*%1'" *1. A I, i , a.#w d.Ae remained ins oMwn requiring attention from the inv b eauallv attended to abroad. fIin some akitde may be allowed, other will demand even a station. It is, in truth, only by a due regard to all airoumstanoee i4d -.4lp to throw te,a that off, or th& powers even of the constitution materially disease of long standing." mitigate, "It was, indeed, a of surprise me, during my residence abroad, to ob- the manner in which many invalids seemed to lose sight e object for which they left their own country-the recovery AeawU& " The mom common and more injurious devi- that system .onasist in errors of living which f diet, exposure an invalid ought to to cold, over-fatigue., etoitement in ,what is called 'sight-seeing,' frequenting and over-heated rooms, keeping late hours," etc. r/Hliams (op. cit.) remarks: Climate is only one portion Ie system of attack which we organize against the dread i decimates our population, and would be worth little if l$*iabined with medicine and hygiene, and a determined will writle bravely against the home-thrusting enemy." Bon (Trans. Colorado State Med. Soc.) thus discourses , as a class, are generally careless, self-willed, and Many naturally so; Sfthem by their physicians that they will not need more made so by Dr.T. "In- unreal instructions East telling them almost inva- to consult a physician here, but to the mountains, '' live out of doors, So, with full of preeoriptions from home, the poor sufferer rushes this jii altitude, and in his ravee" without proper medical advice; The following remarks of Forry, than f4 4 one is better qualified to give advice in this oounec Sppppt. that I quote them at length "Letw n I. toomuch to orange of climate U It the ^ ^nfatw+i JA w&lH Ivana~a, Iti V^T^ 4 .L A- an.T IC. I *i" .1 n /^^^E L *^ - ", 't*,~ & s. ^.. Y __ from 1> *' - 1