HOME AT THE HAVEN. again along a pleasant country road. The driver knew Captain Osborne's house, called the Haven, quite well, so that when he stopped before a pretty white house standing amidst shrubberies and flower-beds, with a mnooth lawnn on one side sloping down from the sitting- room windows, they felt delighted to think that so / ~i e._ o1.- W C , ",/ /v', I4,:,: ,, /;' """- '- " pleasant a place was to be their future homo. If they had doubted for a minute, there was the white and red flag hoisted on a flag-staff in the middle of the lawn, and on the top of a little summer-house was a brightly gilt weather-cock, with the four points of the compass shown by its letters-all which looked as if the house