FAGOTS.

Disentangle the lines composing the bunch of Fagots, Fig. 1, trace each of them carefully upon a piece of card-board, cut these into the general shapes of the lines drawn upon them (see Fig. 2, which represents a bit of card-board with a fagot drawn upon it), and arrange them so that the "fagots" will form an outline drawing of an animal.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 2.


[THEN AND NOW.]

BY W. T. PETERS.

When skies were overflowing,
When noisy winds were blowing,
And all the land was cold,
We went abroad, scarce knowing
That dandelions were growing
In gay rosettes of gold.
But when the skies were bluer,
And all the land looked newer
And lovelier for the rain,
When every cloud was banished,
The dandelions then vanished,
And but their ghosts remain.


"It's getting awful! Been sitting here all morning, and only caught a lot of little good-for-nothings."

"Hi! that was a good nibble."


Caught!

Moral: Small boys should be satisfied with small fish.