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Paulus Androcydes, but it was noticeable that Doctor
Rusticus and Athothis maintained a dignified silence.
" Did Mrs. Cloverblossoin recover ? " asked the student,
assuming his wonted air of gravity.
" No! " replied Doctor Rusticus, crustily. " She vent
off! How could it be otherwise, since the city doctors
loaded the poor woman with nitro-glycerine ? However,
her husband must have been satisfied with the treatment,
as he has since married a girl some forty years his
junior."
" How abundant the dandelions are this spring ! " cried
the student, with the evident intention of changing the
subject.
" Yes!" answered Doctor Rusticus, glancing at the
numerous yellow flowers fringing the green grass at the
road-side. " It is one of our most reliable indigenous
remedial agents. What a pity that it is not more used.
Its golden imbricated florets mark the coming of spring
almost as surely as the incoming swallows. There is no
agent I am acquainted with so useful in real chronic pul-
monic affections and diseases of the liver as the fluid ex-
tract of taraxicum. How beautiful the dogwood looks
with its snow white blossoms. I have known the bark of
this tree to break up severe cases of ague where quinine
failed. It seems as though an ever-kindly nature fur-
nishes mankind with the very remedies needed in cases
of sickness, and, strange to say, these medicines are
usually most common in localities where the diseases for
which they are useful are most prevalent. Malaria
and liver complaint are frequent causes of indisposition
in this valley, and these specifics are growing on the
same soil; but here we are at Cloverblossom's gate, and