ABOUT FKUITS, FLOWERS AND FARMING. 117 



tinuous portions of each, have one kind of forest tree, BO 

 that :in avenue of similar trees be formed. In planting 

 grounds, it is well to group trees of different kinds, but in 

 streets an avenue should be of elms, or of oaks, or of syca 

 mores, or of maples, and not all of them mingled together. 



A PLEA FOR HEALTH AND FLORICULTURE. 



EVERY one knows to what an extent women are afflicted 

 with nervous disorders, neuralgic affections as they are 

 more softly termed. Is it equally well known that formerly 

 when women partook from childhood, of out-of-door labors, 

 were confined less to heated rooms and exciting studies, 

 they had, comparatively, few disorders of this nature. 

 With the progress of society, fevers increase first, because 

 luxurious eating vitiates the blood ; dyspepsia follows next, 

 because the stomach, instead of being a laboratory, is turned 

 into a mere warehouse, into which everything is packed, 

 from the foundation to the roof, by gustatory stevedores. 

 Last of all come neuralgic complaints, springing from the 

 muscular enfeeblement and the nervous excitability of the 

 system. 



Late hours at night, and later morning hours, early appli 

 cation to books, a steady training for accomplishments, viz. 

 embroidery, lace-work, painting rice paper, casting wax-flow 

 ers so ingeniously that no mortal can tell what is meant lilies 

 looking like huge goblets, dahlias resembling a battered cab- 

 bam these, together with practisings on the piano, or if 

 something extra is meant, a little turn, turn, turning, on the 

 harp, and a little ting-tong on the guitar ; reading &quot; ladies 

 books,&quot; crying over novels, writing in albums, and original 

 correspondence with my ever-adored Matilda Euphrosyne, 

 are the materials, too often, of a fashionable education 

 While all this refinement is being . put on, girls are taught 



