" ; Tft ? R'Ur U-r JFTOTJEJME OF GENERAL ZPCZEZtAlf. IJiat ia Mortal of Gen. George S. SfcClel- lan Tenderly Consigned to tlie Grave. New York dispatch : 'At 10 o'clbek thia I morning tho body ol Gen. Georgo B. Mc- Clellan was removed from the house ol W. C. Prime in east Twenty-third street to ' Madison Square Presbyterian church , - where the last funeral services were per formed by tho pastor , Rev. Dr. Charles H. C' Parkhurst. Although tho morning' broke > i- dark and gloomy , with occasional bursts ol rain.yethundreds of people gathered in the i- neighborhood of tho church and Mr. Prime's % ' house. Squads of police officers began to | arrive early and were placed in position to < f'- preserved order. Two hundred and fifty men were eploycd in lines extending from Mr. Prime's house to the church , two blocks ' away , while other o'fficers guarded the church door and passages leading to them. No one was admitted within the doors of the Prime mansion , and only the pall bearers and immediate family were present when reverently and with tender hands the black cloth covered casket upon which r ; . rested a sheaf of wheat and a few immor F a ? * telles was lifted and slowly borne to the street. On either hand were the pall-bear N ers , consisting of Gen. Hancock , Gen. Por ter , Gen. W. B. Franklin , Gen. J. E. John- f Bon , Gen. Anson G. McCook , Gen. Mc- Nf Mahon , S. L. Barlow , the Hon. W. C. Key- [ f Bey , Col. Edwnrd H. Wright , Thatcher W. ! A f Adams , W. C. Prime , the Hon. A. S.Hewitt , J. T. Agnew , and W. S. Alsop. Behind the pall-bearers followed the family and family eervants. In this order tie cortego left the house , and was met-outside by the state comman- dery of the Loyal Legion of the United States n.c-1 the representatives of Meagher't- Irish origade , which served under Gen. HcClellan. Both these organizations pre ceded the body down Madison avenue , where , between open ranks , the funeral cortege passed into the church and up the R isle , where stood the officiating clergyman The church was without decorations o P emblems of mourning , except a few flower ! , - at the altar. The services were of th simplest description , not occupying half a hour. "Jesus , Lover of My Soul , " anc i - "Mother , Dear Jerusalem , " 'two of th hymns Gen. McCIellan best liked were sung t * < and Dr. Parkhurst offered prayer and Dr read the fifteenth chapter Whjtnker o Corinthians. ' 1 he final rights also wer ir conducted in the simplest manner. Whe the service was ended the cofliin wa placed on the shoulders of the under takdr's assistants who marched slowl ; down the aisle to the dopr. Th congregation remained standing till the pall-bearers and members of the bereavec family had left the building. Outside o the church the street was lined with peo pie. The police maintained good order The family and a delegation of neighbors from Orange and a committee of the Loya frW Legion took carriages and were driven tc W the Pennsylvania railroad depot , where a special train stood waiting to receive the party. The train steamed out of the de pot for Trenton , where the burial took place. As the funeral procession moved from the church to the depot it was received with respect by the people who hurnet along the sidewalk. Hats were lifted ant many a tear fell from the eyes of veterans who served under the dead general whose body was on the way to its last resting place. The simplicity of the procession was noticeable. Nothingabout itgave anj indication whatever of the dead hero There were no soldiers in line , no bands o1 music , no draped colors. The procession. BO far as any outward display was con cerned , might be that of any well to dc citizen. Mr. B. B. Hayes' beard is as white as a hen's egg. Riel will not bo able to tackle turkey on Thanksgiving day. Horatio Alger , tho story writer , has started several penniless boys in business. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler's law practice is said to net him the sum of § 100,000 per year. Elizabeth Cady Stanton has passed the three-score-and-ten milestone in the - - - jour ney of life. Count Von Moltke is in verypoor health. " He will not live till winter , it is said. Bis marck , who was dangerously ill last sum mer , is dangerougly well again. Mr. George W. Childs has received from John Walter , proprietor of the London Times , one of tho silver medals struck in commemoration of the paper's centennial anniversary. Gen. Sherman is said by a Washington paper to regret having taken up his resi dence in St. Louis and to wish himself in Washington again. The reasons assigned for the change are of a social nature. You may call a woman "a little duck , " or even "a little goose , " with perfect impu nity , but a Brooklyn court has justdecided that a woman who called another "a Shanghai hen" had damaged her to the ex tent of $500. Mary Anderson is much grieved that the New Yorkers do not applaud her Rosalind. A western editor says it is not to be won dered at , as the man who will pay 52.50 for a seat is a greenhorn who does not know enough to applaud. Hundreds of women who would like to teach school awhile and then marry write to Lcadville to inquire as to their chances e in Colorado. The teaching business seems to be overdone at present , but there is a rl steady demand for female help at from rlD $20 to ? 40 per month. ti Ward's first Sunday in Sing Sing. dcai Ferdinand Ward spent a quiet day at Sing ai Sinsr prison Sunday , Nov. 1st. He occupied Ji JiCO a cell to himself and did not seem disposed CO to talk with anybody. When he marched with his gang to breakfast in the messroom he was It nc the cynosure of all eyes , the convicts having Bt become aware that he was a new arrival. He de ate his hash and his two slices of bread and drank his coffee with apparent relish. After < \ the breakfast he marched in line with the \ gane to the chapel. Services concluded , 6 ( he then marched out and fell into the lock-step of the prisoners quite natur ally. They passed out of the building , and he , Trith the others , picked up his bucket , slung it on his arm , and again re sumed his place in line to go to the window and receive his day's rations. Principal Con- nanghton said Ward promised to be a good prisoner , and as long as he was he Tvould get elong nicely. His work will be to take a coarse file , rim up castings and fit them InU S stover. He went to work at 6:15 nest morn i ing. r AN amount of blood equal to thevLole quantity of the body passes through the heart every minute. ? ? * t'r "DROPPED DEAD. " The Fate that Overcame "Mttle Mac" and Five Other Governors. Apropos of the sudden death o ! Gen. Geo. B. McCIellan , wo note that tho New York Sun , points out the singular fact that Gove'nor UeWitt Clinton , Governor Silaa Wright , Governor William L. Marcy , Gov ernor and Chief Justice Sanford E. Church , and Governor R. E. Fenton , all of New York state , dropped dead of heart disease , and under quite identical circumstances each of them dying while reading a letter except Marcy , who was perusing Cowper'a poems ! Hold your hand against the ribs on your left side , front , the regular , steady beat ing of this great "force pump" of the sys tem , run by an unknown and mysterious engineer , is awful in its impressivcness ! Pew persons like to count their own pulse-beats , and fewer persons still enjoy marking the "thub thub" of their own heart. "What if it should skip a beat ! " As a matter of fact the heart is the least susceptible to primary disease of any of our vital organs. It is , however , very much injured by certain long-continued congestions of the vital organs , like the kidneys , liver and stomach. Moreover , blood filled with uric acid produces a rheu matic tendency , and is very injurious to healthful heart action , it often proves fatal , and , of course , the uric acid comes from impaired kidney action. Roberts , the great English authority , says that heart 'disease is chiefly secondary to some more fatal malady in tho blood or other vital organs. That is , it is not the original source of tho fatal malady. The work of tho heart is to force blood into every part of the system. If the or gans are sound it is an easy task. If they are at all diseased , it is a very , very hard task. Take as an illustration : The kidneys are very subject to congestion and yet , be ing deficient in the nerves of sensation , this congested condition is not indicated by pain. It may exist for years , unknown even to physicians , and if it does not re sult in complete destruction of the kidneys , the extra work which is forced upon the heart weakens it every year , and a "mys terious" sudden death claims another vic tim ! This is the true history of "heart dis ease , " so called , which in reality is chiefly a secondary effect of Bright's disease of the kidneys , and indicates the universal need of that renowned specific Warner's safe cure. B. F. Larrabee , Esq. , of Boston , who was by it so wonderfully cured of Bright's dis eas f , in 1879 , says that with its disap pearance went the distressing heart disor der , which he then discovered was only secondary to the renal trouble. There is a general impression that tho medical profession is not at fault if it frankly admits that heart disease is t the cause of death. In other words , a cure ol heart disease is not expected of them ! There may be no help for abrokendown , wore out , apoplectic heart , but there is a help for the kidney disorder which in most cases is responsible for the heart trouble , and if its use put money and fauie into the treasury of the profession instead of into the the hands of an independent investiga tor , every graduated doctor in the world would exclaim of it , as one , nobler and less prejudiced than his fellows once ex claimed : "It is a God-send to humanity ! " What therefore must be the public esti mate of that bigotry and want of frankness which forbids in such cases ( beause for- sooth it is a proprietary article ) , the use of the one effective remedial agency of the age. age."Heart disease. " indeed ! Why not call such things by their right names ? Why not ? "Dead without a moment's warning. " This lik e wise is an untruth ! Warnings are given by the thousand. Physicians aro "not surprised. " They "expect it ! " They jnow what the end will be , but the victim ? "oh , no , he mustn't be told , you know , t wquld only frighten him , for there is no help , you know , for it ! " The fate that attended "Little Mac" and bhe five governors is not a royal and exclu sive one it threatens every one who fails to heed the warnings of nature as set forth ibove. Let's see : Are liquors sold at the drug itores by the drachm ? MALT BITTERS. 10 ? is u.1 H .m BLOOD PURIFIER i HEALTH RESTORER. It never fails to do its work in cases of Mala ria , Biliousness , Constipation. Head- idle , loss of Appetite and Sleep , Nervous Debility , Neuralgia , and all Female DomplalntB. Hops & 51 alt Bitters is a Vege table Compound. It is a medicine not a Bar * room Drink. It differs as "widely as does lay and night from the thousand-and-ono ttlxture * ofvile whisky flavored with aromatic * . Hops & Malt Bitters is recom mended by Physicians , Ministers and Vnrsev as being the Best Family Medicine ever impounded. Any woman or child can take it "From my knowledge of itt ingredients , under circumstances can it injure any one using It. contains no mineral or other deleterious sub- lance. Possessing real merits , the remedy it Lescrring cuccecs.'r C. E. DsPur , Ph. G. , Detroit , Mich. do only Genuine are manufactured by tha HOPS ft MALT BITTERS CO. . Detroit , Mica , iOODMAN DRU8 CO , , Wiiolestla Agents , OMAHA , NEB. I CURE FITS ! When 1 UT care 1 do not mean merely to stop them lor a tta9 sndtfien navs them return sgiln. I mean a radi cal euro. I bare rondo the disease of PITS , EPILEPSY or FALLTNO SICKNESS life-long stndy. IwimiDtmj maedr to core the worst cases Becansa others hsTo ftUtdunonasonfornotnowrecelTlsgacnre. Send at ence for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my Infallible nmedr. Gtre Express and Post Office. It cost * you notMnir for a trial , and I will care yon. * ddrea Dr7 H. O. BOOT. WsrearlSt.Kew York. M IK TWO HOURS CAN BE MADE BY ANY l active person. Ourdls-cn , fft 7npereent BT counts are liberal ; 3U 10 fUAddreFs ! MURRAY BJLL CO. . ,129 East 23th St. . New Yor Tnmort * nd Ulcers eared witboal W. N. U. , OMAHA. 284 46. , rfmK fjorJ JHy terIon Joke. A joke is a mystery to. some pooplo. In a certain court in this state on a time tho proceedings were delayed by the failure of n , witness named Sarah Mony to arrive. Af ter waiting a long time for Sarah the court concluded to wait no longer , and , wishing to crack his little joke remarked , "This court will adjourn without Sarah-mony. " Everybody laughed except one man , who sat in solemn meditation for live minutes , and then burst into a hearty guffaw , ex claiming , "I see it ! Iseeit ! " When he went home he tried to tell the joke to his wife. "There was a witness named Mary Mony who didn't come , " said he , "and BO the court said , 'We'll adjourn without Mary- ' " "I don't to that " Mony. see any point , said his wife. "I know it , " said he , "I didn't at first ; but you will in about five minutes. " [ Lewiston ( Me. ) Journal. A rising young man has usually 'pinions of his own. | lVI llfVcanmakehandcomeRUQ8infonr Hill LAUI hoarsontof racs.yaraoranjcloth. RnsinsDCiOl No hooks , cUmpj , frunei or pit term. RUB MAKER fascinating. Easy.slmple onanrSEWING Send stamp for MACHINE or by New Free Lint * . hand. A wonder AGENTS ful Inrentlon. It Wanted. Great BELLS AT SIGHT. Price only 81. Inducements. ApplrforterrltorrrNsirplan. No money required. UNO. G. HOITT&.CO.SisEut suciiiciao. CONSUMPTION 1 n Y * potltlro remedy lor tlie bove dlseui ; by Itsnu tBonucds of easel of the wont kind and of lone Handler bus been cured. Indeed , so itronc Is my filth In Its efficacy. that I will tend TWO BOTTLES-FREE , together ifilh a VAI 17ABLK TREATISE on thli dlieuc.to * ny > nffertr. GlyeKz- pnu and F. 0. addru * . DB. T. A. SLOCUH , 111 Pearl St. , N.Y. Wall Paper ana Window Shades It to 20 per cent cheape 'than poo prices. Samples Sent on Application. T. J. Beard & Uro. , . Omaha. Morphine Habit Cured In 1O to SO days. No pay till Cured. I B. J. STXWIENB , Lebanon. Ohio. AN OLD TIMER. It will bo seen from tho advertisements elsewhere , that tho Ameri can Agriculturist , now half a century old , has enlarged its sphere , so as to make a specialty of horns matters. It accordingly , in the future , will be devoted to everything pertaining to the Hearth and Home , as well as to the Farm , Garden , and House hold. As the coolness gets stronger , tho even ings get longer. MENlook slovenly with run-over heels. Lyon's Heel Stlfleners prevent It. 25c a pair. The vain fop is always lonesome unless he has a good looking lass to keep him company. j The beat couch medicine la Piso's Cure for Con- I sumption. So.d everywhere. 25c. ' Halford Sance the best. Donot ouy any Imita tion la pi ace of It. Can a man tel-ephone when ho sees the instrument for the first time ? If afflicted with Sore Eyes , uso Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c. 25c.All All prescriptions are not carefully 'pounded in the druggist's mortar. Out of eighteen births at La Moore , Da kota , this year , seventeen were girls. Tho Marquis of Bute's new caste will cost as much as the Capitol at Washington. Is man-of-war fleet-footed ? a - - always - Tho finest shade trees are not always pop'lar. Piso's Eemedy for Catarrh b the Best , Easiest to Use , and Cheapest. Also good for Cold In the Head , Headache , Hay Fever , Ac. GO cents. BIG OFFER * To introduce them , A we will GIVE A WAY 1,000 Self-Operating Washing Machines. If you want one send us your name , P. O. and express office at once. Tho .National Co. . 25Dey St..N.Y. IDEAL AHEAD OF ALL COMPETITION. Sent on trial to responsible parties. PfPR38SS , . 3jPi _ . " " * ' ' * * * - - ° f \ * i r * - * " ' * rf * ; ( Catarrh in the Head Originates In scrofulous taint In tho blood , nence tho proper method by which to euro catarrh. Is to purify tho blood. Us many disagreeable symptoms , and the danger of developlnc Into bronchitis or that terribly fatal dhe.isc , consumption , arc entirely re moved by Hood's Sarsaparllla , which cures catarrh by purifying tho blood and also tones up the system and greatly Improves the general health of those who take It. "I had been troubled by general debility , caused In part by catarrh and humort. Hood's Sarsaparllla proved Just the tblngnceded. I derived an Immense amount of benefit. " H. E. MILLBTT , Boston. "For many years , beginning- far back I don't rM member when. I had tho catarrh In my head , It cot ? slstedof an excessive flow from my noso , rlngtnj and bursting noises in my ears , and pains on tho to ? of my head. Tho hawking and spitting were mot * excessive In tho morning , when tho tack part of mr tongue would be thick with a white fur. and there would be a bad taste In my mouth. My hearlae wn affected In my left ear. Five years ago I bejan to use Hood's Sarsaparllla. I was helped rleht away ; but Icontlnued to use until I felt myself cured , My general health has been good ever slnco th caUrra left me. " MBS. E.H. CAVLTIKIJ ) , Lowell. Catarrh Cured by Hood's Sarsaparllla. "I suffered three years with catarrh , and my gen eral health was poor In consequence. TVhen I took Hood's Sarsaparllla I found I hod the right remedy. The catarrh Is yielding , as Hood's Sarsaparllla Is cleansing my blood , and tho general tone of my sys tem Is improving. My case is of such long-standing that I did not expect to be cured In an Instant. " FRANK WASHBUCN , Rochester. X.T. "I suffered with catarrh fifteen years ; tried all tho catarrh remedies without benefit , and was about to try a change of climate , when I took Hood's Sarsti- parilla. I would not take any money consideration for the good one bottle did me. Now I am not trou bled any with catarrh. " L "W. LILLIS , Chicago , 111. Id by nil druggists. * 1 ; elx for 3. Prepared by C I. HOOD < t CO. , Apothecaries , Lowell , Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar. Martin Shields , a successful markctman of Chicago derived help from Hood's Sanaparllla. He says : "t have been troubled with that distressing complaint , catarrh , and Iwant to ay that I have been nsln ; Hood's Sareaparilla , and I find it one of tho best rem edies I have ever taken. My trouble has lastcdtea years , and never before could I get any relief , never until I commenced to use Hood's Sarsapartlla. C would recommend its use to all suffering with thai complaint. It is truly an excellent medicine. " "I took Hood's Sarsaparllla for dyspepsia , which I had for nine or ten years , suffering terribly with It. It has entirely cured me. and I recommend it t others who suffer with this disease. " MES. A. Noz- TOK , Chlcopec , Mass. m Hood's Sarsaparilla I Sold by all druglsts. II ; six for * 5. Prepared by C. I. HOOD & CO. , Apothecaries , Lowell. Mast. I IOO Doses One Dollar. WE : - WANT : THE : EARTH Sniy c , ! , hi isrerrToturni t ° onr subscribers during 1SSC than ever before , and accordingly nro pnttine yiI } lb 1sad onyIn'othoAMEBiOAXAoBioci.TuwsT.EnRllshand German. The great staff o ? . George Tnurber. have kept It at the front for twenty-nve years , are now PeweyDI > . T.Moore , and Seth Green. Every number of this periodical I ' ? u cstl,8'nndlnrorniatlonfor Farm. Garden , and Household , together Tools. App.fance . * "The AMZTHCAJT Aamroi/rimisT Isespe- ? m5non' .ccan"e of the remarkable success that has attended the unique and untlrfnz. i" si F , ° P.ret { , ° r8. 1 ? Increase and extend Its circulation. " Kutwe now propose to enlarge It * ' ' 1 h ° me3 ta WWca tU ° * * ° AO'BIC LTUBIST Unread. ding other features , .ly.hnlitntie/enr.t,1.1' { . this time leasehold onward , essentially nnrt Juvenile a Home Departments Periodical , as , and well ad as The American Agriculturist ? n < l cither the AMERICAN A . or theAJKKKIP VV * BOOK , J ' , Just i published. and ? a Compend- , , " ' f ° r Farmers. Mechanics. Business men , .Manufacturers , etc. . enabling everyoneto be his own lawyer. A larce volume. welKhlnsone pound and a half , elegantly bound In Cloth anVl Gold. Tlilrtr Grand double November number of tho American Agriculturist , also full descrip tive sample pages of Cyclopaedia and I.aw Book , all sent to one address on receipt of i cents for postage. Tha American Agriculturist $1.50 a Year ; Single Numbers , 15 Cents. Address 1 > ATII > IV. JUI > 1 > , I res't , 751 Broadway , IV. Y. ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR 1886. . The Companion itself hardly needs an introduction to tho readers of this paper. Its subscribers number nearly 350,000. This 13 the fifty- eighth year of its publication , and during these years it has found its way into almost every village throughout the land , until it has become truly a member of many households. The publishers have secured for the coming volume an unusual variety of entertaining and popular articles , and it3 , Contributors already include nearly all the distinguished Authors of this country and Great Britain , and some of those of France and Germany. Illustrated Serial Stories. A CAPITA ! , SERIAL FOB BOYS , by J. T. TROWBRIBK3E. IRON TRIALS , a Thrilling Story , by GEO. MANVILLE FENN. AN ANOHTMOUS LETTER , by M. R. HOUSEKEEPER. QUEER NEIGHBORS , by C. A. STEPHENS. AWAY DOWN IN POOR VALLEY , by CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK. Adventures. AECTIC ADVENTITBES , by lieut. GEEELT , IT. S. N. THE SLAVE CATCHERS of Madagascar , lieut. SHUFELDT. AMONG THE BREAKERS , by C. F. GORDON GUMMING. CANADIAN ADVENTURES , by E. W. THOMSON. ADVENTURES OF STOWAWAYS , by WM. H. RIDEING. MY ESCAPE from Korro Castlo , by a Cuban Patriot , JUAN ROMERO. A BOY'S ADVENTURES in Montana , by JAMES W. TOWEE. MY ADVENTURE with Road Agents , FRANK W. CALKINS. EXPLOITS with Submarine Boats and Tor pedoes in Naval Warfare , by T. C. HOYT. Special Articles. CHANCES FOE AMERICAN BOYS , by THE MARaUIS OF LORNE. DBAJCATIC EPISODES in English. History , by JAMES ANTHONY FROUDE. GUMPSES OF EOTJMANIA , by THE QUEEN OF ROUMANIA. A MTTSIC LESSON , by the Famous Singer , CHRISTINE NILSSON. OBSCURE HEROES , by CANON FARRAR. THE VICTIMS OF CIRCUMSTANCES , by. WTLKIE COLLINS. THE SPEED OF METEORS , by RICHARD A. PROCTOR. OUR FUTURE SHOWN BY THE CENSUS , by FRANCIS A. WALKER. ; ADVICE TO YOUNa SINGERS , by CLARA LOUISE KELLOGG. ; f Resident C. W. ELIOT , of Harvard University. O A BOY cotllol ! President NOAH PORTER , of Yale College. COLLEGE COLLEGEj -j President F > p. BARNARD , of Columbia College. Four Papers by , ( .Professor MOSES COIT TYLER , of Cornell College. Useful and Practical. BOYS WHO CAME FROM THE FARM , H. BUTTERWORTH. VIOLIN BOWING Buying a Violin , by ROBT. D. BRAIN. LOCKS AND KEYS ; or Wonders of Locksmiths , H. E. WL LIS. SMALL STOCK-RAISING for Boys , by LEMUEL FAXTON. SHORT-HAND AS A PROFESSION , HERBERT W. GLEASON. HOW TO FORM a Young Folks' Shakespeare Club , Prof. W. J. ROLFE. HOME-SEEKING IN THE WEST Homesteading How Land is Pre-empted Farming and Irriga tion How to Secure Land by Tree Culture , by E. V. SMALLEY. Natural History. INCIDENTS OF ANIMAL Sagacity , by REV. J. G. WOODJ NEW STORIES from the Fisheries , by Prof. SPENCER F. BATED. DOGS WHO EARN THEIR LIVING , by JAMES GREENWOOD. STORIES of Old Trappers and Fur-Buyers , F. W. CALKINS. AMUSING SKETCHES of Whale-Hunting , A. F. MYERS. PERILS OF PEARL DIVING , by Col. T. W. KNOX. THE ROGUE ELEPHANT , by W. T. HORNADAY. THE KEEPERS OF THE ZOO : or Anecdotes about Animals , gleaned from the Keepers of the Zoological Gardens , London , by AETHTJS 2IGBY. Entertaining. PERSONAL ANECDOTES of John Marshall , J. ESTEH COOKS. DRIFTED IN : A Story of a Storm-Bound Train , OSCAR KNOX. EXPLOITS OF AMERICAN BICYCLISTS , by BENJ. F. SPENCEB. A RAW RECRUIT , and What Happened to Him , A. D. CHILDS. STORIES OF LETTER-CARRIERS , by T. W. STARKWEATHER. THE PERILS OF PRECOCIOUS CHILDREN , Dr. W. A. HAMMOND. A BOY at the Battle of Fredericksburg , by THOS. S. HOPKINS. THE "CRITTER BACK" REGIMENT , and Other Tales of Old Campaigns , by AMOS MURRAY. . Illustrated Sketches. YOUNG MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS , by H. W. LUCY. ' ' ' 'AMONG * CANNIBALS , by JOSEPH HATTON. ITHB PRINCE AND PRINCESS BISMARCK , by MRS. E. 2C AMES. LORD TENNYSON AMONGHIS FAMILIARS , by BRAM STOKER. SIGHTING THE ARCTIC COLD , by Lieut. SCHWATKA. AN EDITOR'S EXPERIENCE IN THE "WILD 'WEST , J. L. HARBOUR. LIFE IN TURKEY , by the TJ. S. Minister to Turkey , Hon. S. S. COX. ' TRICKS OF MAGIC AND CONJURING EXPLAINED , "PROF. HOFFMAN. " BITS OF TRAVEL IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA and Santa Fe , by HUNT JACKSON. Subscription , Sl.75 a TSTear , Sample Copies DPree. This will appear ONLY ONCE in ihis paper. If you trill cut out this slip and send Jt to us trith your name and Peat-Office Address and 91.75ro will send yon the COMPANION Jb'JtCEE from the time the subscription is received to Jan. 1st , FREE TO J I88C , and a full year's subscription from that time to Jan. 1st , 1887. This offer Includes ( until the editions are exhausted ) the DOUBLE THANKSGIVING and CHRISTMAS NUMBERS of 2O Paces each , trith Colored Covers , and full-page Pictures surpassing any previous Issues. No offer equal to this is made by any other papor. SendJfoneyOrder.Chcck orXegislered Letter. Address p RRY MASON & CO. , Publishers , 39 Temple PI3C6 , BOStflH , HaSS. J. T. TROWBRIDCE'S NEW SERIAL STORY WILL BEGIN WITH THE FIRST ISSUE IN JANUARY. - . . .