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P wwl 0 Revi S?? "? J ?- ??..???.JB??.-j-?..?jL?? flii duh has a Action If ?'Youxc ?GLANi) jt?Il ke &K up 'its .Bračr M-B. P,,d pei-i U? for t boys aid girls. '? ? ,Tkq% ON?--N; 'y sustaiiis its character as a most instructive ami interesting periodical for boys. The Iixistkatkh BOOK Of Povltry has reached its 47th number, and treats in an able manner upon creese. r LiTCiii-j JToiIks is arld. will b« ^ead- "bjt-Xliote fojtjii'iiojn iuls cuiii^iiUxl-uatli.. tlie greatest..in- tere.4. seen for a loiiy time. The nrtb-lps aref .Ls; iisiial- nio-t interesting. Sunday AT Home is. we think* not (I number as of thevreceedin ones, but still there uiy niMJij. !{¡alm¡ of gHlU to 00 tofinTrnrit: —~ THE Ladies' TwcAsmtvii. as,u^aa.l, a most delight- ful magazine. "fife aretcles* are ^weft' written, and will be of the greatest use to all wTio peruse them. Tnere are also eley:viitlfa«llii-vns. THE Fiuesidk f<u- this month is quite equal to its predecessors iii-, c p int it- ,ihe article on Hymns Ancient ana iludern" is continued from the propeetlhjg unintrars Bad is.rnoet inaaictaVfl..T Good Words has alw?y? a choice selection of 1ti .1c?4s t;¡dt fro&p?tHtd? tMS?'mohftr'a?tia?aziu? is h67 £ i?e¥}$6Kftr ? tM5; if' it ?n??Be ca:tM?<i, ?e!&htl rule. The whole of the conten ts are exëen'   'ant I'" +4. V J. J.; las f. t i Jfr 'J ,).. !n oar:rticled 4;y„^clKct r' 'In :aty):)e. 3eJr{ by .thatoYef?tghtful writer Sttf?t-?o?ditay.g?es on to chapter eleven. The engravings are in tiaajna?a.- zine of at high ordei'.  T&e <-?'tVEH, afway?wdcome', hri?tl?'-?ithlh?rest- M?paj?r? Alihol;'t ev?? trtic e is= ably ?itten, and JlH )I instruction. The.??iaJs.;e.ojl.?u.e,(Q/Pe in- teresting," tbe f 1-6 excenent,.?d the r/: :IWJ; .A'J:m: "'Jàfe w:elL,>eløpted,J ) ?..?'?' 1)ay or Rest continues its i-tories.e?Ot?ofthe World and MB'(,?oH.which.are continued to be read witli grfat intf^trst. A«i^article-'on iUe 'Jesuits is .especially WtiWwiWhJp t^» local readers, jrecollecting too location of a bund of these men at Mold. Cassell's MAtrAZiNE lor the present month is very interesting. J.l'herêT-ie\'ei'al,mo"tusefíiral'tiHef; for the ",elltrzll -"t'he Uatherer, always a pleasing-Woitfh-' ili'ore1 than usu.?dy m- teresting, .,Ji'be Her ■ M?e?ty' Repre- sentati \'e, is very"instructive. Ttjg.vsuuy- is,aii exeellentj periodi- cal, and We would lecoi-Hinend all heads of families to ?4thve-itnhi,their --l The papers contained in it ta.re''a!s'inen'e?Hngas''they are?Me,.and'Me calculated ndl ony to !iai[jt' Jlrt9:tf;!f,tlt!\ afford instruction %o  Ihe Gikl ri Own P?rEH il one that will be of, he I gre'ltet Jrt<J'¥Jü:: t?? ?ylit nmd, it? A f .w days .1^0 v e he-'u?ttf?oanH'?w?' aay,«? li ?wayslook C'I :7", '\oUj J fonvaid to th%i.?y?l?.t?;;?Ht' ?'?'" P?l'er' eomus out.?If ?u? M'testiluumal. ?,j,?;?n, by those who are 'th'e rectpie???the paper,'n'eeu we r-ay mure?  -J"'(]' :t?S!if GOWEN H'DL'n?c?utain? amqn?st?.p.Uiej' rticle.; a story bye. R. L?n '?.Jo?f p?.the,?.???. ;?t is a tg ii well told.XL jjut.what: did ■oeour, !evliat-tj!.i>st JlhÍ<.r did..OceMr^ aiid; if ,4;he (iS»peBl«ifc»ml elenieut o £ vthe :5t(;?y- is* *ffit. -aside,^ tlie ziaincter'- a inctui-ouli'ieocplivnaitiion-i :df this national '^disaWfci-k r.n :ido; 'iji-l :1: fvr. ■ ,i,n Jitter the 'éeTjr}é#urs, tH^1 PubMe' Hiill fej4 a ^phK^nolo^fet/'TnE -f>1iREy8rbq.r,(¡,);L, read with more than usual fnterefst. The' lAo're the subject of phrenology is Studiiitl' tlie-■ hiore it appears to hiive in it ;I1ie impM-t»n1? principleS which fchould be considered by every thrflftih'^trsdri; The number before us is a I!t,r¡g, oi¥e-sct¥(llconlains an interesting delineation of ThomasOttriyle. >r> :io:3 t. Nuvi:i.i^r;<(JiOH^n Ih;¡. I iloberta ,at»d- Go. j iiflothe jtit^{jf- !a ;ne\Vti«KP'«n»y monthly, ill. wl1i(;tht ,lj()!ls, srwiety gossip, and literary fiction are mingled for 1 aijy, ent^taininent, with wood cuts and co.l«i^etl-Htot^ilJl^trate the I latest modes. There are four complete novelette. T-hoYrifiS v,Ivy We; or, Love's "YoimelJrftfthi.^biJ'Mbreiice Hodgkinson; "Madeline's Marriage," by Q. iMafcn; and Ladv Langley's Secret," by Clara LorelL i: MACMiLLA?'sM?.?AZi??has itl'ial tale continued totlie3stil clial)tt?r Ari(i .,est. Ali episode, ill ?t i n, T)y tli? late An episode in the' W?terlo? cai,upa?n by the late Sir P. Fitz-Gerald, ?at-t., takes?ns back very forcibly to the time of the Irhn -Duke and "thatfamdu?ictorv." H.N.?V. write art ci -on ? Thd Herald's CoHeg&" and :conSdeft' fji^t-; it' m?.'y "become a; latent source of re venue by selHng titles of baronetcy to persons who paries the rrecessary character :\vith A clear income of £ 7,600 iper-.aimuron at abdut £ 20,000 per title. '"We ieavb till: comment upon the proposal to oUl' relùt'<rs.lhe, otker:' ,at,tiøle¡.;¡ are very readable and good-.r., j. -ir e: -= -u 'c "'0" THE Fern Pakmjise, b^. Francis George Heath, Part 9 (publishedrijy Messrs Sampson Low, Alirston and Co.), contains—19' contlnuatiori,(jf the section of I the Tolmneljevoted'to "Ferns andPérn:Cultûre'J;J.:the I conclusion of the chapt6T"oirth8' Polypodies, complet- ing the descril)tibrt. of tlie; Limestone Polypody, and following with a description a»d" account of the Alpine Polypudy;ûht\pWl'S'Oihibe shield fetat5.-aiid Bladder Ferns,. gnd thq- ,ommeneeawpt,,of the chapter best known, anda'r'e ^Isq..inclu d ed this part, The on the :w q?ias,: lso."irchled III j this part rhe i -best known, aíd oBe:pf the .most beautiful Of the British Bladder .FeenSj is $je: Brittle. Bladder sFern. The Fragile or Brittle. Bladder Fern ia ordinarily seen About-six inches in height? but it sometimes grows to the height of !a foot OF more/ Tlw, Frond-stem- is tender, herbaceous, and-¥#ty brittte, -having just a few light-coiore4' scalqs at its-b^s>e. The fronds-grow from ar tufted root-stoci.i-and-^nie, up in, ,ç¡¡t:er:ý .t!le crown of the Of this. The shape of the fedhd W'I- i, c -lilce, slightly smaller lit-the base than in-the dentrel and tajieiihy'gradually topt' Th,&, &v.-est pa-ir of! bt,tiiche- on 'toh ,? ,pg It .4t ht the 1 the jSctiis 15 tljan the ,'pair Tttmiedlat'ely above it; tiut from that; pair iii the polnt oj the frond 'the successive pairs gradually imiÍli11 in length. The paIrs of branches on each side of the frrmd are not placed exactly opposite one another, but accftWliiig to a somewhat irregular- arrangement. The branches themselves are distinctly laijce-shaped and on each side, above and below them, is a row of leaflets, egg- shaped in general outline, and notched or saw-edged. 011, the backs- of the fronds tHe little bl^ddep-Iike cluster;¡ f of seeds are very plentiful and frequently become confluent. Although somewhat rare in lreland-exoept in two or three localities, that country—this Fern is nevertheless widely., distributed throughout the rest of the United Kingdom; being, indeed, in some places, very abundant. THE Gentleman's Magazin^ now before us opens with three chapters, in continuation of "Queen Cophetua," byR. E. Francillon. There is an' able article by Grant Allen, entitled "The Dog's Uni- verse," dealing principally with the developed sense of smell in the canine tribe. Diitton Cook discourses with much ability, upon The Eclipse of Shakes- peare." and is foliowfed by Alfred ETintnef, who in an admirable paper headed "'The Fishes of Canada," dilates upon the salmon trade, its prospects and de- velopment, and on artificial- propagation. Daniel Pidgeon has here also an exhaustive: article upon the .explosion of the Thunderer gun, but after recording that the committee, after a'protracted investigation, came to the conclusion that the destruction of the gun was to be attributed to the simultaneous discharge of two charges, he neither directly impugns this decision nor supports it, although he asserts in the end of the article that we are still left in uncertainty as to the real causes of the Thunderer, explosion." A most interesting paper from the pen of Margaret Hunt,tipon "Literary. Success a Hundred Years Ago," the in- stance quoted being Mrs Hannah More, is followed by another u on "The Philosophy of Fasting," by Benja- min Wara Richardson. This paper, as may be. readily supposed, ? 'was suggested by Dr. Tanner's great fast, supposwedh,i] c(h, it almost exclusively deals. Other examples are given, but it is the Tanner experiment which is the basis for many lessons drawn from the incident. The writer endeavors to show, and is at -times successful, that good results have followed what has generally been regarded as the foolhardy attempt of a'DJew York enthusiast to make himself notorious. This part atso. contains some able Science Notes," by Mattieu Williams, and ince reading "Ta.ble Talk, by the editor: ■ Belgravia for September, abounds in excellent matter,Under the title: of "The Heart 'of the Ardennes," wë ":hay a Well-written description by Katherine S. McQuold of the little town of La Rùche, in the heart of the Western or Belgian Ardennes. The pa^er teems with legends pecliliar;to -the town and its surroundings, several of them, euoh as the 'story of Marie de Sahri's revenge up»n Henri de la Roche, fot his unfaithfulness to her, being very inter- estltl a tjuality which is heightened by several neat -tnius i ng de'i c'rll)- engravings. There is here. also, all amusing descrip- tion, under the liea4 of "A Scientific Experiment," of the writer's attempt—real or pretended—to fast for two days longer than Dr Tanner. The attempt was sustained for a few hours, and the result achieved SE the en'd of tbdt period*, wis (to use the writer's'own ivotds)—" I tottered out to lunch." Alfred Rimmer continues -his interesting papers upon Our old country towns, this raepth taking us through parts of Staffordshire, apologising at the outset for taking us to a plaee known as. the Black, Country. Fin- delkind,a' child's'Stotyrfrorti the pen of the now pdprilhr Qaajs giri: this p'sjyt.0' H. Barton Baker, writing úndêr the heaid of "A Queen of Society,"j yi -a mantu^ which displays # degree of if^n-pljtvrityjw. jthr.the subject, relpiteu- th^ interesting and pitiful story of the: life of Lady- BJessington—a a tale of the *hrlypart- of the-present century. Upon '4h& subject of' "^Lit^ratiwe as ii, Profession, '^vvfe1 'are here further treated to'he:ti-:¿aHdlèpefiiiéès of a sncceissful' aufhri^, whfch we:'t'ake. tfo be^as tfc&fy an .ex- aggeration of t^e 4ark sille, Qf. the pjpturie' as James Payn's article in the Nineteenth GcMury—\vhichioalled forth the present paper—was of the light sidte, It is nevertheless to some degree, .we have no doubt, a faithful picture. Faur^jcUapters each are given of Payn's "A Confidential Agent," and Mrs Hunt's "TheLeadettjCaafc'et:? t. f We have, also ioacknowlege Excelsiois.; The Lon- f)OV{'LMHl, aaiew Coijs^rva^^e journal of a. Sarcastic [ type.; House and Home, the organ of the workino- j men's club The, OWNI -MA(,AZINE:; THE TRACT M vgaAine • THE Child's Companion; Cootagk? and Autimvv • Night and Day, &c. 1 1  .') ?——————— ————?——— ?———?——————?,——?—??,????  —

Jr¡lon I /v -44*10*O???,fon'7%%7?-II

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