TABLE OF CONTENTS.

VOL. XLVIII.

A Bloomer among us, by Pauline Forsyth,[396]
Advice to a Bride,[405]
A Few Words about Delicate Women,[446]
A Great Duty which is Imposed upon Mothers,[464]
A Lesson worth Remembering,[478]
Annoyance, by Beata,[452]
Blessington's Choice, by Fitz Morner,[424]
Bright Flowers for her I Love, by Wm. Roderick Lawrence,[450]
Celestial Phenomena, by D. W. Belisle,[403]
Centre-Table Gossip,[477]
Charity Envieth Not, by Alice B. Neal,[417]
Cottage Furniture,[454]
Directions for a Letter-Band,[458]
Directions for Knitting a Work-Basket,[458]
Directions for taking Leaf Impressions,[443]
Disappointed Love, by W. S. Gaffney,[449]
Dress—as a Fine Art, by Mrs. Merrifield,[412]
Editors' Table,[462]
Embroidery with Cord,[458]
Enigmas,[474]
Evangeline and Antoinette.—Mantillas,[457]
Everyday Actualities.—No. XIX[393]
Farm House,[444]
Fashions,[479]
Female Medical Education,[462]
For the Lovers of Jewelry,[478]
Godey's Arm-Chair,[467]
Godey's Course of Lessons in Drawing,[410]
House Plants, from Mrs. Hale's New Household Receipt-Book,[472]
Instructions in Knitting,[472]
Intellectual Endowments of Children,[409]
Interesting Discovery at Jerusalem,[395]
Lace Mantilla and Tablet Mantilla,[457]
Letters Left at the Pastry Cook's, Edited by Horace Mayhew,[414]
Literary Notices,[465]
Mantillas, from the celebrated Establishment of G. Brodie, New York,[458]
Manufacture of Pins,[404]
Marquise and Navailles.—Mantillas,[389], [457]
May-Day,[423]
May First,[477]
New Revelations of an Old Country,[427]
Ode to the Air in May, by Nicholas Nettleby,[452]
Our Fashion Department,[478]
Our Practical Dress Instructor,[453]
Painting on Velvet,[393]
Patterns for Embroidery,[456]
Plain Work,[460]
Poetry.[449]
Receipts, &c.,[475]
Remembered Happiness,[433]
Silent Thought, by Willie Edgar Tabor,[440]
Sonnets, by Wm. Alexander,[450]
Spring,[464]
Spring Bonnets,[459]
Spring Fashions,[390], [457]
Stanzas, by H. B. Wildman,[450]
Stanzas, by Helen Hamilton,[450]
Teaching at Home.—Language,[442]
The Borrower's Department,[475]
The Economics of Clothing and Dress,[421]
The Gleaner, by Richard Coe,[449]
The Mother's Lesson, by Elma South,[441]
The Practical,[463]
The Spring-time Cometh,[463]
The Toilet,[477]
The Trials of a Needle-Woman, by T. S. Arthur,[434]
They say that she is Beautiful, by Mary Grace Halping,[451]
'Tis O'er, by I. J. Stine,[452]
To Miss Laura,[416]
To one who Rests, by Winnie Woodfern,[451]
To our Friend Godey, by Mrs. A. J. Williams,[468]
Treasures,[420]
Truth Stranger than Fiction,[406]
Work-Table for Juveniles,[455]
Yankee Doodle with Variations,[473]

May.



EVANGELINE. ANTOINETTE.

The latest French fashions. From the establishment of Messrs. T. W. Evans & Co., Philadelphia.

A pattern of either of the above will be sent on receipt of 62½ cents. Post-office stamps received in payment. These patterns are exact counterparts of the original, with trimmings, etc. (Description on page [457].)