CRDER AND DISORDER. ou being a long one, it wag plain that night would come before 1b was finished. Sitting down, and erying for her kind friend, was therefore her only resource. Order was not far distant, for, indeed, she had been watching her proceedings all the while. She made nerself visible, and, giving a tap on the letters with her wand, they immediately arranged themselves alphabetically in little double heaps, the small in one and the great in the other. After this operation, Julet’s task went on with such expedition, that she called up the old lady an hour before dinner to be witness to its completion. The good lady kissed her, and told her that ag she hoped she was now made fully sensible of the benefits of order, and the inconveniences of disorder, she would not confine her any longer to work by her- self at set tasks, but she should come and sit with her. Juliet took such pains to please her, by doing every- thing with the greatest neatness and regularity, and reforming all her careless habits, that when she was sent back to her mother, the followimg presents were made her, in order constantly to remind her of the beauty and advantage of order. A cabinet of Enelish coins, in which all the gold and silver money of our kings was arranged in the order of their reigns. A set of plaster casts of the Roman emperors. A cabinet of beautiful shells, displayed accerding to the most approved system. A very complete box of water-colours, and another of crayons, sorted in all the shades of the primary colours. | And, a very nice housewife, with all the implements belonging to a sempstress, and good store of the best needles, im sizes, REE OMIEN DIO RD