HY OWN ILtINOJTS. UY EVA KATIIAIHNE ( OAPP. Thore is many a pl. Hsnnt land that iios Under tlie skv uiM;rlol, Countries fair, 'whose beauty rare Is the tlieuu-of half world. But in eacli wanderer s heart of hearts, Could hi* nun choice be known, Ever vou'll iud infierilxd the name Of the laud lie culls Ids own. And to uie, there is u haunting melody, Jlmt no discord doth destroy, lu the soft, sonorous title of My Own Illinois. 1 claim for her no legends, Like the Gerinun for lis Rhine, Bho does not boast tin classic palm, Nor yet the gotliic pine ; , . Rut. like some grav-oyed, brown hairou maid, Not blonde, nor Clark brunette, The temperate charm that is hor own Her lovers ne'or forget From tropic sun, oraretie soas, No fierce extremes alloy Tho hope-ins pi ring air that sweeps My Own Illinois. How blithely o'er her tortile fields The prairie breezes blow Across the level corn lands, Where a nation's harvests grow. The royal Mississippi laves Her golden sunset side ; Gh ains on her brow Lake Michigan, A coronal of pride; Her stately Garden City towors With worthy pride up-buoy Above all would-be rival States My Own Illinois. Deav State, the glint of thy wild flower, Tito song of thy wild bird. Were of color, and of music, All my childhood saw or hoard; Thrilling, like scents of paradise, Across those dusty years, They still make tonderest memories That tremble into tears. Untouched by bitterness, and, like A child's kiss, sweet and coy, Drifts back the dream of inuocouco in My Illinois. • •••••• When ou me dawns that fateful hour— The Archer Death's own time— Perebauce his shaft may still this heart in so me far foreign clime. But I pray that my dreamless dust may sloop Where his song of reckless joy The blackbird pipos to tho prairie sod In my Own Illinois. CHICAGO, 111. AT THE OPEN WINDOW. BY WILL HUDIURD KERN AN. h ALLING WATER is -\ the name of the most j picturesque spot in V ih . tlieCumberlana coun- I , }* try of Tennessee. It I is sit uiti 1a few miles i sou "' Cookeville, i IU awl > one of the first j -SS JJ „J§fgf.places visited by tonr- ! ists "\vlio venture up , 1 1 _ 'to that highland vil lage. Caney Fork, a tributary of the Cumberland River, rises in the moun tains, and surges over the rocky ledges a full hundred feet into the sequestered valley below. And it is this cataracl that is known as Falling Water. The surrounding country is wild, lonely, and romantic, and was a favor ite resort of the moonshiners, until the United States revenue officers swept down upon them, shooting a few oi them dead and sending many of them to the penitentiary. Not far from Falling Water is a dee]), precipitous ravine, tho sides ol which are covered with pines and an impenetrable undergrowth of vines and shrubbery. The density of the foliage hides the bottom of the ravine from view, but if you follow a dim bridle-path trending from the road, you will find that it leads to the door of an old cabin sur rounded by a stake-and-rider fence, half bidden by blackberry bushes, sassafras, and weeds. This cabin was the home of old Mel ton. a moonshiner, and his family, un til the spring of 1871). The still was located within a stone's throw of the house, between two gigan tic bowlders, and so cleverly was it hidden by the rocky walls that towered up ou three sides of it, and so cur tained in was it on the remaining side by the vines that fell in green festoons from the gray ledges of free-stone above, that tho old moonshiner felt himself perfectly safe from the prying j eyes of both officers and informers. One evening about dark,as old Melton Bat in the gallery of bis cabin, drawing consolation alternately from a stone iug and a corn-cob pipe, he was saluted by a young man on horseback, who bad ridden up from tho right and whose face betrayed an expression of keen annoyance. "Hello!" cried the horseman, draw ing rein, "can you tell me how far it is to Cookeville?" " 'Bout fo' miles, stranger," replied Melton, rising to his feet and slouching forward. "Hov yo' lost yer bearin's?" "Yes; went down to old Davenant's to collect a bill this morning and " "Long Jack Davenant's, stranger?" "Yes; up at the head of Caney Fork, and " "Why didn't yo' turn to tho left when yo' came to Squar Mills' place?" "1 did; hut I took the wrong road out in that confounded flat woods." "Jesso, jesso! Been thar myself 'Tis a puzzle to a stranger. An' wiiat shell 1 call yer name ?" "Wilford—Harry Wilford." "Any relation t' the Wil fords down t' Smith's Fork V" "No; my home is in Nashville Am a professional man there. Had to look after a farm of mine down in DeKalli County, and so I concluded to rido up here and collect a hill from old Dav enant before I went back to Lebanon. The old man wasn't at home, though. By tho way, could I llnd a place here or hereabout to stay all night? It will rain long before I can reach Cooke ville." "I dunno. P'r'aps Henry Q. could keep yo'." "Who is Henry Q., and whore does he reside?" "Henry Q. Clark, yo' know. Lives 'bout a quarter out 011 the Cookeville? road yander," pointing to the left. "Henry Q.'s rich—Henry Q. is. His house must 'a' cost a cool live hundred. Jest feller thet " A blinding flash, a thunder-peal and a driving torrent of rain interrupted the speaker. "Wall, I say, Mr. Wilford, if thet are's ther way tlier weather's sr-gwine ter act, I 'low yo'd better tav with we'uns. We liaint much V offer, hut sech f?z we lu-v yo're welcome to." Wilford leaped from his saddle, threw the reins over a sapling bough, and bounded gracefully over the grass into the cabin. He was a tall, slender, handsome young fellow, with blonde liair, a beardless face, and large, blue, winning eyes, that sparkled with humor or scintillated with wrath according to liis varying moods. Airs. Melton was sitting before the lingo fire-place, industriously dipping snuff. She was a lank anil angular woiuau of forty, barefooted and dressed m homespun. Mi© rone us "NYilfoni rame in, responding to liis bow with a ijiin r little bob of hor head, and thru withdrcw into the Kitchen. The room in which Wilford found himself was large and trimly kept. A bedstead stood in one corner, wliile u row of rush bottom eliairs, a table and a spinning-wheel completed the stock of furniture. On the log walls of the cabin were tacked a few unframed photographs of family relations, while on the mantel was a little mirror in a pine-cone frame. Mrs. Melton returned presently, and began to spread the table for supper. Wliile bringing iu the last dishes, a large, bony, and sallow girl ran iuto the room, her garments dripping with rain and clinging close to her stalwart frame. | "Wlioop-ee! but wusn't I sheered ! H j The lightnin' struck a tree not " She stopped short 011 seeing Wil- j ford, her eyes Hashed with anger, j and she ran out of the room as 1111- 1 ceremoniously as she had come into it. I "Thet thar's my darter Nance," re- | marked old Melton; "an' she's the smartest gal in these hyar mountings, j She wus sorter set back when she seed ! yo\ but she'll come'iu arter erwhile an' I play ns a cliune on the organette. Nance is a pow'ful hand at the organ- j ette, Nance is." "Supper's ready," vouchsafed Mrs. ; Melton, in a high, cracked voice. "Sit I thar, stranger, an' reach fer yo'self." Old Melton bowed his head, said grace with all the gravity of a minis ter, and then plunged headlong into a discussion, oi religion. "I blong to tlm Baptisses, I do. ! Tilda—thet's my wife thar- -sheb'lougs | to the Hardshell Baptisses, the 110- I eon litest church in these hyar moun- ] tings. Nance thar's been a tlireatnin' 1 ter jine the Methodisses, but if she do I'll drub her till she cain't holler." The wife made 110 reply to the fling at lier l'aith, but Nance glared at her j father, and then, bringing her list down 011 the table so fiercely that the dishes ; danced, she cried: "I'll jine—l'll jine—l'll jine—l'll be damned ef I don't jine!" and turning | over her chair she tied the room, bang- 1 ing the door behind her as she went. • "CAN YOU RRN, UB now PAH IT IS TO COOKKYILLKV" Old Melton said nothing, but lie clinched his teeth with an ominous sig nificance. Supper over and the table cleared off, the old man went to the kitchen door and called for Nance. "What do yo' want?" inquired the girl. "I want yo' to come an' play us u cliune 011 the organette." "I wont." "THHOTTLING MELTON, HE DARIIED HIM AGAINST THE ITOCKY WALL." "Yo' Will." "I tell you, pop, I wont." "Yo' wuthless wench! I'll lam ye | who's boss. I'll boat you till the blood j runs down yer legs, so lie'p me!" j Running to a distant corner of the main room lie caught up a gnarled ; hickory cane and hastened back to the kitchen. "Where's Nance?" he demanded of | his wife. "She done put out while yo' wus lookin' fer yer stick," was the answer, j "The slut! I'll find her an'wallop her like I would a dog." "Stay, sir!" cried Wilford, as Melton opened the door. "Stay, sir! Surely you wouldn't strike a woman?" "I wouldn't, eh ? I'll whip lier like a dog, I tell yo'. Stand back!" and j tearing himself loose from the grasp j of his guest, 110 rushed out into the j darkness ami was swallowed up in the night. Suddenly a wild scream rang high 1 over the roaring of the wind iu the j pines a scream so pitiful that Wilford rushed off in tho direction from whence it came. "Help! help! help!" It was a woman's voice—Nance's voice and Wilford hurried forward through the blinding rain aud dark ness of the wretched night, till he stood in front of the towering boulders that shut in the still. "Damn yo'!" he heard Melton pant, "yo'U disgrace yo'self an' yo' fambly afore strangers ag in, will yo'? Yo'll jine the Methodisses, will yo*?" and ; with that he struck his daughter a fearful blow, causing her to reel for ward at the feet of the young man. "Dog!" cried Wilford! "devil! Take that!" and throttling Melton, bedashed him against the rocky wall and struck him between the eyes. Melton drew a revolver, but, before lie could use it, Wilford wrested it from his hand, and knocked him head long into tho shelter of the still. "Ha!" cried Wilford, as a vivid flash of lightning revealed the character of ! bis surroundings. "A moonshiner, I •eo. I thought as much," and, taking ft pair of handcuffs from liis pocket, lie clasped them 011 the wrists of the prostrate man. 'You will come with me," he con tinued, dragging his prisoner into the open air. "You will come with me. 1 have been looking for tliis still of yours since last ueconiuer, but I wouldn't have found it if you hadn't been the brute that you are." Stunned, confused, the old man staggered to bis feet. "What is hit, daddy? Why don't yo' speak?" It was the daughter who spoke— it was the bruised and bleeding daughter who now Hung her apron around the eld man, and kissed his wrinkled face. "Hit's all up with we'uns, Nance," answered the old man iu a husky voice. u llit's all up with we'uns. This feller's a detective." "I knowed hit, daddy—l knowed hit. He's been prowliu' 'round hyar all day. I'd a-told yo', but I seed lie hadn't dis kivered the still, an' I didn't want his blood 011 yo' hands. But," and she hissed the words through her set teeth, "I'd a warned vo' when I went home ef I'd a knowed hit'd come ter this." The party went back to the cabin, and at daybreak Wilford prepared to start with his prisoner for Cookeville. They had proceeded less than twenty yards from the door, when the sharp report of a rifle was heard, and Wilford reeled from his saddle—dead. At the same moment the white, tense desperate face of Nance vanished from the open window. ('might Napping. Stranger—Beg pardon for interrupt ing. but you probably noticed in the papers tliis morning that Lord Nabob, who is 011 a visit to this county, met with an accident in the park yester day. He is a stranger here, and some prominent citizen like yourself should see that he receives proper atten tion. Business Man (much flattered)— Really, I had not thought much of it, but Stranger—You probably uoticed in the paper, too, that six persons were injured yesterday iu a subway ex plosion. "Why, yes. Were there any lords among them? "Possibly. No telling. Two men were killed yesterday by electric wires." "I noticed that: hut " "Anil a number 01 persona were run over." "Yes, but tlie lord " "Ah. yea. The Lord wills, and wo must bow; but our families should not be forgotten, sir; and us we are hour ly exposed to these dangers, X thought possibly you might wish to get in sured in the 'Sure-Pop Life ami Acci dent Company,' of which I am an agent."—A'ew York IVeekhj. (let Used to It. "Can I useyour telephone a minute ?" she asked, as she ran into a neighbor's on Second avenue with a shawl over her head. "Oh, certainly." "X am going to give a party next week, and I want to invite a few friends." "Yes?" "It is to be a very select party." "Yes ?" "Only my friends." " V es ?" "And, therefore, you—you won't be ." "Angry iflam not invited, nor won't consider it cheeky if you use my tele phone to invito others? Oh, no. Any one who keeps a telephone in the house fur use of tlie neighborhood soon gets used to anything. Why, a man came in here the other day and used the line to call my husband up from town and dun him for a bill! Go ahead and call up tlio sub-office." —Detroit .Free Press. Pound 11 anting. If a servant obeys orders as far as ho can, and does his work correctly as far as he goes, what more can bo expected ? And yet the result is not always satis factory, even to reasonable employers. The Boston Courier has a story of a woman who own a very large and baud some dog, of which she is very fond, and perhaps a little proud. The other day she sent him out to the stable to bo weighed, confiding the operation to a new servant, who looked upon the powerful animal with considerable awe, and apparetly with some real affec tion. The man was gone a surprisingly long time, but at last reappeared, and announced that the dog weighed one hundred and twenty pounds. "Onehundred and twenty pounds!" repented the lady. "Are you sure you weighed him right ? He must weigh more than that." "Oh, yes, mnrm; sure an' I weighed him right, but I eould't get him all 011 the scales." Practical. According to the philosophers every thing has two uses, a lower and a higher. Some very common people find this out for themselves, so far, at least, as the practical application of it is concerned. The daughter of the rector of a parish in Hast Loudon-over-the border taught the choir boys a new tune at a Mouilay evening's rehearsal, to be sung 011 the following Sunday. Sunday morning came. "Well, Johnny," said Miss X—, "I hope you haven't forgotten the new tune, for we depend much on you." "Nnw, mum, not a bit. I'vo been a skeoring the crows with it all tho week." 'l'HF.only privilegeof tho original man is that, like other sovereign princes, he has the right to call in tho cur rent coin and reissue it stamped with his own image. I'.XPEiUENCK in business teaches a man that too many debtors don't pay. jCRAZY FOR ANTIQUES. CHICAGO PURNITURE MANUFACIUK EKS FORCED TO ODD CONCEITS. Evtrjbodjr A]>o< llio Fashions Popular with it Itatre Who Ifuve LOIIK Ileon Vool fbr Worms Some i the Articles* Alter Ail, hut Millon Snares, Oxi%li/.ed Shams, and Iroii-llound Mockeries# / / - . IXTEENTH contury ;f / / mik with oxidized met £/' 1 '■ al trimmings is the very : V J fa/k latest novelty in parlor ! V'/ f ,iiul living room furni- ! and nowhere in j i ihe country are those back-number conceits . w -^*jiiWJFL7V T 'iY'T reproduced in such fjuperfection as by the W Chicago manufacturer. { f/ bales-windows are M filled with the artistic WMtf fMt'&fflk creations, and advor tising pages fairlybulge 3B Iwlth fancy etchings by furniture yy dealers, of whom none ire as enterprising as our own. The arti cles one sees in first-class houses are made ap in both natural and antique designs, dull and polished, and in a stylo which shows , that furniture as well as history repeats ; itself. Most of the now goods are odds and ends for library, parlor, and hall furniture, and all more or less bound with metal. Marble tops for dressers, mantels and cen ter tubles are going out of date, but this style of trimming is still popular in grave- j yard decorations. Plain oak is the most popular style oi furniture at present, and tuk-s tho lead in the sixteen different kinds of wood now in thetmarket. Complete chamber sots in ash, I Georgia pine, California redwood, maple, i walnut, birch, cherry, mahogany, oak. eb ony. rosewood, syeamoro. white mahogany, satinwood, butternut, and olive can be found at tho hading furniture houses in tho city. "Wo find that plain oak polishod has tho preference over all the others," saidasalos manin a Wabasli avenue house. "This is the cu.se with the masses, as well as our more aristocratic customers. Fancy carved work in chamber suits is no longer in de mand, and some oven prefer tho dull sheila" finish instead of polished goods, in dining room furnishings tho chairs are not HO high-lmeked as formerly. and tho round dining-table takes tho load, though tho square ones are still being used. Tho va riety of sideboards is now so extensive that tho people are no longer building them Into their housos. as they can buy uny stylo they want ready-made." One of tho very latest novoltios Is tho gentleman's Oriental shaving cabinet. It is called tho gentleman's cabinet to distinguish it from the ladies' shaving cabinet, which will be out soon. The cabinet is of antique oak. sixteenth century rtnlsfi, four foot li'gh and two feet wido. fitted with drawers and lockora for lather, razors, towels, and whetstones. The top is surmounted by a small mirror set in a carved frame and hung on swivels. It is a handy thing to have in the house, and is mounted on rollers so that it can be, moved at wilL If the gentleman doesn't want to shavo in a certain room ho can shove the machine into unotli r part ol the house. The drawer handles and hinges uro of oxidized brass, tho hinges which are on the locker extending half way across the door. Anothor cabinet is a combined barber shop. wardrobo, dressing-case, and chiffonier of antique oak. paneled. Iron trimmings, and curved doors. It is con siderably larger than the Oriental cabinet and if It combined a folding-bed along with its other conveniences would bo about a complete chamber-sot fur a bachelor's quarters. The Grecian is still anothor nov elty in this lino, but smaller than the other two. standing on raised legs handsomely carved and mounted with polishod metal. For tho encouragement of Chicago lltor ati one firm turns out sixty different styles in wilting-tables. They range from the massive ofllce-dosk to tho dainty escritoire suggestive of love-laden epistles traced on per.umed paper. All the known timber susceptible to tho designer and cabinet maker's ait enter into the composition or these tubles. Tho handsomest uto of an 1 tiquo oak. until latolv used only in odd scd ill'polvit ilioft If ft. pieces, but which now takes first place in one or those dosks desire to close an im proper or unprofitable correspondence, ho everything. Quo of tho most unique was of waterlogged oak. which is of a bluish- Mack mottled color. In shape it is not un like a packing-case. tho desk dropping down from tho side and held in plabe by chains. It is jutted with numerous pigeon-holes and drawers, and it is bolted tog ether at the corners with brass plates. Tho design is similar to rno wrlting-dosks In uso in the sixteenth ecntury nnd looks raoro like a strung-box tliun a desk. Tho colonial is anothor pretty dosign in writing desks. It is of mahogany, filled finish, with curv. d legs, carved In fantastic figures, and claw feet of brass holding white glass balls resting on the floor. I,ike folding-beds, writing desks aro now mado with Intent to deceive. Ono of the deceit ful kind is a regular confidence game of a desk. To look at it ono would think it was a combination book-case and escritoire, but it is neither. The book-cam attach ment is a fraud, loing furnished on ibo in side with a water-tank instead of shelves. The lid of tho desk Loing raised reveals a china wash-bowl connected with tho tank by a pipe and also fitted with n waste-pipe, which can be connected with the sewor at a moment's notice, it is a very ingenious c ontrivance indeed. Hnouia tno owner or I can wash his bauds of the whole business i thou and there. Another bunko piece of furniture Is tho 1 sixteenth century c nt ir-table with one leg growing out of a pedestal. It is u square tupped table with round corners bound in m tal witli Imitation bolt-heads, thus giv ing out tho impression that tho table was put together by a blacksmith. Hut this is 1 not tho only claim tho tublo has on tho peo ple. Tho log. which is about a foot square. ' is hollow, and Is intended for a receptacle for eontrabund goo Is for gentlemen only. 1 It is said that this table would find groat favor in n prohibition community. 'J he hall chest is another odd conceit in ! bric-a-brac furniture. It resembles a car- i renter's tool-chcstor an Englishman's box, i better known as lu- r gage. Tiiev aro made ; of tho different cabinet woods, but six- i teenth century oak lias the preference, i Seme are wrought in plain and others in i shaded flni.-h, and aro liberally bound with oxidized metal trimmings, the hinges ex tending entirely across the lid. They are \ intended for uso in the front halls of fam- i ily residences and make a convenient place j in which to throw gum shoes and other ' hall litter when visitors arrive unexpected- I ly. A Yale lock and key goes with each and every hull-chest. in parlor furniture tho overstuff is most ly straight goods in tapestries with plush trimmings. A fancy thing in parlor chairs is the Louis XIV. and IV., either in natural mahogany or antique oak. inlaid with mar quetry. with white and old-gol I trimmings. The Queen Anne bedstead is a novelty in polished mahogany, with the head and foot boards finished on both sides. It is usually placed in tho middle of a room in order that its lino points may bo seen from every po nt. But in spito "of all tho rare and costly gems in sixteenth century oak and other woods tho old reliable nineteenth century installment oak is by far tho most popular. UNCLE JERKY TODD'S DUTY. OD-MORNI N\ "Uncle Jerry Todd, a v v thin-faced, grizzly haired, raw-boned old eß * iei ' nei, addreas ie lu ' w teacher °f the Big Wolf Prai- Upr vie school, in the western part of Kan sas. "13em' as I'm one o' the skule boa'd in this deesti'iot, an' bein' as yer hev been wrestlin' with tlier kids o' Dig Wolf Purary now fur nigh outer four months, with nary a visit fruin me, I jest kinder concluded ter drap in an' see yer herd these blamed young crit ters a spell this morniu'." "Come in, Mr. Todd. Have that seat," returned the teacher. "Yer see, I'm gol-dnrned perticklor an' conscientious-like erbout doin' my juty by eddercation," proceeded Uncle Jerrv, seating himself on tho end of a much-whittled bench and discharging a volley of tobacco juice that bespat tered the legs of a desk and the bare feet of a grinning urchin hard by. "When my neighbors 'leuted me ter be aboard member o f Dig Wolf Purary Deestric' I done gin my word ter do my juty straight an' simple, an' alraiglit an' simple I'm aimin' ter do it. as Sary Marinr was a mite grunfcy this mornin' an' w anted me ter go down ter Doc Duffer's ter git a matter o' calo mile fur her stummick, I jest made tip my mind ter come by tlier skule house, discharge my juty straight an' simple here, then go ou an' git tlier medicine of Doc, an' git home fur dinner." And ho emphasized his remarks with an other robust expectoration that made the unlucky urchin draw up his feet out of danger's way, something as a crawfish does. Seeing the urchin's squirming, and observing the general titter it was oc casioning throughout the school, Uncle Jerry's straight and simple duty moved him to speak again. "I'm feared, young feller, as yer fail ter make these kids toe their mark proper. See thet young un thar a sqiiirmin'like as ef he's in a ager fit, an' all tlier others ready ter bust at him. Yer orto keep him straight in his seat, and not 'low 'em ter giggle. It's powerful bad ef loft ter go un curbed in a skule. When I went ter skule buck in Injiany, I tell yer I wasn't 'lowed ter wriggle all over like that kid was. Naw, sir! I was kep' straight, an' when visitors come I bed better manners than ter be a-gapin' all round me, like I seen most o' yer young uns a-doin' as I come in. My teacher was strict on me, I kin tell yer, an' I'm glad ho was, fur it has boon tlier makin' o' me. Teacher, yer kaint watch tlier leetle acts o' yer kids clost enough. Them leetle acts is what leads tor big ones. It's well I'm not your teacher, young uns, fur ef I was I reckon I'd plumb churn tlier very daylights outen yer hides, but I'd hev yer mind an' show respect when members o' tlier skule hoard visits tlier skule. Then yer orto show more respect fur yer teacher than ter wiggle an' giggle that away. Alius respect an' obey yer teacher. "Teacher," lie continued, facing the young pedagogue, "I felt it my juty straight au' simple to make a few re marks. A few remarks keerfully drapped at tlier right time may be of ontold benertit ter both teacher au' youngster. That was what tlier old fellers who use ter sarve on tlier dees trict boards in Injiany 'lowed. Now. kids, yer kin see what a attentive, good little hoy I must a-beeu ter pay so strict attention ter what mv elders said. oncivilized, like someo' yer, I wouldn't a-been able ter a-tole yer this day. It pays ter notice an' imertate yer elders. "Another tiling I fuel it my juty to speak of. This 'ere is fast becomin' a ago o' slang. Childurn, don't slang; teacher, don't set tlier example. It would be aonpardonablesiu fur yer ter do so. Dekeerful o'yer language". Agin I say unter yer young uns, watch yer elders, an' imertate tlier words, au' yer'll not bo apt ter fall inter thet aw ful habit o' usiu' slang stid o' English, what this doostrio wants taught an' practiced right hero on Dig Wolf Pur ary. I repeat, teacher, childurn, don't slang! "I hope as yer kin all tumble ter tlier chune o' my rackit on this subject, with out any furder words fruin me; fur I must be goin' on ter Doc's fur Sary Mariav's caloniilo, an' kaiu't stay longer ter reitirate my remarks. "But, in conclusion, I'll jist say: Set a good example, teacher; hev a keer ter yer acts an' words; an', yer kids, mind yer elders, shun slang, an' now, while yer young an' full o' sap, light in; put in yer best licks at larniu'—lai n so much as ter make yer dads an' mams plumb 'shamed o' tlier ignurance—an' git thar, Eli!" And with his "duty" thus discharg ed, Uncle Jerry Todd left teacher and pupils to their anything but sober re flections. They had food for thought for tho rest of that term.— Chicayo Ledger, How tli© Joke Was Evened. We had a new master in W Aca demy, Now Hampshire, says It. lied wood, in the New York Mercury , when 1 was a pupil there not many years ago, with whom we promised ourselves some sport, before we got through with him the first morning he faced us in tne ciass-room. no was a moderato sized, rather dolicato man, with a | mild, defensive air that seemed to appeal to our generosity to make his , life less of a burden to him than we i had made that of his predecessor. He appeared to fear we would carry I him out of the building or spring some ! sort of a miue under his feet for the first few days, and he eved Willi ins Sharp, our ringleader in 'all mischief, ! with a sort of care, as though he felt completely at his mercy, Things moved on with half-hearted uncertainty for about a week. The master held such a lax grasp of the reins of authority that we expected to make him step down and out within a few days at the furthest. ' lis reading of a lengthy chapter frrn Chronicles or Deuteronomy every morning before prayers was a grievance which the more active spirits determined to redress. We knew tliero was fun on hand, of what nature the majority of us were ignorant, wlieu we went into the class room one morning in the second week. A loud bray greeted us, which we an swered with shouts of laughter. A don key stood in the master's place at the dealt before the open Bible, with a huge pair of rusty-rimined glasses straddling his nose and a ludicrously Boletnu expression of countenance, as if he wished to bear the honors thrust upon him with becoming dignity. We were all in our seats trying to smother the mirth, when the master came in. He walked up to the desk as usual, and seemed to look right through that animal without seeing him. "Behold thy brother!" staring at him from the board made no impres sion on his optic nerve. He stood upon the light of the desk, looking down upon us without a word. As we watched he seemed to rise inches be yond his usual height. His eves fairly blazed behind his glasses. His mild, defensive air changed to such masterly aggressiveness that we fairly quaked before him. l'reseutly he brought his glanco round upon Wilkins Sharp and concen trated it on his face. Those orbs of flame seemed to scorch him. His face reddened, as if he had been pulling chestnuts out of the fire. " Wilkius Sharp, come here!" said the master. Wilkins obeyed with a look of bra vado. "Bide that donkey out of the room 1" Wilkins did not move to obey willi alacrity. "Do you want a lift?" inquired the master, and in a flash, by some dexter ous movement of arm and boot that fairly dazzled us, Wilkins was "boosted" upon the creaturo's back and was 011 his way to the door amid a roar ol laughter. We looked at the master. Ho had relapsed into his usual calm "Now that we are rid of the donkey and his brother," he said, as he turned over the leaves of the Bible leisurely, "we will read the third chapter ol Leviticus." STUFF AND NONSENSE. SET in her ways—a brooding hen. A SWALLOW-TAlL— the story of Jonah and the whale. I'' l it ST mattress—How do yon feel? Second mattress—Full as a tick. THE monkey goes to the sunny side of the tree when ho wants a warmer climb. PRAYERS may go begging for an answer, but "\Vkat'U you have?" never does. BUTTIN' a patched dime in the collec tion box is like buyiu' a scalper's tiokot to heaven. Soup a la Jay Gould—take a little stock, six times as much water, and then put in the lamb. TEACHER " 'Anonymous' means 'without a name.' Give an example, Miss Griggs." Miss Griggs—"My baby sister is anonymous." LOAFER How are you? Just thought I'd drop in a while to kill time. Busy Man—Well, we don't want any of our time killed. BROWN— How time flies. Jenkins—l am not aware of its speedy passage. B.— Then you have not a note to pay. J. —No; I hold yours. BLOODQOOD— SiIby always reminds me of a breeze that comes before a summer's rainstorm. Travis—Why? "Because," answered Bloodgood, "lie is so fresh." "THIS is a little lato for you to be out, isn't it, l'eck ? Aren't you afraid your wife will miss you?" Mr. N. Beck—l liopo she will. Sho can fling things pretty straight, though. MRS. HINTON (recently marriod) — Did you know my husband was very ill? Miss Carrington- 1 suppose lie must be, my dear. Before he married you he told me I had broken his heart. VISITOR— (to bereaved widow) —Your husband, I understand, was killed in a factory? Widow—Alas, yes; poor dear William was reckoned a smart man, but he didn't know much about fly wheels. STATION-MASTER— Come, come, my good man, yon mustn't walk on the track. Tramp (disgustedly)— The con ductor says I can't ride, and you say I can't walk. What's your blamed old road here for, anyway ? WILLIE— I wonder why I can't make my kite fly? Elder sister —Perhaps the caudal appendage is dispropor tionate to the superficial area. Willie -—I don't think that's it. I believe there isn't weight onough 011 the tail. MRS. STATESMAN— Do you know, sir, that you came home last night in an ut terly disgraceful condition ? Mr. States man (swallowing about a quart of wa ter) —"Woman, do you know that the time of year has arrived when the country"has to be saved again ? MRS. SKINNPHLINT— Josiah, don't you think Johnny's hair needs cutting? Mr. Skinnflint (lookiug up from his paper) —How long is it till Christmas? A little over five weeks. (Resuming his paper)— All right, I'll give him a hair-cut for a Christmas present. A COMPLICATED FUNERAL. O bury my arms in dear Mexico. Ami bury my heart In tho South. O bury my loss iu the State ut New York, In Georgia please bury my mouth. For lb rye been married at least (our times. To spouses who've laid down their lives, And now that I'm dead I wish to ho placed At the side of my various wives. BROWN— And so yon have got a first rate cook? What paper did you adver tise in? Fogg—-Didn't advertiseiuany, Mv wife told Mrs. Gray we wanted a girl, hut made her promiso not to tell anybody. "Well?" "Well, we had the door-liell ringing for a fortnight from morning till night. No less than a hundred applications for the place." A WOMAN who favors equal suffrage ' wants to know if it is a crime to be u' .'woman. No, bnt it is not manly. We will say no r * o ' FADS OF NEW YORK WOMEN. Their Idiotic Affectation of -listli.tlci am. —-rjr CUNNINGS a wom flVv'-V „ eji rfjfiian cannot learn Jgjlin the beauty parlors of New tf Mine, de Uosmet 1L iquo lolls about icr/'tfkl in scented liair am * clinging ■t/sSSsilks, are not Nit 7 J"ifc worth prosecut ;V ing. But it isn't every Lady Jane who can get the flfflllill entree and the M I In privilege of being robed icsthetieally. Begular patrons are asked to be cliavy about recom mending new people, and unless the "would be" is properly presented she "can't be," and that ends the matter. But the sweet ways a patroness can be taught! Shade of the guileless Martha Washington ! There's the Pic cadilly walk, foriustance, that requires a free leg from the knee, and a rotary motion at tho hip, with a three-quarter side advance—as tho lesson says. Mas ter the formula and yon save ten dol lars. Then, there's the hollow back, which is as hard to master as a table of logarithms. It will be remembered that the bustle was dropped like a flash, and all of a sudden tho rubbers were unbuckled, and away went the extenders, leaving the style Hat, the gown Hatter, and the girl the Hattest thing in clothes. For awhile she was afraid to sit back in the cars. But that didn't hurt anybody's eyes. The trouble began when she stood up or walked about with her stomach out and her back as hollow as a grace hoop. Madam puts her patrons in training for a week, at five dollars an hour, walking first-in her night gown, and by degrees through and into her clothes, rounding off with a full even ing dress. Another costly lesson is the stage laugh, warranted to sound well, to ring musically, and to prevent wrin kles. It has been proven that merri ment and hearty laughter is more pro ductive of wrinkles than care or the cruel touch ol' Time. The instructress does not pretend to remove tho fur rows already ploughed about the eyes of beauty, but she does claim that her method will keep the lace in repose, and while it remains so the creases will be insignificant. She gives the pupil a handglass, seats lier in a mirror-lined corner, and commands "a quiet face." Then she gets a funny paper, for which the very cream of risibility is selected, and as she reads the listener is expected to look in tlie mirror and laugh, if at all, with the lower part of her face. "Move your lips and chin, and open your month if your teeth are good, but keep the muscles of your eyelids rigid." The expression pro duced is simply fiendish, and if the laugh is not a vocal shudder it is of tin) cylindrical sepulchral sort with which all theater-goers are familiar. In tlie trainiug it is necessary to bind the cheeks and temples with strips of court-plaster, and tlie mockery of it all would bo ridiculous if it wasn't so serious. But there's good even iu liumbuggery, and loud laughs are cut down, harsh voices sweetened, and gratuitous advice given in "making faces," tinting ears and lips, and dye ing hair. At the rate of fifteen dol lars a sitting. Madame can afford to be magnanimous.— New York letter to Chicago Ledger. Look at the Works. "This is a plainer-looking watch than any which I have shown you,'* said a silversmith to a customer lately. "The case is not handsome, but the! works are fine. It will not vary its ratQ of running for months at a time. "The cheaper watches arc more showy outside, but they are loosely made. You will find that dust and rust will soon clog their works and in a little while, owing to some trifling defect ia the machinery, they will not move at all. There is nothing in which you should exercise so much caution as iu choosing a watch." Now the majority of young men and women exercise much more caution in deciding upon a watch than they da in choosing a wife or hii?b.\ud. The hero of a popular French story expresses this idea with a good deal of humorous force. "If I want to buy a watch," said he, "I take it home on trial for a year, and if it does not please mo I can send it back. But. I can't take her on trial to see how she will go! If she does not keop time, tliero is no sending lier home for repairs!" A young man is so charmed by the pretty face or sweet voice of a girl that lie is sure she will make him forever happy if he can win her as a wife. Ho looks at the case of a watch, which ia showy and handsome. But is there no defect in tho works V A habit of malicious sarcasm, of slovenly idleness, of peevish ill-huiuor, these are the things that rust tho wheels in married life. Or, a young girl finds a lover witty, handsome, courteous; he is a good tenuis player or sings a comic song very effectively. She fancies herself madly in love with him. The fact that ho drinks, or. is selfish and indolent, or treats his old mother harshly, counts for nothing with her. Y'et how soon one of these faults stops the whole machinery of a home! Few marriages, comparatively, end in absolute divorce. But how many, from the jarring of petty faults, or of diverse aims and tastes in husband and wife, result in weariness and utter wretchedness! The works are not fitly, adjusted, they wear out with incessant friction, and at last, perhaps, stop alto gether. The end is not a damaged watch, but a shattered home, and two ruined lives. Most readers of the Companion probably are either married or hope to be married happily at some future day. Their old friend has but one word of advice 011 this most momentous of all subjects: Tlie beauty or costliness of the case matters but little. Look at tlie works. Yoilth* A Cnmvaninii. Handsome Is as Handsome Does. Bob on—Where are you bound? Beuisen—Up to ask my pretty cou sin to marry mo. Boboon—Well, good luck to you. Berasen—Thanks, dear boy. Bobson (an hour later) —Well, di(? your pietty cousin say yes? Bemsen—No; tlie homely thing re fused me.— Judge. THK parent who sends his son into the world uneducated and without wkill in any art or science does a great injury to mankind as well as to his own lamily, for lie defrauds the comunity of. a useful citizen and bequeaths to it ol nuisance, J