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10 THE CHICAGO: TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1877"—TWELVE PAGES. 3 WonFm the shrub named Dubolaia n?‘rr- yoodii. The plantgrowssparsels from the Daring dyer and Barcoo to West Auatralla, in the ¢ ; scrubs of the desert, aud is allied to a species llmunrllnf fn the forest-lands of Australia nnd 'g’uwl Quincs, which was discovered by Bfvon {ueller. Of this, the D, \I}'n’pnmldc,‘, the Baron writes n the Anstralian Medical Jonrnal: We never anspeeted any ruch extraordinary proo- ortics in 1t a4 are now establisbed for the later dis. covered epeciea. ., . The natives of Central Anatralia chew the leaves of Duboiaia loprvoadil, nat o8 the Peruviana and Chiliane masticate the eaves of the Coca (Krythroxzlon Coca), to invig- orate themselves darfug their long foot-jeurneys throngh the deserts, ] am not certain whether the aborigines of stricts in which the Pitury grows ara renlly sware of fts atimniating power. Thosa tiving on the Ilarceo teavel many days' journer to obtain this, n them, precious follage, which 1s tarried nlways abont by them, broken fnto small fragmenta and tied npintittle bags. 1t is not im- roliable that & now, s pehaps important, medic: rnll plant s thas gained. The blacks use the Duboiria to excite thetr courage in warfaro; o large dosc infuriates them, BRIEF NOTES, Nature agserts ns one liaving anthority, that the Paris Internatfonal Exposition will not ho postpancd, nor will M. Kranz resign hls offico as Director. The Russian Conncfl of Btate has granteds yearly sum of 2,000 rubles to the West Siberlan Branch of the Russian Geogruphlcal Bocicty, at Omsk. On the banks of the Amoar, In 8iberia, there exlsts the most ample development of Jurassic plants yet known. Elghty-three different specles have been {dentified, among which are three which still exist: The Asplenium, Thy- sopterls, and Dickeonta. Canifers and tropieal forms predominate in the collection. Dutte, a mining district recently doveloped In llonumu,‘ ylelded last year 800 tos of ore, con- taining 35 per cent of copper, and fifteen ounces to the ton ot sfiver. Tue orea aro. oxides and copper-glance, and are surpassed in richness only by those praduced In the Clifton District, ‘on the borders of New Mexico and Arizona, In a recent lectore before the Paris Geogravh- leal Boclety, on the Pampas of Brazil, it was stated by the speaker, who was an American, that the Argentine Republic is bullding o strong wall to guard theso lauds against the incursions . of the Indlans, Tnso nlnlnfi. 20,000 squarc miles of good gruzing ground will be reclalmed, A meteor was scen on the evening of the 16th of March, at the Cape of Good lope, which travcled slowly across the heavens, and, when it burat, sent forth myriad streains of fire, accom- panfed with a sound ke dlstant thunder, At one statlon where the metcor wus observed, a glow of heat was felt as it passed, and the {llu- mination lasted for nearly a minute. Capt. R. Gessi, tho ltallan explorer of Albert Nyanza under Col. _Gordon, is at Cairo, pre- aring for an cxpedition to the KEquatorfal akes on his own account. 1le will hu accom- panied by amnturalist and plmta{.:mphcr and wlll study on the routetlic ncteoralogy, anthro- pology, and natural listory of the country,— takiug vicws of the most interesting objects by the way. e FISH-CULTURE. At the April meeting of the Chicago Academy of Sciences, Prof. Albert Do Hager read tha fol- Jowing Intereating paper on flsh-culture: SHAD (ALOSA BAPIDISSIMA). In June, 1405, the lato Judgo Bellows, of Cone cord, N, 1., drafted a resolutlon, which was adopted by the New Hampshire Lezislature, then acarlon, saking the Gavernom of tha sureral New- Englond States to sccarc the nppojntment of Com- misalonera to examlue and roport on the feasibliily of restocking the Cennecticut and Merrimac Hivern with ahai and zalmon. Theea tlsh were sbnndant inboth etrcama prior Lo 1K00, atont the time high dams were bult, - Since then, salmon had cutirel disappeared, and shad wera'very scarce, in botl rivers. Commistioners wero accordingly npe pointed, and under thele direction, In the summer of 1807, a mucceasful experiment was mado st hatching shad in the Comnecticut Itiver, ab o}~ ke, Masn. From that ond subscquent experi- ments many facts have been elicited, to which [ will brleiy icfer in thin paper. The ova and milt sre casily obiained by lightly preesing the aldes of b ** rije " fah near tho anal openin. Tho ova. wlien fest pressod, are faccld nnd jelly-like, and not individualiy perceptible to tha Touch: but, nfter being bronght into contact with the willt of the male fish, and gently stirred in water, Inatin Jam, from ten to twenty ainutes, iey became quito solid, and are easily recoynizo by “eight and touch. After thls procoms of im- reznation, tho exgs arc double thio aize they were heforo,—of a_Lioney-yellow color, and read¥ 10 bo depontted in the hatching-boxes, 'The Latching. bo fs about two fect long, one foot doup, and one foot wide, with n hottoin of fino wire-cloth of abont twenty-aix mesties (o tha fncl, Theaa boxes aru_nnchored In (he river, whero there s gontly-running carrent, and by ieans of floats are tilted np ao that the water strikes the n- clined guujze, or bottom, and, passing throngh it, pro- duccs » circu'ntion, or ediy.like motlon; and the egis, baving a gravity bt Aittle greator thsu vuw,r.dnlrr"kcm 10 mnotloy, aud constuntly siue pended fn f1. Tlie ova from a **ripe™ ahind will caver the hot- tom of a_hatching-box, and number about 20, 000, "To nscertaln thie, we find tho apzs averago from ouc-ninth to vne-cighth of an Inck in diametor. Tf cleht esua placed linn mako an inch, sixcy-four will caver a squaro nch, and 18, 452 will cover two equare feet. 11t requires nino'to make an inch in h, eighty-one will covera xquare inch, and 24,728 will be requirud to_cover wo aquars foes, or the bollom of the box. Twenty thousand sconia to bo a falr overage, . The temperaturo of the water required for snce cenntui® whiad-hatehing 18 abont 70 dey. Fahren- 1fthe temporatuze s below 64 dog., the czis become npaque and white,-~asnr fndication that they nro dead, Eggs will ntch In water st & fempeentuze of 82 dez.s but the deselopment I prematute, nnd the young fry hiave not suticient vitallty tolive. ‘Tho peridd of incubation in water 2170 deg. Is abont three doye, At BO deg. thoy hatch insisty Lourt, At U5dog, It required four tonix dayx. * “lie umbilien] sack, from which the (nunfl fry at ly nbe frat obtain theiz nonrishment, ls whol oroed fua fow doys. The young fish, at this stago not mote than lalf an Inch In lenzth, sro obliged to weck thelr own {o0d, ns no one has beon able to FUPDLY 4 projiersabstitite, That they flud anabund. ance “of minulo forwme of life in the river- waler, ia wvident from thelr oapner of awhnming, god alwo from thelr rapid growth. whilo fo"the rervico of the United States Mish Comminelon Jast July, st lolyoke, Mars,, wo caught witli o tine-meehed net i lotof fish for the Ceniennial Exponition, Among them wore about twenty young shad. ~Thess could not liave been moro ‘tian #lx weeks of were two Inches Jong. They remain in fresh water till they are abous thrce Inches long, when they s to Lo aca, the youug shad leave the Conneetls cut prior to the 18t of Octol They remaln tn #alt water ] they become mature flsh, 1t seums warentlal to the ranld growth, I not indoed the ex- fetcnce, of all snadromous tian, thut thoy £o to ralt water. ta have been made with no one has been able ali; but “the llen, e Jerome, the efiiclent Suputine ndent of Uigherles for — Michigan, has ket salmon oud fed them in his ponds, and proyed thereby that they do not grow much more rapldly thun “ordinary” trout tealio fontinalis, ) duseph Guudtellow, of Mirhmichs, N, B, fn 1808 canglit a fot of malmon in Boptember, put'them lnto a larga pond, ond with 8 welue catght_them wot and expreescd the wpawn from them fu November, and put them hack with hope 16 Keep thew thers il tue next scason. Althoigh food woa stindant in the pond, the salmon woukd not eal, and most of them became invre szeletons. the ezt summer, ond died. “The othera ho turned (uto tho river, snd they went to the sea. It uppears, therofore, that the sea {s tha home of ail mature auadrom fish, and that the unty rea. frequent fresh water {s for the pur. cltuzand peryetusting thele suecles. there Lty will not haten i 3 From ihe fact that uvery shnd-produ g atran has it own pecaliar varfoty, it 1 evident thatabad, 1! retarn to thetr positthelrova, In con. Armation of (hls, it may bo wald that the sliad of the Kt Joun's Rlver, Florlda, are unlike tliose of the Connecticut and’ other Northern nivers, and uature enrller. ‘They suter tho river about the 1st of Decenber, and cantine (1) the et of Aprll, In the Counecticut, they aupear ju May, and we took thew Jantsummer InAugust, (We saw soniv at Bouth's in October, ) An Lefore stated, tho first artidelal h:l:hln\g n ery th Connccticut was in the sumioer of 1807, ew sliad were fu the stream during that and the next two years. lu the apring of 1570 the rlyer was lterully ulive with whud.” Such hauls a8 were made Ly the lucky fshesmen who clianced o bave ue were never beforu secn, ported, on the a thority of Frof, 8. ¥, llaird, that on the 2id of May, st Saybrook, Conm., 2,800 shad wers taken from one net, or pound; spd, at another polut fu that vicinity, 3,560 wero captured at o singlo haull Theso W v evidently the same sk that hud been artldelally hatched threw years bes fore at Holyoke. No wbad entered the “Thames, Housatunic, of suy otber stream from the Saund — showing that theau were nok stragiless, willing to giller any aireun, but wera uatived of the Conneet- feut, ou their way to thelr native epawnipg-beds. This remurkable {faflux of siad proved tho identity of the the fuct that it requires three years for suad {0 mature; and al40 tbat artiticial propa- Katlon of fan, if properly conducied, can be wade B success, Not wore than 5 per cent of Imprecusted cege shn:ll in hatching-boxes fall to hatch under vr- inury clrcumastances, Under favorable clrcum- slancey, the perceatsge of lus ls cvon lees than fuls ¥ buve wen sbox conlainiug 20,000 cypee iu whichs thers was ot 8 desd ove. O the Otier baxd, Itls probablo that not G per cent of the eitze duyusited by the fbb natarally, ever batch. A large percentaze, probably 50 per cent, do not be- como Impregustéd; others are caten by o, cels, water-funl, etc., or killed by muddy water aa vthes (atal eurrounding: ‘tho adult shad 13 3 very tender fish,—s0 easily Kilied that, ax a rule, ou belnx landed from tho net, be will not Mve If tarued back futo the river, We often tried, lust suwmer, to kecp them allve by puttlug them Loto water: but, anowalous us it way wipesr, they dld live us loug'as vome did that we Iaid upon tha dry bottom of a bost, orupon the banke of the siream. The yonng ahad, abont a month old, that we caneht for the Centennial, and rent by experienced men, all died bnt ono hefore thelr arrivat in Fhiladelphia; and he snrvived the Journey only a few honra, Tint the yoang shad, scon after thoy emergs from the ege, arc mors {enacions of 1ife, can en. dore more exposure, and be Ltransported and **planted " in distant stresms that Are sitasted to their requircments, Iast snmnier we shipped from Holyoke, Mass,, In ten Aifly-quart cane, 100,000 yonng ehad, that were safely depotited in the Sacramento ftiver, California, We alto sent, nnder the anspices of the United States Fish Commission, young had to every Nouthern State excapt FIoFida ani Texas, Innearly every instance thore was no material loas of fish on the rontes, An no food 18 ever foand In the stomacha of shad caurht in fresh water, it s inferred that they eat nothing from Lhe time they enter the rivers till they retuen to the sea, —a period of reveral weeks. Vhen they enter and nscend rivers, they are solld, and of good flavor; bt & **idown-runnee™ i4 poor, flaccid, and nafit for the tabl In what part of the sen they live, or upon what they feed, sross yet untolved questlone, Tiey aren toothlees flah, like the whitefiah, and proba. y, like the latter, fced npon minute forma of mollnsca and crustacea, Prof, 8, ¥, faird, Uni- tcd States Fish Cominirsloner, and Prof. J. W, Milner, his eilicient and very capabio assistant, are making carofnl investigations, and will doubt* lc=8 solve tnese and many other equally interesting and valuable problems rclating to fsh-culture. To test the question whether shad will live and thrive without gony to salt watet, they hava made soveral depoeits in nivers um[}tg’\g'i Into the great Tnkes, In the mmmer of rof, Milner deposited, ns an upn\'hm-nll a large number of young shad In the Calumet River. Under ondi- {mry clrcumstances, they shonld have retnmed to it ast summer; but, A8 faras {s known, nuna canie. Tt s to bo hoped that, if any are caught tho ensn- Ing spring or summer, the fact will at onco he commnnfcated to Prot. Balrd or Prof, Milner, of the Smithaonisa Institution, Wasnington, and the fisls be carefnlly pescrved. An tha succens of flsh-calturs depends In a great meaanre npon the powerful and controlling in< Inct that directs the maturs fish to return to theie llvalrnwnlnl:-bcdnl will refer to o few lu- stances in proof of thls pecaliarity, Urwnthg suthotity of Mr. Ashworth, of En- gland, it ia said that **The Lar! of Dun- mote _caughl, on hin pmpnrl{ in tho Islo of Harris,—one of the llebrides, —somo twenty or thicty salmon, Thess he marked, and carricd allve In his yacht to the opposite aide of the Island, wnere they were turned into o lake, In the conrsc of the snine reason it was ascertained that sume of theee same flsh had coms back again throngh the pathlcas waters of the great Atlantice, prasing soveral sivers In thelr journcy, up which they mlght have gon had they not preterred thelr nutivo stream, " Another Instance to which T will refer {s given by the Hon. Charles Barrett, of Orafton, who wae four years associated with me as Commiealoner of Pislicries for Vermont. He had a suwnll trout. pound on his land, which, In the Ts‘lt }relhol.l of October, 1BGD, was swept entirely nway. After the fiood had sobsided, ho took his fishing-lackle and went down tho stream with hope to find his flsh, saversl of which be could recognize atsight. Huthe found none in the stream, and concluded that they had Dbeen swept down In the Connecticat River some wix mllcs below. Heveral small streams enterod the ono into which his fish ltad cecnpod, and from one of those ho had orginaliy cavelit most of the trout, He rubscquently went to thl4 stream, the maonth of which, | think. was the fuurth ona down the stream from his pund, and there found wmany of his pet fish, but not ono In any other stream. It s the apawning-ressun for trouty and. {hey had ;e‘l‘nmfll to the beds upun which they hadbecu ched, 1 1807 T vielted the hatchery of the Canton of Neufchatel, Switzerlund, Prof’ Vagwa, who had charge of tho worke, told me that the fishing In Lake Nenfchatel was much belter ot points near whore they turned their young fry lovse than in otlier parts of tho lake.” llg further stated that the tncrenso of fish at that point had beon greut rinca they commenced sticking tho lake artificial- 1y, butin other pacts it wae hardly perceptiule. It i & well-known fact ainong fahiermen that the hest faling-grounds are in the vicinlty of spawn. fng-beds. In viow of this fact, oid ap. preciuting tho value of artificial propa tion, tho peoplo of Michigan have i actlve measures to increase the nimber of edible fishin the lnkes bordoring upon and within the State. The Snperintendent. the Ilon. George I Jetome, 4 now, or swas recently, distributing whitefish that were hatchod during the last winter, 1am unsble to give the number of ilsh that were hatehed by the State durinzthe winter Just pasecd but, the year before, I visited the State hatch- erics, and saw 80U,000 California ralmon in the hatchery at Detrolt. Tho yoang fry were deposit- ol instreams, ponds, and lakes, in and bordering upun the State, ‘Twenty to twenty-fivo ycara ago the people planted ‘ont orchurds, and already .\llcn|§nn v vecome notod s a frult-producing State. In clos- Ing this popor [ venturo to predict that in twenty years from now the retarns from the fial now beinyg planted fn Michizan will bo zreater than 1t has beon rons the young orcharda; and, it the enterprisc of fNishi-culenre 1s ns porsiatently nnd judicluusly care rled on aa it has been durini the last threw years, that the acres of watcr in the State will be mado an productive, the harvest ne sure, and the prodis ns fereat, na ate an cqual number of ucros of (And cov- vux‘l, \vith apple-trees, wheat, corn, or uther farm- 0 s, A JUNE FRESHET, **And what leso rare as a day (o Juner* A 2 iimee thissett Loteelt, Ah! **what ls a0 raro as a day In June?" Days without aun, and nights without moon: Birda without vong, and buds withont bloon; When both Heaven ond Enrth seau out of tane, ‘The clowds hang lotr §n the threatening sky, And not s spot of tho green earth in dry, KEach tremb Imi twig and towering tree Ia droopine wnd #ad, and seciny 10 bu Bighing snd weepiug, not to bv consoled, Or flattared, or coaxud, or soothed, or cajoled. Dty after day, this unwelcome guest Prolonzs its sad stay, without a. requont, And will not be dured or frightened away 1y refiections, or thrasts, or tauntings of May, OF lint of November, wlien wo always expoct Huch weathor, in arder to make us roflect On the end nf all things, of coming old age, Aud the swilt-dylng year our fancies vngage. O what in so changing, fo -mry:'n and capriclona,” Ko chnnining, eo luring, so wild, and so viclous, 4 this t;;:mky young danmisel, the overy.day weather, lndequndtm and sancy, carlng not whether Bhe e rash and tornionting, provoking and teas- n Or Nnnglnd invitlog, or smiling and plearing: 8he ia fickle and flerce, #ho ta buld and defylng: 8ho carca ot far the slek, the holploas, o dying; 0 power can chanzy hor whitns or her fancy— No skl of magiclan, or urt of necromancy: Aht **what js o rarc an a day In June?* For who can tell haw swift or how »oon ‘Thin zay yannz firt may chango ner tune, And bright tnopes he dashedl t endlens doom? ‘This chungrablu creatury, this charming coquette, l)l 111 at easc in hor new coronct Of ros [l al t Blio wtepn forth at dewn in gorgevus array, “And smiitngly bowe t0 har wwest siater 30ny, Like & haughty young Queen, as atio socmia 'to say, *3 Your race ls rin—be ming this gind day. " That ler nr\'ly-lunnd honore Liuve tuzned her falr o i And, ero tin dow te dry on her sweet-acented bed., Bhe hraatening sud frowaing with soger aud acorn, And eachs Llushing rose is trombling, farlorn, Her braw Is o'erclonded, her eye fushing o, Her voica is uplifted in decp-toned | And June, amiling Juoy, the sweuvtest and rarcat, 11as Tust al) bier chariny, ‘the freabest and fatrest. Eruwoun, 11, June 1), 1877 A, REFORMING HER DIET, v the Ediior of The Tribw Cinicauo, Juno 1G.—1t has Leon ohserved that more than balf the marricd ladios of Chlcago, who board, live only to eat, dress, und **loll" nround frum one Lot meal until another wteains Lefuro (hea, » On the West Blde, o **lusbands' Reforn Club" have threatened their wives that, In case of untimely geath from the above. causes, they shall have but o one-horas hoarso, without plumes, and be dlsgraced with the followingdoggerel vpon their head-stonca: Stay, lady, ere {on drop that tear Abuve the pale form lying here, And learn, if you'd niot dia {u!. ‘That (he cause which lald my lavo thus low, Hencath the datuicennd Lo snaw, Waa fierafernatly~bad Diet. Spiced pickles, and bixcnit hot and cold, uw bread, and jolllus sut 1o mold, Not naming 4o cakes und plo eat, Helped condlments of every wort, ‘I'iat could with cash or cura be bought, ‘T'o make up her rich Dict, would drink, ter snd coffee o tor i black as printer's iok— trouy but she would try it} A T ey R uts, cloy ulls, ang vines Au, aught denlod, ‘she'd Luy 1 v At last her systom did give way Under the Bges uf AIUCIY— ** My form duth sbrink "' (sho'd sigh 1) ¢ And Nature, finding it no uae, i The **silver cord " becoming 10ose, o Perforce bad o untie it, How, lady, you may drop the tear Which yul’:‘\r’- reatralned x\vhlla lingering here; but iy woral, plcats apply 1t: Don't eat tvo wuch this day (b June, But let your husband huos his tune, Nor a1l his vy, atmoru oruoon, ‘With funcral-biils, lest ruu dle soun From your accursed Dict| J. A, Batowis, A Fuu-Mlsser, oo Fork iorta. Charles Johnsou,” sald Justice Wandcll, st tho Jeflerson Market Police Court yesterday, S you Lave becn under the influcuvo uf Nquor, Now, wbydo you drink{ It docen’s do you any good, und you sce the troublo you get jato. Heéro Ia G0 years old, aud never touched o dmgo( liquor.’ You've mlssed an swlul ot of fun, Judge,” sald Charles, sadly, 4 Ten days,” nid the Court, steraly. THE TTOME. THI BABIES. [ Dedteated to All the Mathers in the Land.] 4*The denarcat, swestest little mite Thit ever came o earth 1™ (That's what the mother saye, yon know— ‘Taxe It for twhat i1’s worth, ) ¢ So canning, and xo caroful "tia, "Twas never known to fall.* (Mercy! that msas a fearfnl thump; And graclons! swhat a squallt) **The aweetest little temper, too, A child did e'er possess. ** (Your halr did get an awfn) pall— I'he baby's **mad," 1 gnees.) 4 Jaet feel ita pretty, even teeth— 1t nerer hites, yon knot, (O whew! It Aas real pretty teoth, Aund neter bites, 0 noty ! Then nce the bamps upon its head~ Fowler predicts peeat fame, " (Yea! yen! the old backataies, 1 think, Could tell us whenee they eame, ) **And fan't It a wonder great Ilow one s0 young can speak?' (It 14 rea) amart, for | declaro T'he young ane's talking treek.) “* 1t {8 40 sharp *~arannd the teel! ** So graceful "~when It falls; 44.50 gentle “"—hen It graepa your balr; 4% S0 pretty "—when ftsqualls. M, Q. IIOUSEITOLD ADORNMENT, Tv the Editoy of The Tridune. Critcano, June 15.—~0ne of our humorons new s- paper sriter latsly described the plan of a hoase drawn by 8 woman srchitcet which had seventeen ‘hay windows and nn chimney anywhere. In sapite of thirsatire I believe that if women ever study the profeselon of srchitectarn In any numbers, our honses will gain both in comfort and beanty, De- sides an ample allowance of bay windows,— thoso traps to catch sunbenms,—we should have not only kitchens, atluent In shelves,— 1 know somebody who Is supposed to have a mania for sholves, -~drwers, and closets, bus we should have rooms with cozy racessos, decp wine dow-ecats, alaircases thatinvite exploration, halls that welcome the traveler, bedrooms that were planned with somo raforence to their use, door- knoba that will open and shut, and windows that will slide up and down withont taxing the strongth of allerculoa. At lcast we may fancy thatwe shall bave il these things in that happy timo com. Ing. without, 1 fear, any immedtate donger of hay- Ing uur fancies et at naught by the fact, 1In onr nld Kastern towns houses still exist which fond thumsclves kindly tu pictureaque decoration and furnlshing. There aro lofty, many-paned winduws, wiere quaint hangines may fitly wave to and fro, looking oat of deep recesses, and with broad window-scata whera lovers and friends may 1inger in dreamy talk; there aro massivo chimneya and quatnt mantels where ancient Easg Indian and Chincse ornaments, Lrought home by tho eca-golog sucestor, put to shamo the Aapanese craze of to-day; wide oaken stalrcases with heavy oatustradvs and broad laudings ot in. terrale, and abave, Ualconles with high, latticed railings, wherethy mananas of that olden time walted and watchod user the s0a for tho lover who came not back. 1 wo grow cnviona we havo only to comfort our- scives with the roflection that these multitudinous cluss-paned obstructed the vision, shut oat the Hlght, and were an cndiess trouble to keep clean, and go back to our own four ag two-paned window of plate-glass with a senseof ratisfactlon that, after all, we ftve In modern times and {n modern wayn, g Qur oater door may not be surmounted by o winged geifiin or flanked by two lons couchant, hut it awings easily on Its hinges; it may not bo of ook, but it 1s handsomely inod, and let us be thankful for the art which re- produces besuty at & humble price. T have no nymyamy for that eant atout ars which conalsts ca. sentlatly In holding it no far abuve the common oye that not vne humun soul in ten thousand can be Ligssed or helped by it. Thero has boen a vast deal of ciaap criticiam of 1mitations becanso they are Imitutioim, —criticiam that ns been thoughit- lewsly caught up by the muititude snd sumethnes oven indorsed oy those wito vitrht to know butter. You ure 1oy to linve your doors gralued, becauso custly wuods arc thorehy Imitutéd; you may not paint your fluars beown and vsenlsh them, Lecause shot (8 8 shant; yon muy not hanz paper on your walls, o repeat aifects In your drawing-rootns by wirroes, becausa tiese, tuo, arc dolusions, This nionsa of art. Truo nrt preaches no such io but rupresonts the beauty which is na llny the sunshine. What you want is Lenuty, —color, graceful forma, pleasant offects to wou tho eys and reat the acnec,—uand you lnve a riyht 10 1t'by whatevor mesus you can maxo it your own. Lut us go back to our front hall. The door has, houso let s Lope, uporchof sumosort, +hA without a poreh, " uuyw Iko dagvel, **16 liko 4 man Hoving passed under tho withuut oyebrows. * lmtol les us also hope thut we tind o sotuewhat spucious Interlor, ‘There shuuld be room for a tuvle, € posslble, for one of two chalrs and a nofa, an wmbrolla-staml and o swsll mirror; & window 13 u luxury, und one ur two plctures msy ve wively parioined’trum the drawlng-roou or patloe to en- rich the boll, tor sinull hallways the cubinet- mnkers have klndly deviecd a chalr which way ba converted Into au winbrolls stand; another makesa wtep-laduer, a convenlence appreclatud 1n every houschiold. Instend of the uxual batetree, a clusei, vasily ccaasible, With hooks for hata and coats, und & deawer or bwo for shawls, s alinost a noces- ity In burgtar-infested towns, It now wo carpot he hall watls some purs tinted caroct-crimson with. 4 muall black fgure, or moes-green that hos a yel- Inw glint under the sunshine, we have o tho hallattracilve at a very moderats cost, Itis the hall which gives tho et fpeodsion of & house, #nd If this bo shiabby tno lmrunl(un can hardly bs by evur wo prottily furnlahed rooms, nuys numulmd’. “*oiy isll fs only & liftle six entey.™ ‘Then all yuu can do is to pnt small-lignzed earpet cn the tloor, —not ofls hien {8 cold and uniuviting, but an ingrain cls, wince so finy a oIt you can afford to ronu! It 1¢ I8 Jike that of the parlar wiilch vpens frum It, the plecod, patchwark Juok of tho small antry Wi hia svoldod, 'Fio sofa for tha hall muay b miade like the ordinary {uned a1l over with nono “of 1 woodwork show- ing, or, If there ls o roceased window, a cushioned #ut Just liling the recess will be sull botter. Yuul are #o furtunate ns 1o posacss an old-fashlonsd thest, much as thoss that came over in the Mayfows er, and held the moduat roiuery of u ltoge Stundish, tho hall 1a the place for t. Thess autlque chests are very quaint uad curlous, and tielr deelgna uro Imn;::nrml and Intated in_rich wooda for the bomen of wealthy people, = Somo of them atand upon four, square, aolid feet; others have lon's claws for supporins saino have ons or two drawers at the batton, whils a heavy carved 1id shuts in the chost |‘mp=r. Alany vftheau odd cheate, which bad been degraded to hold carpenters tols, or hid uway in the gueret as receptacion fur rubblen, are ouli roclatined, polislied, aud ussigned to o place of Lionor, From tho ball we enter tha parlor or drawing. room. Hure everything: that 1s moxt beauthtul b the houso yatliers as lo its natural homo, 1f vno could always chovss uno’s coloring, b then ouo's wathetic sensu could bo satistied, Dut there b thia old curpet, chosun soms. tima ago, ond of acalor and dosign” that our waturer (uste ro- Jects, ‘Weinay not only not dlscard it, but womust tnx our Ingenuily to coux the worn place ta retiro from pubile view under the lounge, snd thu une 1uaiched plece o bu as unobirusive sa pusible, I thu culors of the carpet are dimn by time, wa anull nut shaine It all out of countenance by intro- ducing Uritllant hues in onr window drapery or cusilons. The brick reds, sombro greons, indizo bluea will givgricli and burmunious, undazzling effecte that will not be barmony with the faded carpets, I wo are furuishing for the tiret thue wo shall realize how bleased 19 he who bus nuthing, foe now Wu inay snlt our coale plusions und tastes. OF all dolurs, crimaon sevms most beautiful und sultable for a drawing-room, but ta Mlbers! use In steatibouts und rallroad cars huve forbldden it 1n the privata parlor, ' Yet wa iy bave a littloof It. With browi su the keynote, wo'inay have a tovch of crimson arof yollow, The lutter colur wurnw and glorities o room in the cold winter dua aven more thao crimson, and we have to remenibor that In our climate winter, or what s ry good lwltatlon of 1t, lssts nlus monthe fn av the year, 41" the furnitaro be old, we may hide ite shabbl- uess under covers of thuse bandsoinostufls In dack, rich colore and qualat figurca Iiko the ordinary Lrochio whawls, or with or cven unbleached muslin Hutinge of plaln Turkey-red, custly manage without calllag in the upholsterer. Th 0ld cover can bo takey uff, smoothed uscid &8 & pattera for lic now. New cavily Inevsted in pluce of the old, ! out of [l urn husks, curled hair, or suy acc materiu] used Lo give soltness aud soutidoess to the citslitous, ‘Chen cut & cover of strong, unbleached muslin and put it o, Aftorward the muterial choseu for the covering cau be nlcely adjusted. It wmay be tacked along the (ront with brass-headed natls, or the line of attachmcnt may bo cuncealed by a strip of brald. or fringe, urEImn. If you want tw taft it, you will require an upholsterec's acodic, It is over a fout loog oud curved. Torcad in wteong iucn twine sud pass the avedlo through from the bottem—if it {4 tue seut whicl is belog irvatod —slip on & bulton, or adjust a tuft and pass the ueedlo down, If the stafog materlal bo soft and Hlexibio, you will deaw tho thread tiht, and a deep indsutation will be the reault. If you have a little fuzcuuity and faculty you will fud your leunge fuite sa good aud ome as new, and you will have doue in & fuw bours what tho upholsterce would chargy you several dollars for. Cushloned chalrs 3y be waoaged 1o the same way. Cate- chise thelr constraction, notice whon you take thria to picces bow they are put togother, snd you will bave the wkill tolwitate sud even' fprove upon the uohulaterer. Fratcsof chalrs and tables may bo reauwed with @ ittle aré and small uz- pouse. All dust wust deat b carofully wipod duay with's dawp clotl. Plaia black waluut which nut vencored, oAy fret bo caretully r«lhhud aud then varnished, or siwply olled, Fur pollablng, procurs tho fnost !\nlverl:nd pnmice atone, Mix with water to sbout he censistency of cream and Apply with a eoft waolen rag. ft mnst be mbbed until all inequali. tien disappear. and 8 Amooth glonty anrface roe wards your labor. Now dry with a linen cloth and pallsh nrain with tripolf and sweet oll, Dry again; b with starch powder and polish again with the noft linen nntil the anrface ia as amooth aa bue- nished silver, Varnish with the best English conch varnish, applied with a largs braab, on boldly with a free hand, The room free from dust and at & tempersture of from 0 to U3 degrecs, ‘Tables aro komewhat moro diMenlt to deal with. 1fof walnut or mahogany they may bo treated as ahove, or If of plain teal they may be ebonized or inlald, or the lege, edges, etc., may bo ro trested, and the tops carered with crimaon, cioth Inid emooth and tacked ede with brass-headed nalls. For the patlor a round table of medinm slzo In desirable. Thir may have a Tarkisl table-cover, of one of ladies’ cloth, vt preseed Nannc) ornamented at honte by cretonne work, or embroldery in chainstitch, or bralding. ‘Thera shionld be two or three other ornamental tabice, thelr number depending npon tho aze of the room, and these may be cither ronnd, oral, ohlong, or octagonal in shape, For a dollar, a lite tla round binck walnnt table, twelve or fonrteen inches acrose, (may he bought, and this may be or. namented at liome i the manner above suggested, For ebonlzing, soft pine or whitewood is preferas blg to walnat, Bquare or oblong tables of thes materlale may be enriched by Sorrento woud carve fng, and then simply protected by ona or Lwo coals of amonth, transparent varnish, To ebonlae wood praceed an follows: **Toa quarter of A pound of best elze, In A stone pot, add watcr enough to caver it. Set it un the etove to melt, but do not let 1t boil. Now take three cents' worth of Jamp-black with a littlo blue-hlack to improve the color, and make it up with bollea linsced oll to the consinte ency of paste. Pour tho melted size npon this black pasts anl mix the two thoroughly togethor. Apply it to the wood whilo it Is yet warm and thickly enonch to give an appeacance of eolidity, When'it 1s quite dry varniah acconling to tho direc. tiane given above." Polishing adds greatly to tho beanty of the work, You may now brighten thus black ground by gilded and vermilion lincs, or by transferring decalcomanie pictires to tho sur- faco {(and varnish again), or (ou may cven gnm the puctnres to the surface with good effect, A mote artistic metnod I8 to trace A demgn upon the Lop of the tablo before eboulzing,—a bonlor and centre-piece,—for the bosder a rinning vino of lry leaves for example, and for the centre a handful of flowern, & apray of rones, uic, I'aint In oll or water colors,—If the former, uee tho valnta which come in amall tolea and mix with copal yarnish. Now ebonlze all but tho dealgn. and when the whole is dry, varnish as above Paluted furnituro i3 now aa fashionablo e It In beantiful, and commanda fancy prices, A small vbontzed cabinet, with branclies of peaches ani Jeaves onagold backeronnd on the pancls, tho drawers ornamented with vy leaves,—tho whole work capnbla of being exccated In & woek, —1s shown at the modest price of §050. The unpainted woodwork woild cost purhufin 250, Chuirs and tables aro offered at almost fabnloun prices, To imifate inlaying procecd thus: Drnw in Anublo lines a norder and design on a deal surface. Size with parchment alze, anid’then chonize all but the dasin. | Varnish and polish aud yoa have an ebony table Inlaid with white wood, ~ J‘or Inlaylng frory, paint the poftorn befors clionlzing with & mixturo of mara yollow and Chinese white. Cheas tables mld ba mare in this way, the alternato squnres balng sbonized, Gliding 1a not casy. 1t {a'well iobegin on something we do not mind spoiling. The gold-leaf comes Inehects In abook. Nevor cntoff more than {s needed for the moment—gllders nsa the thumb-nafl for this pirpose, tuenbne hack the lenf of the book just as farus you wish to divide the I kecp the hook closed fnthe left d, ‘e leaf is taken up with 8 equaro, fiat brusly, and applied. The'portions of the work to b gliled nrofeat patnted with o cont of yellow vchre and vormillon mixed with drying otl, “When thiin {s dry, add one, two, or tarea coata qf euld-stxe, lutting each coat idry boforo the next'ss put on, The goldeleat In to ba npplled when the siza fooin Junt ticky ta tho Anger. " The Jeaf ia pressedt down with a soft pad of cotton tied up i silk, and the superiuous guld brushed awny, What 18 rA\lud{;nld or bronze rllm. fanvery fair tmitatlon of gildfig, and is vaslly put on, The ornatentation hiere deseribed may bo ap- nlied to any kind of woodwork, —tloor panals, bed- Htonds, writing-tables, ctc,, and all the materinle mentlonod may ba bougnt ot un artlet's farnlshing Ktore. 10 not ba uigvardly 10 brushes, o your suceess tlepends largoly upon the exccllenco of thede, Pay the higheat prico and et the best, Thoy will [axt & long time with good care. 1f, Instead of dofug all thoss things for oursolves wo profor to buy thein ready-mado, thoro ia an alinoat bowlldoring varlety shown nt the shops. Besides the tompting chonized and flower-paintad furniture, thero urc solid binck walunt plecea In the Enstlake design wriler, which hi substantial homeliness of fts satisfactory for muny purpoacs ‘Tho chalrs and tabids stand upon four solid Jegs of thelr own, or are strengthened by nalid hraces Tn carved wood. Protiier thau theso are the Gotlic and Queen Anna designs, —the Gothie belig tha most nicturesquiaof all utylo, and the Quten Anno Iending ttsclf fo o graco and besuty to which (bao Eastiake makes na pretenalons, Anofiiceor lihrary table of this atylo, with drawers and pigen-huics clused 1n by pancls, 'snd Onlshod 1n the most thors ough and workmianliko fashlun, was o thing (o bo covoted, It lookod na if one'had w grandfather, and, morenver, as if it woull contlnuy to exist long afier the ‘manuscripta hiddeu away fn its ro- ceaves hal beon miperannated and forgoiten, Tho irico of this cholco pluco af furnishing was $00, bt tha dualer, who had something discouraying to say about tha fasta of this matropulls of the West, declurod himself ready Lo uccept [ta cost—375. Az M, Mare, . D, —_— CULTIVATL TITE MIND, Th the Kditor of The Tridun Neaoa, 1L, June 13. —[ hava read consllerable in Tho Howo in regard to women and 1iteraturo, and feel like adding my mite also. * Ibollave, with othiers, that It ls every woman's duty to caltlvate hor mental faculties by, 2o far as possible, making herself thoroughly acquaintod with substantial and roflning literaturo, nnd truly wish soms ono might be prompted to may something which wonld prove effcctiva in awakening wnany to a sense of tholr ob- ligation to thomselves, to thelr families, to God, and to the world at large, In this respect. Ilow many butterfllos of fasbions and family dolla we have who do not acem to realiza that thoy are placed hero for any greator or highor purpose than tobon headless figure to show off Anery, and to assnme helplesanosannd aftectstion, folding thelr waxen fingers langaldly, ciggling Incomsantly, and ncting {nalpid to the extrome in varlous other waye, Lifecol ashamed of such women, and when Ithink of thom alone wonder that mon glve ns women crodit for baving any sense at all; but T am happy to know thut all women are not so, but that many, many offor a striking contrast to them, and even somo who get tho crodit of heing shallow and. mero butterflica of fashion are tho posscssors of nory intelllzenco than woe at frst finagine they are, Do such wonicn as the formor clade olevate and enrich soclety! Do thoy make companionable wived, prudent mothors, “dlscroct honaekooperay In shork, do thoy make homa what it shonld be, or prove o boneilt to any one or anything? 1 am nuoaking now of & clase who have tinie and means 1o misko themselvea samebody, and (o assist others 1n & ke undertaking. 1 they wonld imprave tho opportunity this sge aftords then for menial cul- tare, it wonld Uroaden thelr viuws, deepon thule understanding, tone down thele wuywardnens, and glve themn an object In 1ife, theroby enhancing tholr happlnces hero and brightenlng tholr crowns In the 1ifu to come. And now comos anothor class who are not gifted with bountiful means (o assist hem in thiv uuders taking of montil finprovoment, and bave very Tittla time to give to the sttaimuent of knowledgos bat liternturd e 80 plenty now, and a groat many of the atandard authors have thelr worke in pame blot formn, which can Lo procured i very low Zurce, boaldes roliable wowspapors ars Ko abuns dant ihiat it scomas alniost supentious for muy one, unicsa they are in extremne pnvnu{.,t 10 ‘make scarcity of money sn excuss for not being able to obtain'good readlng matter. And even then, if one shows an Inclination to read and improve vno's self, it is seldom they cannot flud some ono to lead them A fow books to read. As to the time, do you 1 1 e moments a¥ you oukht, or do now bonuet re, B.,'s character, or do you pass tho timo {dly looking out of tho winduw thinking it not worth while to undertake any read. inz becanso you have onlyu moment or ‘two to sparet Wouldn't it bo wisor to gather up the pen- nlue, i you saw then scattered about until you had enough’to make dollars, than to pass thom cares leasly by saying peanies do not amount to much if thay wors dollare It might be worth whils ta plek thein np? Juet so with reading. If you only have opportunity to rend a fow scntencos at & thne,after o while you will have read a whole book. and the ew scntonces will give you food (or thought while oy are ahwut your dulics, and help yon forget your unpleasant surroundings- and be wore contented with your laot, 1t soous wu wvery one {s “responsihly for what they might be as wullas for what they aro, Hut I shink thure arv soing ruorwnmen wto cannot Lo blamed for glvii itlo attention ta n.'uunfi. these la those poor women and girls who aro so gaforiunate us 1o be thrown upon thelr uwn resvurces, snd, not being qualified 10 do anytbing very remuncratlve, are cowpolled to work carly and [ato every moment ut somethlng, uatil both thelr mental aud physical powers ara n\'ur‘uhxml by thelr odorts to svep suniand Lody tugether. 3 {4 that (e woman whose busband cannot or dues uot furulel her uuy help in the house, und, although sho may not be Very strony, or have the facully of dulug work caslly’and rupldiy, is com- pelled 1o be nurse, housckeepee, chanibor- waid, divlog-room girl, couk, laundress, scome stress, cic., and s always expecied (o play the lady by boing drosscd with cars sud tasts, evor ready to recelvo und enterialn calls with charming interestednoss, sud when hor busband cowmus :fmfll‘l"’. moet Nll|lx with a ‘n‘\'cal ‘lmlllu. haad m hls newspaper, slippers, clc., pot awd ' carea him, smooth nway lhn‘:vdnkle- lmglq his brow,aud make heraelf so [ntoresting to blin In geoeral, vo watter bow tired or bow fuoblo she fusls, ur bow Leart-aick she may bo, that ba will think ho has a Jewel ol wife,und **iherv Is no place ike bome. ' Can woman who has all “this to do be expocied 1o be & profcicut in teratare, or bo blsmed If, when she dovs chancu to gol a mo- ment {0 Feat her wudry bady, she u? her nead up- on tho pillow nud doea uot troubls hes tired brain with Htaraturo which reqaires thouzht and lud{l Grotchen. | thing Just 84 you du. that men should ok be #0 particular lo give up thoir scats 1o and do Savors fog the fusbluuabiy-dressed women, lottiug those Inplainer atties And a seat for themselves, or stand ap if they fall to And ono; but I wasnot talk- Ing to the man in my remarka upon trte politencss in that respect. 17 1 had been hould have told them Abont the same s you dld. I only desired there to tell my slaters what I considered was one part todo In this matter. I anything T chanced to any in that lettsar had the nppearance of censnring the ladies Lo the npholding of the men, Tam tenly glad yon ramo to the rescae, for § didn't mean to do that. I intend to bo true to my own rex in every respect. It ia hecauec of that that 1 point ont some error [ behold in It, that we may correct thom, 0 far as posaible, and help to raina our ldeas of trne womanhood to a hicher standard, ‘Thanke to you. Up and Down, for your kind words, They encunrage me to writa more. Vesta Verne, I think thote ‘‘splce cookles” must be quite a navolty, and mean o (ry some of thems also that oranie pndding, given by School Glel. Aliqnis, you can mend your glaes fralt-dish h white lead mixed with s little oll. Tie the parta Airmly together with cord, after having applicd lead to the broken places, and sct away tivo of three months before naing, China can ba mended this way nino, and 1f dons neat), does not Injure it Jooks as minch os coment. iave mended theso thin whito lamp-shades with It, and [t worked aumirably. Somo ono asked for a recipe for leo-cream, Tlere 15 one which [ {hink in very good: Four eggs to one gnart of milk; sugar 10 (aso: heal the milk quite hot; heatthe sugnr and ¢ together, and stir into the heated milk. Lot them Just come to aboll} tnrn and let cool; sesson when cold. To freezo I8, use about one-third an much enlt ns (ce. Should any one deslre a recipe for claaning silver. ware, with vory little teouble, I can give a good one; ean also give directions for making n pretty cross of moss and lichens withont An‘ exponse whatever, if desired. LAUKIE, THFE BLOOD-MAKERS. 0 tha Edltor of The Tribune. Caor Coauxty, 1L, June 11.—The study of thoso forms of discase which consist csrontially in an imperfect claboration of the blood, but which prescnt themsolves to oue obscrvation as an Altera« tion In tho notritlon of soma particalar organ or gland, {s of great Interest and Importanco. Of this closs of diseases the two furma known as can- cer and consumptlon are by far the most common. and as regards tha latter cases, though always formidable fn number as well as nature, they are at present greatly Increased, notwithstanding ther nature anil treatment are far better understood. It ia estimated that about 20 per cent fs the ratfo of deatha from consamptinn alone, and whep we conelder that this fa only one form of. tubesculosls, to which most be added the diseasca known as tabes mesenterica and tnbercular menin- pitts (depositions In the mesenteric glands and brain), boside ather less important forme, we cam- not fall to see tho terriblo naturo of tho dlecase, ‘The two latler forms arc principally confined to childron, and itls estimatod that they carey off at lenst two-thirds of onr Infantila popuiation. A large proportion of this infantile mortality. fa dia- tinctly tracenUlo to soma orlginally slight disorder of tho digeative fonctione, nggravated by neglect or Improper medlcal treatmont, and might be pre vonted by attention to Dr. Hale's admirable direce tlons, " Cancer, on the other hand, although doublicss increasing, 18 yet o comparatively rare discaso, Its naturo hasbeon carefully studied, thongh with Hittlo practical benoflt, for it romains to-day an opprobitium to the profession, A terror to the pa- tient, aml o harvest for quacks, Sometimes o really scientiic and conscientious practitioner of a sangulne temperament hecomes {napired with a Ihcory for the rational teeatmont of thls dlsease, and for a tima labors earneetly In the directionsin which hls iind has been turned, and as a reanlt can paint to quite a number of indubltable and permancit curcs, yet the gencral resnita are un- ratisfaciory, owing Lo the very larze proportion of cascs that “applyYor ald fn an advanced atage of the discuso, 'Tho phyalcisn soon Lecomes dise heartened ond tarns his_nitentlon In some other direction, leaving the subject of the treslment of cancer Just where lio found it, #o far 8a tho knowl. edgo of 1ho prafession in genrral is concernad, 'I'tio Idea that these discases ara origina)ly or e sentially local 1s unworthy of notice, and ia con- fined to that clnss of practitioners who claim to have sonio infafllble tocsl cure, Nothing s moro obyloua than that this kind of interfercnce (such ae Inhalations in consumption, exclalon or de- stenction of the parts in cancor), however im- portant, can (n the natura of the case s bnt scc- ondary to other means, 1f we look to the hlood for an sxplanation of thene loeal mautfostatlons, wo find it Impgrfectly clnhorated as rovards 1ts cells, and thus to a certaln degree incapable of nourlshing healthy orzantzed lnsnc, This Inability to form and sipply to the ‘blood a proper nnmber of perfect cells having com- menced, tho resulis are & mors or less imporfect nutrition of tha Loy, and an accumulation in the blood, in cancer, of fmperfect colls, aw, In tnborcnlosin, of tho less organized albumin. ous materinl intended for cellspraduction, but which cannot bo used for want of ruflicient organ- Izing force, or from a Inck of some necessary his- togoratic substance,~Iron, phosphorons, or fat. 'This uscloss materinl, which woula only obstruct the cironlation it allowed to acenmulate, fs kindly rumoved by naturn, aud by a sclection, which we cannot alwars oxplain, ls depositod in' some por- tlon af the bady, and Is thore. rocognixed as cancer or tuhorcle, accarding 1o the daxreo of orzanization 1t had previously undergono. To Diustrate, lot us glunco ot the way hlood Is made. A forclble writer haseald: **Let it be remombered that to take food 14 to make man. Kaling 18 tho process by which tho nonlest uf ferrcstrial fabrics s constantly ro- paired, Al our limbs aud argana have bheen slckud up from our plates, We havo been served up at table many timcs over, Evnt{ individnal fs Mterally a mnss of vivified viands; lie s an epitome of innumerablo meale; he has dinod upen himseif, supved upon hlnsol in fact—paradoxical as it may n; }‘wur—l aygain and sgain’ leapod down his own throal The blood, thon, i the transition botween the food eaton and tha structura it s ine tended to ropale—liquld tirauo, recolving tho first finpreasions of organlzing for Naw the proper amount of food—albwininous, fatty, phosphorized, ferruginous, cte.~having been ingosted s duo proportion, {t becomen tho ofiice of the gastric fnid to disdplve the slbuminous purtlon, change s colloid character, and it 1= for absorption. Tha fat poseing on analtered into tuo duodenum, s thore. vuulalfled, and per- hapa saponlfied, for there fa reason to bolleva that the glycerine ls thoreal **histogenctic'" of the fut. This inllky or aibuninn-faity finld, the chyle, is then abaorbed and thrawn Into the clrculating cur- rent, there to furnish the m‘cculrf condition for the first etop in the, production of cells. ‘Theso minute bollas, —thB **molectilns Laso ™ of dulli- vur or the **clomuntnry granulo' of Ascherson, -~ notwithstanding tho increased nower of tho micro- lcorv, still dofy eatlefactory exuwmination, but thelr chumical ronctlon determines their fatty charactor, and there ia overy reason to Liolleve that thoy furnish the fundamental condition uvon which every other lln‘l in the progressive formatlon of orgauized tinaue {s Lased. The next step fn the proce: of cell-fo matlon scoms 10 bo the withdrawal of thess cleoll from tha elrculating current by tho lymphate ic giande, thare to undergo an elaboration ‘Into the nuclel from whicls tho ultimate Llond corpuxcle In mado. ‘Uhe lymphatic, togothor wilh the vascular fiLflnu and perlisps the cancellous portion of the Appear to sorva as atore-houses for the atty matorial of tho col able arona for ml? play of that fo 2 ai which dovel- ops them, stop by step, fnto the perfect white corpuncle. At this stago they sppoar capabla of performing thelr functlons, 1o tle extent re- qulred by snimals of | ynamic and low atimualone (cold-blooded). But in ani- male of low dynsmic snd high stloue Jous (warmeblooded) this coll would pol wuflico olther av an oxygon-carrier or as a nutrient, for the performance of thoue functlons cascutial Lo ilte, 1y snother elahorative step the ruduction of thosa elemonta whick, when chemically united in defnite foria and proportlun, constitnto the hremogiobin of tha zed colls is accomplished, and the result is & blood-corpuscle of complex and wonderful endowmonts, cavable of nourlshlcg the highust forme of tisano and of chemically uaiting with oxygen, aud carrying It 1o tho tlesues tnan eloctro-uegative or oxonlzed condition. Evldonce seems to be accumulating that the liver i tho ore gau in which this remarkable play of attinitics s carrled on, which roaults in the production of the uacle, the secretion of glycogen belng rl:cp;mnry to, and uf blle complementary with, roduction. = of the hlood s delayed ar contraveno 0 Foma) ported by Dr, Slon lllustrates to what oxtent nu- trition may bocomo purverted bofora deathy clog thoacene. Inthis case the clircnlatory dnid,~I cannot call it blood, —was found to conelat practi- calli of notbing but chylo In ita most elomuntury condlilon, and the vuly inference to be drawu fram this fact would seem to bu that thero was at loast a total cussutlon of the Llod-forming functions of all the varlous glands. In this case naturo relieved the circulattonsuf tho oxcess of the albumnino-fatty supply by eatablfshing an extonsive sbcess of the breast, It {a evident that no cancerous or tubercu- lnn-du‘rmulun could occur here, as thess coudi- tions depend upon a partial elaborution of the blood (morg cowplete In the former thaa the late tor), which in this caso was sltogether absont. Péruaps the esrllcst departuro from the normal coudltion, fu tuborculosts, ts Ino defclont supply of this **molecutar bass™ to form tho puelel vt thecells, This will account for the improvemeut following upun an inceeased consumptlun of fatty foul. sud In part of cod-liver aud cocoanut olle, which contain a larger amount of glycerino than vrdiniey fats, ‘The investigations of Konly sud Shulze [nto the uature of the fat of hay, cats, and 80in¢ other cattle-foods, taken fn connection with $u Germun feeding exporincuts, vecu (o ahow un inadaptabllity of any but & trus glyceride to the purpuses of " nutrition, sud I belivve it has been found by chemista that the fat of all the moet bin- portant tssues, Including the blovd-colly, {s gly- cerine, freud from the futty acids and in proxzimale union with the phosphorus, "Thoto may aiau bo a lagk of one of more of the wmineral vr lne constituents of the cells; a Jack uf phosphorus would Lppear o u rly con- stant, and the popularity of the bypo-phnsphitca asa raimely 1u tubesculosle rests upon this duil- cloncy, ‘e saniv nay bo of frou. 1n suwme €ases, no doubt, tho salts are deficlent, the lime or Dotash salts of {he cells, of the alkaline chlornda {comuon sult), and cascs are not wanting whore tBis remedy ulono has nfip;\n‘ully mrcd 100 wotat forma uf taberculosts, latina'vist munrll{ I‘: cases thy busb listological tnicat wii of little avall uuloss toe enfecled dlgestive powors patlently woatched sud perseveringly atlaulal 1hy beat mcdical and bywientc weaus , b p o tho viandard of health, and capecially ss ro- #3204 10 digeajlon of fuls, Whero tho can be so- complished and maintained, a fllnlggmmnte nf the dyscrasis from tne hlood may condently oxpected, when If no fatal organic lesfon has s ready ocenrred ns s resnit of the R_RVIDHI Ayncra- nin, the patient will recover, he discriptinn given by Physician of tha habita of certain young lIadics of his nc?nnlnunce. In_regaed to tiet and exercise, reealls 1'rof. Coventry'a celo- brated **recipe for making consumption,” S8till, 1 muat hope_that these youny indlen sometimen In- dnize In pork and beana behind the pantry door. ‘There I8 evidence that this conditlon of the blood may exist to some extont for {r s, withont pro- dnclng #efionn mischlef, yet the person s never safe, for thore I danger that, upon the occarrence of fover from any cause, the acceloralion of the ¢lrenlation will be accompanied with a correspond- ing ncceleration of the deposit. Moreover, the organa in which chronie tubercular deposlts exist are peculiarly liable to Inflammation ariaing both from the irritation produced by the tnberclo scting 84 A forelgn body and from external canses, Thns we often l'mfmrlnno with the taberenlar disthenia eink rapldly fn_consumption after ** taking cold " or following an attack of pnenmonta, Tho only enfety in In controliing tho circulation il the tem. porarily oxcitinz cause is pnssod, with the rame decision that you would grasp the relns of & rona- wray horso or shut off steam from the fiying Inco- motlve, and this control shonld be exerciecd trougl impressinns on tho baso.motor nerves rather than by ordinary antiphlogiatic mea 1 havaaitempted no more than aglance at the E_z-nnml principles of treatment in this disease. ieto 18 no impottant diiference in regard 1o theas nrinelples among acientific phyeicians to-dny, bat, unfortunately, all dactors are not of this class, and I, having suttered tha loss of friends from medical empiricism, feol like warning others on some 0{nte, —flrat, tho nee of minaral *'alteratives’ n his discate, Arsente will **alter” a case into (!rnp:l&. Nerenry I8 a pawerfal **alterative”; it helped to *‘aiter™ mvyaister intoa corpse. I af- terwards recovered from tho same dlsease withant the uso of **siteratives.” It lian long been known thnt these sudbstances posseased s dangeroins power of degeneration over the finlds and sollds of the body,” Tho known afiinity of the chlorlde of mer- enry (corroaive rublimate) for albumon haa made ftachemical test for finding that anbatance in no- 1ution from timo immemorial, and the microscons lian now shown the naturo of the change produced by thers and other mincral subatancos on the hmemoglobin of the blood. They sppear to dieplace the exiating combination, precipitating the hremo- glnbin in crystale, probably by combining with tho albuminous stroma. Second, 1n the lung form of this direass nar- cotics and powerful astringents should he avolded, A patlent whlle!nt In the Inciplent stage may be literally **choked off™ in two weeks time l'fi * diligent uso of thess promoters of asphyxia. Bat Aliero in one astringent that, although powerfal, ia #ukind In its action as to deservegrent pralno, ~not that wa necd anv astringentasan antlhemorhagte, but It may ba used pafoly for this purpose. I refor to tannin, From the rcports of Dr. Aliison and others, thla romedy wonld appenr to boof grent valuo in scrofula In every farm and stage, 1 refor to it becauna It aeesms to have boon partially over- looked by the profession, perhapa on account of its simplicity, Dr. Allison, from his posi. tion as head of tho Northern Dispensaty, Lon. don, had ample rcape for testin e In cvery form of tubercnlosls, Without _stop. ing to giva his theorios or statistics I will increly say he consldered It invalusble and de- pended greatly npon ita action fn a1l cases efther slone or in comblunton with other m Negrelr has published throe memolrs on the walnut-tree loaves in this disease, and It s tion whether the efects decril the tannin which the loaf contatns, Theso momolrs *‘consist entircly of practical facts without any theoretical viow cither of the disense or tho rome- " The statistics are tealy wondorful here drs aTow of nls cloaing deductions. Firsi—*'8crofulonn dlsorders are In general radically cared h'v tliouse of preparations of wal- nat-trea leaves, * Second—**The action of thisagent possess & nnf. ficlont degree of ateadincas to enable tha practi- tlouer to reckon upon thy cure of three-fourths of the patients treated by meaun of 18, Tnird—"*'The actlon of this modo of treatment Is gencrally slow, It requires from twenty to fifty dfb’l" Juorder that the etlects may be rendored sen- ibla, Fourth—'*Patlents cored by means of this romedy almost always retaln tho health which they have obiatned under the uss of this treatment.** Thero Ip plenty of evldence trom Dr. Allison to prove that vno of the principal efects of tannin is to Improve digestion, espccially of fats, Nulthers #hauld ite chomical composition be overlooked, It Is O18, 118, 012, or, aslde from the clement of water, C10. The cfecta of respiratory foods In this discase having Leen pmvlnn-lK dfscunsed, [ rofer to thom now morely to say that, nside from their conservative and heating eflects, the oxida- tlon of th elements In the lang and syatemic capiilaris taina and keopa In activs operation a form of force closcly allied to heat, but transcond. ihg it In Importance in ita relations to nutrition. A considoration of the nature of this force, sa wail as the condition of tha biood in cancer, will be re- sumed {n my noxt. Goxamga. TIE INFLUENCE OF FLOWERS, 70 the Fditor of Tha Triduns, Povo, 11l., Juneo 12,—My letter of the Gth nlt., entitled ‘‘Home Attractions," expresecd somo opinlona that aro not Indorsed by & number of The Home contributors, This, of course, In entirely nataral and propor; e cannat, and perhaps shonld not, all think alfke upon sny anblect. I do not complain of the re- wpectful criticlema of such clear thinkers and terso writers an Kltchen Dovates, Lanra Earle, and Mrs. Montagane; bat my theory, or ‘*what-do-you- call-It," sa Mrs, Montagne calls it, acema to be so mystio and Incomprehiensible that I feel called upon to aries and explain, and porhavs upon somo futnro occaston I shall court an opportunity to ex- lain thie explanation. What 1 did say, and that which seems to be the subject af criticlam, was this: ‘*1 think that plcfona of evil aro justly attached to porsons of elther ncx who havoa nutnral hatred of flowers, Tholr thoughta and agtions cannot be always pnre, ~upon such tho choldést gifts of Nature aro rqua: dored, And converacly, those who hava & genuli affection for thess bountics of & wise Providence must ba moving generally in barmony with the re- uirements of Naturo's moral codo, |{ . lleve that such an indlvidual cannot do & deliber- ate wrong, "' 1 gavo that na o ncnenlrwpu-mon and per- tnpe T should have added that it, like aft general rulce, may have its exceptions, [ aleo saidin the eanio latter, in aubstance, that thers are genuine adumfrers of flowars who fuake no specisl deman- atration aoout it; and I will add now, that thero nra others who become spparently ccstatic on be- holding the gorgeous tinta and boauatifal propor. tlonsof a lufl?ll own rose, but who have notthe soul to apprecinto its sentiment or spleltuslity; who cannot comprehend that 1t ls o amile of (‘lo‘- goodness—that **its, volcoless lips are living Bruake‘l;gn. uach cap & pulplt, snd each leaf 00 1t {s only the two well-defined classor—thoss whoa hate and thaso who love flowers 1n this com- proliensive aunse--ehat Tintonded to contrast. It not contendod that the love of flowers s in An{ wenso & rolizlon.—not at all; but only that thil Jave, In 1ts entimients) meaning, conducte the | diridaal to the paths of worality, and the study of and association with thevs boaut{ful ** emblemas of our own resurrection and of a bright and better land* will keep him travellng thereln. "Fiat the voice and tho Induenca of the flowors ars_ever for the good, the boautiful, oud trae, is evidenced by tho fact that all peoplos'aud sl civil izatlona winc the warld bogan thewn s embloms of morality, virtue, snd as exprossiongof their finest sympathies and H as mbola of! those delicate sentimonta for which {uxw- ceins almost oo yross A modium, * {hoy havo been ever em- rluymt ns an omblem of thelvirtucs and graces, thoy haye never boen sdopted 10 typlfy vice oz crime, It la tho tacit and expreasod Judgment of all man- kind that the Influence of flowers iy ever Lo cxalt sud ennoble, and nevor to debase. ‘The pocts of the world give expression to the ag- frogata santiment, of tha peonlo; nd what they have sald upon this theme Aindy & responsive echo in tho linart of tho whole human race, Tho bards delight, at thnus, fn representing fowers as the vislllo fonins uf (God's lova to Ilis sarthly childron; and sialu ua 1is code of cthice communicated to mau, nat through the thunders andsmoke of Sinal, s wos the Decalogue, but bome down upon the golden sunbLeams, the pearly dew-drop, snd the muylcal summor raln. ~ Richiter 1 **The In- tinite b Ils name in the heavens In burning sta | on tho earth in tender flowers, ™ Cawper add ot a flower hut shows some touch, In " freckle, ' streak, or atain, of 1lis un valod poncll. lle inspires thélr balmy od and imparts thelr haea. ' Theodore Parkesdeclares very ruso s an sutograbh feomn the hand that ** of the Almlfhu on this world about as, He has Ineeribed N relous hior s thoughta In these m: glyphics, which seuse and scicace boen thos miany thousand years seoking to undorstand. Loveo airma thiat **To caltlvato a zarden fs to ‘walk with God, to go hand In hand with Naturo in sowo of hor most beautlful processes,”” and Hud- son {s of the aplaton that ** Flowers knew how to preach divinity before men kuew how to dissoct and botantze them, ™ And agalu, tho poets sometimes poreonify flow- ors s Intelligont buings with all the good, but with none of the ovil qualitios of men, Bays Bhakepearo: ** Flowers look up to Hsaven, from whence thoy bave thelr nourisument.” Per- cival s orul dazling in these tender worde: ** Swuet fluwer, thou tollast how heatte s pure and tondor as tuy lea?, as low snd_ humble aa tby stem, will suroly know the joy that pe lmparts.” Wordsworth {4 Infiuential in this'wi na the meanest flower that blo nnfi. thouyhts that do often llu too deap for tears. " Countcss of Bleesington weavea them fnio this vautiful wreath: *Flowors are tho “"‘fl“ re- membrances of youth; they waft us back with their bland odorous breath, the Joyous hourd that onl voung lifo kuuws, ero wu' have learucd that | fair curth hides yraves." "AndT. B an Head invltes us all to **Luok how the Bluc-eyed violuts glance love to one auvther!™ 1 will coucluda thess extracts with this from "rl L. M. Child, which i¢ ncarly sn epltome of all the res low the universalheart of man blesscs flow orsl Thoy are wrealhed around the cradle, the warrioge-altar, aud the tomb. They should deck the brow of the youthful bride, for they are jn thewmsclves a lovcly type of marriage, Thoy shoal twioe around the {omb, fur thelr perpett Fn- nawed beauty is a symbol of the resurrection. The; ahould festoun tho “altar, for thelr fragrance an: £ H thuir beauty sscond lu purpetusl worship before the Most Migs." 1 bava thus given but a fow (all I dase 10) of the hundreds of kindred aud relevant quotitlons that are very near ut hand, (o how fu part bow [ have acquired wy helluf 1o’ tho polootial sad bonctcial infucnce of fowers; yet tho greater reason is fuund ln that ewmotion which o sensitive Leart must feol when standiug i thelr prescace, looking into thelr vpturucd fuces, fecelving thelr awee amiles~hearing thelr volces—Interpreting SXoreanive langange, a1l In ihe mIGrE. of thels gir lizhtfal aroma and thelr bowltching graco and anty, Am{’nnnly. whers were weon the 30th day of the month ast paet? If In the propor place, w were at the cemoterles with bawed heada and mor. rowfnl hearts bending low over the green ves of onr nation's vallant defenders, licre wo saw thelr snrviving comrader move with snlemn troad and nncovered heads, from grave ave, acatiering ?mnfl.n of apring's esrliont loome, Lo weep in dewy eplendor upon the humble maasolcama of our herolc dead. Have not the flowers of Amerlca, growing and blosaoming In the anilof Liberty, taaghta nublimer floral langiiage than was ever spoken befora? The, hnve been choson by the noflonal imatinet as tha oracle to voice at once onr country's sorrow, her gratitnde, and her triumphs, *+Silont an tho grave, yet'melodions an tha song of immortality, " are the volces of America's flow- ers, telling of the tolis xnd telumphs of A Repnblla foundend by Washington and his compatriots, pre. served hy the vyalor of her mililona In blue, and connecrated by the grand lifo and martyr death of her own Lincoln. Dznoxpa, FERN-LEAF’S LETTER, v the Bdiior of The Tridune. Orrawa, 11, June 14,—**One tonch of Natura wmade the whole warld kin." Yes, I thought traly sho did, as I sat or rather reclined, in an casy. chalr on the steamer that was carryingme from the New York wharf, amid cheers and waving hand- kerchiers and the tear-dimmed cyes that looked once again as the famillar faces woro steained te eatch one more glimpee ere & turn In the stream carries them from our aight, and wo turn toong fellow-passengars to sce tho samo sad look. But that was & year ago; and now we can look with pleasnra to the trip on old Atlantic's briny bosom, and smilo at one fears, and the doleful faces of tha sea-slck crew; and hear once again tho musig from the organ, which came softly to our eam after rotiring to our state-room, It was this first night that mado ua alf akin to each other. Polnt Jndith s & place for soclobility, and, whila rounding her, wa discnssed her merits and pointa of fnterest; bnt withed ourselvea safe ot homo, and not tossed about at the marcy af hor wayes, nor soaked by her impenotraole fog. Pour Kitchen Devotee, out wniafortuna han awakencd a feeling akin to {nu In my heart, and I would ltke to send you, daring the summer or fall, & fow of my pets, aomething that will raiso your drooning spirits, for we canld not apare you from Tha llome, ' Will you thersfore b so kind as to send ma 8 box with addreas therein, Iloxes ars acarce here, pleasant it {s to sce our Homo at peace. Iamaure | resd Amanda Apronstring's lotler with **Lot him who {s without sin cast the 0," Burely she nceds to be taken home to our hearts, for even If we all err, {tis not all who will come boldly to tho frthtand acknowledge it, Lat nont sn(or for ua. Laura Enrle, you have told ns of & manwholoved to work with flowora and was dovoted to them, etill wan low in Liis habite, and anconth in manners and dress, Let ua hope he {s tho oxception, 1am sure one of your refinoment and_good aense wonld not, for his'sake, abandon tha_good floral work in which so many are engaged. T waa much pleascd with your Tast letter—all of them, in fact—and opa they will apnear cach week., chool Glel, you must now dry your llly it yon ‘wish it to bloom next wintor. 1n Soptember repot In rich soil and water it modsrately till it com- mences to grow well, and then each day give lt a dipper of boillng hot water. You havo vrobably read Deronda's article on roscs, which will give you the needed fostruction. ‘Ihanks, Grace, for Your suggantions. Now jor the wardlanscaso onco more. I thought I had told it all, Allle, and you say | have faorgotten one irmportant thing. "We will try and Investigate tha matter. As & matural conseqienco {:n must ugect that molature, or sweat, as yon 'm it, on the aldes of your glass, As it cannot eacape, it risesand forms drops, and then runs down the side of the case. To provent it in a co taiu measure, wash the glasa with !nlg and 1t will bo lesaened. 1 fuar you havo sprinkled it most too 1 would rafwo tho lur fivo minutes each day fors weok. 1 think this wilt bo sufiiclent. Do not 1ake the top off; only ralsc It about aninch. They are tender plnnts, und must be treated with care. Iam sorry could not scnd the plants and noss hefore. 1 with send you somo things for your cnsa this woek. The lonf with light atripes ia a pepper- omla, and grows from leal. The moss with it {s ycolodlam, or blus mogs. as rome term it. T s 1 iold bo glad of & leaf of your hegonis, When rie enongt,” Thia “h % Hich week s ns been ‘s rich week Lo me, in letters, ura Earlo says in her Jast:’ | Ricl ! Annle was of tho Iatter; and oh so nice. Yo who wora the anthors of this dainty morse] kno. to whom I refer, But do not beg pardan;fur weltlog, it leentirely unneccssary, ‘Soma of yau| | wrote such good, long lotters, and told mo so much hat m-r;y & tle now binds ns {n P which 1'hops may long exlst, A.G.1', I feel that I am under many, many obli- gations m{nu; and the two plcturcs will remind me of you'till I sce the oriyinals, Ishowed tho victara of the lady to her mother, snd, though she never flaters any one, anld it was very protty, I think you boastiled both very much, and they aro both miuch admired. When you come we wilf dia« cuss the wardian-case queation, I shonld love ta aco your mother. My kindost regards to her. Thanks, T, W., for the box yon sent. All ar- rived nicely, including the beauniiful lettor, Never mind how many you write, nor iow long; they ara #0 scceptable.’ “Wish 1 could visit the room of that ared one with my floral oflarflnr Ihope ha may live long to cheor you, and surely you will bo * rewardod for your devotion to him. ] Heaay tud 1s a sonrce of great satisfaction to me also, and if [ do not bow dally at {ts shring, and sdmire tho knowlug facos bofors me, and 'learn luesons of frecdon: therofrom, it 18 becauso the rain scpa. rales uag and then whon I do visit it, and seo the ties, what s pleasuro 18 grantea me. Soys ane, **1 have compared the tlowar misslonary o the forelgn misstonary, and wondered if the songi snil sermons of tho formor weoro, not as pure glory In the presonce of the loving ‘Wather as thos of the latter. God blesa the woman who divine: the mission of the flowers.” Theso words wero by one who may now have crossed the dark river and have gaincd the golden shore, but n‘hl”t i and Ja nle C. vou may end any yon think best. As you esy it wifl e .{, oasuroe to Liave something as & remiembrance, I will scnd somothing for your sls- er also. Bello Plaine, If you aver coma ta Ottawa yon will please inform me beforehand, should be equally glad to seo you, may send anytoing you have, [ wounld llkoa fear of your rexbegonia, and then will return in your box, Bister Ivy,I rclll{‘unndl tell what tha pfants are; whon large enough send mo 8 leaf and I can. nd 80 many that 1 forget, 1often wish I might send to each one of evory kind 1 have, but as itls Impostiule | sz obliged 1o divldo the beat 1 can. i E. B., ll;la t bulbe will not bloom again. doing nicely, I b wish Thada la:fln ¥i n wild one; we Linve inany boautifnl ones here, an weo are surrounded by timber-land, The cobla scandons grows very readily from slip; hope you will succacd with yours. 1 had a'very hande some variegated ono sent me from Chicazo, but lostic. 1 wasso ""I' for I prize them nex: 10 the variogated hoy. have no plitosporum, ‘The vine you called a passlon-vine la a clentl chn send you the re: asion-vine, Mine brought from Californis, and grew readlly and rap. l.'lnn Earle, when I think of the man you spoke of in your letter, I am reminded of a "lady who asked'me what caused me first to love flowers. [ could not 'y for T was 30 sstonished, I supposed overyune loved thom, though all did not care t0 be troubled with them, 8he thon told mo that stie was s00n to be a bride, and tha gentleman 10 whom ahe should plight her troth was an extrave ngant lover of fluwers, and one who cultivatel them from pure love for them, as every spate mos ment was devoted to thelr caliure, Now, sald whe, I want yon to tell me what to do, for, while I b no interest In them, and all are alike W m slwars aecing new b and talks of little else, 1ali y loai love them for bis o d ake if uol meherhn'm. for must bo pleasant d \ wife interested In his band to ha d 1 hope s the sun rises, and the eveniog dows longthen, |nn¥ together plant the tiny ed and watch 1ts growih, and thua through lifa walk hand In_band, each Intrusted in the t the other, and doubly dear to one becau intercat of the other;” and at last when th umi Jesper shall call thom home no may ssy *!Wel done." Can you imagine what this’ world would be without flowers! Methinks a dreary place in- decd, But I 1t takea all kind of people to mako & world, then let them act thelr part withont an! whys or whetofores from us. I they act-ths! a5t wo Are pot obliged Lo, Thelr acte to us are nacratable, but lct us not question the acts of ;'llhn!‘l. but’**act wall our pari, thers all the honor cs, R b ik Bleturea a parca, Tk to do. 0 & ARd somewhare I a;uld 1 fh‘&u;n angels are few, ‘They're fruqueptiy met unawares. " )‘y beliet fs that I have met several since my Grst comunnlcation to Tux Tuisuxe. Blany Lhanks for the forn-seed from the Berksbire hill kind friend. hat can 1 do for you? Odell, I walting tiil I can send the geranlums snd ferna to- cether. r Auut L“f‘ plesse write once more, am sure our kind edltor has not intentionally fur you are one of our ol friends, Blistakea will happen in the best reyulated fum- ilios, and you kuow ouza ia so large. belleve ‘un cipe 1 plo, ‘wblch & ny onu pleasa llfln from you, % TN o dilea for you. 1 arrived an bour sgo, #ball be dlied for you. Biva ofich wondsicd If Dab's Blster receiyed my package, aud all tho others who havg wrltten o me; many of them 1 do not hear from, stiil 1 do not know why they should not receive them. From somd of you 1 have recelved ssveral letters, sad you kaow **small favors thankfaily rocelied and ainsll ones sccordingly.' s a3 welcome, right welcome, ve ua yous L33 Y dulad futhe cala) 0 ive us da &7 teuu frle can’ hearta shiould hold back till they'ro (. Then coms with all walconie! [ frar nol tu Blig Iieserva (o tho winds and the wayes: And never cai cling o the cold-bicaded thiry Boclety makes of bee slaves. Your . —_— MANNERS, 2 T0 (ke Adlior of Tha Tribune. Caicago, June 15.—What o world of kv lies blddes away in the braln of our duas v \(vL: Mrs, Awie M, Uale; Besides undersl) wanls of tha buman system thoroughly.