SEPTEMBER 30 Days. Autumn.: I : Sundays, Weather, High Water , mean time, at St.John, Charlott • ! D 1 Anniversaries , &e. Halifax, N. S. N. B. & Annap. Town, P. E. I. St.Johns,' Newfid. ; 1 l Pleasant 11 35 2 27 9 23 10 35 : [ 2jLondon burnt, 1666. morn. 3 5 3 I 11 35 ; morn. ! 3 New style adopted in O. B . 0 35 4 5 4 0 ! 4 Low tides, weather. [1752. 1 51 5 21 5 16 0 5» i 1 5 First American Con. 1774. 2 50 6 20 6 15 1 50 ; 6 continues 4 27 7 57 7 53 3 27 ; E 12th Sun. aft. Trinity . 5 24 8 54 8 49 4 24 ! 8: 5 stat. Nat. B. V. Mary . 6 9 9 39 9 34 5 9 9 fine, but 6 46 10 16 10 11 8 46 ; 10 Middling tides. C apogee. 7 20 10 50 10 45 6 20 | 11 a little cooler. 7 51 11 21 11 16 6 51 12 g greatest Hel. Lat. S. 8 14 11 44 11 39 7 14 1 13 8 52 A. 22 A. 17 7 52 iE l3thS.a.Tr.—. 9 22 0 52 0 47 8 22 15:Battle of Quebec , [ i £o<[. 9 54 1 24 1 19 8 54 ! 16 [1759. some rain. 10 29 1 59 1 54 9 29 il/l 9 greatest HeL Lat. N . 11 13 2 43 2 38 10 13 ! 18iVery low Ids. [Emberday. A. 8 3 38 3 33 11 8 19; < J <5 <[. Emberday. 1 23 4 53 4 48 A. 23 QOJEmberday. A storm 2 45 6 15 6 10 1 45 E l4ihS. af. Tr.-St.Matthew. 4 14 7 44 7 39 3 14 .'22] of rain 5 23 8 53 8 48 4 23 231 Aut. begins. © enters 25. 6 17 9 47 9 43 5 17 241C perigee, accompanied 25| Very high tides. ? <$ C • 7 3 10 .',3 10 28 8 3 7 45 11 15 11 10 6 45 26\2[ & C. icith 8 23 11 53 11 48 7 23 "27 high icinds. 9 12 morn. morn. 8 12 E:15th Sun. aft. Trin. 1 9 42 0 42 0 37 8 42 ,29|St. Mich. —Michaelmas D. 1 10 26 1 12 1 7 9 46 : 30|St. Jerome. $ stat. | 11 12 2 50 2 51 10 12 : i ■----------------------------- nr-.___». t«r:_j___ r>_____ i ____» n.„ i ._ *~*_______n:_ 'iv [ aier &\. »v iHusur, rurrsnoro , nonon, i ^ornwams, ji uro, Sic. bar d is soon avaricious enough to allow the woman of his love to becom* his > most devoted drudge. From thenceforth her life is oiw of unremitting toil. lit is nothing liut mend and botch, cook and bake, wash and iron, churn and make cheese, pick'up chips ;md draw water, hear children and nurse ihem. The family enlarges, the husbatid grows wealthy, becemes important in the jcommuuity- takes his ease when he chooses; but the cares of his faded and 'broken down wife know no relaxation. She may outlive her husband; but rarely does, and not unfrequently a second wife comes in to share in the 'money that should have been enjoyed by her predecessor, through a quiet old jageofrest. This is no fancy sketch. It is drawn from life, and in every tountry-lown and neighbourhood, its truthfulness will be recognised. From iihis life, the girls of our day are learning to shrink ; not because they are 'lazy, but because they know that they are to be sacrificed. Not because the falling of the farmer is not respectable, but because they do not wish to be¬ come his mistress, maidof-all-work, nurse and bootjack. Jt