The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, July 09, 1892, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Advance of the
Pipe Brigade.
Retreat of the
Cigar Cohorts.
Yes the Pipe is coming to the
front as never before. The high
price of good cigars is helping
drive them out of use. Millions
of smokers use
BlackwelTs
Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco.
It is the most popular Brand in the market. Smoked for overtwenty.
five years its fame is still growing Quality always the same.
ELACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO.,
DURHAM, N. C.
M
exican
Mustang
Liniment.
A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the
Stock Raiser, and by every one requiring an effective
liniment.
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
Tins well-known remedy has stood the test of years, almost
generations.
No medicine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustang
Liniment.
Occrtsions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it.
I ELY BKOTHETCS. M Wuiu
BOILING WATER OR MILK.
PPS'S
GRATEUL COMFOKTIXG
DC A
Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only.
SAVE
YOU
SOHIFFM ANN S Asthma Cure
alas tails to Kirs hrntiu relief in tho wont
eaaaa, aaa .nTrrta -area where others fall.
Mai rii rHKE of DnRhk r a-r 9 all.
It. gQHIFFM.MiN, M. Pmil, Kin.
Scientific American
Agency forf
. LJ CAVEATS,
TRADE MARKS.
DE8ICN PATENTS
COPVRICHTS, etc.
9or rnfnrmation and free Handbook write to
MINN CO 361 BhoaDWAT. Nsw YORK.
Oldest bureau for securing patents la America,
vary patent taken out by us ia brought before
U. paella by a notice -.tii free of chance In too
Scientific Jmmcmi
eirealatlou of any scientific paper in the
8DlndidlT Illustrated. No intollicont
should be without it. Week It, X3.UO a
1.40 six months. Addrees MtJJOi A. CO-
Kb.
uawtxn. 351 Broadway. Kw York.
Cha.mberlain'a Eye and Skin
Ointment.
A certain cure for Chronic Scro Eyes
Tetter, Salt Rhonm, Scald Head, Oh
Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema,
Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples
and Flies. It ia cooling and soothing.
EZondredaof cases have been cured by
It after all other treatment bad failed,
it Is put up in 25 and 50 cent boxes.
fob am 0M.V
ail IB ibi iiiu mt lat surtais ar usiasi.
Tksy sxaks asraie aorta . fra tfetasstlva..
. mm M iinui a.w . saccassrally
.SHAKE OFFTHE HORRID SNAKES
key firm mo la input u nnk law as aarir
w ass mm savava. J nn at atsxrw
OUR NEW BOOK
ant trmr. nhM, laralMl)
fcrallaaltrd Ua.ri plains
tas pkUoMshy of SIhu
aa aaa Afflieiloaa of tk.
Oryaas .f ktaa. aaa haw by
HOME. IKtAlMtni,
fry nthdl nclctTly mr
mmrm. tk. worst nun of
iMt er rauia aiaaoooa.
eaoral aa roa Do
kilitr. Wsaa.as mt Body
sad kf lad. Marts of Error
Iimui. Btaatod or
- - a.B.ata la a dsy.
BowtoBaJarcoaaaatrackoaWIAK.iniDETELOrEO
1 rSl'-.-Xfl. 'mT
MOT
mmtmmmm ruTVMMISIa4lalIUtU IBMrMMm.
JLmmmmmmT aiaaaa, Tvnira a4 Paraxa Caontrws.
ln.'atilmilniii'l proof. aiMma
CRIKMKOICALCO.BUFFALO.N.Y.
Er. Kew Tf rk. Prica GOcbj.j
ESS HEiDSOISES CURED
by I'eck'n lavtmJMr Tabular Ear u.k.
F v.-Mfulwh.rrmllrrtn,.l.fii. Sold by F. Illmx.oulv, rrj PC
1-53 llruadway, Sew lurk. VVV.u fur fcouk uf pruu'u IliCC
lona. W blsfwra beard. Comfort. h
.. PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
uJ"- -i" r3 tncanwi and bt-autino the hair.
:. f Sl 'umuKl a iQX'i.iant rn.arth.
1- -5-!rr1 NT?Ifi" -.?0,r ?ry
. Ckri3 Cwi-3 .ra p 1 & hair ialliiie.
r.nnrt !. Iiii-i?!.tj "
r "",'S,-'st'on. i'ahi.Take in time-AUcu.
'ilSiCOnK. The onlr mrp niw fnr Pnm.
IN;
S.-i!i ii paiu. ic at Liru-ists, or IIISCOX at CO., N. Y.
How Lost ! How Regained
KNOW THYSELF.
Or SKLF-PRESEKVATION. A new and only
Gold Medal PKIZE KSSAY on NEKTOUS and
PHYSICAL IEBIL1TV, KRHOK8 of
nil lll.tAlIAI Mm VlTAUTy, PRE.
MATURE DECLINE, and ail DISEASES
iit; 125 invaluable preecriptiong. Only $1.00
y mail, donble sealed. Descriptive Ptopdocu
ns with endortemcntg irm a prun
of the Press and voluntary EULL I ptND
testimonials of the cured. I I1UU! NOW.
Consultation in peroon or by mail. Expert treat
ment. INVIOLABLE SECKECY and CER
TAIN Cl'KE. Addrena Dr. W. II. Pnrker. or
The I'eabody Medical Institute, No. TBullinch St..
Boston, Mm.
The I'eabody Medical Institute has many imi.
tatom, but no equal. ferald.
The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, Is a
treasure more valuable than ctold. Head it now,
every WEAK and NEK VOL'S man, and learn to
be STKO.XG . Medical Jtevieic. CCopi rijjhtedJ
i. mw mm
Morning
Noon
Night
Good all the time. It removes
the languor of morning, sus
tains the energies of noon, lulls
the weariness of night.
ii jijiu Beer'
delicious, sparkling, appetizing.
Don't be deceived if a dealer, for tn sake
of larger profit, tells you Svtne other kind
is "juos good " 'tis (jlse. No imitation
is as goou a te genuiiie i lines .
4
ANTED
AGENTS to sell oiirchoice nursery
writoquick utul r-ecure choice of terr itory
MAR BROS.
NL'KSEKV.MEX.
Koch Cf tcrX.
Not at Noarlahlna; Ilt.
An old Bcotch Horvant attached to
the honsohoM of the famous Britiah
loxiciati, Sir William Hamilton, was as
Inml of hi master's fame as if it had
been his own, and, having picked up a
few of Sir William's technical words
and phrases, brought them into play on
every xosnible occasion. -
One day a gentleman who was fond
of drawing out old John for the amuse
ment of the company said to him, with
an engaging air:
"I Kuiiose, John, now that you've
lived bo long with such a great reasoner
as Sir William, j-ou pxo quite able to
conduct an argument yourself?"
"Weel, I wiuna say sae muckle as
that," replied tVe old Scotchman, with
the modesty of true genius, "but if I
canmi conduct an airgyment, I'm think
in I could draw an inference."
"Could you? Let us see, then? There's
an Eastern proverb, you know, about
the wild ass snuffing up the east wind.
Now what inference would you draw
from that?"
For a moment old John looked non
plussed, as well he might, and then a
gleam of sly humor twinkled in the cor
ner of his dark gray eye, and ho an
swered, with a grim chuckle:
"Aweel, tho inference that I wad
draw from that wad be that he might
Fnuff a lang time before ho grew fat!"
David Ker in IIarier's.
Polly Saved tho Valuables.
We had moved into a newly built
house, which had all tho modern im
provements, the electric bell being one
of them.
ft was a cold winter's night. Mr. and
Mrs. J. were traveling in Europe and
the servants were all gathered about the
kitchen fire. Polly was also near the
fire, but in the dining room, which was
up stairs.
She used to see our mistress ring the
bell for tho servants to enter, and, like
a edever bird, studied on this for a long
while.
On this night Polly was all alone,
when suddenly the door opened and
two men entered. Tho room being
dark they could not see the bird and
legan searching for valuables, for they
were burglars.
Polly now proved her worth. She put
out her claw and pressed the button of
the electric lell.
It brought the servants to the dining
room, where, after a short struggle, they
secured the burglars, who were about to
make way with much of the valuable
silver in the dining room.
Polly was fed on dainties for some
time as a reward for her valuable as
sistance. Cor. New York Recorder.
An 011 Buccaneer.
"I recently met a survivor of Pirate
Lafitte's band of freebooters," said
Thomas flames, once a lieutenant in the
United States navy. "He was a tough
looking specimen, and must have been
well past eight3 years of age, for it is
more than sixty years since Lafitte had
his headquarters on Galveston island
and preyed upon the commerce of the
Gulf. The relic of those half forgotten
times was an inmate of a Jersey City
charitable institution and was not much
inclined to discuss bj-gones. He said,
however, that Lafitte was a very hand
some Frenchman more than six feet in
height, well made and possessed of won
derful talents as a commander. He
ruled the toughest lot of men ever con
gregated on one island as though they
were a nock of lamb3. Occasionally , a
lawless spirit would rebel, however, but
his days thenceforth were brief and full
of trouble. Every woman who came in
contact with Lafitte fell in love with
him, and he was as safe among his fe
male friends in Xew Orleans as on Gal
veston island surrounded by his armed
buccaneers." St. Louis Globe-Demo
crat.
Production of Portland Cement.
Mr. Giron read before the Engineer's
club at Philadelphia a paper on the trade
of the world in Portland cement, in the
courso of which he said that the present
annual production in Europe amounts to
over 20,000,000 barrels and its commer
cial value to over 7.200,000. The first
factory was established at Northfleet, on
the Thames. The process was so crude
that in 1830 only four factories were in
operation. In England there is now
over o.juu.uuu barrels made each year.
The process is much the same as it was
twenty years ago. The raw materials
are chalk and claj', both pure, and al
though inferior processes are employed
they make satisfactory cement.
A few years ago the entire product of
the kilns was put on the market, but the
fineness of the Continental cements led
English makers to improve their pro
cesses, although even now English ce
ment is not as a rule as firm as Geneva
or French Portland. New York Even
ing Sun.
Photographic Paper.
Photographers were obliged until re
cently to import from Germany the pa
per used in their work, our own manu
facturers being unable to assemble the
necessary conditions of material water
and workmanship for the production of
paper suitable for silver printing.
A process has now been perfected in
this country whereby a very ordinary
paier is coated with a thin surface of
sulphate of barytes and answers admi
rably for photographic use, bringing out
in the finished picture a wealth of de
tail formerly unknown in the art, it be
ing lost m the texture of the paper em
ployed. L;ineering Magazine.
A Clever Itit of Workmanship.
In a museum of curiosities at Salem,
Mass., there is preserved a common
cherry seed or stone hollowed and fash
ioned like a basket. Within the basket
are twelve tiny silver spoons, the shape
and finish of which cannot be distin
guished with the naked eye. The name
of the artist who constructed this little
wonder has been lost, but the actual ex
istence of the thing itself will not bo
questioned by any one from the old
witch headquarters of the Bay State.
Chicago Herald.
Aged at Nineteen Years.
An important bit of local history has
been discovered at Siil.m in connection
with a tombstone in the old Charter
street burying ground. In. the utter
most corner of . this ground U a atone
bearing this inscription:
"Mr. Natlmu Mather died October ye
17th, 1CH8. An uged lerHOU that had
seen but nineteen winters in this world."
The meaning of this peculiar inscrip
tion has long been a matter for conjec
ture among local historians. In hia
"American Notebooks," Nathaniel Haw
thorne refers to it and naj's: " An aged
man at nineteen years,' eaitb the grave
stone. It aff ectd me deeply . when I
cleared away the grass from the half
buried stone and read the name."
The mystery has been solved by the
discovery in the Essex institute of a
book entitled, "The Genealogy of the
Mather Family." By this book it ap
jiears that Nathaniel Mather was born
July 0, 1CC9, and was a brother of Cotton
Mather and a son of Increase Mather.
At the age of twelve years he liad
thoroughly fitted for college, and he was
graduated from Harvard at the age of
sixteen. At twelve he had read the Old
Testament in Hebrew and tho new Tes
tament in Greek, and was able to con
verso familiarly in Latin. He was. dis
tinguished not only for his complete
mastery of languages, but for his attain
ments in mathematics, philosophy, his
tory, theology and rabbinical learning
as well. At the time of his graduation
he delivered an oration in Hebrew upon
the state of learning among the Jews.
Boston Journal.
Where Columbus Got Ills Idea.
Mediaeval Europe knew but very little
of eastern and northeastern Asia. Man
of the most learned cosmographers ot
the time taught that Asia stretched east
ward indefinitely, and no one imagined
that it had an eastern coast washed by
the ocean. It was seriously taught thai,
eastern Asia was a land of vast swamps,
inhabited by monster serpents and
dragons. This was the opinion that still
prevailed up to within 200 years of the
time of Columbus.
At this time two Venetian merchants
by the name of Polo went on a vast
trading expedition to the uttermost
parts of Asia. They were gone many
years. Upon their return the son of on?
of them, a young man named Marco
Polo, wrote out a full account of their
travels, described the empire of the
grand khan (the Chinese emperor) and
revealed the fact that Asia was bounded
on the east by a vast ocean. He de
scribed this eastern coast minutely,
with all its vast cities and its wealth of
precious stones and spices.
It was from reading this book that the
imagination of Columbus was fired, and
he conceived the bold conception of
reaching this eastern coast of Asia by
sailing toward the west around the
earth.
bo when he discovered Cuba he had
not a doubt that he had landed upon the
coast of Asia, and that he looked upon
the same scenes that Marco Polo had
gazed upon 200 years before. Yankee
Blade.
The Floating Weeds in the Atlantic,
The gulf weed (Fucus natans) which
with its litle round "berries," is not un
like the mistletoe in form, but of
brownish yellow color, has been thought
to have lost its property of rooting on
rocks and to have acquired the power of
living afloat. It has even been sug
gested that the sea marks the site of
submerged continent, apparently the
lost Atlantis. Dr. Krummel holds that
the weed has simply been drifted to its
present position by the Gulf stream and
its affluents from the West Indian is
lands and the Gulf of Mexico.
It is now proved that the Gulf 6tream
is not a single narrow "river of the
ocean," as Maury poetically described
it, but consists of a number of currents
not only from the Mexican gulf, but the
Antilles. The weed, according to Dr,
Krummel, would take fifteen days to
float as far north as the latitude of Cape
Hatteras and five and a half months to
reach the Azores. In the Sargasso sea
it becomes heavy and sinks; but the sup
ply is kept up by the Gulf stream. Lon
don Globe.
Advice for Young Journalists.
a correspondent asics, "iow shall a
young man proceed who desires to be
come a reporter?"
Let him apply to the city editor of the
paper on which he hopes to get a job. If
he can bring a short letter of introduc
tion it will not hurt him; but he doesn't
need any great wad of recommendations.
He should know what he can do in the
way of reading and writing English, be
prepared to say how old he is, if he
speaks German or French, or any other
foreign language; if he is m good health,
if he drinks; he doesn't want to be fresh,
nor does he want to be a chump. He
wants to get rid of the idea that the
paper needs him, but wants to impress
it on the city editor (not by talking,
however) that he is a good man, and
that if he has had no experience he will
nevertheless learn. Some papers prefer
green men; they don't have to unlearn
so ltuch. New York Sun.
Long Services in Wales.
In Wales the Sunday evening services
generally last two hours. Now there
can be little doubt that a service lasting
two hours on a summer evening is con
sidered too long by working men and
women who have been hard at work six
days running. If our chapels are to re
tain their hold, especially in English
towns, the services must be made
shorter. 1 have seen an advertisement
from which it appeared that in one Non
conformist chapel the services are "brief.
bright, brotherly." But that was not in
Wales. Liverpool Mercury.
Left Luggage.
Irate passenger, as train is moving off
Why didn't you put my luggage in as
I told you?
Porter Eh, mon: yer luggage is no
sic a fule as yersel'. Ye're i' the wrac
train! London Tit-Bits.
Capttaiu !. Mlver.
Eveiyl)ody who took a trip on the
Missouri a dozen or twenty years ago
rememberi) Captain Dave Silver, one of
the handsomest men that ever guided
the. destinies of those old timers. Cap
tain Silver is still alive ho is some
where in the south, I think. But wher
ever he is. ho is still the courtly, stately
figure that ns'sd to stand forward and
bow tevthe passengers leaving the boat
at Jefferson City, frit. Joe, Omaha or
Kansas City Westiwrt Landing it was
then. They aljknew young, handsome
Dave Silver they all liked to ride on
bis boat. It was tho Lucas, I think, one
of the fastest that ever rode the river.
She wore the champion's deer horns on
the pilot house for years.
It was hard on Captain Silver for all
of the floating palaces to pass out of the
river forever, but be had another mis
fortune. He had a brother. How he
lovwdhimt They were inseparable. One
day they were standing near tho rail of
a big boat just as she was pushing off.
The brother leaned forward a bit, the
rail broke, and before Captain Dave
could catch him the man had fallen into
the water. The boat swung around at
that instant and poor Silver was dragged
nnder the wheel.
"It's Joe!" gasped Captain Dave. That
was all be said. He had seen his broth
er go under the vicious paddles, and he
fell into a partial faint. That was one
of the reasons that this tall, handsome
man, with the elegant manner and gray
hair and beard, left the Missouri for the
low banked streams of the far south.
Detroit Free Press.
Anroras Forty Miles High
The scientists of the Royal
Danish
academy have made public the
results
of some interesting experiments,
which
were conducted for the sole purpose of
ascertaining the exact, or at any rate
the approximate, height of the aurora
borealis. At Godthaab M. Adam Paul
sen, with two theodolites situated only
four miles apart, found that the height
of different auroral displays varied from
one to forty miles! Near Cape Fare
well, with a base line of three-fourths
of a mile in length, the best calcula
tions obtainable placed different aurora
at from one to ten miles in height; at
Spitzbergen it was shown that they
range from a height of one-third of a
mile to eighteen miles.
In this case it will not prove uninter
esting to mention some of the remark
ble opinions entertained by the early ex
periinentera in this line. Flogel esti
mated the height of the various aurora,
observed by him at from 90 to 310 mil js
above the earth; Reimanu found tint
one observed by him was at least 50U
miles high, and Nordenskjold's earliei
deductions gave such phenomena an av
erage height of 125 miles. Then Leem
strome came forward with the announce
ment that he had taken notes and ob
servations on an auroral display that
was not separated from the earth by
more than 1,000 feet, while Hildebrand
son concurred to the extent of declaring
that many of the displays were below
the clouds. St. Louis Republic.
Dr. Mackenzie's Kindness.
Here is a story about Sir Morell Mac
kenzie which gives a typical instance of
his kindness to nonpaying patients.
A wretched girl tried to commit sui
cide by drinking carbolic acid. She in
jured her throat fearfully, and in hospi
tal came under the notice of Sir Moreli
for a few weeks. She lingered on ( being ,
4. 11 T r . .
mortally injured ; ior niteen months,
and when lying dying in her miserable
home longed and longed to see ' her doc
tor again. At last, persuaded by her
entreaties, I said I would go to Harley
street and ask him if he would visit her,
though I could not reasonably hope for
any success.
"Can I help her?" he asked.
"Not physically, but it would give her
untold comfort."
"All right, I'll go," and go he did that
very evening, and, at the farthest verge
of an east end slum, sat by the girl,
suggested one or two simple alleviations,
called her "my dear," and left her with
two sovereigns squeezed up in her hand.
She died next day, but she had seen
"her doctor." London Tit-Bits.
Appearances Are Deceptive.
He looked every inch the hog, but ho
wasn't.
He sat inside a Cottage Grove avenue
car, while two women and a man stood
just iu front of him. One woman held
on to a strap, while the other wabbled
about in a manner very disconcerting to
a man who was sitting.
Glancing up uneasily he discovered
the cause. The man who was standing
was grasping two straps in one hand.
The man who was sitting may have
resembled the street car hog, but, as we
have said, he wasn't, not by a long shot.
Reaching up, he touched the man on
the shoulder.
"I beg pardon, but won't vou let this
lady have one of those straps?"
J. hen he drew his pet corn from under
the seat and resigned himself to hia
paper. Chicago News Record.
A Growing Industry.
Inventive ingenuity of the highest
order is constantly at work to discover
uses for paper, while the manufacturer
and the inventor of papermaking ma
chinery are straining every energy to
improve the quality of the product, to
cheapen production or to provide special
grades for new uses. Judging from the
still undiminished flood of inventions, it
would appear that the industry ia yet in
its miancy as compared with the influ
ence it is destined to exert on the com
fort, intelligence and advancement of
the human race. Engineering Maga
zine. A Word for the Plagiarist.
The plagiarist, though an example of
misdirected effort, may serve to illus
trate how good can result from evil. He
very often confers a benefit by discover
ing some bit of wit or beauty that nearly
everybody else has forgotten. The pla
giarist who attracts attention must
needs be a man of onsiderable literary
discrimination. Miles Ryan in Kat-
Field's Washington.
1
Every Month
many women Buffer from Eaceaalv. or
Scant Menstruation; they don't know
who to confide in to get proper advice.
Don't conbde in anybody but try -
Bradfield'o
Fomalo Regulator
Speclfle for PAINFUL, PROFUSE,..
SCANTY. SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR
MENSTRUATION.
Book to "WOMAN" mailed, free.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Ga.
"14 bjr all Itrass-lata. '
I
TTOKNKV
A. N.
SULLIVAN.
Attorney at-Law. Will kIvs prompt at Initios
Union block, Kajt Hide, l'lattsmouth. tib.
to
HENRY BOECK
The Leading
FUUNITURE DEALER
AND
LJNDEPvTAKR.
Constantly keeps on hand evcrytliin
you need to furnish your house.
CORN Kit HIXTII AND MAIN HTRRKT
Plattsmouth
Neb
IKST : NATIONAL : HANK
OK PLATTSMOUTH. NKHKAHKA
fald up capital
Surplus
.$.V) ,000.00
. I o.ooo.o.
th the very best facilities for tbe proiup
transaction of ligltlmate
Hanking Business
Htocks, bonds, sold, government and local se
juruies I)ut?lit Hiid sold. leMslts received
ud interest allowed on the certificate
Drafts drawn, available! lu any part of the
United States and all tbe principal tewns ot
Surope.
0OLLECTION8 M ADR AND IROMrTLT BKMIT
TEIJ. Highest n.trket price paid for County War
rants, State ana County bends.
UIKECTOKS -
John Fitz;rall I. Ilawkswortb
8am Waugh. K. K. While
(leorge E. Dovey
fohn Klta(rrald. a. Wauxh.
President Cat tier.
W.
II. CUSIMXO,
President,
J. W. Johnson,
Vice-PrenidrtiL
-ooOT
EOoo-
PLATTSMOUTH
NKHKAHKA
Capital Paid in
$CO.OOO
F K Outhman. J W Johnson, E 8 lireuxel.
ileury fcikenbary. M W Morgan, J
A Connor. W WcMenkamp, W
II Cusiiinj;
A genenil banxitig
acted. Interest
posites.
business fraiiH
nllowed on le-
FOR RELIABLE
Call on
SAMT, PATTERSON
Plattsmouth - . Nebraska
PLACES OF WORSHIP.
- ' - - " - r .,, , . Fan
Catholic St. Paul's Church, ak. between 3ur,
mm aim nixm. rattier uatney, Pantor
Services : Mass at 8 and 10 :30 a. m. Sunday
Wi)tijl m O .'li. ..-Wft. 1 '
v7v.,ivjvy at c mill UtTllCUlCllUIJ. htll
ler
Christian- f'ornor Ini'imt iriirliti, (. m
Services iiioriiinir
and evening. Klder
Galloway pastor.
Sunday School 10 A. M.
' I.
if rT a a w . tra- t ii,.io ...a. ra- a i a . aJ .
ana ine. nev. n k. rimt-re. paxtor. Ser
vices : 11 A. M. ar.d 7 ito P. M . Sunday ScJiooI
Qt o .on 1. m
German Methodist. Corner Sixth fit. audi. M
Granite. P.ev. Hlrt. Paetor. Services : 11 A.M.
ana 7 I" M. .Nunrlav Hr hnri! in -30 a f i.
j - - nil ,
PbeshvtkkiaN'. Services In new church, cor ac
ner Sixth and Granite st. liev. J. T. Haird.
pastor. Sunday-school at 9 ; 30 ; Preaching-!
at li a. m.vzia 8 D. m. inn
The V. K. S. C. E of this church meets every a
sauoatD evening at 7 :ia in me oasenient ol
the chucrh. All are Invited to attend these
meetings. en
First Methodist. Sixth St.. betwen MaiiyS
and Pearl. Kev. L. F. Britt. D. D. oastor.ay
Services : 11 A. M.. 8 :(X) p. M. Sunday School
Q -3n A . M. PrSLVir m-ttir.cr A riririair vn.
Ine. " ' Iain
German Prebbvtekian. Corner Main and
Ninth. Kev. Wltte, pastor. Services usual 1
hours. Sunday School 9 :30 a. m. oite
SwRPllKR PfiVflHtniTinKll T.nnll. rxt
tween Fifth and Sixth. tt
aell.
Colored Baptist. Mt. Olive. Oak. betweer. Pl
Tenth and Eleventh, Kev. A. KoKwellrpas
tor. Services 11a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Prayei-
meetine vt eauesaay evening.
ert.
Votrwo Men's Christian AH80ciATiow-JlaJ(
Kooms in v merman block. Main street. Gos'
pel meeting. lor meu only, every Sunday ai
ternoon at 4 o'ciock. Kooms open week
open week day.
from 8:30 a. m.. lo 9:30 p.
m- J
y Bd
South Park Tabernacle. Rev. J. M. . P
Wood, Pastor. Services : Sunday Bcboo3,r
aOa.m. : Preaching, 11a. m. and 8 p. an.
prayer meeting Tuesday night; choir pra
tice Friday night. All are welcome.
i
i
t
o
I.
1
-a i
i
ras-
,r T
r.i.
t. oa:
nATJl