the leaver work side by side. Julian Ralph in IIarer'a Te Moqui Indians. A hundred miles north of the Petrified forest and well into the edgo of the Ari z ona desert are tho seven strango and i-eldom visited Pueblo cities of Moqui. They all ha o wildly unpronounceable names, like li'aalpi, A-hua-tu and Mish-ongop-avi, and all aro built on the sum mits of almost inaccessible mesas islands of solid rock, whose generally perpendicular "cliff walls rise high from tlie surrounding plain. 1 hey aro very remarkable towns in apjearance, sot u ton dizzy sites, with quaint terraced houses of adobe, and queer little corrals for the animals in nooks and angles of the cliff, and giving far outlook across the browns and yellows and the spectral peaks of that weird plain. But they look notjialf so remarkable as they are. The most remote from civilization of all the Pueblos, the least affected by the Spanish influence which so wonderfully ruled over the enormous area of the 6outhwest, and practically untouched by the later Saxon influence, the Indians of the Moqui towns retain almost entirely their wonderful customs of before the conquest. Their languages are different from those of any ol her of the Pueblos; and their mode of life though to a hasty glance the same is in many ways un like that of tiieir brethren in New Mex ico. Charles F. Lummis in St. Nicholas A Detroit Man's Cane. A Detroit man has a novel walking cane that represents tho work of odd hours every day for six weeks. It is made of old postage stamps of various denominations and six nationalities United States, Canadian, English, French, German and Italian. It took 5,014 stamps to make a cane. The face value of the stamps was $100. The sur face of the cane, when the stamps were all on, was filed smooth and finished un til it glazed. A heavy gold knob com pletes one of the handsomest and most unique canes ever seen in Detroit. Philadelphia Ledger. Telling tlie I'ees. The curious custom of "telling the bees" is observed in some parts of nearly every country in the world. Those who observe the custom always go to the bee hives and tap gently on each one, then stoop and whisper under the cap or lid that Mary, Jane, Thomas or William is dead. This is done to keep the little honeymakers from forsaking their place of abode should they have to wait and find out the news of the calamity them eelves. The custom is alluded to in Whittier's poem, "Telling the Bees." St. Louis Republic. East and West. The failure of the people of the Atlan tic states to understand the area, condi tions, products and needs of the west is not infrequently illustrated in national legislation. The late Editor Buudy, of the New York Mail and Express, said a short time before his death: "The people of the east know little about the west, but 1 have always found that the people of the west were well in formed about the east." San Francisco Examiner. ! Every Month many womea auffer from Kscsssivs or Scant Menstruation; they don't know who to confide 1n to (t proper advics. Don't confide in anybody but try Bradfleld's Female Regulator Specific lor PAINFUL. PROFUSE. SCANTY. SUPPRESSED and IRREOULAd MENSTRUATION. Book to " WOMAN " mailed free. BRA0FIEL0 REGULATOR CO.. Atlaata. 6a. Kold b all Pracctata. I jTTORNEV A. N. 8ULLIYAN. Attorney iit-I.Hw. Will giv -.rom-it al tfiitlot to all hurlin'f HtniMcd to lilui. Utllce In Union Mock, KaH Hide. 1'lattxmoutli, Neb. HENRY BOECK The Lending FURNITURE DEALER A ND S.. SkL r Jl UN DERTAKR. l oHtHiitly keeps on hand everyttiin you need to furnish your house. COIINKK SIXTH AND MAIN 8THKKT Plattsmouth Neb F IK'ST : NATIONAL : HANK OK FI.ATTHMOUTII. NKI5KA.SKA Paid 1 1 1 capital .'o.ofio.oo Surplus ill.OOO.Ow rx Mih vrv bent fucilltlen for tlie proinp traiiHiw:tiuii of IlKltlinate liin.kiiig BusineHN Htock", ooimIm, K)ld. Kovrriinieiit and local se untiff IioiikIiI iind Hold. OhimmiIIm rMWlve1 ini iiili'it-st Hilow-l on the certlncatwa Drafts drawn, availal'lf In any part of the "Mtei! siat'-f and all tlie principal tuwiis ol Europe. 0OLLKCTIOJWH MADK AMI 1'lCOMITI.Y KKMIT TEI. UlKhest market prlfr- ptttd for County War. rants, Htate ana County bends. DIKKCTOKN John Fltzt'wraM 1). lfawkxwort.li Sum WauKh. K. K. WlilU- ;rK K. Iovy fohn Fitzgerald. H. WauRh. I'recldent Cat t W. II. C USUI NO, I'rtKiili.itt, J. W. Johnson, Vict-I'rtxiihtit. -ooOT H EOoo- PLATTSMOUTH NKIIItAHKA Capital Paid in $CO.OOO F It OiitlmiHii. J W Johnson. K H (ireusel. Henry Kikenliary, M W Morgan. J A Connor. W Wetteiikamp, W II dishing A general baiiNing btisinCHU trans acted. I liferent allowed on tie posites. I. If. DTJ-JNTjSr Always haB on band a full stock of FLOUR AND FKKD, Corn, Urn n, Shorta Oats and Haled Hay for sale as low aa the loweat and delivered to any part of the city. CORNEK SIXTH AND VINE Plattsmouth, 'Nebraska PLACKS OF WORSHIP. Catholic St. Paul's Church, ak. Fifth and Sixth. Father Carney, Services : ,M-jsh at 8 and 10 :30 A. M. School at 2 ::), with benediction. between I'smfftr Sun da) (Juki st j ax. Corner Locust and Eighth Hti Services inorniriK arid evening. Elder A Galloway pastor. Sunday School 10 A. M. Epis'jopai,. St. Luke's Church, corner Thlra ana vine. itev. ii is. iu.exx. paxior. rwr. vices : 11 a. m. aLa 7 :m) r. M . Hunuay ncnoo at 2 :30 r. m. German Mkthodimt. Corner Sixth St. an Granite. liev. Uirt. Faxtor. SerTlces : 11 a.m and 7 :'M p. m. Suuday School lo :30 A. m. Pkkshvtp.ki ax. Services in new church, cor ner Sixth and Granite stx. Kev. J . T. ttairO, pastor. Sunday-school at 9 ; Freachln at U a. m.aid h d. m. t The V . K. S. C. E of tbl" church meets ever 1 Sabbath evenini' at 7 :I5 In the basement . tli- rhnrrli. A II sire in vitrf to SLttend thea-J meeting's. i - Fikst M'TnonisT.-Sixth St., betwen Mar aud Pearl. Kev. E. F. liritt. IK V. p&sto Servicex : 11 A . M.. 8 :00 P. M. Sunday Bcho; 9 :30 a.m. Prayer meetii g V eduesday evet- jU Urumax Pkkhkvtrkiax. Comer Main ant Ninth. Kev. Witte, pastor. Services uan.' hours. Sunday School a :30 A. m. Swfkwsh Coxr.KPo atioxal. Graitile, b - tween Fifth and Sixth. Colokkd Baptist. Mt. Olive. Oak. betwetrf -r ..... 1. .1 I.-1 ,.. ,.., v a u ...... .. 1 1 . .. I i ill Lit auu j.ic?riuii( n. ihitkchi " I tor. Services 11 a. m. and 7 UJ0 p. m. Pray . riiA-fritur Vf1li(triav fveTtfrilr Vouxo Mfx's Chriktiax AasociATioiiix lioonis In w aterman block. Main street. G . j pel meeting, for men only, every Sunday fa I ternoon at 4 o'clock. Koome open week da J from 8:30 a. m.. to 9 : 30 p. in. I SOUTH rABK 1AKKKSAILI. TOT, J. m Wood, Pastor. Services: Sunday Bchoi toa. in. : Preaching, lia. m. and 8 p. - prayer meeting Tuesday night ; choir pn tice Friday night. All are welcome.