Sitting alone in the fire-light's flare, This is the girl with the golden hair, This is the garden fresh and fair, These are the peaches sweet and rare, This is the great and terrible bear, This is the prince with noble air, This is the wedding beyond compare, This is the house-maid, Biddy McNair, Flower-Pots for Rooms.—Fill a pot with coarse moss of any kind, in the same manner as it would be filled with earth, and place a cutting or a seed in this moss: it will succeed admirably, especially with plants destined to ornament a drawing-room. In such a situation plants grown in moss will thrive better than in garden mould, and possess the very great advantage of not causing dirt by the earth washing out of them when watered. The explanation of the practice seems to be this: that moss rammed into a pot, and subjected to continual watering, is soon brought into a state of decomposition, when it becomes a very pure vegetable mould; and it is well known that very pure vegetable mould is the most proper of all materials for the growth of almost all kinds of plants. The moss would also not retain more moisture than precisely the quantity best adapted to the absorbent powers of the root—a condition which can scarcely be obtained with any certainty by the use of earth. The Advantages of Foreign Tongues.—In the Letters of Charles Dickens, recently published, occurs this pleasant child's story: "I heard of a little fellow the other day whose mamma had been telling him that a French governess was coming over to him from Paris, and had been expatiating on the blessings and advantages of having foreign tongues. After leaning his plump little cheek against the window glass in a dreary little way for some minutes, he looked round, and inquired in a general way, and not as if it had any special application, whether she didn't think 'that the tower of Babel was a great mistake altogether.'" Vancouver, Washington Territory. Mamma takes the Bazar, papa the Weekly and Magazine. I have the first and second numbers of Young People. I like it very much, but I like "The Brave Swiss Boy" the best. I am ten years old. I saw in your letter to us that you wanted us to write to your paper. I think it must have been very funny to come across the plains in a wagon. I came across from Fond du Lac, Wisconsin (where I was born), in the cars, and not in the long trains of wagons. Oro Brown read "Two Ways of Putting It," from the first number of Young People, in school last Friday. The pets I have are gray and Maltese kittens. I did once have a chicken that would come and eat wheat out of my hand, and fly into my arms. Julia B. I live a little way from Scranton, Pennsylvania, and a friend takes Harper's Young People for me. I have had a great deal of fun trying to draw a pig with my eyes shut. It is very funny to sit down with your eyes shut and try to feed another person with a spoon. Daisy. Middletown, New York. I wanted to write to you, and tell you how much I liked your nice paper. I like the story of "The Brave Swiss Boy" best. I live with my grandpa and grandma, who are very good to me, and I love them very much. Please print this, and oblige Harry W.T. Pretty communications are received from Frederick B., Brooklyn, New York; Perkins S., New York city; Annie L., New London, Connecticut; Mary E.R., Albany, New York; Mabel L., New York city; and Lottie S.B., Boston, Massachusetts. A.M.S.—As it may interest other young readers, we print the whole list of portraits on the United States postage-stamps in use at present, as well as the one you require: One cent, Franklin; two cent, Jackson; three cent, Washington; five cent, General Taylor; six cent, Lincoln; seven cent, Stanton; ten cent, Jefferson; twelve cent, Clay; fifteen cent, Webster; twenty-four cent, Scott; thirty cent, Hamilton; ninety cent, Commodore O.H. Perry. Bessie G.—Your "Bran Pudding" is excellent, but it came too late for use. We shall reserve it for next Christmas, as it is good enough to keep. Correct answers to Christmas Puzzle in No. 8 are received from Charlie G.G., Gussie L., Birdie C., J.N.D., Fred A.O., Herbert W.B., Emily J.M., Nina B.F., Willie C., Herbert H., Isabella C. Van B., and William W.F. The answer will be published in our next number. The following easy puzzles from very young readers are offered for other very young readers to solve: No. 1.WORD SQUARE.My first is a battle. No. 2.ENIGMA.My first is in stove, but not in coal. No. 3.NUMERICAL CHARADE.I am a word of 10 letters. No. 4.NUMERICAL CHARADE.I am a word of 6 letters. No. 5.ENIGMA.My first is in cold, but not in hot. No. 6.DOUBLE ACROSTIC.A girl's name. A measure. A fine net. A girl's name. A verb. An explanation. The answer is two cities of the United States. M.L. No. 7.RIDDLE.Decline ice-cream. M.L. No. 8.NUMERICAL CHARADE.I am composed of 18 letters. Answers to the above puzzles will be given in Young People No. 15. |