MEDICAL TREAT M E N T. 
set upon this noble chalybeate. My nose bled to-day, 
and I was struck with the fluid brickdusty poverty of 
the blood. I use iron much among my people: as a 
single remedy it exceeds all others, except only the 
specific of raw meat: potash for its own action is 
well enough to meet some conditions of the disease, 
and we were in the habit of using freely an ex- 
FOX-TRAPS. 
temporaneous citrate prepared from our lime-juice; 
but, as our cases became more reduced and com¬ 
plicated with hemorrhages, iron was our one great 
remedy. 
“January 31, Wednesday.—The weather still most 
extraordinary. The wind has hauled around, and is 
now blowing from the north and northeast, usually our 
coldest and clearest quarter. Yet the diffused mist 
