A GLOVE. Faith !| but I loved the little hand That used to wear this time-stained thing! Its slightest gesture of command Would set my glad heart fluttering. Or if it touched my finger, so, Or smoothed my hair, why should I speak Of those old days? It makes, you know, The tears brim over on my cheek. Poor, stained, worn-out, long-wristed glove! I think it almost understands Lat reverently and with love I bold it in my trembling hands, And that it is so Jdear to me, With its old fragrance, far and faut, Because my mother wore i$, she— On earth my love, in heaven my saint, a. lM DISENCHANTED, Will Carlisle had definitely made up his mind to propose to Augusta Colton —“ Augusta Ann,” as her unsophisti- cated relations phrased it in their every- day talk. “She is a diamond among the rough pebbles,” he declared, with all alover’s | enthusiasm. “Are you quite sure that she is a | diamond at all?” dryly asked Dr. Bel- | ton. Mr, Carlisle had been spending the | summer at Groton Point, in a dreamy, | desultory sort of way. He was one of those fortunate —or unfortunate — young men whose career in life is | already made for them. | An old uncle in the West Indies had | bequeathed him a fortune, a connois- | seus cousin who came abruptly to his | end in a railway accident had left him | a house and a gallery of paintings, and | just when he was preparing to enjoy | himself thoroughly a husky cough de- veloped itself, the medical men talked | grimly of consumption, and he was or- | dered to the seashore for the summer. | “There is nothing the matter with me,’ said he impatiently. “But there will be,” averred the | learned disciple of Esculapius, ‘if you don’t check this thing in its very in- Westward ho now, or Rhyl, ception. Of =e “Nonsense!” said Carlisle, care for any of those fashionable re-| sorts. If I am to be banished any- | where, I'll choose the place of exile my- seif,. What do you say to Groton | Point?" “Groton Point! Groton Point!” re- peated the doctor with a puzziel alr. “I may be very deficient in modern geography, but I must, say I never heard of Groton Point.” “No, nor anybody else,” said Will | Carlisle, smiling, ‘and that is Lhe rea- son I am going there. It is a solitary | fishing station on the West coast, There's absolutely noting there but surf and sea gulls.’ And so Groton Point was selected for Mr. Carlisle's summer residence. There | was a little one-story hostelry there, fronting the sea, while the postofiice was ai one end of the village and a va- | riety store at the other, where you might buy anything from tallow can- dles and matches to an almanac and a plow. There it was that Miss Colton threw her net over his unsuspecting heart, one day, when she lost the sovereign wherewith her mother had sent her to the store for a lot of carpet warp, seven yards of red flannel and a box of baking powder, She was so pretty and plump and dis- | " “I don’t | 3 tracted, and her blue muslin gown set | off her blonde complexion and bur- | pished hair so exquusitely, and Will had not seen any woman but the fat | landlady for a week. And they found the gold plece lying | among some rocks by the seashore, where it must have dropped from Augusta’s pocket when she pulled out | her handkerchief to brush away the flies, which were troublesome at Gro- ton Point when the wind set from a | certain direction; but Mr, Carlisle lost | something more serious still—his heart. “A fishermaid of low degree,” he | had quoted when he confessed all these things to his college chum, young Dr, | Belton, whose quiet sister, Lettice, he | had once admired 1n asort of way, when both the young men were in the gradu- ating class, “A wild rose-bud, don't you see? A genuine daughter of Nature, who has | never been out of sight of the ocean!” | “Oh!” said Dr. Belton, “Of course she has no external pol- | ish,” added Carlisle. *‘She will have | everything to learn. But she is so re- freshing as compared with the conven- tional city young lady that one get so | tired of.” “Exactly,” said Dr. Belton, seeing | that his friend expected him to say | something. “Her father owns a small fishing- | smack. He is a real character, And | her mother 18 one of those nice old | ladies that one seldom sees, Domestic, | you know — neat-handed Phyllis—all that sort of thing. I'll take you there, Jack, if you’ll promise not to find fault with the primitiveness of the thing.” “Oh, I'll promise,” said Dr. Belton. Belton was a man of instincts, and in this case his instinct told him that Will Carlisle was altogether astray. ‘“‘He is beauty-struck,” said he to himself. “For the time he is be- witched, It’s the old story of Ulysses and the Sirens over again.” But he went to the seaside cot where Augusta Collon had all the old china niichers filled with wild flowers, and sat ing, in their midst. toward 11 o'clock of a dark and brood- lightning here and there, ‘Isn't she the shore. *‘She is very beautiful, yes.” “And graceful—and wemanly?” cried the lover, greedy for praise, “I concede all of that," slowly spoke Belton; “but I don’t call her exactly a lady.” “Pshaw,” said Carlisle. ‘Your ideas are formed on the hackneyed model of society. A girl like Augusta is capable of any degree of polish, And did you observe what a sweet, low voice she had-—like a lute?’ “Granted; but it struck me that her grammar was a little shaky now and then.” “*Oh, grammar, that’s nothing. She will soon pick up the phrases of the **Carlisle,” cried his friend quickly ‘you are not engaged to her?” *‘No; but I shall be within the next twenty-four hours,”’ boldly asserted Carlisle. “I beg of you do nothing rash,” treated Belton. ‘*‘Wait til—-m" “Don’t preach,’ a little impatiently. en- a little un- matter all made up my mind.” ‘“Then there is no use in my arguing “No use at all,” cried Carlisle, *‘I call myself a not contemptible judge of character, and I pronounce Augusta of the rarest types of true womanhood.” Colton to be one sweetest and By this time, however, the impend- Sheets rain poured down, vivid lightning cleft the ng of “I hope you are certain about the path,” said Belton, who was quite new to this coast country. “Well, I thought I was,” Carlisle. answered “But the tempest and dark- ness seem to have blotted old landmarks, Here is some one coming. Let's ask him. My friend, are we in out the answered an **GGoin’ back to pub- Derrer ““Ain’t goin’ to Point,” inebriated voice. lic-oush. go back to public-oush. “It's old somewhat Ge-wet! Ge-cold! . Colton,”’ sald Carlisle, “He other seafaring men, he likes his grog.”’ “Your father-in-law elect, eh?" i * isl & discomfited. always sober, Like said Belton, with a shrug of the shoulders. “But you should see how angelically sweet and forbearing Augusta is with him,?’ said Carlisle. “That is the thing I most admire in her—her perfect tem- And, of course, we shall separate her entirely from the awkward rela- tionships. In the meantime the old man is going back to the ‘public- oush'—I suggest that we go back tothe Augusta’slittie brother to pilot us in the right direction. Or, Vi «3% don't like to ask it of them, but I do not see what else we can do.” In less than five minutes they were A tiny window at the left was pushed fair Augusta, shrill and sharper than “Go away!" she cried, “Clear out! “Augusta Ann!” remonstrated the voice of old Mrs, Colton from the in- Augusta, “‘I’vetold pa, time and again, the next time he came home at this hour of the night, I wouldn't let him in. And I mean to stick to my word, so there! It's too bad of him, so it is, to spoil my chances with a city won't stand it. Get out, pa. Don't stand whining there.” old woman, ‘*it’s your tongue and tem- per that drives him away more’n any- thing else, Let him in. Don’t you hear how it’s raining?” “Silence!” retorted daughter, And the window was shut to once more, leaving the two friends standing on the doorstep, in the night and tem- pest. They got back to their lodgings after a long, wet walk, in the course of which they went considerably out of their way—but they were neither of them sorry for the night's adventure, wet and forlorn though they were, “It’s astonishing how easy it is for a man tobe mistaken,’ said Carlisle, after a long silence, as they were sitting be- fore the fire in their own room. Belton leaned over and grasped his hand, “Be thankful old fellow,” sald he, ‘that you have escaped as easily as this,” Augusta Anu never saw her cily the dutiful swan again, and as she didn’t read the papers she missed perceiving the notice in a daily journal of the marriage of | Will Carlisle to Miss Lettice Belton. | And poor old Colton leads a harder life than ever. ———— A —————— | The Transpiration of Viants, i A r—— er — Of all the phenomena of plants, that of transpiration is perhaps the most interesting. The rich dew that im- pearls a summer morning with beaaty, resting on leaf and flower and grass blade, dampening the country roads, and that was once thought to be evolved from the atmosphere, is proved by the great Dutch naturalist Muschenbroeck to be the coadensed perspiration of plants, Theexperiment was very simple; he covered with a plate of lead the whole circumference of the root of a white poppy, 80 as to prevent the vapor of the earth from interfering with experiment. The plant was then cov- ered with a bell glass cemented to the lead, After that, each morning, when | the naturalist came to visit the during the driest night its leaves name of dew is given, and that the | sides of the glass were covered with { moisture, (iuettard was able to decide of a cornel tree weighing only 0% drachms distliled each day an ounce | and three drachms of water, double its weight, in twenty-four hours. The common garden sunflower is a { marked instance of the transpiration of | plants, Wales has proved by experi- | water in twenty-four hours. Ruysch, the great Dutch anatomist, states: that it in a green house in Amsterdam from proportion anarum which he key the botanical at dist extremities of its leaves in garden led water drop by drop the as it was watered ; and another plant of the same family (Colocasia esculenta edible arum, threw out water in the form of a jet, exhaled from the pores seen on the tips of its cordate shaped leaves, and from each of these orifices from ten to hundred drops of walter were thrown some distnace every minute. mentions a similiar phenomenon in one little drops of that were one den at Rouen, where arborescent fuchsia rained down much water upon the plants around it that it The leaves an 80 Was necessary to remove them. perspiration they distil, collect it in little cups, which are seen at the ex- tremities of their leaves ; theses in some cases have movable lids, The most markable plant that exhibits this phe- 1s the famous Nepenthes dis- pitcher plant, found in Its leaves display a the cylindrical 1H nomenon tillatoria, or Southern Asia firm mid-rib, which extends along blade and ends in cup, provided w a strong a hinged lid, which 148 spontaneously opens and closes accor- ding to the state of the atmosphere. During the night lid sinks dd and hermetically closes the little which then fills up with limpid walter exhaled by its walls, During the day the lid is raised and the water mostly evaporates. The beneficient nepenthe has often quenched the thirst of the Italian lost in the burning deserts. In the marshy forests of Southern Amer- ica is found another distilling plant, the purple sarracenia, the structure of which is equally eccentric. Its leaves uniting at their edges are transformed into elegant amphorm, the narrow open- ing of which is surmounfed by an am- ple green auricle threaded with scarlet this wn VASE, name. These cups are filled with pure and delicious water for the benefit of asses, the water of which is lukewarn is the weeping tree of the Canary Is- whose tufted foliage distils Bat the rain tree with vian Andes, Professor Ernst director Gardens, at Ca. raccas, states: “Inthe month of April | transparent; during the whole day a | minishes with the growth of the leaves, and ceases when they are fully grown He attributes the rain to secretions from glands on the footstalk of the leaf on which drops of the liquid are found which are rapidly renewed on being re- moved with blotting paper. _ rt Tmpregnable. When Alexander paused before the walls of Tyre, Delessepius, his engineer reported that that city was impregna- ble. All attempts to break down the walls would be but a waste of time, and an assault would cause a terrible effusion of blood. Alexander smiling. ly replied that while a battering ram might fail, a goat would probably an. swer, ‘Bring up a goat or the butter we had last night; either is a strong butter,” he musingly added. The peo- ple of Tyre, who were on the walls of their city, immediately got down and left on the other side. Jonathan Niles and His Fife, In his youth, Jonathan Niles was a musician of the Revolutionary Army. In 1778, while the American Army was encamped at Tappan, on the Hudson, Gen, La Fayette had command of the advance, his particular duty being to guard the water front; and in order that any attempt on the part of the enemy at surprise might be guarded against, La Fayette issued orders that there should be no noise of any kind, by the troops, between the hours of tattoo and reveille. Our Jonathan was one of La Fayelite musicians, and his instrument the fife, He was a son of Connecticut and he had & maimed and disabled brother who was a cunning artificer, and who, among other quaint things, had made the fife upon which Jonathan played. so constructed thas it could be blown to | shrill and ear-piercing notes that belong with the drum, or it ceuld be 80 sofi- | ly and sweetly breathed upon as to give | forth notes like the gentle dulcimer. Oneevening Jonathan wandereddown { to the water's edge, and seated upon a | rock gazed off upon the darkly flowing, star-gemmed flood. His thoughts were of his home and of the loved ones, and | annon came memories of the old songs that had been wont to gladden the fireside, Unconsciously, he drew his flute from { his bosom and placed it to his lips. In his mind, at that moment, was a sweet | song, adapted from Mozart, which bad | been his mother's favorite, He knew { not what he did, To him all things of | the present were shut out, and he was | again at home, sitting at his mother’s | feet—and the chasm was not broken | until a rough blow upon the back re- | called him to his senses, ‘“‘Man! what are you doing? The General may be awake. If he should kear you-—ahl" It was a sentinel; and even this guar- dian of the night afterward confessed that he had listened, entranced, to the ravishing music for a long time he had thought of his duty to stop it, On the following morning an orderly came to the spot where Jonathan had been eating his breakfast, and informed him to see him at headquariers, Poor Jonathan turned pale and trem- bled. He knew La Fayette was very strict, and that in those perilous times oven slight infractions of military or ders were punished severely. As he arose to his feet the sentinel of pre- vious evening came up and whispered into his ear. “Eh sathar Aas Jonathan, don’t OTe that the General wanted the about the music, you be alarmed. Not a soul save you and me knows anything about it. I can swear to that. you just say it Stick to it, and you'll come out all right.” should be So.do wasn't you, Jonathan looked at the man What! that? 11% §h pie fe Pityingiy. “ MRE my mother’s son tell lie It would be the heaviest load 1 ever carried—heavier than I ever mean to carry, if I have ny senses, I's quarters- a commanding site He went to the General's a tent pm overlooking the whole guard, fro, moody as thoughts were unhappy. “Comrade, who are you?” “Jonathan Niles, General?" “Last evening I heard music by the river's bank. Were musician?" It was I, General, but 1 knew not what I did. I meant not to disobey I sat and thought of home and my mother, and.’ tched in . line it had to La Fayelle was pacing to and and his | pr y sad though down you the The Yearful Hesults, **8o blonde women are going out of fashion at last?’ inquired a representa~ tive of one who, among other things, makes a study of scalp diseases a spec- ialty. “To what do you attribute this sudden fall in the stock of yellow hair?” rumerous to particularize., 1 dare say the first alarm will leave comparative quiet in the camp of the Baxon-haired ladies, The say-so of fashion has a mighty influence, but blue-eyed, drab- haired ladies will not willingly sink back into neutral obscurity.” “But what amount of truth is there in the statement that chemicals injure those who use them?’ ““More, perhaps, than you or they are aware of, when it comes down to being “What are the symptoms of the pol- “They differ, of course, with differ- ent temperaments, BSome women rap- They lose appetite, and have to resort to beer ora stimulent; most aggravated forms, and the last they becomes perfectly They will attribute all these but the right one, and their husbands mon alkali bar-soap or salts of tartar, But finally, when almost bald, with red, watery eyes and constantly aching face grew soft and etherial, “Of your—MoTHER! And I thougnt of mine. It wasa theme of Mozart's 1t will do me good.” In the after years—even to his dying Though he would never urge the truth thing as the benefit that might result, memory of all his soldier experience might have been lost to him bad he grasped at the opportunity to tell a lie, which might, to some, have seemed most opportune and profitable, Florence Maryatt, the clever novelist and fascinating daughter of everybody's favorite, Captain Marryatt, will short- of engagements for readings, made for her by Mr. Howard Paul, whose wide acquaintance with the States makes him invaluable in this way. The Princess Dolgoreuki, the widow of the late Emperor of Russia, has left Paris with her children and a large suite for Switzerland. She intends wo pass the autumn at the Lake of Lucerne and the lakes in Northern Italy. A young daughter of the present Lord Lytton, amiss still in her teens, has begun a story in the August Temple Bar entl- tled “The Red Mavor.” A good beginning is half the work. Prudery is the caricature of modesty. The pleasure of love is in loving. An old friend is better than two new ones, \ selves by inches to become a problemas All men do not admire yellow-haired women by any means, For my part. and I think the majority of men think with me, is only worthy of admiration when just as n WOINAD fa- ture left her, without tampering with at all, no matter what her complexion, Besides, it is questionable taste in la- dies of correct life and standing, since they follow the mad pranks of those who, lost to all decency, would do any- thing to attract attention. They star. ted bangs, and straighiway all women ” off their front hair.” “Well, you make this out matter, to be sure, 4 Cus & serious Have you enumer- ated all the dread results®"’ “No; there isone I have to speak of —lunacy! Yes, horrible as the asylums are up with incurable brought to that pass by using hair washes and bleaches, This begins by nervous attacks periodically when hen they Soult Pe loth been filling maniacs nEino in begin to have hysterics more often; husbands are puzzled to know how to deal with a wife who bursts into tears at the salight- est provocation and falls right on the or bed. It is a gibbering n road to for floor swift insanity, ot yet thought out I see that and Paris r babies’ trick is which science has not the cause 18 80 new, in London } have bleached a cure for a long ume women thei heads, and that this pernicious being done here. Such mothers should be depeived of their children as being unfit custodians of them. The effect will be a lot of imbecile young women, We are a brown-haired than any or wolnen nation, and flaxen-haired on earth, and up in trying to imitate the peasantry of Ba- varia, Austria or Sweden.” ————————n Norse men Fiastering In Early Times. The use of plaster, or “‘plaister,” as it was formerly called, 1s of early date, even in the British islands, in connec- before lime plaster came into general ing or plastering in the British Isles were those structures erected of wattles the cold. This kind of domestic build- of Henry 11. From necessity or in con- “‘uncommon elegance’ of smoothed wattles in 1172, and in such buildings his Majesty with the Kings and Princes of Ireland solemnized the festival of Christmas, The Devonshire “gob,” a class of building not yet ex- tinct, is a fair illustration of the ancient fashion of daubing or plastering prac- ticed in this country for long centuries, In the thirteenth and fourteenth cent. uries in this country the plasterers proper and the daubers formed two dis- tinct classes of building workmen, and their wages, like the wages of other operatives, were subject to certain reg- ulations summer and winter. The daubers were simply the layers on of a mixture of straw and mud to a frame- work of timber. The plasterers in Lon- don in the twenty-fourth Edward ILL (1350) were bound to take no more for their working day between the feasts of Easter and St. Michael than 6d. without victuals or drink, and for the remainder of the year 5d. Upon feast days, when they did not work, they took nothing. Sl BR Rin — ¥yOOp ¥OR THOUGHT, Denying a fault doubles it, A charitable man is the true lover o. Where the will 1s ready the feet are A candle lights others and consumes itself. If we build high, let us begin low What is duty ? It is what we of others, Far better that the feet slip than the tongue, Discretion of speech is more than eloquence, Youth looks at the possible, age at the probable, exact A word and a stone let go cannot be called back, He that will not economize will have to agonize, Manner is something with everybody and everything with some, Things don’t “turn up’’ in this world until somebody turns them up, Poverty destroys pride it « * ign. 4 wv er per- 18 forti- 8s difficult r The virtue of prosperity is ance ; the virtue of adversity Uneasiness is a species of sagacity; a Fools are never un- GASY, Whoever entertains you with tl 16 n A similar manner. Men make themselves ridiculous not s0 much by the qualities they have as not. the man wonderful I have often noticed that there. Do you know that a wise and good everything for the sake of having acted well 7 The moet ignorant have sufficient knowledge to detect the faults of others: most clear sighted are blind to their own. We are ved than more dece ¥ take gravity {i Ver iT greatne pom posity youl 14 that wv ing ial you y thelr comf dit 1fo % an a on Unlimited severity of without investigation, is a viol the law of right often worse thaa fault you are condemning. A man is known by his friends. But more than this, a man is made or mar- Companionship is one of the great factors of life, We must look downward as well as upward in human life. Though many may have passed you in the race there are many you have left behind, life is a series of surprises, and would not be worth taking or keeping if it were not, God delights to Isolate us every day, and from us the past and the future, Nothing is more expensive than pe- nuriounes ; nothing more anxious than carelessness : and every duty which is bu n to wait, ret fresh dutys at its | Give self-control, and of all well-d +4 vid wide : the n mind, body, % oh thought, of essence business and success, —the himself can master these, Agitation prevents rebellion, keeps the peace and secures progress, Every step she gains is gained forever. Mus f animals. Agita- tion is the atmosphere of the brains, The old, old fashion; the fashion that came in with our first garments, will last unchanged until our race has run its course, and the wide firmanent The old, old master fashion—Death, To be nameless in worthy deeds ex- The Ca paanitish woman lives more happily without a name than Herodias with one : and who would not have rather Expenence teaches more and more from day to day, that a child will retain in its memory only what is ine corporated into its life. It will forget what it has seen or beard, but rarely or never what it has accomplish- The wheel of fortune 1s ever turning. neglect to keep stepping you are roli- od again into the mud ; more exertion being required to keep there than to cling to the wheel as it carries you there. There is enough in the world to com- plain about and find fault with if men have the dispisition. We often travel on hard and uneven roads; but with a cheerful spirit we may walk thereon our journey in peace. The morality of an action depends upon the motive from which we act. If 1 fling half a crown at a beggar with the intention to break his head, and he picks it upand buys victuals with it, the physical effect is good, but with respect to me the action is very wrong. . Friendship, love and piety should be We should only speak of them in rare and confidential moments ; have a silent, undertstand- ing regard for them. There is much in respect to them that is too tender to be thought of, still more to be talked about. Some happy talent and some fortu- nate rtunity may form the two sides of the ladder on which some men mount, but the rounds of that ladder must be made of stuff to stand the wear and tear ; and there is no substi- tute for thorough going, ardent and sincere earnestnes, Every man is a divinity in disguise, a god playing the fool. It seems as if Heaven had sent its insane angels into our world as to an asylum, and here they will break out in their native music, and utter at inter vals the words they have heard in Heaven ; then the mad fit returns, and thev mope ant wallow like dogs