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sive. Let the pupil read these verses in Luke, after which he will the better appreciate the lesson. It was the good Samaritan who was "neighbor" unto him that fell among thieves.]

LESSON LXV.

THE USES OF INSECTS.

1. "I can not see the use of spiders-and of a great many other ugly. looking insects," said Willie. "And, besides', spiders are very cruel', for they catch flies, and kill them', and suck their blood'."

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2. "It seems to me', then'," Uncle John quietly replied, "that the more spiders' there are in the stable', the less will the horses suffer from the flies'."

3. "I did not think of that," said Willie; but, after reflecting a moment, he continued, "But what good do the flies do', Uncle John'? And if they do no good', would it not be better if there were neither flies nor spiders'?"

4. "Do you know', Willie', that the fish you like to eat, fatten on the flies that hover over the stream? And that the poultry, especially ducks and turkeys, and also great numbers of birds, thrive all the better for the caterpillars, grasshoppers, flies, and spiders, which they pick up and eat, as a relish with their ordinary" food' ?"

5. "But what do the flies eat?" asked Willie. "Do they eat other little insects, not so big as the flies'?"

6. "No. The common house-fly, and some oth

er kinds, have no mouths for eating— only a little tube through which they suck up their food, after first moistening it. Thus they eat sugar, after dissoly. ing it with their saliva.d

7. "But, although

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the flies are sometimes very troublesome, they are useful in more ways than one. Wherever putrid meats and rotten vegetables are found, there the flies swarm in immense numbers in the warm days of summer, and by feeding on these substances they do much

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The Lady-bird and the Currants.

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Willie remarked that he had seen a great many of them before, but he did not know their names.

9. "This'," said Uncle John, "is a kind of beetle', called a lady-bird. And it comes just in the right time to teach us another lesson about the usefulness of insects."

10. "But, Uncle John', are these little bugs good for any thing? Do they do any good'?" asked Willie.

11. "I don't like to hear them called bugs'," said Uncle John. "The lady-birds do not belong to the race of bugs', but to a much more respectable family. They are beetles, and are to be classed with the beetles' and the weevils', although these latter, I confess, sometimes do a great deal of dảmage."

12. "But what are the lady-birds good for?" asked Willie. "That's what puzzles me. Don't they eat the currants', and other kinds of fruit', and the squash vines', and the pumpkin vines', where I have seen so many of them' ?”

13. "Not at all, not' at all," said Uncle John. "Both the lady-birds, and the little grubs which produce them, feed wholly on the plant-lice which destroy so many of our garden plants and vines. And if the gardener would keep an army of these lady-birds', the garden would be all the better for it. They are also a very simple and sure remedyi against the plant-lice which are sometimes so destructive to the plants in green-houses."

14. "This is all new to me," said Minnie; "and the next time these little lady-birds get on my

hands' or dress', I shall not think them so very ugly after all'. I do think their colored wingssome red, and some yellow-are really beautiful."

15. "Are there many other insects that are as useful as the lady-birds, and the flies'?" asked Willie.

16. "What do you think of the bees, that make the honey you like so well?" asked Uncle John.

17. "Yes, Willie'," said Minnie," we are to have some honey for tea. I think the bee is much more useful than the lady-bird."

18. "And I remember," said Willie, "that in the third chapter of Matthew, which we had for our Bible lesson last Sunday, it is said of John the Baptist, 'his meat was locusts and wild honey?' But is the locust, as well as the honey, really good food, Uncle John' ?"

19. "I suppose the locust mentioned in Matthew was a kind of grasshopper," said Uncle John, "which is still found in immense numbers in some Eastern countries, and is used there as a common article of food."

20. "Are there any other useful insects'?" asked Willie.

"What do you think of the silk-worm, which makes all the silk that is used in silk dresses, and shawls, and gloves, and many other articles'? Is the silk-worm of any use' ?"

21. "But is the silk-worm an insect?" asked Willie. "I did not know that worms' were called insects'."

22. "The silk-worm," said Uncle John, "is a

caterpillar', which, after

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spinning its silk', and

winding itself up in a little mass of it, called a cocoon', comes out a butterfly, or moth."

23. "I suppose just like the common caterpillar which you told us about," said Willie. "But is all the silk in

Silk-worm, Cocoon, Moth, and Moth's Eggs. the world made by such little worms' ?"

24. "Yes, all of it. But how many elegant ladies do you suppose ever reflected, that their most costly and most beautiful articles of dress. are furnished by a mere worm-by a common caterpillar!"

25. “But are there many other useful insects' ?" asked Willie.

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"I suppose

all insects have their uses," said Uncle John, "and that our heavenly Father made all of them for wise purposes. But where do you suppose we get the red, and crimson, and scarlet colors, for coloring many of our silk and cotton goods'?"

26. "I'm sure I don't know," said Willie. But Minnie said that Aunt Mary bought some coch'-ineal' at the drug-store, a few days ago, to color a shawl; but what the coch'-i-neal was made of, she did not know'.

27. "The coch'-i-neal," said Uncle John, "which

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