Custcr County Republican D. M. AMHIIKItliY , IMItnr unit I'nlillilini JBllOKKK BOW , NKIHUSKJ A mnn Is foolish to mix up with mil- ' pen n Iron , unless ho linn money , Tlio Now Vorlc Supreme Cf vrt Ims flcclded Unit kissing Ls not a crime. Wo krcnthc enslcr now , According to the I'resb.Morlnn church k man cnn now marry his dead wife's ho wants to. A contemporary says there ate soiiio krorso thltiKH Ulan fltfim'tto Kinokliig , but folia to mention them. Possibly not a single person will bnclc' fcl > Uie claim of that Now York clergy- jnnn that all unmarried people are fcapny. _ _ A North Carolina olllclal stole $12,000 Ind pnvo It to the chureh. It Is to ho feared he Ima put It where It will do ilm no good. A New Jersey court has .compelled . n nit B feet and 4 Inches high to sup- rt n wife who Is 7 feet and 'J Inches II Can we call this justice ? nnllooufi may be used In the clouds bind suhmnrlnc boats beneath the Moa , put neither are assuraiiees that war will be seen on earth no more. One difference between lOdlsnn nnd retdu Is that whc'n the former nn- \ouiices \ that he has struck a good Jilng the public Is willing to believe ilm. An nutomobllc nt Nlec made a mile In kiio minute and wven seconds. Very row old Indies nnd cripples can escape this machine. The auto Is now nearly perfect. Now that the automobile has trav- freed the desert of Snliani , where It was tailed "the devil's mm hlne" bj alTrlght- id Bedouins , what Held leiualns for It p conquer ? ' The mnn who claims there Is nothing to read must be In a blind asylum. Jlx tbousnutl three bundled nnd fifty- ilx novels were published In the United States InJit yenr. A normal school boy In California uul his mind wrecked by foot-ball and ins gone to nn asylum. Most buys' nlnds remain bright , but sometimes : belr persons are sadly disfigured. If you don't amlle at tills yon would- t at anything. A young lady In New fork State has married an H-moilths aid boy. It was a financial trnnsaetlon , uid the child's parents were willing. In New York a man has been arrested 'or ' sketching one of the Vanderbllt rest- flcnocs. This sounds like a Berlin ntory , font It Isn't. It's real Manhattan , md the ICulser will chuckle when he reads It. f Strange freaks will occur In any walk pf llfo. And tbo New York doctor that iroodod ver the question of whether 10 hnd killed a patient with his treat- pent Avns about the fieakli'st freak thtu fconld nrciir In the medical profession. AM alumnae published In KH17 IIIIK boon Hold In Hoston fur $105.Yliy diould anybody pay nch n price as that when , In nil probability , he might get ! ho same Jokes out of one printed this r ir whlcb the patent nuvllulno man would l > glnd to give nwayV T w > banana Is one of the oldest foods known to uinn , but It has never been fcpprcobitttl In England. Lately , how- vor , n strong demand has sprung up tlioro nnd a special line of Hteamers linn J > mi put Into commission for the rapid transit of t'he fruit from the fWcat Indies to London. "TheWxtlrpatlon of ItnbbitH , " "llniv- n's Dead-Letter Olllce , " and "Itevtvals fey Constitutional Methods" [ we been recently nnnounced In Australian nows- papern n uubject of Sunday discourses. Bo It appears that America Is unfor- tunntcly not the only country where j t pcnsatlonnl titles are chosen to attract ilBtoncrs to sermons. One still beam predictions that the ; bicycle will soon go the way of the Tollcr-okatlng rink nnd the toboggan lido. Very likely tluif-e who hiivo taken It uu merely as n fashion or a fnd are now creating business for the second-hand stoivs and Junk-shops ; tnit the wheel Is to bo cln.ssed among tin ; permanent utilities , nnd not merely s a provisional paxllnio. The deimtnd tniay IncrciiKO len muld ! } than hereto- /ore , but there Is no probability of n ( falling off except on the part of the 'novices. There is an understanding that .Mr. fSchwiilj Ue of the $1,000,000 a year jta not to remain many months In the j reBldeucy of tlu Htcel trust. Uo "needs n rest. " It Is said. Iln "shows the effect of his work In solving the tamny problems of organization. " Does &t & pay oven at ? 1,000,000 it year to press hard work to tbo point where It ( becomes overwork ? A lot of money can do a lot of things. Hut It cannot buy back health ruined nor restore shattered nerves. Isn't a llttlo lelsuro ' one of the most rational things It can purchase ? Tbe Supreme Court of the United baa hondad down a declulou which will have the effect of checking the American divorce mania. The sub stance of the decree IB that divorces granted Jn a State where both hus band and wife have legal rculiloncu are vrtlld In any part of tin1 country , but that divorce granted In a Stnto w I I'crrltory where the parties have not a ( legal residence ) IB Invalid. This will re- iducc to a blgainotiH status many per- 'sons who temporarily removed from their legal residence to a mure accom modating Ktntc or Territory for the purpose of procuring dctnrlniioiit from a legal partner who hud giowu lin-oii- venlent or Insufferable , the motive In a largo majority of such cases being Immediate romarrlmn- > another party nlrendy selected. The decision will imt operate iigalnsl collusive divorce when the part lei are rich enough to be able to remove to a new legal residence and nblde there long enough to .satisfy the terms of the decision. The decision Is to be welcomed as a practical step In tlo | direction of uniform divorce legis lation In the I'nlled States. No legis lation on the subject will be effectual which does not absolutely prohibit ic- marriage of the guilty party or of both p.irtlcs until nt least n year after grant ing of a decree. So lax has divorce practice become In the courts that mar riage has ceased In a large measure to present to the contracting parties an aspect more serious than that of a tem porary agreement to be dissolved at the caprice of both or of either. If remar riage were made dlllleull the divorce mill would grind more slowly and the original contract would carry more moral as well as legal weight. If the He were lightened in the first knot then ; would bo less disposition to cut It for a second. When the peculiar cadences of the ' "coon song" began to catch the public car most musical critics held up their hands In horror. They protested that "rag-time" music was wholly unworthy of consideration and merely a passing whim. The words set to these airs were generally trivial nnd vulgar enough , but the melodies were sometimes beautiful. Some of them were real folk ougs , not the product of conscious art , but the natural outpouring of the Instinct to ex press emotion In sound. As these airs refused to die , historical students of music finally began lo cons.dcr and ana- ly/.a them. They found that the offen sive word "rag" was merely rather old slang for "dunce" and that n "nig tune" was primarily a dance tune to which words hud been set. Then the nature of "rag time" was Investigated nnd Its peculiarities were found to result from a systematic and perhaps excessive use of the musical device technically known aa "syncopation. " Now , many of the most popular dance measures depend on syncopation. The gaycty and aban don of the old Strauss waltzes , such as "The Blue Danube , " resulted from their peculiar syncopated rhythm. Tljeii It was found that "rag time" hnd an even more respectable ancestry than the Viennese wizard of the ballroom. It occurs In many grand operas. The air , "Love Is a Wild Hlrd. " in Bizet's "Car men , " Is correctly cited as genuine "rag " " tlmu" In the time. Mozart wrote "rag overture of "Don Giovanni. " Even Bach , the Idol and model of the musical purists , was guilty of "rag time. " In Ills "Prelude and Kugue In A M'nor" there Is a specimen which needs only to be furnished with words and to be sung In quick time to make It one of the "coon songs" wherewith music-hall au diences are enrnptuibd. One of the most beautiful of the "rag tlmo" melo dies was composed by a negro criminal and sung by him on a Mississippi river bumboat to words simply unprintable. A wandering musician heard It , and published It with Harmless words. Since then It has appeared lu more than one Sunday school collection , of com so to appropriate words , and bids fair In time to take Us place as one of the most fnmlllnr of church melodies. Thus from some mysterious sense of beauty In n negro convict's grimy so"\il \ cnnio an air now duvoted to the praises of ( iod. In thu llgit ) of the history and popularity of syncopated music some of the most respectable musical schools have begun to encourage their pupils to play and study "rag time" because' It Is popular. They might put their recognition on higher grounds , Music that expresses feelings of the people , that comes straight from their con sciousness. Is worthy Of recognition. Its use may bo justified on the ground on which Henry Ward needier mis tered protests against the sinking of ; o mini1 airs in eliuich. Ho said he was unwilling to leave the devil all the good mimic. A Cluur Story. "A little over a year ago , " said SmltliMdi , "I made up my mind I was .smoking too much , it doesn't seem to affect my health In the least , but I thought It was a fooll.sh wasteof mon ey , and I decided to give It up. " "A very so"nslbh > Idea , Indeed , " to- marked Brownlow. "So I. thought at the time. I figured out , as closely as I could , how much I had boon spending each day for cigars and tobacco. That sum I set aside each day , and started a bank account with 1U I wanted lo bo able to show Just exactly how much 1 saved by not smoking. " "And how did It work ? " Inquired Brownlow. "At the end of twelve months I found 1 had seventy-live dollars In the. bank. " "d'ood ! Could you lend nit " "And u few days later , " Interrupted Smlthson , "last Thursday , In fact , this bank failed. You haven't got a cigar about you , have you ? " Listen to any womnn talk five min utes , and you will hear her say , "All I do Is just slave ! " KVITJT woman believes that she can nwke good bread. nU- HOW GIRLS CAN HELP MOTHERS. VKIIY girl , If she be not thor oughly selfish , Is nitNlotis to lift * soimi of the burden of household management from her mother's shoul ders onto her own : but unfortunately , many girls wait lo bo asked to do things Instead of being constantly on the lookout for little duties which they are capable of doing. If yon would be of any real usu In the home you mustbo quick ( o notice what \vniilcl--lliL' ( room that needs dusting , the ( lowers which require re arranging , the ciirlalnhlch line lost a ring and Is Iherefote drooping. Anil then you must not only be willing lo do what Is needed , but willing to do It pleasantly , without making people foul that you arc belug'iuartyrcd. It Is al most useless to ttiko up any household duties unless you do them regularly. If you do a thing one day and not the next , you can never be depended on , and If some one else has to be constant ly reminding you of and supervising your work It probably gives that person moro trouble than doing It herself would cause. Have a definite day and a definite time for all you do the ( lower vasex will need attention ou-ry other day. the silver must be cleaned once a week , and there should be one day kept for mending and putting away the house hold linen. Begin , too , directly after breakfast nnd keep on steadily till your work Is done. If you begin by hitting down "just for a minute" with n book , or think you will "just arrange the trimming" on your now hat , the morning will be half gone before you know where you are. A girl who has brother may spare her mother all those tiresome little Jobs which boys nre always requesting to have done for them If she will only do them kindly. But n boy will not come and ask his sister to repair frayed-out buttonholes and to make him paste for his photograph album If she Hiiaps and say.s he Is "always bothering. " It IH not cilsy work , but it Is qulto possible for the daughter at home to make up a good deal of Its sunshine , and It Is only when she has learned this that uhc Is fit to go away and be the sunshine of a home of her own. Helped Htiit't Her 11 ( line. MTH. R. M. Dunlnp , of DCS MolnoM , la. , has built ji hon.se. She has proved that she Is n carpenter and a good one , for Hhf has compli'l ed her effortH In nn Incred ibly short time. .Mr. and Mrs. Dnnhip have been married but n few years. Mr. Dunlap has for years boon a clerk in a de partment store. He bought a lot In one of the now additions , and , In planning the erection of n house , his wife suggested they build' It thorn- solves. Dnnhip had once served as n cnr- uits. mifU.Ai' . penter , and , having learned the trade tlmroiiKlily , had not forgotten It. lOnrly morning and lute nt nlKht found Mr. Dunlap working on his house. When he left for the store his plucky little wlfo took his place ami worked diligently and successfully. Motliet-H of ( > reat M-n. Schumann's mother was gifted with musical ability. Chopin's mother , like himself , was very delicate. ( lOiinod's mother uas fond of paintIng - Ing and music. Spohr's mother was an excellent. Judge of music , but no musician. Kalelgh said that he owed all his po liteness of deportment to his mother. Milton's letters often allude to his mother In the most affectionate terms Word * wort It's mother had a charac ter as peculiar as that of her gifted son. Ooethe pays several tributes In his writings to the character of his mother Charles Darwin's mother had a de- elded taste for all branches of natural history. Sydnty Smith's mother was a clever conversationalist and very quick at repartee. Haydn dedicated one of his most Im portant Instrumental compositions to his mother. ( ilbbon's mother was passionately fond of rcndlniMind cjicmiragcd her son to follow her example. 1'rcxiili-nt of .Mount llolyn < < cr. Miss Mary Kinnni Woolley , A. M. , Lit. D. , L. D. 11. , was recently Inaugu rated as President of Mount Ilolyoke College. Miss Woolloy Is only about 3. > years old , but her at tainments as an educator cater are profound. She Is u native of Hartford , , was grad tinted from the Wheaten Seminary in 1881. and , after leaching history fora time In that school she entered BroWH University. In ISflU MIHS wooii.iv. : she left the university with tbo degree of bachelor of arts , the first woman to win this honor from Brown. Miss Wool- ley Is a woman of broad education , nn excellent teacher and n capable admin istrator as well. The Cornel' * HnlMtltiite. We read that quite a satisfactory BUlwUtuto for the corset bus been In vented. U In just a simple HttU bunt gliillc , but Is made In entirely new lines and sohes many a troubling problem to women. She who wears It has the privilege of feeling perfectly comfort' able and yet looking well nt the same time. She can expand her chest and brontho freely , and yet have her figure look trim and show Its pretty curves to advantage. The Croclan bust girdle Is entirely free from bones and stools. The plainer ones arc made of sateen ; those moro expensive come In silk nnd Hiitln. The girdle Is constructed so that It forms n support underneath the bust. It does not cover the bust , over heating and flattening It , but merely holds It In the proper place. The per tlon of the girdle which supports thr bust Is Just sufficiently stiffened with grasscloth to give It tfie necessary firmness. Those pieces , after support Ing the bust , become narrow , cross the corsage In surplice fashion , and by buttons and buttonholes adjust them selves to the shoulder straps. The shoulder straps are connected with bands of clastic , adding to the ease of the girdle. 1 ipert Tclcuraiilier. A Maine young woman has Just set nn example of what can be ( lone oven by a girl when she so wishes. She Is now nut quite la years old. Her father Is employed In han dling baggage at a railroad station at Blddeford , Me. , and while visiting him there she became at- actcd by the telegraph - graph Instruments in the station. Securins permission from the agent she visited the MISS sriMr.soN. Htatlon every eveuins after school nnd spent her spare hours In studying telegraphy. When she was 11 years old she was able to report trains and rend ordinary messages. Last Hummer , during the school vaca tion , she was given charge of the telegraph - graph olllcu nt Saco , Me. There she served as both manager and operator , and she did her work so well that the superintendent of the line has promised her a more Important appointment. Kni- the Thin Girl. Extreme thinness generally denotes a wasting disease or some form of malnu trition. If such be the case , the family physician should be consulted , and , If he happens to be the right kind of o physician , he will give careful direc tions concerning * sleep , diet , exercise , and tonic medicines. Indigestion , liver trouble , a bad case of nerves , or a thou sand and one Ills to which woman is an unwilling heir , will keep n girl thin and pale and listless. The stomach Is the little shop lii which the materials for tissues , muscles , nerves , bone. hair , every part of the makeup of the hu man body , are manufactured. Do not offend Ibis excellent engine of health by giving it unsuitable fuel. When nourishing food Is taken and when this food Is properly assimilated , good pjure blood Is created and muscles become firm and strong. Katty tissue can be destroyed by overwork or by fretting. Cheerfulness and rest are of vital im portance. We all know that when one Is blue the stomach sulks , there Is no appetite , and one .cares not a rap If one becomes n "grave man" as Mercu- tlo puts It or just a walking skeleton. There are many loan , lanky sisters who could become round and plump were they but to give themselves a third of a chance. A less active life , n cheerful mind , and n change * of diet that is all. To a Kclf-vOii-cioiiH Maiden. Put self wholly out of your mind and study the Interests of those around you. If you are self-con.scious In the pres ence of others , they cannot but be un comfortable and 111 at ease In your company. Think only of what will please them and make them lumpy. Study the art of entertaining nnd amusing people. You can acquire it by making of your mind a storehouse for nil that Is good and beautiful in literature , music , art , etc. ' Your efforts to please others will cause you to target all about yourself , while others will be only too glad to remember. This Is the true secret of popularity and success. Follow It closely i\nd you will soon have cause to wonder at your former diffidence and "self-consciousness" that had caused you so many unhappy mo ments. The Secret of Itcnutv nt Middle Atjr. The woman of10 or thorealxmts whoso great aim In life Is to preserve her figure and her complexion , not only pays strictest attention to her bath , nymnastles and mnssnge , but she Is more careful as to what she eats than any old Uoinnn gladiator. One society ' woman , who at15 Is famous for ho'r good looks and generally attractive and youthful appearance , never puts a bit of bread In her mouth ; It might be rank poison , for the scant civility It receives at her hands. Nor does a sweet of any kind , sort or description ever pass her lips , nor an Ice , nor coffee , nor choco late. What does she eat ? Beef , mut ton and all vegetables that grow above ground , but of these she eats only spur- Ingly , so fearful Is milady of embon point , that foe to youthful appearance. Frances Smith , In Ix > slle'8 Weekly. Good humor Is one of the bt st arti cles of dress one can wear In society. TliMckeiuy. Nearly 200 servant girls attended the last meeting of the recently organized Servants' Union of Minneapolis. A largo plant for the manufacture of tin Is to be erected In Wnynesburg , Pa , , t a cost of ? -T)0,000. The concern Is expected to begin operations August 1 and will employ 'toO men. The Cambria Steel Company , nt Johnstown. Pa. , Is preparing for the employment of 180 ! skiilcd mechanics and 1,000 additional men to engage In the manufacture of forglngs for street ears. The depression in the British iron and steel trade , and also In the ship building Indus ! ) ics , Is very marked. The area of unemployment spreads and the edge of hard times Is upon us , writes Thomas lleece from London. The American Tin Plate Company's Monongahola plant , in PUtsburg , which has boon Idle since last July , has start ed In full blast. It Is an eight-mill blunt , with a capacity of 1,000 to 1,200 boxes , and employs from HOO to GOO men. The Cignrmnkcrs' International Union has n surplus of almost a third of a million dollars , and the fund is constantly growing. Union labels Is sued from the headquarters for the year 1000 numbered a2GVJ,000 : , an Increase - crease over 1SOO of more than 4.000,000. The United States Steel Corporation , the greatest combination of Interests In the world , began doing business on April 1 , and In the Plttsburg district , the leading iron and steel center of the country , over fiO.OOO employes In the mills and blast furnaces have new em ployers. The Workingmen's Educational As sociation , of New York , has purchased three lots for ? HO,000 and nre having plans prepared for a five-story brick and stone building , divided Into club rooms and offices for union secretaries. A gymnasium and roof garden will also be provided. The estimated-cost of the building Is $ JO,000. Of all the disorganized cities in the United States , so far as the labor movement is concerned , Philadelphia is far in the lead. Outside of the master trades , such as plumbers , painters , printers , machinists , etc , there is hard ly n solid union In the city. An organ izer of the American Federation of Labor will soon take the Quaker City In hand. The eight-hour movement of ISO" In Great Britain was not thesuccess , the nine-hour movement had been in 1871 and 1872 , but this triumph Is .only de layed. The total amount spent In con nection with , the 1807 struggle was 030,000 an amount which the Amal gamated Society of Engineers raised in six months , and a drain from whlcb It has rapidly rccoveicd. The growth of unionism In Erie , Pa. , Is remarkable a greater amount of en- tlfuslasm has never been known. Many trades are realizing benefits from their unions , and before long Erie will be one of the best organized cities to be found. The men are making a de mand for union goods , and It is bavin , , a good effect. Shoe men are ordering a label shoes , caused by an active agi tation for the stamp. Union tobacco and clothing are gaining strongly , and Erie Is redeeming herself and will not long bear the name of being the poor est paying city In the State. Anulcnts Lived in Luxury. In an article of the North American Review Charles Waldstelu , Slade pro fessor of the fine arts In King's College - lego , Cambridge , endeavors to Interpret the significance of the results of the excavations recently made In the Island of Crete by Messrs. Evans and Ho garth. Nothing , Professor Waldstelu thinks , of so striking a nature has been found since the days of Schllemann. The material unearthed In Crete be longs to a period as remote as the fif teenth century before Christ , and it gives the Impression of a civilization of a very high order : "People lived in n developed social or ganization , In ease and comfort , nay , in luxury. The various handicrafts aim arts were practiced with great variety nnd proficiency ; wood , Ivory and met als were carved , turned , beaten , sol dered nnd combined In the most skillful innnncr ; architecture and painting anil architectural scnlptuie reached a com paratively very high stage of porter- tlon , a stage higher than we have evl- klence of for several centuries snei < > ed- 'lug ' this era And now through the most brilliant discovery of Mr. Evans , \\e lenrii that they oven posseted the art of writing. For he has found written documents In the Hellenic lands at least seven centuries earlier than the first known monuments of historic Greek writing. " Art TrcitNurcN from tliu Deep. Off Cerlgo , the Inland at the southern end of Greece , ( liven , nre bringing up art treasures that were sunk 200 years before Christ. Liiclans tells of a ship laden with art spoils that went down on the voyage from Athens to Home , and It Is believed that the wreck has . been found now. Besides ninny bronze statuettes a llfo-ol/.o bronze statue re- ! nembllng the Hermes of Praxiteles hni been brought up. Some Of the objects are excellently preserved , but other * are corroded. Bnerjry Is not always rewarded A girl has practiced sit hours n day on the piano for scran years , and aecom pushed nothing Iwyoud mukliif the neighbor ! hnt her. Uut thorn nn * Trouble. Mr. Mann " ( Jan you-er-take pills , , my dear ? " Mrs. Mann "Oil , yes ; without a hit of trouble. " Mr. M. "Thank gootlncssl I have a bitter one for you : 1 just sat down on your new Muster hat and squashed It as Hat as a pancake. Philadclphkv Bulletin. * AtTliu It.iM-lmll Oninu of the future. lie And why do they oncer' that player who has been running round that way ? She Why she has just made a three bayycrl Dear me , Henry , can't I make you understand the game at allP Harlem Life. I'duiml Ilm lee Mnn.v Clinplnln. The London Dally Mail says that King Edward lias decided to re ducc his ecclesiastical establishment from 37 paid chaplains to 12. Conliln't Wear Slices. Suniptcr , 111. , June lO. Mrg. J. B , Flnnlgan of this place had Buffered with Dropsy for fifteen years. She was so very bad that for the last three years she has not been able to wear- her shoes. She had doctored nil th& time , but wiVs gradually getting worso. Last winter Mr. Flanlgan , who was very much discouraged , called for some ineillcinc at Mr. .1. J. Dale's drug store * In Carml. Mr. Dale persuaded him to- have bis wife try Dodd's Kidney Pills , and ho bought six boxes. Ilia wlf used five out of the six , before she was entirely cured. She Is now as sound nnd well as ever she was , completely restored to health , and free from any Bymptom whatever of Dropsy. To say that Mrs. Flanlgnn Is pleased nt her wonderful deliverance does not half express her feelings , and she and Mr. Flanlgan ar.e loir I In their praises of Dodd's Kidney Pills , and of Mr. Dale for recommending this wonderful remedy to them. The fact that Dodd's Kidney P11U cured Mrs. Flanlgan of such a sever * case of Dropsy , after the doctors had given her up , has made them the most talked of remedy ever known In White- County. CITQ IVrnmnenllyCun-il. NoiUaorm'rrousnosufler rl I o flri-t ( Uy'n IIP ? of Dr. Klmu'ii Unutt Serr * li- rtapcr S.-.Dlforl liCKifJ OC'rUlboUtaancltrrAtlm. 1)11. U. K. KU.NE. 1.W..W1 * , . St. . I'liilacJdlphlK. ! . I90 | j- .with trim , _ 115 while the : HICH GRADE CO. , DIXON , Genuine Little Liver Pills , Must Bear Signature of See Pnc-Slmllc Wrapper Below. Very amnll anil as easy to take as ungar. FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION uxuviurm MUSTIUVI CUPEMOU : HEADACHE. A Skin of Beauty is a Joy Forover. irjn. T. TEI.IX < : IIIIIAIIII < H oitir.VTAi * " CUKAJJ , OK MAUIOAL. nEAimFIKU. lit moTfi TMI , rimplej , Frrckk * . Moth I'ntches , iiant aud flklft < ll cafc , and erery blemtih o - beauty , and deflec detection. It has stood the test o ( 16 year * , and Is u narmlees we t ut * II to be sure It la prop erly made. Accept no counterfeit or f trull ir name. Dr. U Ahare BaM to a. lady of tin liauuca. j itlenti"A yoii lade ! wlllu etbein , 1 rwommend'Oour- aud'n Cream * as tht > Irunt harmful of all the ( -kin prepara tions " For tale br Fancy loodn Dealers In the U. 8 , Canadaa anil Europ * . FF.nD. T HOPKINS. I'ropr. 37 Great Jonea St. , N.T. Grand Island Route Double Daily Service FREE RECLINING CHAIR CARS ON NIGHT TRAINS. For Infofnuiljn tr Ritti , cill upon M ttttm MirMt A | nt , or S. M. ADSIT , a. p. A , ST. JOSEPH , MO. N.H.U , NO 671-24 , YORK , NIB ,