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THE OMAHA DAILY BRE USUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1894 THE MAGIC OF THE BRAIN|: An Infinite Garden of Plants Porforming Mysterious Marvels, THE ELECTRIC SYSTEM OF THE BODY Mechanism of Thought and Memory—In strictive Facts Rovealed by Late Re- mourches on the Microscopio Cells— ‘aJil makes only one layer of these pyra- midal cells, which aro beyond amy doubt the actual sphere of the operations which constitute the highest form of thought. LIKE BLONGATED PYRAMIDS, They vary in size, as stated, from one elght-hundredth to one-five thousandth of an inch. They are shaped like elongated pyr mids, Each one sends upward to the mole- cular layer on the outside a protoplasmic pro- Jection, a plume of living matter, which as it Koes upward throws out any number of minute microscopic branches, these branches in turn sending out other branches more microscople, till t ramifying process ends in_evon more mieroscopic spines, The main shool upon reaching the surface | branches out fnto & mintte treelike mass of upon ‘vibration In oar. In the aural apparatus, therefore, similar centrifugal nerves ocondueting from within to without will be looked for, and this study has already begun. 3 Analogy indicates that the organs of taste, smell and touch will be found stmilarly equipped, and that retasting, resmelling and retouching, as we often do In memory and in dreams, comsists of an actual duplication of the original process, that any experience We may go through and the act of remem- | bering that experience are similar mechan- feal processes employing precisely the same machinery. In other words, that the actual seat of memory ts not in the brain by itself, but the whole nervous system of the body. Any reader who happens to be interested NEW YORER CREAT ESTATES 01d Farms t| Now Near the Heart of 0, City. C0.D BLOOD OLICY OF THE ASTORS Money uuu-lmr xalts Blood~The HBogin nlng, Man, tund Policy of the Astor Mt Groat Landlords place. Farmer Rogors had a pretty daughter whose bright eyes won the heart of a young forelgner, a man who, in the absence of any bettor name, was called Rhinelander, just as wo would call a lad newly come from the valley of the Pocomoke a Marylander. But the beginning of this humble romance be tween the all but nameles German youth and the country maiden was also the be- ginning: of a great fortun & great family, for the Rhinelander’s pretty wite succeede to the acres of her father and left them for her children and her children's echildren Were it worth while the map of New York with the land lees as they existed eighty or ninety years ago could be gone over and many curious little facts rescued from ob- livion. Were the descendants of the people BATTLE OF EZRA CHAPEL Gen. Howard's Desoription as Given at the Reunion of the Army of the Tennessee, RECALLING ITS DEPARTED COMMANDERS Strange Colncidence of Succeeding In Mo- Footateps — Confoderate Vorslons of the Mareh road, runnimg through Bxfa chdroh. ene eral Loe, finding that the enemy had already gained that position, engaged him with the intention to recover that line. This brought on the engagement of the 28th,” towlt, the battle of Eara Church “My old classmate, General 8. D, Lee, whom our men reported as riding in the thickest of the fight on a white horse a that exciting day, says of his movement: “The (confederate) army was then in posis ton and intrenchod around Atlanta, daily shifting its position to meet the flank movements of the enemy. On the 27th Hindman's and Clayton's divisions were withdrawn from the trenches and massed on the 1 On the 28th, about 11 a. A Fascinating Subject. in memory can develop for himself the out- of G Metropolls. who then owned the Iand plous in the same lines of this fact by simple analysis. As S cal way that in ““thought” {s the combination In the brain of ™ Was Gained by the War, ders to move o o ! (Copyrighted, 1894, by McClure.) m;""’“"fi“m: r"r n';n.mm-{ colls composing | 11, number of special thoughts,”* so u\Nn»[ o (Copyrighted, 1504) this done. But bless us, they never will mrades: How the years roll around!| !0 hold that road, to be used for a cofie Dr. Ramon Y. Cajul, thy eminent Span- | {ie jayer sonds apwand one of (hese phames, | ore,l® (N0 recreation ‘of any’ number o W YORK, Oct. 27.—An observant Bos- hey oan get much nearer what thoy desire | rane gnerman, MoPberson and Logan templated movement. 1 soon, faund that, the , s , thy ye pward o . | spectal “memorics. tosintt Pemarkdl Ber ¥ ¢ for- | from some college of genenlogy and heraldry, v 8 enemy (Howard's skirmishers) had galn Ish histologist, has, by hi§ late researches |and these plumes and their branches are | “Suppose that the memory under considera- i 1""«“ ed b lyr(.' the era of xr.n % for from some institution tnat ‘:;n be sure to| Successive commanders of the Army of the | that rond and was gradu iy driving hn:k 0:‘: oft the microscoplc cells of the brain, carried | an fmportant part of the materials cOmpos- | (jon ‘{a that of a daneing party which the | tUNes in this cowntry that in America it Rivo to each patron something to gratify the | Tennessee—have - passed on t the other | cavalry, Brown's division was at once the sclentific world a perceptible step for- u‘.z the |nmv‘r' layer. psl.;n p,\‘-mrr‘m:nll ‘urll.: reader attended some years ago. The !memr was only three gencratlons from shirt sleeves | pride regardicss of the varieties that would | shore of immortal life. 1 am the only one ’“'”‘""' on the left of and obliquély to the that protoundly In- | B O, e vhelow, And entsring the | GrT, Il be found to be entirely made up | to shirt sleeves, and the,saying had at one | binder the hamd ot & moriisc o at, woult 7 ks GICH A0ee )9l cet | Fond. and Clayton’s division on the . right, ;.r::”:.! «',r.rvma:a:l.:u:.: ‘::.p(::nh:m Al ]v:.‘m throughr the. layer, helow, and entering the | g7 special memories, visual, aural, motor, In- | time & great vogue, being uséd to' elinch ar. | 10KIsY and - eacher after th Trauume. o oy :’ 1«1.‘.:,»;.::». l‘wu:u:,:m 108, 901,10 1ee| panniecting by a. lite of skivmisuucs kil b ablel o of thot e matter underneath, whic ms ud o e ocension, ¥ ¥ 5 + 3 »| and address you tonight. a o oun 3 The practice of thinking is indulged in by :r[.”,‘: l;:;rl('lu( (‘h”c \.rr‘.mpm :Lix [r'vln';»':-?,-'f:.',',?‘r\;:'|',:glf.§‘ln.",?.,";'u::;lf:.\:!.n.ri guments upon which ft had a bearing and :-'n”..’,’f‘i‘..‘l"-"?.24,.1"‘.':.‘.‘,‘ rl‘:)n r:r::n;lln‘le:;‘t‘-lpml?:‘r You may u’y that is not a cheerful chord :’x‘v::an“\i,'.:“m"r:.,:»'fl"lx.(-lh.'m'\t‘"]' ,‘,,‘;.‘:,,,"",',"‘maf 8 human beings to & greater or less extent, | Each pyramidal cell also sends out Deri-| ing the evening. A large part of it will be | also to add a spice of neat and epigrammatio Shnnd burchased by the. founder of a landed | (o toueh. - Why not? T often minglo i |somdy driving the enemy (Lightbare's men) and an increasing percentage of the eom- | pheral growths horizontally, setting up ml‘ made up of words alone. Words are just as | eynicism to conversafion upon the transitory | estato o large that to borrow an expression i ith th 1d friend: d in- | Reross the road and to a distance half a mile munity are much interested in thinking how | IDAnity of connections between the cells of | important to the action of memory as they nature of worldly riches. In these latter | from the race track, it is first and the rest| ™Y dr with these old friends and bevond, where he encountered temporary that layer, and many of al| are to the action of thought. To remember nowhere, mates. never meet them in the tomb, | breastworks, from which he o they think. hat I R Mg ok L b RO Y RN ENTINUR | iy NG i 50 B (Tt coun- | I pa L S WL S St | BOSROTRIIAY. 1 he was driven back : A growths also branch upward and form p what we did on a speclal oceasion we say BEGINNING OF THE ASTOR ESTATE. but in some active sphere correspondent to | With considorable loss. Clayton's division It can scarcely be sald, however, that Dr. y end f the outer or | it over to ourselves or say it aloud. * try that rival in size and in apparent per- v s . » that Dr. | in their feathery endings of th er to oursolves or say oud, apy 1. aifude o *iech Y e b, is carnest; Sherman, | M0ved forward as soon ds formed, and about Cajal's late locture as delivered to the Royal | molecular layer. ALL OVER THE BODY. manency those vast estates of Great Britain 3 o0 Ghe farm owned In partnorship | the old pluces. Grant is earnest; S 3 n ten minutes after Brown' a C = by Governor George Clinton and John Jacob | gay and of &% McPherson, quietly happs 8 advance, and met socloty would be of interest to the majority, | EXTENSIONS OF LIVING MATTER. Dot e cmploy the organs of artioula- | that have been fostered under, the protection | Astor, bounded by Bighin ayeaus’ sad ooy | 587 and oft-hand McPherson, quietly happy. | with simitar seonies 1 found it diffieult to a8 It was the lecture of a great expert (o an | The layer below the pyramidal cells s one | tion mutely, from within, or suficiently €0 | of sucoessive ondupomonss upon first born | Hedson river amd Gansevoort strest ang| " Logan electrict {ully Brown's division, and moved It against B A o e R L | O e s vt 1 Lt cpund, thereby ttme({ng: tia- wordu f Ghne, eia efuav iu Ghiflh. o &EDIIcabld A NUEGERORLh WEsohtis MT5: Auac b o edy be-| MY own part in a given dream may bef the enemy a second time. The consequence i AnH " a % > ¢ was that one or two bri sizes, the bulk of them being triangular in | aloud, our memory of our past actions de- [ *o" come a rich man before his first large ven- | slightly depressing, often shame-producing| Was t or two brigadgs of this di- strange and perplexing polysyllables of a | form. " They &lsc ¥’ St extensions of 11v- | pends upon_our ability to deseribe them in | €Ver before, the estates alluded to serving are 7 vision, as also Clayton's m\lfm_ sustained ture in real estate. His previous venture o I 0 ol o col ord, defe; ! vy special sclence, and was, moreover, delivered | ' mgtier .in all . Girections, connecting | words, a fact carly established by the (as admirable cxeoptions to prove the rule. | had b 1. A% LI oAt i U I; |u1}| rous, or, to : Iuln w rxi ']':.rlal,"\:‘l heavy losses because of the faflire M the in_French. (heln wxtent, and, bnInioite complenity. plac. | variee tivempmory, in savage tribes, which | Bui the rule fs (hat where the fathers ac- | had soveraigned away Tor many ool e | But thelr parts in the drama of the nigh Alyision !t hortions of their lines. Walthall's Consequently ita polnts, In the meagro out- | heir extent, and, in infinite complexity, piac- | varles directly with the coplousness of thelr | eurmulate. the eliiancn woe though ‘to be | [lke 8 king he sent hia fleats (o the far scas, | Vistons are now g T Bl R % A ol e e pre n touch, rough ocabularies i ppe o ex- | only— ether the, he O v or peace. - i - 4, while Brown', Uttle that was new and less that was under- layir of pyramidal cells. Like the latter, | fact, that memory is located, gencrally spenk- | even the fathers do not gather wealth enough Some of the people in New York take a s sh soiled | (HEMY. At my suggestion this division was #tandablo to the lay mind. It has now been | the third layer of cells havo each an exten: | g, all over tho body, and {lie way in which | to Pother about or to tempt into prodigal | cysious kind of pleasure in recalling the | M0 @ Toll of Brusscls carpot much solled | thrown against the enemy. where Brown had translated in full, and when perused and pon- | sion which passes through the pyramidal | “memory” is made up of ‘‘memories’ Is and spendthrift habits, ince the beginning | fact that the first John Jacob Astor beat | ffom use. Sherman appeared to be stand altacked. The enemy (Logan's line) was kthll dared it Is perhaps the most Interesting con- | layer to the outer surface, and each also | thus gpen to any one. and the rasearohes of | aoltigd lite 15 Bt % he very | fUT8 In New Vork for $1 a day, when their | 108 not far off and talking rapidly in a | Within casy range of the Lickskillet road, tribution of its Kind that has ever been seen. | sends a shoot downward into the white [ Dr. Cajal and his colleagues upon these re- T on Heoa hY the VEEV | grandfathers were owiers of ihe land. It |most animated atyle to & host of com:|and I beHeved ho weuld yield before a de- e land. I HOW DO WE THINK? oy arousing memory nerves are looked forward | great majority of men have had to make scems to me that the perfod in Astor's ca- | Panions. I called out to him, weral, let '“”"“"j'_l attack. The effort was, however, & The study of thought action is one which | At numberless microscopic points there also | to with great interest thelr own way by tol through the encom- | reer to inspire the pride of his des endunts | me bathe my carpet in your tub.’ i i -+ rise, through these two layers, microscopic| Other corollaries from Dr. Cajal's facts are [ prssing diffieultios off inherited poverty and [and command the respect of the world is He had a quizzical look as he removed his GENERAL HOWARD'S VIEW. ;:: fi.i.fli.,‘"i.'.ff'fiffl.if ;:\“::;::::\g:':gr”vzll:: oftshoots, bundles of nerve fibres from the |!u|m>r'-ouavand .pr:lflunfllyl tm-fr ““uz’ “\-‘ ever changing industrial methods and condi- | that part before he beeamo a great land- | cigar and lifted one of his brows after the| As Dodge and Blair were occupied with the In many other studies, and such an equip- | “hite matter passing upward to the surface. inn:)u lr_;_thre{un xdnllnum‘wr‘% ll‘ b;n:‘nn‘r‘" ;mua And so it whl remmin unless our [ owner. As a merchant and as a trapper he | old fashion confederate forces inside of the Atlanta ment ks eminently the possession of Dr. Cajal, | The molecular, or outside layer, is thus | brains. They are 156 of the mind can hoe: | Irlends, the socialists, manage by levelling | was an enterprising man, more tarsighted Put that carpet in my tub? Al right, | works, it is evident that e moving cone A1 that has been learned of oell life, of pro- | Primarily composed of an infinity of nervous ever, Incroase (o cell camoamiyioncan, how- | up and ‘levelling down to put and keep all | then his contomporacies. mors thrifty, ‘more | Howard, do what you like." This was said | foderate column - greatly outnumbered oun \pplasmic action, of olectricity in its mul. [ 4nd protoplasmic. extensions from the two | ever, inerease the ol ramifications and do- | men in an equality, ghergetlc, more resourceful. His ' early | with the same old trombone voice and joyous [ men, who wore engaged at the points of tudinous aspects, of nerve constitution and | 14yers below, and the white matter ‘inter-| velop & MONEY QUICKLY EXALTS BLOOD. | &2ctive life was spent in this trade and in | manner which we never forgo attack. ' ¥ v ‘ cells. b he ke hi . g en twisted and interwoven in indescribable com- 5 j A T e it he accumulated a fortune that was looked | ; So you perceive, my comrades, the me writers thin e and llhj‘ :,‘,“‘,’,’,'",‘,’,’n"';l:“‘mfi’\;:)"‘,“ lll':;himr plexity with a microscopic minuteness of de.| The physical measure or test of culture ap. he colonial days there were men sl a st who were teckoned rich by thelr nelghbors, | 001 4t that time as collossal. He went | friends and many others who leave us one | sad. experioncs. o tue ity 000 Provement, of vital chemistry, of the living | (all, compared to- which any texture woven g:l“fqunfl“é’&,‘uf:":l’l‘x"‘"‘ifl'!’d'L';I'l"']'::; Al ilg A006AAIIE 'tn 1t S IR A et i oetave pecause he wanted to In- | by one are not really dead, but lving en- | 224 of July and Pey vrr.p"a,',l,'.; ‘,‘,r,,,,:,','fl brain us Gxplored by viviaection, and other |bY, bands would bo gross and lantesque. | Call cnmections. Auother surmised measure | &1d ccording to | Nowadays such wealth | {5, (e, money e had made in furs and | tities mol far off from our thoughts Dight | have managed 1 sren ot ey defensive and branches of advancing knowledge must be | FEVery minute nervous rwn;‘x‘vi)l'\lwl'"“"f ': “1’ somewhat with higher intelleetual develop- | would commal but 1ittle respeet. Some of | ""\’l"‘ i his land parchases purely as|and day. have waited for our coming. It he had done it s L, asdoaicon Lo trwlatess | 40, TSI G ot Ahe MRhent ke Timtthher o0 LBORENCEY 1IOkS, (a0t Thoee: monis Kawgve.. o LoD yag o T Ben continued by mie. duporoleYq At bas A WORD FOR M'PHERSON. 5 We would have had his railroad: eome A v and. e WrgHone Las iy K (¢34 Lhepe WEGHAIR0 interwaten - lerminala P bttt e T DU e o e note " taraiicy Uhese | tho present time. This policy, it may be| | You have given me “Eura Chapel.” . All H ot ey Off by two lours after sun- ology, befo ighest and subtles - &k Lot om- |@re excited in the thought centers by a| have served to keep whole families rieh | ' ; . it | e | o 5o of the 23th. Once there, Mé Gouid mot ;e A activity In explored. e ':.,',‘,f,:’,,' {'fi‘,‘f,’;"Zfi.‘;"'é.:.‘,'fi..:fx'u"" Biven obloct—n other words, - fertility of| With no other. oRort than that required to| beArked: has been us ""‘l’_,fi,‘.’l""t‘,'_',,'l';lfm‘.“”' Dt e days before that baitle, the | have dislodged us, and the siége of Atlanta m:m_! 'mvl; ‘K)c;:‘)clunn:u -’l-’x‘nnl’lmx xil:: ‘s!im;lnl Between the Lworsidenich khe Braln being: a8 Iv!;’*}:a{‘a:prnr?llo '":‘Tl"d umn‘m‘pl ‘-Klmxiv‘v l:»\{usuv(u sell land around which the great | yopore ¢ lling what this policy fs It fs well y of July, 1864, In the niorning, all m':l'y’.C j;m; lm"n‘ ended brompt abandons On the great problem for tho lovs LorilE | Lorfect, ds the way In which all the cell | Which the cell or céils DT connested ot | Suy-was growite I men who started i say that It Lia been condemned quite e commanders were here in bodily pre ont or surrender. Certainly our move. i % tat. | parts of either half are placed in connection | 0 interest in that object are connected with | (hese fortunes were froquently small farmers 3 severely by those who recognize the full | ence living. During that day, as you, Mr,|Ment would have forced even Johtiston ta Jaars though al the kindy of slectrical bat: | BAris of shther | cells of the same general field and petty shop kiepers; their grand children i ull 0 o dicate wha % vividly . have attacked us as Hood did SR GETON T OB b and complete rights of property as b Prosident, too vividly remember. one of e od dic kind of an electrical battery the brain is, From all parts of the brain come micro- INTRUSION OF TELEPATHY. and great grand children are more fre others, for the policy Ipu\v:‘( out of St F e McPPherson,. the young man of finest HOW THE ACTION BEGAN. X p P et f 3 quently than not proud with an arrogance tirel faast x I d brightest earthly prospect, fell All the Z whil ptogi G vl vented has | 3cOPIC conductors — to this surface layer.| If ideas consist of reduplicated sensations, 4 g : ntirely the responsibility that talent and brigh earthly prospect, All the morning of the 28th Log o Duot e Dted DA% | From all parts of the body, through thelr | combinod with unuttered words, Of oOf eltner of ace beyond that of the most exclusive | ship of property imposes’ the responaibity | I battla, L have visited bis singolar fomb. | moving ' steadily forwerd: welh, cokoia(BL that figurative photography within oneg | centers in the brain, impulsés flashing over | by themselves, their gronping appears clearly | nol LY in ny of the old world kingdoms. | i the rest of the community ace toy obli- | set up there on the fleld, also the statue I | his skirmish line. With tny tafs wen cms) head which records and stores all the mf" the surface of the outer layer reach the | to be a matter microscopic protoplasmic and [ This “noble” class in New York is not only | gation to assist In all the work that tends | Washington, and have had a description of | escort I Kept him in sight, following up*the of a litetime in small masses of living mat. | Sensitive plumes of the pyramidal cells. nerve fibers, infinite in number and com- \Lnn.x;l ‘uf“:u »;‘» w'v‘h. but: 1t : x):'l:lltl of “J {oward neighborhood advancement. Neglect- | the other erected in Clyde, 0. "His history, | movement, Between 7 and,' 8 ‘Sherman ety ot ey may be recaled at a mo- | LIKE A TELEGRAPHIC HEADQUARTERS "“T‘,.":”;,m the controlling power which com- | that mny of thim. i historical rotrompect | Aatbre lave Coel S AL e e ) yimanta' O Iron” stine. und yaere Hkviyin TN Rtpe L B ST ment's notico, and in groupings which pay | Everything that niay occur throughout the BN 60 ills MO ese | go back 30 far as to’ find cstor meas- | York been I a enlis Of Teal estate in New | not need monuments o iron, sto i 1eavily wooded country. As we .were cone ween them. brain, to this outer layer, and consequently to Fiied * » Ve 1 earn | bel counter. o dipmly o L uB ¢ kept within the e CLaT ke RIS N 00k to be grape-shot cut Lt oas jong been known that the brain was | the pyramidal thought colls. Al the bodily | & STeater mystery than ovor. We may learn il Gcommatich: of tNia LM i 5| oty In 2l his acts and consequently out of | loved him he | LArough the irees over our heads, ‘breaking composed of millions of minu ol baividec & 2 2 oes | t ¢ o | Jall, vet fallsto win either the affection or| On the 27th of July, five @ after the | off the limbs. We both felt tha ¢ enel pose of minute cells, varying | labor s beautifully and equably subdivided, | gng how 1t does it and be ox foran does 2Dt to bave been in # furrow behind & plow: | seusencror s 3 Rt ATD hat the enemy from one elghth-hundredth to one five-thou: | and beautifully and harmoniousty carried on A T ol b i urrdw bahiad o plow: | Festaotot hidimeighbors, death of McPharéon, |1 asviimod comitiana0r | way' hacormiig MBS BHEHrate- ' 0 webid Thndth of an inch in size. The control of [ by the various departments. But, as in all | Tqm World’s greatest authority on the cau- | honorable, And 1t wenld cot b orth ) THIE_ASTOR POLICY. the FAvmy St thets Tentiskass, . Therd i | clonerall Hodal il Fatiioieke barel the bodily activities by the cerebellum and the | ofther woll ‘organized establishments. every satlon of vital action came over from Ger- |y this piace wero It not for the fact that |, THETe 18 nothing wonderful in this policy, | SMéthing a little remarkable in th e | o T guess not; he will hardly try it again," exercise of the Inteilectual powers in the | item of action is aulomatieally telegraphed many a fow years ago to tell the Royal so- nm.y'u'r' iy 1-:,‘;“ inherited fortunes | VIt It 18 remarkable that three generatins | Guence of his work and mine at points| Sherman replied. gray matter forming the coat of the cerebrum | instantly to headquarters, reported to the ciety In a famous lecture that he knew noth-| rom such sou .,&,‘}z“ Jgnored the humbie | *10uld have persisted in it. The first Anterrs | Where they came in contact. ; in 1840: | y. \hen remarked that I was three years'at have been indisputably established. pyramidal seat of consclousness, and thus | ing”absolutely about it. Telepathy has fat- beginnings with such persistence that they | AC'1V¢ busincas life was spent in New York. | He entered the military unted i 1853, |\ ost Point with Hood, and pronounced him Vivisection has given ua a knowledge of the | forms part of thal comparatively mechanical terly intruded its presence upon thought | pes'"yn&h with such persisten ory. A |2t that period when the city was making its | HOWard in 1850, He graduated " in }| “indomitable in heart.’ : molor area lying along the fissure of Rolando | cell process which we call thought. study, and_now declares in a way that com- 1‘::;1‘; :v""r' ‘;“ :“"‘15*5‘"".')":"(;’19 g’,“'}‘_'“'cfi-md first strides toward commercial supremacy, | HoWard In 1854 He was cadet \;mlr’h": Now, as the sounds of battle kept on in- aneh, iam been of Incalculable beneilt to brain | The whole conatructive scheme seems 1o be | ot a “meinioy thot tonr. noye ao bt Com- accounts, made by 4 resident of New. ork | 210 Its Erowth was both steady and resry. | master sergeant during bls second class | creasing, Sherman turned back: o’ Thomas, el thanmd their pationts, and the thought | the aim of placing every microscoplc cell of | hpnrt from matter as e Kiow 1o aod ey just prior to the beginning of this contury, | 11¢ hrewd old German had complate faith | ¥ear; Howard the same, pucoeelling him- | probably having a double motive: Wrat to cella L!l'leru;cl:r;-e‘llhruug\h the series of inven- | the pyramidal layer in immediate contact | by fashed by brain batteries and received by b L o the bawinuing of published. | 1 the developmeat of the town, and he saw, | He was cadet quariemanter in his grady be where he could best re-enforce, and fec- s for hardening and straining the brain, | with every other cell and every other OrgAan | other brain batteries over indefinite distances. antte g what it séaiis diflicult that any others could | Ating year; Howard o 83 H t[ond to let me exercise my new command have, under the microscope, been studied | of brain or body. And to this ond it has None the less, however, will the researches | AStonishment Sis Reard upon many sides | 41"ty woe. that fto 8rowth wauld be to the | W88 president of the Dialectic society at| yithout embarrassment. — On. many st hat this distipguished e and that had vi y doeply and successfully by investigators, | constructed itseif with an ingenuity which | into brain action now in progress have a| that this ‘ISKI'HN".’ name '"]1 i u.] lfl* north. - Indeed, there was no other way for | West Point in 1852-53; Howard. was his lm- | sjong I noticed that Sherman took this course whose results Dr. Cajal has only carried a | the word infinite can alone express. very practical and beneficlal effect upon tho | 91°9 Eraced ngnql?nr]shvnbsbh\’/l“;‘ et s¢| It 0 grow. So he bought parcels of lana | mediate successor also in_this chich | With subordinates In whom he had confi- fiep further onward. That step is important, | The thonght colls are not only thus eon- | brain’ powers "of future generations, and | of divers Kind might have boen bought at| whorever ho could buy . (o advantage, and | I did not seck the fleld command which | gence, however, nected with each other, but also, through the | sooner or later give us a fairly good mechani- | Tetall. l'['h'fl'!.‘ the bearer (){ pne of ”\-»';n: established the policy of_holding on until th~ | McPherson had vacated. No . friends | “proin the direction of the eneniy’s firing, T {7 AN_ELUSIVE MYSTERY. aecossitios pf nourlshment, with the minute | cal, If not fundamental, dofinition of the long | Dames—a Stuyvesan, I bellevewrots, to the | improvements of others shonti mako this | pressed my mame upon General Sherman.|had no great fear for my right flank, sud £ Consciousnoss s 'still & profound mystery, | Arterial and venous systems of the circula- | studied mystery of tho o papers [n nroty 5:\(n5 that 'x“ name had | 1N desirablo for busingss or rosidenco pur- | and o It was, is, and ever will be & specai | oy from the shape of my position that Mermory fs still the wmost inexplicable of | Uon by Which new blood is furnished and i Hen Do G penrin. s name kad| poses.” His pollcy, WaR to. secure far "L | aratifcationn o' my < military pride . that 1| [ could -easily, and largely re-enforee ‘tho facts. The pr.y.m.l‘org.mmn of an idea | ¥aste materfal is removed. Each cell is, THE CURE OF CONSUMPTION, been enxusvg,, i piade, a¢ ?lxts lf(‘fifll‘t‘ k‘;ml éstate every farthing of the ‘uncarned incre. | wis selected for the high position right, If necessity should require. 1 watched Temains about' as unexplained as when | therefore, the seat of chemical action, and a b alandi of Baptember | ik AT %mwiwg"v“?'; hay have| |ent and to refrain from doing a single| You will agree with me that by the time Logan as he gained the higher ground, and Maudsiey agked the question ten years ago. | S20crator of what we call eloctrical force, | The Times, London, Eogland, of Sep it MLl L Yoy ftvs [ thing to earn this advance in value. e |it had been occupied by so many generals | fosm5s satisfaction thousands of men’ rufi- Ribot's lln‘y of the diseases of the memory | The famify(ng processes of each cell ap- 2. 1894, Say found sucl evrilxloqntenl. but he“tn;,t % | was quite within his rights in so. doing, but | of distinction--some whose ability and repu- | ning forward with rails and such logs as and the diseases of the will have thrown | PAr o absorb nutriment as well as conduct | Since Dr. Koch's abortive experfments in | were likely to have included reta thobe | thote ‘whose “enterprise and whose more | tation the world will have difficulty to mateh | tag Tonyatd it pon s i O Tlght on general laws of action, but haye | !mpulses to and fro, and If these two dutles | inoculation for the cure of consumption, | where the owners served customers wit 1d | pitive invistments gave increased value to | —that it was a‘great honor and enhanced | were making & ontieryus eyl said nothin i be subdivided among the ramifications the | science seems to have made no further at- | shrewd politeness that concealed it it did | his lands did not Loy tre policy any the | with unusual responsibility. ter at best was but little, bu thing as to physical constitution, f Y any th . but was a fair one The intelligence of living matter is the | e¥idences of the subdivision are so minuto as | tempt, or, at any rate, no succeseful attempt | not dull the keen edge of bargeining. morebecause it was lawful. = He would not HOW THE ARMY MARCHED. to men when knecling, and better when clusive mystery before which sclence ever | (0 escape the microscope as yet. Dr. Cajal | to discover a permanent remedy for this most THE STUYVESANT ESTATE. ool thecvachnt iots A6 held, nor Would Be | s vers day T passed from the Fourth |lving down. Of course, it was foo late for drops its hands. The fact is that a man's | 0€8 not agree with Colgi in making a sharp | dreaded and fatal of iseases. Pure Nor-| pu ar that tme the Shuyveeants wive vory | 4 8 ESHra) Ripaiipgrovel: therm, -but e | THe YOIy €ay T oeaaid from Ui Boufly} iOS Qhe. Dbraln knows far more than the man does, | distinction based upon form between purely | wegian cod liver ofl, no doubt, is as yet the constderable land owners on Manhattan | Would lease them for twinty-one or forty- e iioa aaey proceaded, General Dodge's | It did not take long to verify my pre- It does automatically and inteliigently a | Sensory and purely motor cells, having found | best known palliative, but it cannot be recog- | {.jand, their farm stretch ng from the | !W0 years to tenants, who would build what Blair’ d Logan's following | diction. That shrill, terrifying yell—who thousand things far beyond' his own pawer | Cells of sensation in motor tracts and vice | nised strictly as a remedy, though Its fn. Dowery east to to_the East river and north | he considered suitatio houses. Under thi, | COrps Teading, he fleld of, thelr bloody. tri- | can ever forget it! Hood's men sharged g and Knowledge. His heart beats, his moryes | orsa. troduction to the world was justly looked | ang south from Houston to Twenty-third | bolicy he converted a. groaier pam oot e | in order, [Eontaihp 0eld, Shuiy of Atjanta, | fired as they tame. Al alongthe |aen conduet, his brain acts and his whole bedi) POLARIZED CELLS, TOO. upon as a most marvellous advance In|giree. The Stuyvesants have husbanded [ Wealth Into real estate in New York. and hi | umph, tow called the bal s of tha Ohlo| men remained In place. I saw that u few ecoomy s carried on_ without ‘his vlition | That all brain cells are olectrical generatnrs | therapeutics, and its use haa doubtless served this estate very carefully, and much of this | tichis grew —with amasing rapidity. The | around the rear of the s Ths AT airarcies baok from gas. camey caen B asstatanc to an extent is undoubted, though some of [ to prolong the lives of countless thousands. | o} act still belongs to members of the | Pollcy was successtully continued by his son | and the Cumberland to and beyond the then | 5tr b m i " and- e. He eats and breathes be- iginal tr I y &' poaftion. We wore | Put not many. These few Logan and off e e cannot help eating and breathing, | them have special transmitting or specially | The chief objection to the employment of | gure! (et S\ belgnEs (o members of the | 7 ef heS Seccosstully, cont present. mastera | extreme FIgMU of Thomas' position. ' We'were | CuL NoL many. - These fow Logan and oft He has a certain power to injure the mar. | €lectric functions. He -finds that in all | cod liver oil was its utterly nauseating taste | whole ‘like the business of a bank or any | Of the estate. The founders great grand- (10 g0 across Proctor's creek, and Sherman and back they went to duty, impelled by the Vilous machine under his control, and in | Centers whence an excitatory Impuise, a|and smell. That objection, however, was | sommoreil concemm e wethin i Stay. | tons, William Waldorf Astor ~ and- John | desired me to march in the'usual order of | 41 back they went to BT Inaignant volaes the purault of ploasure he usually injures (¢ | 3:NdINg of a message, Is known fo come, that | after a lapse of time in & degree overcome, | Somme cron onc: mame ot the i 0SBty | Tacob Aston mranad with only very siight | columns of ‘four ‘stretching out as far as I| UL, fAoreencas ~of hla’ indignant volce, as sreatly as t the cells are polarized, the nervous impulse | and the various emulsions and other spe- se sections in the great city. | modifications. | might, so as to encompass the confederate ! ossible v as the social laws and his own P P tenement hou: m [3 y Y much time had passed since Sherman left lgnorance permit. The tenant for a life of | UPiformly entering by way of the pro- | clally prepared forms, in combination with These swarming tenement houses must con- | From the time the first Astor joinsd with | works of Atlanta and gain, if Confederate ot a)llthe I Qinclan pinoor the. hons obtes far e whose Instincts. will always be [ oPlnsmic extension, and being sent out | hypoposhites, malt extract, etc., offered the | ribute no Iittle to swell both the Stusvecant | Governor Clinton i purchasiog the farms at | Hood would allow me to do so, his south- | 3o &ll tho dlarles place far more knowing th: : latterly by an &xis cylinder which transmits | welcome advantage of being nearly tasteless | pride and purse, and a member of the fame | the foot of Fourtesntn stracy, e Astors | bound railroad track, and thus cut his vital . o g than his intelligence, his pride and purse, 5 Irom Harrow's and Smith's front the first study can only group after a knowledge of | It to new protoplasmic apparatus and other | as regards the oll and more palatable—as far ily contemplating them in midsummer can- | have been steady and regular buyers of real | communication. 1 demurred a little at the charge was met with rapld and well Qf how the brain acts cells. aa medicinal proparations can be made|not be blamed fon belleving that he belongs | e5tate roperty until now It s seattered ol | wanner of Soing. and s with: Shemans o 4 3 acts without hope of ever t be & 4 rected firing. Nothing could stand against knowing why. Apd In [Lhis way, throughout the whole | palatable. 1t has been given to Dr. T. A. |ty a superlor race. As for recognizing the over town, from the Battery to the Harlem | sent changed the order of coming into line It, and the most of the confederates cithes DUt sclentist or layman, this question of | fc1d of the thought contors, the millions of | Slocum, an American practitioner, to efect | &ty eanat who webt & Shom o fiver and way beyond. Though they have | Genoral Dodge had hardly passed Thomas' fell %o’ the sarth: or. (araed’ snd et the how i ever one of profound interest, | °°lIs are, roughly speaking, minute batteries | a combination of medicinal products whereby OTHER FARMS NEAR THE HEART OF | ullt hundreds of houses they have bullt 5o [ fank when, General Corse beini on the lead, tecting. themuelves_ sa best they coid by and from the discovery of alr and respira. | recelving smpulees and combining them and | one of the greateat remedial agents in cases YIHE CITY. lite in proportion to thelr holdings that the | odge began skirmishing with the confeder- | {,C(VE hemielvos as best OF P Srouitd tlon to the discovery of the of sending off n impulses to either traverse | of consumption Is for the first time success. cy of ettng others improve their | ate pickets and advance guards, driving them 3 the-blood, and from that polnt 1o Bie Jasens | (he. feld. ot thought. I now: combinations. | exlly ailiey with. cof Tgen ot Ty, locete- iniend il ‘shows! Thet. ihe " Biuyveranta | ProBerty. has mot been afooted: Mven: (ko | oy e inc BUARdSs driving them O aaat aa swuty orenabped. and3 Lister's antiseptio surgery, those surfage dig- | ©Orming new ideas, or to sweep over the field | ourative properties of Gualacol no learned had in the De Lancys near melghbors, also | kreat 10tols put ub on Fifth avenue by Wil- | pun advinced. General bodes handeamoly Permit me to repeat an account. I gave Elugs in the search for the deep-lying truth | 9f Muscular activity to express in action | physiclans are at variance; but It was found with a considerable tract of land, and this | NA™ Waldorf Astor are not considered to be | vvung up. into line. brigade by brigads oo, some years ago of this part of the battle Rad” e of measureless valuo to all men, | the volitonal result of the thought process. | next (o mpossible (o administer it with suc- family has also held on to large portions of | 21 Ma P are from tho established | ing into deployment, as we would say With | arag Je o fresher in my memory than aud of Incalculable influence upon the de. | HIs idea of the cerebral gray matter is, In | coss for the reason that patients were rarely the old farm. And without any doubt the | boucy; Rather than a departure It is but | \osyior poente! by divisien o s abe ek M welopment of socfety, fact, best conveyed by the metaphor which | able ll:‘llal:lln on fl:?l-m:w& l:lo!:h::llnnl:l: Etr s e il R B bt‘tm-;wur:: ;\:‘l’c:“):onnzeu?'nmel:wnd"' Who | jine—each saccessive brigade covered and| To withstand them, four regiments camo VITAL BLEOTRICAL MACHINERY, | h%uses. . He compares it to & Growihe, | | petent oatativewas virtuslly " aseiems | 0und anywhere o0 this Jcontinent flourlshies | Broadway so loug ago, that a that time the | Protected the Taenaral Bt n v s | from Dodgo, including the Sixty-fourtn dnd To form an idea of the chief point % ¢ | (or languishes, if you please,) on the land | pore) way h predecessor. eneral Blair, in the same | Sixty-sixth illinois. Inspector General Strong aped by Dr. Cojal's rescarches, let the reader | Iy, L1 Plants, the toliuge o ant e e Triodust el Sombinink | o ore"Gld Tames De: Lancy marked out his | 10te] W i o8 thwepbirtasat DL Y herin ah Dad s s o Dok r el Laoes my chief of artil: turn his eyes suddenly from this the roots below are so interwoven and inter- | this product § furrows. 1t fs in {his district the gentle- | it oW W tary arare of{ camo nearly into position, curving up foward | lery placed meveral batteries, aried with o + throw them " upon “some abject.” " Sappeny | Laied 4 10 form a solid living mass. The | way the object of Dr. Slocum's experiments men of the Unliversity Settlement soclety | ownors constaes 1t 1o rt ermoatby property | B e e ienta: bat- o whited | racbiaced several hatte sweep that exposed that hin glance falls upon a closed book, say LI e i e i ectatoal e ml“.ifl&.".'mi‘." yeeeaded lare living fn the hope of ussisting in some et thoyihann ereas ;,’g;;,‘";,';;m; that"cm: | for completer adjustment till the daylight | flank. Thess were brought ln ats the s SC dark green binding, lettered in gold, In | an Imeaies eors mupo e oot EVuArel | a:the b achi Iadiasciubis. RiBtaLa R pure | measure to e e 1 apenrd, conditions | great estate will do nothing more acijyy|of the following morning. Logan unrolled moment, and after fow rapid dlschargos, an instant he has combined many th of the very poor ‘who are huddled in|ihan 1o hola that | 0 & similar manner, except that he de- | the repeating rifles bef ng remarkable in their TiLbok” dark green.” 5. spociation o | Lok WILhin ashes through part Sy e Mormontens oot e, ol cDu by, o - ipdcin! mistclied ‘Rouses kb 'ravbitaIn & wWarren. | developmeats by of kst will boose” it AL [ Mhora masnty b aniire siys. Maring thd Oigcution, all the groups o fankers wers general idea of color; ‘“letters” a subdi 9 o | But the property yields a good return in|ngance | int night, forming a large angle at the junction | either cut down or had sought safety in i ;| excitation of any one part instantly be-|thus adding another vitalizing element, the ance in point was that of the present | DIght, t g vision of the alphabet and words, and “gold,” o rentals, end further concern than this is| yopn"y Waod's division was near Ezra | flight. This battle was prolonged for hours. . 3 admirable and easily as- ohn Jacob Astor, who chose to b with Blair. Wood's n wa zra 5 & Wi lization of hia general tdea of metal. | ontire e'xte'l:m:llh::c::l‘:‘:):‘Icl:h:?l‘lf::";‘r’:: e e v 8 Miehest | Not to"be expected from those who with the | Jonn, a Madison avenne; tioust the. stabiy | lmreh, ARG glies Ame. Hasrow's. aod. than We expected help all that day from Morgan's of an electric flash | ure equally consclous. dogree the properties considered on patho- [ !fCome freat the world to an unexpected | was distasteful to the nefghbors o last on the extreme right Morgan L. Smith’s, | division of Paimer's corps, coming back from ed in his conscious- ) sight of an American noblity. piorll o ‘ ded in this battle by Lightburn, | Turner's ferry, but the confederate cavairy g logical authority to be essential to the cure | 5'&RE 0 = us to eir property. commanded in Lig! i ot rding In e (heory. of Dr. Cada) | -+~THE.OFF10. NERVE AND MEMORY. . | Keieal Sithasity 1o be s pulmonary d'seases, |, A~ Land of Trinity church, called | heighborliness could move m, o whose own brigade was on the extrems | kept that division In check. Our troops ex- these ideas did not come together, but in | I an address, the new facts of which are 1¢ may beboth interesding and’ userul” (5| King's Farm, - wanted to know was whother or not he was | right of Smith’s division. Each corps had | hibited nerve amd persistency. Logan was fogular order, though the difference’ in time | fruitful of new suggestions, and, perhaps, of 1 fully into the properties of the| ., Anthony Rutger's farm. within the law. its own artillery, but there was no cavalry, | checrful and hearty and full of enthusiasm, between. their respective arrivals in con.|neW theorios, the most interesting vista of | XAmine ot D .are emedy. | ‘. Land of Trinity church, called “0ld MANAGEME i oxcept a small escort at army headquarters. | He stopped stragglers, as we have scon, apd iolotianess were 8o minute as to be mpor. | Possibllities pened up In the bearing of Dr, | OmPonent parts of Dr. Slocu o Ty | Jan's 1and.” n T, OF THR ASTOR ESTATA, |[S0ent & Small shoort St armmy iomqaattars. | o by s e B aeon Ank ceptible. Now, the exact point of their re. | Cajal's microscopic study of the optie nerve | tFid ’f“““ irse too woll Knows tr mre el TD.r " Ribert Herring's farm. The founder of the Astor estats managed [ng our general communications, cansed Gen- | der. Blair was watchful and helpful; so was 3pective combination the scientist does not |UPOM the mysterious process called memory. are ,L“m““‘ Rl ey a product | o, E;” Land of Abijah Hammond, pact of | it himself; those who have come since him eral Thomas to send Morgan's division to | Podge. After the last charge had been res Tontura {9, Sugkest, any more than he as- | What memory s and how It is carried on | $¢T/DL 0 beech wood, and a heanct|Sir Poter Warren's land bave nesded - asvistanos and.: the ocorpe-of [ T e Perry #t -tho seme ticie that we| Pelled I wont along my Ilass and ter proud sumes to theorize how we became conscious | P0body has yet remotely suggested. All the | O (Tt At sl v e i Leoet ta l;'l Land of John Ireland, formerly | clerks, collectors, real estate exports and so | o re moving. To the same end, I had Gen- | Ad happy to be entrusted with such brave of the combination. late advances in. the knowledge of the phe- | fU "I"‘ B afioent Eomi afieh (08 DE ks | part of Sir Peter Warren's. on has grown until now it is a staff like that | nr. Dodge reinforce Morgan with the Ninth | and eflicient soldiers, Hood, baving again * Ho deale only with the machinery of this | "omena of sound and of light wil ultimately | N8 in the h?“* 0 % L. st uwmn s G.” Farm of Governor George Clinton | of a bank or the executive department of & Illinols mounted infantry. Morgan, so helpad | 108t three times as many as we, withdrew process, viewed and discussed from the | ASSist the solution of the problem, but they P‘"‘I‘"f'n‘l oty e voded ra. | and Jonn Jacob Astor. Tallway corporation. . The large London | by mounied men, was to watch sii che meats | Within. his fortined ilinos.. Qur skirmishers standpoint of vital and electrical machinery | D4¥e thrown no clear light upon it as yot, | Yearly e o L e R R ReAed £0- H.” Rapelve farm. ghiates, suckas those of the dukes of Hed- [ 7 (i rignt and. Tear, and afie his recon. | cleared the fleld, " and. Due Datile of Ezra 8s far as we understand vital and electriea) | DF- Cajal has discovered in the optie nerve | SOFS “w wisser l‘m‘;n |s" m'v‘"m"h nis Land of Clement C. Moore. ford and Westminster, are in a great noissance came back as rapidly as possible to | Chureh was won: and with this result I cone machinery. Carryng the familiar process |® Certain apparatus whose only use and ob- | the nal it el B st Bayard's West farm feasure.in tracts or diastriots, where. every: [ PLFTIERS SRS PARK B EE D O a ted myself, One officer who was a Jitfle ot 0 & Moment more the reader's |{°Ct can be to enable the brain or thought | from pulmonary « w0 successtilly introduced BAysNOAIA far bt Gp Aleht belongs to the one. landlosd, | (1Y, confederate works in front of Thomas, | PARic-stricken ran' With the fivat. strageiers mind has branched off from the book to a | CENters to excits the retina of the eye from T T aelne ae: seovswBiT: Pl g Roosgvelt’farm. but ‘the Astor properties are scattered ali | nogge and Blair. were held 1 fores by Har- |0 Sherman and cried substantially, as 1 re- long traln of fdeas past, present or future | ¥!thin. Ordinary sight depends upon the Into the new prepargtica. With consurap- Rulgors faem. ' ger,town and therefore canuot bo managsd | Geu's corpa member: “*You've made a mistako in Me- : i e t o] Phe Ceoé: . B 1 i ¢ A ectuelly destroys, at the e s Now in order to make this battle as plain Shes ey perceptible time In their pasage. over, that the retina can aiso be excited from | COVeres par s Byt Stuyvespntfarm more than half a century to his work and he ) Sherman sald: “Is ; % ’ same tlme preventing any further propaga- s, Song Harbor” lly know all ¢ perties, | a8 possible, we can do at this time what we | (hores ot JUST LIKR MAGIO, L fac o comon | om0 (he W, 35 much fo tho ot o r::r:“(rf;, foug Harbor” land, may personally know all of the properties, | a8 P there? o reads the title, thinks whether he has | knowled, ¢ 's | Ingredients—Cod liver ofl, the emollient and ge, A3 We ofton see with our eyes but the younger men and the owners them- | conld not do on the 27th ‘nr 2»:(1. lx{xJ|I|yi !'Yes, T suppose he fs.” ‘arm, g} Hgury Spriogler. silves need to refer to the maj the | 1864, We can step over to the othor side and [ «yyeil, 111 walt Lo ctio 1880 the book or not; recalls or does not re- | shut, mee In_ our dresms. and o trying (o | nOUFishing elgment, and Guaisool, the anti- Farn ":L’ sy DU o e it e call its contents, its characters or any of i books to aid memory. In buying, in leasing, | s What our opponents were doing. I eannot | near from hin o remember the appearange of an object in the | #9Ptic and germ destroyer. Now, as to the Farm :of ypwuus Tiebou. that Hood, after his General Howard in insuring, in building, In making repairs [ 4o better, perhaps, than to give you what our | So Sherman sustal sted me, M recalls his impressions of the author, | past closs our eyes and strain them in the | 02008 which Dr. Slocum introduces by means Land of Slyy Peter Warren, to houses. ivuryn.mg ey -:wn.l‘ln:g ':."1 &ood General Cox haw ferreted out from con- | 1 was contene, T e0 Ah4 trusted me, und of another book which looked like it, | offort to recall It to our vision. of electricity. Ozone is oxygen in a con- the ey, road from the De Lancy | system that has grown out of the Astor | fed:rate reports GAINS OF THE WAR 4 title like it, which he read The pachinery by which this is carried on | tracted state, its specific "“"" being halt | ¢, rio"ere tho fya fayard farms, separated policy. So long as this Is adhered to the ie (Hood) determined upon another effort : sl L WAR: ¢hild in a garret twonty years ago, goos back |is a. sbatem . of contrifugal nerves lying |8 much again as that of oxygen. By jts | {2f™ grere the h f farm by Broadway. |income will probably remain so large that [to crush Sherman’s flank; and since the thing | When the war spirit fs upon us, as it io the garret, goes out of the garret into | within the optio morve wad running not frorp | Pecullar odour and its “hflfullfi F aon ita [ Nortn of this, 41l Tonting on the Bowery, | to get rid of it would bafle the orari® of the [ Was to be again tried, it must be admitted ( Must be when we return ta our fields of ehildhood again and is, in a moment, tho ‘sya to the ‘brain, but trom (hs kfain b | bresence in the atmosphato s sasily detoeted Yas the Gilbert ffgrring farm. including | most reckis spendthrift. Dut the Astors | that he was wise in determining to strike | CONGUEsts, we do not, I think, onough ome viewing a phase of his 1| the eye. They play ho part in tho phenom. | ALSF an eleotrical dlscharge; Ity VIVITying | Wewpiieios reshre. Lhought of for twenty years. but wiich in- |eno of sight. as 1t takes place from withoyt; | effects are experlenced at the séaside, or in i Manaq e north | have nover been of this kind and the ruling | Howard's right while in motion, and before | Phasize what was gained by tho war stantly comes back to him, clearly eut, tully the farm that lir’i’.,‘tpuln Randall gave to|generation may be depended on to take safs | he could emtrench. He withdrew Loring's It is not emough to cry out that slavery form uo part of the electrical apparatug of | the clear pure mountain air. In Dr. Slo- the Sallors' Sndg 'Hatbor. The Henry Bre- |care of their own. pNnu,L,.‘ less ‘h,‘“,’;",, and Walthall's divisions of Stewart's corps to | Was abolished. All our institutions covered, colored, perfect in all details, exactly pre. | externg] vision, as it s fairly 8," ,,',‘,],,_ cum's remedy the very necessary function | yoo +' tarm sepkratéd this from the place | revolution is Mkely to disturb them. support General 8. D. Lee, who with his | by the constitution of the United States served with its infinitude of minute elo- | stood. Performed by the Oone I that of more | ¢ Honry Spridftér, “which inchuded Union| Toe Vansermnl co very valuable real | 00rps (latterly commanded by Cheatham) was | and atill developing under its nourlshing aiie oin the mystorious storehouse of in- | Thelr construction shows clearly that they | ToRdlY TOPIACING it .oxYBen of 1he Bady | quere and frbm ‘Twelfth to Eighteenth | cstate ln New York. mut their holdings do | Ordered to move out on the Lickskillet road, | sunshine more and more year by year, were 'a*hfll"" located in the living matter be- | carry slectrical impulses from the optic cen- | taken up by the fatty matteP of the products | §heer ran east AT West from whors Fourth | not compare Wwith the Astors, nor do they | attack Howard and drive him from that road | then at stake A_eyos, trea to the retina, and they end In spongy | during their absorption into the system. As-|,venue now is to midway between Fifth and | ent to tenants’any great number of houses, | and the one by Ezrg church, Stewart's orders | What were those Institutions? I love te two readers starting with a glance at u}nfunnlnnl at the back of the retina, | Suredly the whole process scems on the face | Gyvih avenues. Whil They are not, therefore among the great | dirocted him to rémain in support of Lee | reckon among them the American family, ok sl bave the same train of thougit. s, actording to Dr. Cajal, their signif. | of it as plausible, as consistent and as perfect | oy zuchs of thiw; not taken for public | landlords of the Ratasalin T he 8T8t | near the fortifications till needed, and next | the American schogl, the Amecieen churches “vn‘rgl'u;m;.“awwar, it have some train | cance Is gbscurd, they leave no doubt thet | 48 may be. It only rémains to be seen from use, the Spingler heirs still hold I have not JOHN GILMER SPEED, |morning (20th), reinforced by his other di- | and the American ballot. I;”" X pre-an‘:‘o may fash to the past, | the speci! grgah of sight can be excited in | pratioal experiency whether the results | gon's to the records to.see, but it s enough el bl vision m—sz ®), to move beyond Lee and| We, my comrades have given thess, com- rdart Into the future— | two way#, from within as wall as from |Justify Dr. Slocum's sangulhe=but perhaps sclence, a8 withess the spacicus ; turn completsly the flank of Howard, attack- | pleted, rounded out, intact, (o our ehildn ombination of atoren facn i G Ted LLTHA ey | IR DA N g ivenis et "4 :..I‘d ‘:ll\:l‘()-':nm on ‘the north. side of B | Pretty little three-cornered tea cabinets | LUT0 Ln 8 el ’..,.'..,,‘m.._.. the case may be. Pri s MEMORY IN THE RETINA. Loaling power of hiw: remedy for a diseass | Choyin bonmr with 1te norenge oyt our- :L‘:L"':y‘"";f Mand o :‘::“luli‘l’;“ Hooks™mes | Smith's Georglang were ordered to occupy the | also, we veterans. the encrgy, the patriote el ombiniog procees fs the first and | Tye peoh tmportance of this is the light | thAt has wrought such havoc amongst man- | faghioned garden and Its contempt’ for the screwed into the back of the upper shelf, ang | YOrka in front of Thomas and Schofield.” | ism, the spirit Of elf-sacrifice ‘and (he four fhost Impressive quality of bratu nction, and | wyion 1 May thron upon the actual seat of | Kind, and which has hitherto bafled the rprising arms of commerce which streteh | proty cups hing. b hom - The eaued | " Perhaps General Hood himsell makes It | loss loyalty which inspired and animated 10" hb Sfanteraat In, Dr. Cajal's lecturd ligs | mbihory. Memory hus bacn wimesia e Cf | knowledge, time and. Fesearch of the: sntiy SV WBodt I Ut ave not semme Fercnaiaion | o 3 ap DeRIRG . cinae arm. BUE MauoN | o omelal Biatemaent (b | nael TaI TRiCh A8Epleet 10 oih8 deacriptien of tho special machinety | lofktod, {n oIl Te, compianiin Pponed (0 be | KON el profession, the tall iron tence. 'Btrangers ‘and New |and in the lower parc. preccoios bi's Le% | fallows | 'The storms come aven i times of peace; pon which thip action depends. cerebral lobes of the brain. It appears to be e Yorkers, (00, hhve looked at this old house | door, stands the tea caddy, silver 1u § g [ ‘‘Sherman began to mass his forces in that | they come from &)l quartcre and in all He findg iy the coat of gray matter, which and probable, l‘wvowr, that the Significance of the Marks. and have wondersd why it should be sul- | wpoons, a spirlt lamp and ket i ying | Querter. * On thie 35tk it besame manifest | shapes, and they will continue to coms as ¢ . that the epemy (Howard) desired to place | i i distinet layers of eslls SVt ples brincloally “In_the retina | susplelous Woman, “I belleve tils reoom. | had been tumbled down. Though 1 cannt | ° e O the main shoit 2is right T Utoy cresk. T datetmatosd i T b Mease g s il Wwhole thic O the Eray matter, which fs | and nat In the brain; that in responte to an | mendation Is one You have mad m & long | answer the queation I do know that the namac) - hold the Lickskillet road, and accordingly | aitions in society be bigh or low o, Unauestioned wext. of those processes s | irmpaie from. i pyramidal cells of the cere. | lime, instead of DOIRE Trom e aer LOLf | anewer the question 1 do onough to com. | Dr- Carroll estimates that 20,000,000 re- | oriorea Lioytonant Genersi Lee, who on tan | " oo comrades, at times wo may tremble Only & quarter of an ineh, and the middle m the retina apldly oreates or repro- How did it get all those grease spots | pensate for its comparative idleness. And | !E10us services, mot counting the Sunday | 36\ Felieved Major General Cheath from | and fancy that the very foundations of the Jayer of the thres ls o much thicker than | ducos and transmils one of woday. then the helrs of James Spingler do not | 5hools, CH "' ‘l 10 Gho poar ' the United | command of the corpy formerly commanded | government are being st I tho other two thal olher cbservers have| [If (his he as truo as It appears to be, and ma'am,” sald the lady who wae(need to worry about money for household ”"‘:fi',m"‘.'n m‘-m i ‘:"'"m"‘ Thig | 2, Myself, to move his forces 0 as to pre- |~ But not so! No, not so! The children are & It lpto three and even four layers. | if seeing an object again depende upon a recre- | looking for & situation, ‘“thim is marks of | expenses or even a trip to the country when | Preach g u'nun oty Hp, This | yent the enemy from galnfng that road. He worthy of their parents! The very insti- » does not look s ristanity 1 "dylng | was ordered to hold the enemy in check on | tutions we have mives inem prepare thess 05 & Ktruggle agalust svery opposing fem. ing him in the rear. Hardee's corps and |and I hope we bate given to our children in many donvolutions covers tho entire care Doler af emonbering ihe appearapco of any | Indianapoljs Journal: “See hers,” said the | fered to remain so long after those like it Drum, th he | past pecultar cells are al} of tie same char- | ation of fta image by the retina, thera is no | the tears sho shed hecadse she bad Lo ler ok | (hb arcsther 15 warm. i Solor, boweyer, though of differcut sizes, Dr, |doubt that hesring a sound again depeads | West of the Splugler farm was the Rogers | ©Ut- a line mearly parallel with the Uunulm{