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THE JACKSON SANATORIUM

AT DANSVILLE, NEW YORK,

[LONG KNOWN AS "OUR HOME ON THE HILLSIDE,"]

FFERS an unequalled combination of natural advantages, therapeutic appliances, and favorable conditions for the sick and exhausted. It comprises a magnificent main building and twelve cottages situated in a woodland park on the eastern mountain slope overlooking the attractive valley, town and beautiful hills beyond. Location unsurpassed for scenery, healthful climate, pure air and water. Malaria utterly unknown.

The new main building, three hundred feet long and

ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF,

is designed to meet every need of the invalid, or seeker of rest and quiet, and is complete in sanitary details. It has light, airy rooms, safety elevator, electric bells throughout, perfect sewerage, best modern appliances in culinary department; abundant, varied and well-prepared dietary, extensive apartments for treatment arranged to secure individual privacy; all forms of baths, electricity, massage, etc., scientifically administered-Dr. Tailor's Swedish Movements, Instruction in Delsarte System of Physical Culture given by Mrs. Dr. Walter E. Gregory. The Sanatorium is under personal care and management of a permanent staff of experienced physicians, all graduates of leading regular schools in America. Skilled attendants minister to every need. Here is found comfort without care, and freedom from the taxations of fashionable life, with the helpful influences of a well-ordered Christian Home.

"The skill of the physicians and nurses has the successful history of years for its endorsement. The religious character of the life in the Hillside Home is unmistakable." Rev. CHARLES S. ROBINSON, D.D., New York City.

"Use my name for anything which can serve the interests of the Sanatorium. Do I not owe to it all that I am?" CLARA BARTON, Washington, D. C.

"I never lose an opportunity to say a good word for the Sanatorium."

PROF. R. H. THURSTON, Cornell University.

OPEN ALL THE YEAR. For Circulars, Testimonials and other information, address

J. ARTHUR JACKSON,

CORRESPONDING SECRETARY AND GENERAL MANAGER,

(Formerly Jackson & Leffingwell.)

Dansville, Livingston Co., N. Y.

By the Beacon (Boston):

"Writers of recognized authority are called upon incessantly to give in the pages of these Reviews prompt, decisive, trustworthy analyses of all the great questions as they arise, and the reader who follows them from interval to interval is qualified-and he alone-to judge fairly and honestly of the merits of the many schemes nowadays unfolded for the possible material, intellectual and moral advancement of humanity."

By the Colonist (Victoria, B. C.):

"The reader of the English Reviews has the advantage of seeing the great questions of the day discussed by the men who know most about them. An intimate knowledge of the subject treated on is by modern editors considered of more importance than mere literary finish. They therefore obtain their articles from the actors in great movements rather than from mere spectators or men who get their information at second-hand."

By Public Opinion (Washington):

"With their great mine of fresh and strong thought pertaining to every interest, it would seem that every American might read them with great increase in breadth of thought, culture and information."

TERMS TO SUBSCRIBERS :

NINETEENTH CENTURY, CONTEMPORARY REVIEW,
FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW.

Each $4.50; any two, $8.50; all three, $12.00.
WESTMINSTER REVIEW, $4.00 per year.

EDINBURGH REVIEW, QUARTERLY REVIEW, SCOTTISH
REVIEW.

Any one, $4.00; any two, $7.50; all three, $10.50.
BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE.

$3.00 per year; with one quarterly, $6.50; with two, $10.00; with three, $13.00.

LEONARD SCOTT PUBLICATION CO.,

231 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

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$2.00 Per Annum.

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Registered at New York Post-Office as Second-Class Matter.

London: B. F. STEVENS, 4 Trafalgar Square.

* IN THE WORLD.

FROM

Chicago, St. Paul,

Minneapolis, Duluth,

Superior or Ashland,

THROUGH

THE LAKE PARK REGION OF MINNESOTA,
ACROSS THE RED RIVER VALLEY,
ALONG THE YELLOWSTONE RIVER,
THROUGH YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK,
BY THE SHORES OF LAKE PEND D'ORIELLE,
ACROSS THE COLUMBIA RIVER and CASCADE RANGE,
FROM TACOMA, ON PUGET SOUND, TO ALASKA.

Send your address to CHAS S. FEE, Gen. Pass. Agt.

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Northern Pacific Ry., St. Paul, Minn., mentioning this LEONARD SCOTT PUBLICATION CO.,

announcement, and you will receive some handsome publications, giving particulars about this and other desirable trips.

Nineteenth Century,

JUNE, 1891.

CONTENTS:

The Opium" Resolution." By SIR JAMES F. STEPHEN, Bart.

On the Analysis of Voluntary Movement. (Illustrated.) By VICTOR HORSLEY, B.S., F.R.S.

A Description of Manipur. By SIR JAMES JOHNSTON,
K.C.S.I. (late Political Agent, Manipur).
Social Aspects of American Life. By HAMILTON AIDE.
Hasisadra's Adventure. By Professor HUXLEY.
The Duel between Public Schools and Private
"Coaches." By WALTER WREN.
Mohammedan Women. By MRS. REICHARDT.
From the Albert Nyanza to the Indian Ocean.
Lieutenant W. G. STAIRS, R.E.

Tsar. v. Jew. By the COUNTESS OF DESART. Witnesses to the Unseen. By WILFRID WARD.

By

The Bombardment of Iquique. By ARCHER P. CROUCH.
Morocco: the World's Last Market. By CHARLES F.
Goss.

Is Free Education a Bribe? By T. E. KEBBEL.
The McKinley Bill. By ANDREW CARNEGIE.

PRICE, 40 CENTS.

LEONARD SCOTT PUB. CO.,

231 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

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GREAT

ROCK SLAND

DENVER

ROUTE

MAN CITY

A Vacation Trip

TO THE

ROCKIES.

"Manitou and the Mountains" have become household words, and when one nowadays contemplates a summer trip, the popular point, Manitou, at once comes to the front in the minds of all, and the decision in nine cases out of ten is, "Yes, to Manitou we will go."

THE CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC R'Y runs Through CarVestibule Trains from Chicago to Colorado Springs, and on fast trains are Through Day Coaches, Through Chair Cars, Through Pullman Sleepers and Dining Cars.

At Colorado Springs, which is virtually at foot of Pike's Peak, there is an electric line to Manitou (six miles away), and one can leave the Springs at any quarter hour interval. There are steam roads also from Colorado Springs to Manitou.

An excellent plan is to take carriage at Colorado Springs and drive to Manitou, taking in en route the Garde 1 of the Gods, so widely advertised, and in which are such wonderful sights, and the detour on this route is but little, and the tourist is well repaid the time and trivial increased expense.

But on arrival at Manitou the climax is reached in delightful drives, babbling brooks, lovely lakes, and cool corners in the shady parks that abound at this foot hill village.

We can not begin to tell you of the wonders and beauties of this popular resort, but just mention another feature that overtops all. It is the new railroad built from Manitou to the top of Pike's Peak, and in a Railway Car you can now be Carried to the Clouds-Cheaply, Speedily and Safely.

Take a trip via the Rock Island Route to Manitou, Colorado, in your summer vacation. E. 8T. JOHN, JNO. SEBASTIAN, Gen'l Manager, Gen'l Tkt. & Pass. Agt, CHICAGO.

Permission to reprint entire articles from this Magazine is withheld.

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