2 BUFFALO LITHIAWATER In Lithæmia. John V. Shoemaker, A. M., M. D., Professor of Therapeutics and Materia Medica, and "Fannie S., aged 13, a school girl, was in bed with swollen knee and ankle joints, fever, and in fact, the usual vas a gouty tendency in the parents, I gave her BUFFALO LITHIA WATER dose-ounce ours, the interval increased to 3 hours as the symptoms subsided. This was followed by relief from all the symptoms, with free action of the skin and kidneys. In the first week she entered an easy and PERIODIC ATTACKS OF GRAVEL. FR "Julius R., 52 years of age, a commercial traveler, complained of passing gravel, lumbar pain, and a slight acrease of temperature. The urine contained crystals of uric acid with urates, and a small amount of lbumen. No casts detected. He had been subject to similar attacks for four or five years, probably connected With irregularities in eating. He was every two hours, with or iven two ounces, afterwards four, of BUFFALO LITHIA WATER y attention to diet. This gave immediate relief, followed by recovery." LITHÆMIC DIABETES AND ECZEMA. "Lizzie C., aged 44, had a chronic eczematous eruption upon different parts of her body; also acidity of the tomach. Her urine contained considerable proportion of sugar. She was directed to live principally upon green directed to WYOegetables, poultry, and fish. Fresh-air exercise as also insisted upon. Three or four glassfuls of BUFFALO LITHIA WATER bertakere every ay. All the symptoms were alleviated, and she steadily improved. When her stomach was in a ANEQndition to bear it, she was given ergot and iron, and the disease has thus been kept in abeyance." DE his Water is for sale by druggists generally, or in cases of one doz. half-gallon bottles, $5.00 f. o.. b. at the Springs. Descriptive pamphlets sent free to any address. Springs open for guests from June 15th to October 1st. PROPRIETOR BUFFALO LITHIA SPRINGS, VA. AND DANVILLE RAILROAD. ON THE ATLANTIC in the Typeonied 826 Fifteenth St. ille, 213 Up 2nd St. City, 917 Walnut St. kee, 122 Grand Ave. polis, 329 H'pin Ave. SALES AGENCIES. Mexico City, Ignacio Carranza. New Orleans, 522 & 524 Common St. San Francisco, 807 Market. Washington, 1205 Penn. Ave. Druggists, Plumbers, and Dealers in Hardware Household furnishing goods. 26 The Atlantic Monthly Advertiser. Recent Religious Books Moral Evolution. By GEORGE HARRIS, Professor in Andover Theological Seminary. The general result to which Dr. Harris conducts us is the reassuring conviction that in the mar and religious history of the world the tide bears on to the realization of the divine and human ideas in an advance on the lines of Christian ethics and toward the realization of Christian ideals of fath, life, and duty. - The Independent (New York). Christian theorists who have been troubled by the theories and claims of evolutionists will find ar antidote for their troubles in this marvelously clear and lucid exposition of the claims of both essential Christianity and evolution, and of the perfect harmony which exists between them.-Boston Advertiser The Expansion of Religion. Six Lectures delivered before the Lowell Institute. By E. WINCHESTER DONALD, D. D., Rector of Trinity Church, Boston. 12mo, gilt tep, $1.50. It is a very good book; any thoughtful person will feel that his money has been well spent r buying it and his time in reading it. The general impression it produces is excellent; the writer is reverent and earnest, brave and outspoken, unconventional and yet not wholly unconservative or destructive. . . . Even though we disagree with certain of Dr. Donald's propositions, his book s thoroughly interesting, and in a very high degree brave and outspoken; and we trust it will receive a very hearty welcome. The Churchman (New York). Visions and Service. Discourses preached in Collegiate Chapels. By the Right Rev. WILLIAM The Christ of To-Day. By GEORGE A. GORDON, D. D., Minister of the Old South Church, Every chapter, and almost every page, is noteworthy. . . . He discusses the profoundest truthand mysteries of nature and religion with a breadth and force of grasp, a just discrimination, and als a tender appreciation of actual human needs, which few, even among modern leaders of thought, have exhibited in an equal degree. Henceforth he must be conceded a high place among them. - T Congregationalist (Boston). Christ's Idea of the Supernatural. By Rev. JOHN H. DENISON, D. D. Crown 8vo, $2.00. A book which may well be set beside Bushnell's "Nature and the Supernatural," or Drummond's "Natural Law in the Spiritual World." . . . It is impossible within the limits of a brief notice t give any adequate conception of the stimulating quality and spiritual suggestiveness of this thought ful book. Springfield Republican. Ruling Ideas of the Present Age. By WASHINGTON GLADDEN, D. D. 16mo, $1.25. Dr. Gladden writes with so much knowledge and spiritual force that he can afford to indulge repose in style. Every paragraph in his "Ruling Ideas of the Present Age" is instantly intelligible, and yet we are led to consider some of the most profound thoughts about life and duty. — Chicago Dial. The Spirit in Literature and Life. By JOHN PATTERSON COYLE, D. D. Crown 8vo, $1.50. One must say that the book is one of power, marked by broad reading and evident originality in thought, and is bound to be of great service to thinking men. The author has grappled with modern questions and has discovered an answer by the use of modern methods. - Biblical World (Chicago) HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY 4 Park Street, Boston; 11 East 17th Street, New York. CORNEASE Cures Corns It isn't cheap, but it cures. It don't cure in Sold everywhere, or by mail, post-paid. LARK JOHNSON MEDICINE CO. 17 LISPENARD ST NY. Prof. I. HUBERT'S MALVINA CREAM For Beautifying the Complexion. Removes all Freckles, Tan, Sunburn, Pimples, Liver Moles, and other imperfections. Not covering but removing all blemishes, and permanently restoring the complexion to its original freshness. For sale at Druggists, or Bent postpaid on receipt of 50c. Use MALVINA ICHTHYOL SOAP 25 Cents a Cake. Spend the Summer at DEER PARK On the Crest of the Alleghanies, Τ SEASON OPENS JUNE 22d, 1896. HIS famous mountain hotel, situated at the summit of the Alleghanies, and directly upon the main line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, has the advantage of its splendid vestibuled express train service both east and west, and is therefore readily accessible from all parts of the country. All Baltimore and Ohio trains stop at Deer Park during the season. There are also a number of furnished cottages with facilities for housekeeping. The houses and grounds are supplied with absolutely pure water, piped from the celebrated Boiling Spring," and are lighted by electricity. Turkish and Russian baths and large swimmingpools are provided for ladies and gentlemen, and suitable grounds for lawn tennis; there are bowling-alleys and billiard rooms; fine riding and driving horses, carriages, mountain wagons, tally-ho coaches, etc., are kept for hire; in short, all the necessary adjuncts for the comfort, health, or pleasure of patrons. Prof.1.Hubert TOLEDO, O For terms apply to D. C. JONES, Camden Station, ป. ND AMERICAN GUIDE-BOOKS, By M. F. SWEETSER. Incomparable hand-books for the tourist."-N. Y. Evening Post. NEW ENGLAND. A Guide to the Chief Cities and popular resorts of New England, and to its Scenery and Historic Attractions. With 6 Maps and 11 Plans. Revised for 1896. 16m0, $150. THE WHITE MOUNTAINS. A Guide to the Peaks, Passes, and Ravines of the White Mountains of New Hampshire. With 6 Maps and 6 Panoramas, including the new Appalachian Club Map. Revised for 1896. 16mo, $1.50. THE MARITIME PROVINCES. A Guide to the Chief Cities, Coasts, and Islands of the Maritime Provinces of Canada. With 4 Maps and 4 Plans. Revised for 1896. 16mo, $1.50. "They are among the best examples of painstaking and thorough work of their kind. The fulljess of information is remarkable, and the arrangement, which closely resembles that of the famous Baedeker guide-books, is a model for its convenience of reference and clearness of topography. Many maps, large and small, and a full index add to the usefulness of the book." Sold by all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, by HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston; 11 East 17th Street, New York. BIRDS IN THE BUSH. Contents: ON BOSTON COMMON; BIRD SONGS; CHARACTER IN FEATHERS? ¦THE WHITE MOUNTAINS; PHILLIDA AND CORIDON; SCRAPING ACQUAINTANI MINOR SONGSTERS; WINTER BIRDS ABOUT BOSTON; A BIRD-LOVER'S APRIL: AN OWL'S HEAD HOLIDAY; A MONTH'S MUSIC. No more delightful sketches of bird-life have ever been given. . . . The writer's blithesomeness, y spirit, his hearty good cheer and genuine love of nature, added to a happy style, render every page nating. - Boston Advertiser. A RAMBLER'S LEASE. Contents: MY REAL ESTATE; A WOODLAND INTIMATE; AN OLD ROAD: Co FESSIONS OF A BIRD'S-NEST HUNTER; A GREEN MOUNTAIN CORN-FIELD: BERNS THE EYE; A NOVEMBER CHRONICLE; New England WINTER; A MOUNTAIN-SIRAMBLE; A PITCH-PINE MEDITATION; ESOTERIC PERIPATETICISM; BUTTERFLY PSYCHOLOGY; BASHFUL DRUMMERS. In thirteen sketches, led by a short, neat preface, we have here, by an author whose work we have learned to delight in, some very charming out-of-doors converse with nature. . . . In these bright ess we find that delicious optimism which we involuntarily associate with health of mind and body... feel the puff of a country breeze and smell the perfumes of tangled places before we turn a leaf. Hel brooks; old, almost vanished, wood-paths, windy mountain-sides and unkempt fields; the birds, the m sects, the flowers, the nests, the wild voices all are here with the added charm of human interest dashed through them by the fine grace and humor of the author's style. - New York Independent. THE FOOT-PATH WAY. Contents: JUNE IN FRANCONIA; DECEMBER OUT-OFDOORS; DYER'S HOLLOW; FIVE DAYS ON MOUNT MANSFIELD; A WIDOW AND TWINS; THE MALE RUBYTHROAT; ROBIN ROOSTS; THE PASSING OF THE BIRDS; A GREAT BLUE HERON; FLOWERS AND FOLKS; IN PRAISE OF THE WEYMOUTH PINE. A FLORIDA SKETCH-BOOK. Contents: IN THE FLAT-WOODS; BESIDE THE SPRING NOTES FROM TEN- Contents: AN IDLER ON MISSIONARY RIDGE; LOOK- Each time he gather.. a new volume we reahy more and more the weg tier reasons for his preeminence in a group : writers with whom naturally associates him, He is not merely a plilosopher and a saver happy things. He serves nature keenhe well as sympatheti sy. and with a spirit of a entific caution tha stamps his work with a value which the art ings of many a #" prominent ornitholiga will never possess. — The Auk. Sold by all Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, by HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY 4 Park Street, Boston; 11 East 17th Street, New York. ▷ CHARMING PAPERS ON THE ROBIN, WOOD THRUSH, EUROPEAN SONG THRUSH, AT-BIRD, BLACKBIRD, HOUSE Sparrow, etc. Not a page of her writing upon her especial subject can be spared. Never was bird-study a sincerer thusiasm; never had the birds a more patient, appreciative, affectionate observer. If they but knew her she is, what songs they would sing in her honor, how frankly would they welcome her into their private e To Mrs. Miller each bird is an individual, and all his traits are studied with considerateness as kindly the observation is minute and unvaried. - Providence Journal. N NESTING TIME. ▸ Contents: BABY BIRDS; BIRD-STUDY IN A SOUTHERN STATE; THE MOCKING BIRD'S EST; A TRICKSY SPIRIT; THE WISE BLUEBIRD; The Golden-WING; A STORMY VOOING; FLUTTERBUDGET; O WONDROUS SINGERS; A BIRD OF AFFAIRS; THE LUE-JAY AGAIN; VIRGINIA'S WOOING; FRIENDSHIP IN FEATHERS; THE ROSY HIELD; THE BIRD MYSTERY. A book both for lovers of birds and for lovers of literature. Read by one who loves both, it is not only itertaining, but fascinating in the extreme. — Boston Daily Advertiser. LITTLE BROTHERS OF THE AIR. VISITS TO THE HAUNTS OF KINGBIRDS, FLICKERS, REDSTARTS, BLUE-JAYS, HRUSHES, BOBOLINKS, WOODPECKERS, SCARLET TANAGERS, AMERICAN GOLDINCHES, AND OTHER BIRDS, NEAR THE GREAT SOUTH BAY ON LONG ISLAND, IN THE EIGHBORHOOD of GreyLOCK, AND IN NORTHERN NEW YORK. One of the most delightful volumes about these feathered heralds of the spring that could well be ritten.... More fascinating than a story, and brimming over with delicate humor and exquisite descripThe Union Signal (Chicago). on. A BIRD-LOVER IN THE WEST. BIRDS IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS (LARGELY IN COLORADO), UTAH, AND OHIO, In a thorough understanding of bird nature and in the faculty of accurate observation this writer is not irpassed by any naturalist of the time, while the charm of her style renders her sketches of wrens, redrds, chats, and the rest as fascinating as a fairy tale. — Chicago Inter-Ocean. FOUR-HANDED FOLK. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS. The greater part of the book is taken up with descriptions of monkeys kept by the author as drawingom pets, a kinkajou or "night-monkey," two or three frisky lemurs, a group of marmosets, a spideronkey, and so on, the narrative being rounded out with chapters on that remarkable chimpanzee, Mr. rowley, and with notes on the peculiarities of baby monkeys.... Their various traits are depicted with nfailing patience and sympathy. This is a book that ought to be a source of almost inexhaustible enterinment.- Boston Beacon. For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by the Publishers, 4 Park Street, Boston; 11 East 17th Street, New York |