\ THE SORTH POLE. •Mmgh of Arctic JKxploratlou. [From tha Chicago Times.] The recent return of the steamers .Jdeii and Discovery from a fruitless fluiHtuun to th« froz-en region about the Jforth pole seems to call to mind how aauoit treasure has been squandered,how arooh suffering has been endured, and fcow many lives have been lost in tne fain attempt to penetrate an oo9an which nature ekwed by impassable barriers. Scarcely had Columbus published his •ooount of the discovery of this oonti- Aent before John Cabot set about flnd- k-ig >* way of reaching India by sailing aorth of the newly found continent. His first voyage in thSs direction was made in 1#97, and was attended by severe kardshipe. During the following 200 years *tome 200 voyages were made by different navigators to the same frozen lea. Great Britain took the lead of the commercial nations in undertaking to find a northwest passage to the Piscific Ocean. A reward of £6,000 was offered to the fortunate individual, who would •ail Iroxa sea to sea„ Some thirty expe ditions have been fitted out by Great Britein alone for the purpose of discov ering a northwest passage. The same jiataon sought to encourage exploration ,'jby oonfernng titles and distmctions on Che men who hMsarded their lives in the perilous undertaking. Parry. Franklin, Ross, Bock and Richardson were all knighted for the services they were sup posed to render their country by the ex plorations they made in the regions •bout which we know so little, but of which we know quite enough, after all." The expedition which attracted the most attention was the one commanded by Sir John Franklin. The two vessels, the Erebus and Terror, which conveyed his party, left England May 24, 1845, but never returned. The loss of -the brave men who constituted this parly seemed to stimulate rather than to dis courage the spirit of adventure. There were now two things instead of oue to find--the lost party and the pass age they were to discover. Twenty- one expeditions in all sailed from different countries for the pur pose of obtaining information in regard to the fate of Sir John Frank lin. Great Britain offered rewards amounting to $20,000 for his discovery, and expended $6,000,000 in the various expeditions sent out. A spirit of rivalry sprang up among the different nations to see which would penetrate the vast frozen sea the greater distance. This spirit was shared by the people of the United States, as was shown by the ex peditions of Kane, Hayes, and others. These expeditions resulted in little else than in demonstrating that there is no passage available for the purpose of navigation, and in obtaining some evi dence that there exists an open sea about tiie North pole. The expedition just re turned to England found the best proof against the existence of such a sea. The party which composed it found ice vary ing from 80 to 150 feet in thickness, and so broken and rugged that a progress of only a mile per day could be made over j(b. It is to be hoped that the day for Arctic expeditions has passed. It is not possible that any benefits to commerce Can result from them, and it is very hard to see in what way science is to be ben efited by future Arctic voyages. IJad {fre money that has been spent in fruit less expeditions in the direction oi the Iforth pole been employed in stimulating discoveries in practical science, the world yiight have been better and wiser there for. Half the people in this country rely on soft coal for fuel, but we have not found out how to burn it without having the best portions of it pass into the air in the shape of soot or uncon- sumed gas. Botanists inform us that no use has been found for thirty-nine- fortieths of the plants now known to them. We aue in comparative ignorance to-day of the science of making steel, and still our civilization largely depends on its manufacture. With so many things to find out, any one of which would be of immense value to the world, we may as well remain awhile in igno rance of some matters pertaining to the polar sea._ A Wonderful Surgical Experiment. , English surgical and physiological students will find in the Gazette des , Hopiteaux interesting details of an op eration of gastrotomy, attended so far with successful results, which has been performed at the Hopital de la Pitie, by ^r. VerueuiL The patient, a lad of 17, had inadvertently swallowed a quantity of the solution of caustic potass. This occurred in February, and, in spite of the most skillful treatment, the con striction at the upper orifice of the ®so- phagus became so complete that death from inanition must inevitably have en sued without an operation, which was accordingly performed on the 26th of July. The results will be seen from the medi cal bulletin of the 10th of September, which states that the patient is in good health, remains up all day, and even helps the hospital assistants in their work; he has almost as much strength and energy as he had before the acci dent. His diet is composed of soups, fine chopped meat, mashed vegetables, and drink, which are injected through a large elastic tube inserted in the incision made in the stomach. Under this treat ment he gained upward of ten pounds in weight between the 18th of August and the 14th of September. At the moment of the injection of food a flow of saliva in the mouth is pro duced, in the ejection of which a motion curiously resembling the action of chew ing is remarked; he can distinguish be tween warm and cold substances, but otherwise all are indiiferent to him. It is stated this is the first time the operation has been successfully performed; the last time it was attempted, but unsuc cessfully, was in 1849, by M. Sedillot, Professor of the Faculty of Medicine of Strasburg.--Paris^Cor. London Stand ard. Queen Victoria and the Emperor of Ger many. I have heard, from a source which I have reason to trust, that the rumor that Queen Victoria had sent MI autograph letter to the Emperor of Germany is true. The letter contained an earnest and solemn appeal to thp Em peror to use his power and influence to save Europe from the calamity of war. from the same souroe I have heard that a very remarkable reply has been re ceived by Her Majesty, one not likely to be laid before the English public. In it she is reminded that a few years ago, when Germany was attacked and had to enter upon deadly strife, no such im pressive appeal for peace o&iue from Her Majesty, «^d that the "war was then pro longed by the continual supply of strength to France from England--just enough to prolong bloodshed after the hope of successful resistance was passed. However, the Emperor says--if my in formation be correct--he will not on that account fail to do his utmost to preserve the peace of Enrope.--Conway. in the CtnoinmUi Commercial. A COLORiDO HE BOIHE. ' Aa Affecting Story of Frontier Lift Mrs. Oatrom's Moarnftil Bivouac In the Roefcy Mountains. [From the New York Wotrld.] On Friday night of last week, In one of the small parks of Colorado, lying among the mountains on the North Platte, there was a curious scene. There in a place fifteen miles away from the nearest neighbor sat a woman, surround ed by her family of seven children, and watching the dead body of her husband. A large fire which she and her oldest boyf n lad of 14, had built, threw a (?h»stly glare over the lonely landscape. The broad sky above, and the huge hills around made more intense the sense of desolation and the littleness of humani ty^ and the murmur of the stream near by and the bark of the fox in the dis tance were the only utterances of soli tude to grief. This woman's story, as told in the Denver Tribune, is one of the most affecting in the strange annals of American pioneer adventure. Her husband, W. H. Ostrom, had come to Colorado from Alabama, and, on aooount of^ the depredations of the grasshoppers had not been very prosperous. He had prepared a new home for his family in a park on the North Platte, and set out that, morning |om Pine (Gsove gulch for the journey of twenty miles, in a Western wagon drawn by a team of mules, and loaded with his household and his household goods. Toward even ing, as he was crossing a small stream at a rough part of the road, one of the mules shied, and the wagon was over turned. It is probable that Ostrom was walking beside it, and flung himself in the way to try and save his wife and children. They were thrown vio lently out and he was caught un der the overturned wagon and borne to the ground with the cross-bar of the wagon-bed across him and a weight of 1,500 pounds crushing him. His terri fied wife found him lying in this way, cool and oonsiderate, but very pale. He directed her in her vain efforts to pry the wagon over, and died within five minutes, even while assuring her that he was not dangerously hurt. The old est boy was on foot, driving a cow, and came up only in time to join his mother in her attempts to release his father's dead body. With true pioneer readi ness and sternness the team was un hitched and put to drag off the wagon, the corpse was rolled in a sheet, a fire was built, the mules were corralled, and the widow and orphans sat down in their dismal bivouac. Even when deatii comes by slow approaches and with fair warning, where the care of anxious friends and the comforts of civ ilized life mitigate suffering, the loss of a husband and father is a calamity that evokes our sympathy for the afflicted. It is a grief that no oondolences can soften, no wealth alleviate, no compan ionship render endurable. It would be useless, therefore, to dwell upon the terroro of death when it struck down the head of a family unexpectedly and violently in a Colorado wilderness, leav ing a woman and children desolate, with darkness and Ihe desert about them. We think a picture of this night-watch of Mrs. Ostrom would be as characteris tic of a great phase of American life as any scene that the imagination could conceive of. In her bitter experience, giving us a glimpse of the sufferings of the women of the Western frontier, we have something to suggest the trials and labors of all that hardy generation which puaheu slowly on from the Atlantic to the Mississippi, before whom the wilder ness receded like the horizon. It is the fault of our time to underrate the rough virtues of the pioneers, and forget the value ol their achievements. We are losing sight of the romantic and heroic aspects of their life, in the refinements and luxuries of our own. Her story should bring back old memories to those in the heart of. civilization, and teach them what they cost. It was not by enchantment that the log cabin was changed to the brown-stone mansion, the homespun dresses to silk, the emi grant wagons to family carriages. The metamorphosis was rapid, but it was the result of the sacrifice and < endeavor of ages heaped into a few years. The Col orado woman, sitting all night in her mournful bivouac, with her seven chil dren around and the corpse of her hus band just outside of the glare of the fire, stiffening in the frost--this penni- ess widow a rousing herself in the morning, taking the dead body on the wagon and retracing her steps toward civilization, is as distinct a type of American womanhood as the gayest lady that attends church in New York to-day. They have different missions; but neither of them should forget that they are sis ters.--iV. Y. World. CHARLES LANGHKIMKR, aged 74, has been held to bail at Philadelphia for stealing an overcoat. He is known as Dickens' Dutchman, having been sin gled out by the great novelist, during the visit of the latter to this country in 1842, as an example of the terrible ef fects of the Pennsylvania "silent sys tem " of punishment. In his "American Notes" Dickens devotes nearly half a page to this man. MKBCHANT'S Gargling Oil has become one of the most popular liniments for human flesh that is now prepared, while for horses and cattle it has no equal in the world. We are assured by those who have used it for the piles--one of whom is a distinguished physician--that among all the various pile remedies none afforded such speedy relief as the Gargling OiL--Louisville (Ay.) Daily Democrat, June 4, 1856. THAT languid, helplees, sallow-com- plexiontd woman muut use Dr. J. H. McLean's Strengthening Cordial and Bloc*?. Purifier. It is exactly what you want to vitalize, purify, and enrich your blood aixl give you buck the bloom of health again. Dr. J. B. McLean's office, 311 Chestnut, St. Lome. Moon's stroke. I An Indian correspondent writes to J Nature: "There |B a popular belief < that it is dangerous to sleep in full moon- ! shine, as It is supposed to produce some ! injurious effect caUd moonstroke, A j clear sky admits of apid radiation, and any person exposed ?p such radiation is sure to be chilled by rapid lews of heat. There is reason to believe that under the circumstances pf«alysis of one side of the face is likely to occur from chill, as one side of the fa*@ is more likely to be expas^d to rapid mdiation and con sequent loss of its baat. The chill is more likely to occur when the sky is perfectly clear and in a full mooa. 1 have often slept in the open air in Tnfli* on a clear summer niglt when there was no moon, and, although the first part of the night may have beta hot, yet toward 2 or 3 o'clock in the miming the chill has been so great that 1 have often been awakened by an aehe ia the forohedfi, which I have as often counteracted by wrapping a handkerchief around my head and drawing the blanket over my face. As the chill is likely to be greatest on a very clear night, »ud the clearest nights are likely to be those on which there is a bright moonshine, it is very possible that neuralgia, paralysis, or some other similar injury, caused by sleeping in the open air, has been at tributed to the moon, vben the proxi mate cause may really lave been the chill." ' The Minnesota Liqier Law. < The Supreme Court of Vfinnesota has affirmed the constitutionality of that very excellent and wholesome law, passed in 1878, requiring each liquor-dealer in the State io pay $10 annually for the establishment and maintenance*of a State Asylum for Inebriates. Grounds for the asylum were long since located at the charming city of Rochester, and this de cision of the Supreme Court removes the last remaining obstacle to the early erec tion of the necessary buildings. AT our request, Cragin & Co., Philadel phia, Pa., have promised to send any of our readers gratis (on receipt of 15 cents to pay postage) a sample of Dobbin's Electric soap. Try it. Send at onoe. Scribier's Monthly, IN UJTBIVALED ILLUSTRATED XLTTUIKI. When SCMBNKB issued its famous Midsum mer Holiday Number in July, a friendly critic said of it: "We are not sure but that Scribner has touched high-water mark. We do not see what inorlds are left to it to conquer." But the publishers do not consider that they have reached the ultima thule of excellence--they believe "there are other worlds tooonqawr, aud they propose to conquer them." The prospectus for the new volume gives the titles of more than fifty papen (mortly illus trated), by writers of the highest merit. Under the head of " FOEMOK mm," we have " A Winter on the Mile," by Geo. Mtv- Clellan ; "Saunterings About Constantinople," by Charles Dudley Warner; "Out of My Win dow at Moscow," by Eugene Schuyler; "Aa American in TurkiBtan," etc. Three serial sto ries are announced: •'NICHOLAS MINTUBH," by Dr. Holland, the Editor, whose story of " Sevenoaks " gave the highest satisfaction to the readers of the Monthly. The scene of this latest novel ia laid sMh* banks of the Hudson. The hero is a young man who has been always " tied to a woman's apron strings," but who, by the death ot his mother, is left alone in the world--to drift on the current of life--with a fortune, but without a purpose. Another serial, "Hia Inheritance," by Miss Trafton, will begin on the completion of "That Law o' Lowrie's," by Mrs. Hodgson Burnett. Mrs. Burnett's story, ,»#ogun in August, hw a pathos and dramatic power which have beop a surprise to the public. There is to be a series of original and exquis itely illustrated papers of " Popular Science," by Mrs. Herrick, each paper complete in itself. There are to be, from various pens, papers on "BOMB LIFE AND TBAVEL." practical suggestions as to town and coun try life, village improvements, etc., by w«ll- known specialists. Mr. Barnard's articles on various industries of Groat Britain include the history of "Same Experiments in Co-operation," "A Scottish Ljoaf Factory*' in the November number, and •'Toad Lane, Rochdale," in December. Other papers are, •'The British Worklngman's Home,* • ANation of Shopkeepers," "Ha'penny a Week for the Child,"' etc. A richly illustrated series will be given on '• American Bports by Flood and Field," by various writers, and each on a different theme. Tho subject of "HOUSEHOLD AND HOMX DRCOBATIOH" will have a prominent place, while the latest productions of American humorists will appear from month to month. The list of shorter eto- riee, biographical and other sketches, eti, is a long one. The editorial department vfll eotAiims to employ the ablest pens both at home and abroad. There will be a series of letters on literary matters, from London, by Mr. Welford. The pages of the magazine will be opon, as heretofore, so far as limited spaoe will permit, to the discussion of all themes affecting the social and religious life of the world, and spe cially to the freshest thought of the Christian thinkers and scholars of this country. The pablishers say they mean to make the magazine sweeter and purer, higher and nobler, more genial and generous in all its utterances and influenoes, and a more welcome visitor than ever before in homes of refinement and culture. FLFTBEH HOSTHS FOB F4. SCRIBXEB for December, now ready, which cantatas the opening chapters of '• Nicho las Minturn," will be read with eager curiosity and interest. Perhaps no more readable num ber of this magazine has yet been issued. The throe numbers of SCBIBNER for August, Sep tember, and October, containing the opening o lapters of "That Lass o' Lowrie's," ko g van to every new subscriber (who requests it), and whose subscription begins with the present volume, i. e., with the November aum- ber. Subscription price, $4 a year--86 eents a number. Special terms on bound volumes. Subscribe with the nearest bookseller, or send » check or P. O. money order to & Co., 743 Broadway. H. T. SOMETHING new for your aching back --Collins' Yolt&ic Plaster. They cure when all other plasters fail, and may be relied on to re lieve painful affections of the kidneys, liver, muscleB, and joints. Rrrrus CHAPMAN, of Liberty, Me., had a stiff leg, bent at the knee, limbered and strengthened by the nse of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment. THE Mason k Hamlin Organ Oo. have sustained their well-earned reputation as best makers of instruments in their line, at the Centennial. Their organs are the only oues afc the exhibition de clared by the j udges to belong to the first rank, and this not merely because of one or two qualities, but in " the several requisites " of suoh instruments, which is equivalent to saying they were unequaled by others in any important quality. We congratulate the company on having added to their Paris, Vienna and Santiago medals this emphatically highest award at Philadelphia,--Bottom Traveller. THKEE can be no mistake about it, •' Matchless " plug tobacco takes the lead. Ola fine-cut ohewers say it gives better satisfaction and is cheaper than fin« Yen cannot be imposed upon, as each plug has the worda, "Matchless P. T. Co." on a wooden tag. Try it once and you will always chew it. Manu factured by the Pioneer Tobacco Cosacaiij, New York. NegUotwl Ooaghi and Colds. Few are aware of the importance of ing a Cough or "Common Cold," in Its first stage ; that which in the beginning would yield, to "Bsows's BBONOHIAL TROCBES," if neg lected, often wctka upon the Lungs. THE editor takes pleasure in oalling the attention of sufferers from rheumatism, gout, neuralgia and lumbago to Durang's Rheumatic Remedy. It has been before the public for three years, and, it is said, has never failed in a single case. It is taken internally, and curee at onoe. Sold by wholesale and retail drug gists everywhere. Price fcl.00 a bottle. CHAPPED hands, faoe, pimples, ring worm, saitrheum, and other cutaneous affec tions cured, and rough skin made soft and smoot h, by using Juniper Tar Soap, Be care ful to get only that made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, as there are manv imitations made with oommon tar, all of which aro worth- lees. To HOTTSSKKKPKRS.--The attention of heads of families is invited to the superior quality of BURNETT'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS. They are highly concentrated, have all the freshness and delicacy of the fruits from which they are prepared, and are less expensive. " WHY, Maud, where did you get that beautiful corset?" "It is Dr. Warner's Health Corset, and is the most comfortable and ele gant oorset I ever saw. I sent 91.75 for it ti> Warner Bros., 763 Broadway, N. Y." THE proprietors of Johnson's Ano dyne Liniment Parsons' Purgative Pills, and Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders have published a readable aud instructive pamphlet, which may be had free by mail. 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Erery Ona Should gs Anntd. folCAOO IEDBER 0iri^91,00ayaar,and 18* ftp porta**, wtll aaaoN 1 Best Story and Family Paper in the United 8tate*. It to lannr and batter than the great weekly papers of New York, and li told for C"" laird tlie money. Addnn THE LE130ER, Ciiicaico, Illinois. HOLIDAY MUSIC BOOKS. Two Splendid Volumes for Presents. THE WORLD OF SONG! Pricajn Boards, $2.60. Cloth, $3.00. GNt, $4.00. Ritrely havo wo Issued a booV of «onfcts Including such a variety of ivully litest-clnss and jwpular Vocal Musitv fi50 pages, full Hhe«t Miisie size. Son^s l>y nparly sixty different composers, and among the coin positions are many sucU gems as "Comf t\> Me "(iolden ljocka are Saver," " My Heart's Best Love,'- "She'a a Koay, •he's a Posjr," and Millard's " Whippoorwlll." We publish nineteen valuable collections, uniform with the " WORIJJ " and " OKMB." Send for Catalogue of " HOKE MUSICAL LIBRABI," and salaot ona or mote of ita books for Christmas. GEMS OF THE DANCE! A Companion to Utt/mmout "G*m» qf Strauu 1" 92.50 in Boards, *3.00 Clotli, $+.00 (Jilt, The "GEMB OF STRAUSS" had a wonderful success, %nd this new work is fully its equal, and contains the recent " Strauss" pieces and many others by (.ung 1, l.a:noth?. f'sust, C;«stc, Zikr.tf, s;..! other eminent com-pi)sers*"282 paae's. full Sheet-Music size, well tilled with Waltzes, Galops, Polkas, tjuadrilies, et«. Either l>ook mailed, post free, for retail price. OLIVER DITS0N & CO., Boston. C. HL Ditson & Co., J. E. Ditson & Co., Til BROADWAY, Saeoewota to Lea * Walkaf, New York. PMIa. fm~ Mention this papar In ordering. Cut Out Certificate Below and Return with 83.00. ^DfiNCING J5KELET0H, A. jointed figure or a xtctfrn mcnes lifh, will annce at command of the rors, WHO «nuwu««u« Immensely sensational. Skeleton ana D&venuort Brothers Hope Trfek. Seat itostpaid for 25 cents. wovfiB? CO., 88 Randolph Bt., Chicago, 111. 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SILENT SEWING MACHINE. Send Postal Card for Illustrated Price List, Ac. Willcox & Gibbs S. M. Co., (Cor. Bond St) 658 Broadway, Kew York. WREADY I OR AGF.NTS-THI CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION 3ESCRIBED AND I1XUSTUATED. A graphic pen-picture of its litMtory. mnt buildings, wonderful exhibit*, curlosltieij, trreat days, etc. Profuaely thorough. & popular, and very cheap. '«*eiu> <g'immensely. -•j.fHH) ABSENTS wanted. Send tor full particulars. This ia the chance o/" l<H) year* to eojiTmoney f„„f. Get the only reliable history. HUBBARD BHOTHEKS7Pubs.. WLaSalle St, Chicago, 111. « A TTrnT/VfcJ Be not deceived brrprematnre CAU llvlW books assuming to be "official," and ..m„g What will taooen H» Aiuruat and Heotemfcer. Thia book Is a necessity for tho thousands who will take up thia new, pretty and useful pursuit Chitaga Tribune. SORRENTO AND INLAID WORK For Amateurs, by Arthur Hope. A practical manual of Scroll-i>avt -ing, Overlaying, Polishing, inlay iiiR, SilhouetteR, Ac. Containing 51) full-sized dosigns, new and beautiful. The deaiatw nre_wi>rtn more than price of book. Taste-full; boand in muslin. For sale by booksellers generally- Sent tay on receipt of price, $1.6(J. Descriptive circular mailed to any address. . JOHN WILKINSON, Publisher, 65 Lake St., Chicago. $66 i BRUT INDUCEMENTS TO AGENTS. up tbiftnjwjjreiwy aua w $10 -°** Kn? FO«»«!ogti#fraa. for all. Ohrt'rao A: *Oo..t»N» #14 A PA » at. Hsai. Agents wanted. Ootftl r fiss. TRUE ft CO., |OA aDay. MOWTOMAKMIt, -71^ WMXfamt isMH MX, TOW+MS CO.. ~ r r7li |>l 20 »VM REVOLVER $25 A DAT to Ortatagna. L AGENTS *1TF, <Sr*w» fcj mchlMry. ww»ts4. Iallt«|t«>> TtOa,fMa,la $55 S $77 ' Aaowtta. Nate A GOOD BUSINESS IS INSURED to an aatanHr ing man by addressing Bo* 27S8, PhUadalphia #TO- KH Agents. Send postal fcrclrculuis. W " ' t h i n g i m m e n s e . CHI. K. G. Co., C'l 5oaa» A«Ti»fiia8PMFIP "PHYSICIANS, DENTISTS, ftr., who al_ JL genuine Chartered UnWersitj Degree* caa sMnik Soloalng cents, ,1. R YUlLtR, feoMon, $80 a month, hotei and «r»r»ttng san«h> WATCH3M. Wmtokmr* <Mi Oold. A Onst "^•SobtmtoSSBSS M. ^•TPgN^MantoealltoMerobante. |N $984 M»'!c by one Agent In 57 days. 13 new iirt M lts. Samples free. Address, C. M. I.IXKXC1TOX, Oilcac*. OS I MAGIC: ? Sporting uoo«s, KpTolrars, Magic Wand» QUODS f Secret of Beauty. Agenta wari«il logneslree. EUREKA CX>., 29 Broadway, jfc *' AIIL DESCR5DOBS9RSSI9FL^L6R^5L5^1NL# world, latroducticn by MKaaapla lllastratt^ aircalars free. Address A. O. NKTTElToll A CO., Chicago, DL a month reo'd by our gradnatM. StudenU wanted. Salary paid while practicing. SUuntionsftar. legraph Inatitnta,Jaaef>v-i>!n,Wlg, fANTED~Mra h"oWt ofd< ' salary. ill I CU permanent employm<-iit; goo4 Jary. Traveling azpenaes paid by Onmpans. Union lnduamal Work*, Cincinnati. CI, VA Wa will start yon tn businef". yon 0 " make |50 a week without «ai>it-al; WnVW and respeotable for either lax. Aai IH.UJWa 1 8PWLTOQ., *61 Bswg. N- Y. YOUR own LIKKNSM in oil oolora, to show our \ painted on cati«A«, from a photograph or t tope, free with tbe Home .Vonrnal, C3.W a year. 8a Picture and paper 6 months tor <1. One agent 1 R9B.S0 in a day. Address I,. T. UJTHEK, Corry, T ^ mad* hy AFF«nts Miiinj , Picture and Chroino Cftr.l,. 12$ $10425^' Vj/lw W*" nisi worth Aft, »«rni p«»strM*»d for Hfto. Illuttr*- TEIL CKWOGUT (W«S J. H. BUFFORD* S SONS, BOSTI^N, MA88» A Month.-itH --n-- WHnm- in« artlolM in tba worid. One sampla bla Addres*«f AT BHONBOlt. PHwll.lM Made rapidly wtQl Stencil and Key Obaafe Outfita. Catalogaa and samples FRIQk S.M.8penoer,M7 Wash. St., Boston, Msaa HABIT CURED AT HOMK. No publicity. Tima shcai- Terms moderate. 1,900 testimo. DR. F. R MARSH. tjulneyyMtoh.. OCUn A STAMP and we will send ywi agyntufc OClill ropy of theCRIOKKT ON THK H KART1I.OW mammoth 16-i'«go.M-ct>lumn Itlu»trsto<i l itnmryft vgnji ily J ounial. I*. M. Lvvi'oXJt Co.,3-; Park Kow,NewYotS, OPIUM nials. Describe oaae. KIPPERS FASTIULS^S mULBtmrdlAOk laatown. Msi> FARMERS-or tbeir sons vwntnl thisfa^l and iwintcr, ( 1 or 2 tnrach Co.) to s«H a few staple articles ot real nMH to the farmers in their own counties. Husine*s plea-nut, pfO* fits good. Particulars fre«. J. \W>KTJI. St. Mo. THE ELGIN WATCH IS THE BEST AND CHEAPEST. A iHM production. Send for the latest deecriptire prioe4ia^_ JAMKS MCMILLAN. »0 CbestputBt.. Pblladalphl^ JY PHYMCIAN. !«TMV Id K. 8. 8. FITCH'S F. Hampie ('ouyt X*w mnd in Cloth, wi|i EZZtJS.'SiStlrT all. TO BK GIVEN AWAY next A months by the 'lilf •SJ' 1 of the ST. L.OU1S WKKKl IWWW JOI'KVAL.! Vor fuU informaU write IMMKDIATKI.Y to WOLCOTT ft HUiK oo; PUBLISHKR6, ST. IiOtTIB. Mo. KMS PATENTS TOT A1^ COST IucludintrGov't Fea , Mi*ud for Pamphlet KNIGHT A KXICiHT, Wnahiagloia, Ojk JSMPZlO-r s ANY PtCRSON of ordinairlntelUgenoa can earn • Hit ing by canvasstng forTha Illustrated Weekly, frpsilmaa is not necessary--the only requisite* being, aa In all m-oessf ul business. Industry ft energy. Sand tor particalanh-Address Cha*. Cine as SCe., X# Warrtn Sc., Jf. f. A BOOK tor the MILLION, MEDICAL ADVICE ISBSSBFIARFFL Csturt hMUipmre. Opiuui liabit, ac., SENT FREE on 'cqsi| it stunin. Ad(iros», l)r. Butts' l>isx»eii(>ary No. 12 N. ^th st,. St. Louis, Ml J{ Proi; Hnl!'« JMufflr C'oiit|»oui4< li the only prt'parufiou,oae package ut' whl$|^ will force the tH'urd to jxrow thick heavy on the iinootheat face < without injury \ \z% m day* in every case, or money chceriully funded. £5 eenta per narkaire. rxwtpaiU; $ M, 50 cent»< E. W. JONES. Aohfand. MM. L,': OZI3S, HEaD THLS.-B; sending nw $2.30j' «ii! send yon one Cent.' nr.irJ or Mogio Visitor, j B plmtr a yard ot goods e minute, end makes ;i {jeiiuinn band-uiade plait Agents wanted in ererr tows, or san# me youradifress. W. CASLKK. Msuisoti St., RooM NEW YORK WEEKLY Commercial Advertiser The S>e9t paper published. On» Dollnr per ysigi Specimen copies free. Special rates to agents. " 140 Fulton St., New 1 ork City*. , SECRET ERVICE IK THE P.O.DEP'T AGENTS WANTED >. r th« book,Guarding the Mails, aaiss* won.l.rltil bm,k on tl» Det.-.-t:i>n .iT Pmtat Thu'vc*, by l:itc Chitff A^e*»l Wot w*»r.l, I circular* ientfro^. Adds Di'sriN, UILMA.N A CO.. Hvll..r.i,< Chicago, 111., Ciru'iiiii.'ilf, O., n iw <td*sa TRCTn 18 HI«HTTt PrefMot Marticcs, ihs 8*»r a ad Wbarj, will fcr •«» Caeta. wuh *o«t caloi of ul Uck of bair, tfEid to ?ou a pvtmr* •T ;o«r fatwfc huabud cr «>f«. «**I riaar, the time wiHJfM •»»*. u4 tW 4»W *t AdAm Prof. 4 Profit** 81.. MMft. fUwss t # P^OL/'s CHAIN . K I c c t r i c i t y l a L i f e . I^L Paolis Belt, liet>t in the world 1 Cures Oisease wlii'wall other ri'inetlii'S fail. Testimonials and circulars sent free on "* plication, to P. .1. V I11TK( 27 Bond Street, Kew York. •ri cbur jaw; ~ ituiruMDi - - MXDICUIlBaXltBUMM. run *11 m gHik rwa una Fiiuaii A C --The ehotoaet to the world--ten 1111-- J. UlAla* price®--Largest Company to America-- •tapla article--pleases everyoody--Trad * aontteuaVp jissslin rt a 111 its wanted trerywhere--tJst IndncesMBlB --don't waste time--send for Cirouiar to BOBT. WKLLS. 43 Vsaey St.. N. P. O. Ba» l»Wf {Y 4 lar^T^TI TCSIORSanaStroftdj,. V. Hill, l>r. T. S. ROBEETSON, SAPA j tK« A n (^en^ar ' Intifilllff*. Rtld (ilJ'OOVfrt'r 1 fl i ̂ m J • A • IFr. 1. O, WUf-Biovfi tho American Oaijcer Institute, and <i!?ooverer of remedy for the radical cu?c of Cancer, Tumors_l7TT Sorotulm by acting on the bKod t>c'y, «ill eerd. on reeejM of a f;ill coaree of n;et>icines th&l hat failed In the carts of Career, Tuuu»r»or fi»crotuia. »4 Tremont StrrrU Boston. Mr-- AGENTS WANTED FOR HISTORY < j'L EXHIBITION Tt sells faster than any other boo*. copies in one day. This ie tbe only authentic aad OM®* hiAtnrv i»oblished. Send for our eatra A*ents N ATIOfiAX. FUBLXiSHLNU CO.. Chi A AGENTS W L/ENTEN I 1". »'-.J "MC be tilled while bumina; instantly eitiS-ped. broken or upseu out as HW aa any Kiidrvsa for W Cts. Sold by all Drafr plode; cannot . - cuished if dropped gas. Mailed tf :my „--» --KUiil vista. A few atfeiitt. male and female. wanted. Pivnl ECLIPSE MANUFACTO CO., Cincinnati, LOVERSGUIDE HOW TO WOO. Ariof gaining love v. ing who and when yon pleaaa. Containuu: rulee tor •tliuetta of courtship, with direction* 1' 41.„ nf J<* Ksf IA hw (KewEditfoa* OB HOW T% _ W I N A N » ts of :.su jUj r«il-e -- "direction* showkng bow I* win the favor of tbe ItdW, bow to begin sad eod % oourtahip, and bow bf« abouM be wrtwatk C. N. V. No.ao WRITING TO.ADVKR uatfu