HINCKLEYS T A RUSTIC PAVILION. HIS design is intended as an embellishment to plantations, and to straight pathway of an elevated terrace. Several buildings thus placed, i of which the building is erected, and the roof is covered with reed thatching; 1 color, and which, from its nature, is little subject to become a harbor for noxious inste's or verin; ill, the alur dance of the troubl い injurious to the use of garden buildings which are not inclosed, that it is desirable to ascer.ain a remedy eieat to prevent their approach. The firzo so dried is adverse to small animals and birds, and has a reputation for being offensive to insects; but it is doubted if experience warrants fail legentence on its efficacy. If, however, seats were detached from the walls, and supported on glazed porcelain feet of a mushroota shape, and used as cators are app to furniture, it would prevent the annoyance, in a great degree, which some persons find from these intra leri. If straw be used instead of reeds for thatching, a few seasons will show the propriety of employing the sharper material; fr alee and arrows bare a great facility of assailing such roofs, and speedily destroy them. 2, 114, 210, 480, 498 324 Nebuchadnezzar's Dream, by William E. Scre- 322 The Land of Beauty, by R. C. Crane, The Lesson Dream, by W. Wallace Davis, The Little Girl's Inquiries, by Lillian, The Love-Letter, by Kate Wildfire, The Lynn Bride, by Mrs. Madeline Leslie, The Maid and the Magpie, by Jno. B. Duffey, 220 295 Ought a Married Woman to hold Property? 542 The Ministry of Woman, by the Rev. Charles 194 Our Hostess, by Mrs. S. J. Megargee, 512 The Mint Coin Adjusters, by Alice B. Neal, 125 Our Talents, by Haddie Lane, 66 The Muse, 216 The Mysteries of a Flower, by Professor R. 430 Patriotic Stanzas, by J. J. Baker, 159 The Nursery, 205 The Old Churchyard, by Beata, 88 18 17 91, 192, 290, 385, 477, 574 Pause Not, by H. Colman Paige, Pioneer Life in Ohio, by A Western Contributor, 45 Pride of Birth, by Alice B. Neal, 280 Reaping.-To A. C., by Caroline Chesebro', Receipt for a Fashionable Novel, Recollection of an Odd Chapter from a German Novel, read many years ago, by M. B. W. H., 183 Reminiscences of Kilkee Bay, by M. H. Fortune, 184 The Satin Pelisse, by Mrs. Sarah J. Hale, The Scarf and Cross, by Rose Ashley, The Silent Multitude of the Dead, The Sleeper who is Dreaming, by Mrs. A. F. Law, 569 The Soldier's Dream of Home, by J. L. Scan, 380 The Soldier's Dream of Home, by Fanny Fales, 380 The Sorrows of a Wealthy Citizen, by a Sufferer, 83 The Star of Earth, by Mrs. L. G. Abell, The Stereoscope, The Opera-Box, by Joseph A. Nunes, 163 The Peasant's Family, by Mrs. Sigourney, 195 473 The Phantascope, 43 The Philosophy of Grammar, by Lady Morgan, 95 141 343 466 462 377 Self-Made Men.-Francis Joseph Haydn, Shaving Tidy, 74, 152 228 Shopkeeping, by Alice B. Neal, 370 340 Single Solitude and Single Blessedness, by Mrs. 124 Sketches of Southern Life, by Pauline Forsyth, 530 The Three Conquests, by Sara, 506 182 The Town and Country, by E. Jane Cate, 561 Song. To thee, my love, by Samuel M'Nutt, 425 The Voyager, by Miss E. S. Norton, 332 17, 166, 219, 327, 471, 567 The Wail of the Tyrol, by R. T. Conrad, 86 472 Sonnet.-Early Autumn, by M. B. W. Hough, 284 Sonnet.-In Memory of "Amelia," by G. Wal- The Wife, by Florence Macdonald, 217 283 570 356 570 Think of Me, by "Jamie," Stanzas, by A Stray Waif, 186 Suggestions to Women, by Mrs. S. C. Hall, 195 To Caroline, by Ann Sweet, 471 |