A SOWG OF HOME. Across the wide lands as a pilgrim I roam— Alone, and a strnnger 1 fare, But wherever I wander my heart is at home, With the ones that remember me there. The flowers bloom sweetly along these wild dells, And the mountains rise rugged and grand, And the low Sabbath sound of the far-away bells Melts tenderly over the land. And the western skies wait for the soft after glow, Eve never closed lovelier dnv— But my soul looks beyond, and my eyestlioy o'erflow, For my heart is at home far away. You may warble, sweet birds, to the red evening skies, Yet your vesper song dies on my ear, For deep in my spirit the memories rise Of the far-away voices more dear. You may babble, pure brook, in your soft monotone, You may purl to the pebbles you love, i'ou may kiss the green moss ns it clasps the I gray stone, But my thoughts to a deeper pulse move. Hark ! hark! now I hear them, I hear the old words, Familiar and sweet, light and gay- Nay, nay, I hut dream, 'tis the song of the birds— But my heart is at home far away. The western skies darken, the stars brighten j forth, The wihl flowers droop, the night comes, The birds hurry home to their nests south and north Ah 1 happy things, cling to your homes ! The lights of the city are dawning in view, 1 return through tho gay, thoughtless throngs, From happy home windows bright faces smile through, And I hear children's laughter and songs. New friends give me welcome, with greetings of cheer, I laugh and I seem to be gay, But memory grieves in the thought's inner ear, And my heart is at home far away. —[Ernest W. Shurtleff. UP IN A BALLOON. 4 'So you won't marry me, Jenny?" "It would be madness, Tom; you know it would." 44 What do you mean by madness?" "You know well enough what I mean, and you know that I am light." "Yes, I think Ido know. You mean that I am poor and you arc ditto, ami I poverty multiplied by two is madness." Jenny, a very pretty little blonde with bright golden curls and sweet blue eyes, gaid nothing but looked down nud wrote hieroglyphics on the ground with the end of her parasol. Slie was sitting on the gnarled roots of a great oak, while Tom, a handsome, broad-shouldered fel low, with dark brown hair and moustache and large hazel eyes, lay half-reclining at her feet. 4 'Eh, isn't that the sum and the an swer?" he asked. Still Jenny said nothing, but continued to write hieroglyphics, while a little flush rose on her checks and brow. The young man looked up in her face, and there was a deep melancholy in his tine eyes. "I see how it is," he said. 4 'While I have been away you have been demor alized." 44 What do you mean?" she asked sharply, giving him an indignant glance. 4 'Oh, nothing to make you very an gry, "he replied. 4 'lt is just this: There has been some old woman's work going on, and you have been persuaded that 44 4 Two poor folks wed llud us well be dead.' "Some of those sage female veterans, ■who have gone through life satisfied to exist without that which it appears to me alone makes life endurable, havo talked you into their way of thinking, anil now, forsooth, it is madness to marry the man you love. For you do love me, Jenny—you know you do." The girl was silent yet a little while and then she said, plaintively. "I did believe I loved you once, Tom, I'll acknowledge it, but I am older now, and think maybe I was mistaken." "Pshaw!" said Tom; "think maybe. I say you love me still. Yes, you love me still, and yet you are going to marry Kalph Morley. Don't deny it! for I know it; though perhaps you don't quite know it yourself yet. Are you engaged to him?" "That is an impertinent question and I shall not answer it." "Then 1 will take it for granted that you are." 4 'You needn't do any such thing, for I am not." "Well, you did answer my impertinent question, after all." "J was not going to let you think what you pleased." "I'm glad you answered it anyhow, for now I am going to tell you what sort of a fellow he is, and I sha'n't feel as if I am being rude, as i might otherwise have done. Morley*B kinfolks " " I haver never had the pleasure of meeting any member of Mr. Morlc's 1 family except himself." l "I he pleasure," said Tom, with a ' scornful laugh. " Let me tell you if you do find it a pleasure when you meet one of them be it father, mother, brother, sis- ' ter or the forty-fourth cousin—it will be 1 more than any one else has ever done." "He seems to be a very nice gentle- ! man." i "Seems to be. But, pshaw! I won't 1 plead my cause by abusing my rival. If I can't convince you of the divine right Tiii °t C a^"vo eVL ' r y other consideration, 111 throw up the case. I know you love me; I know I love you. We've loved each other since we were old enough to know what love meant. Letter is a din ner with herbs where love is than a stalled ox and hatred therewith. Do you know what that means?" 44 Of course I do, any child would know." "You don't though, for nil you think yourself so wise. It means just this: It is better to marry for love than for money." " C omc, Tom," said the girl, and there was a catching of her breath when she spoke, which told that tears were not far off, "come, I must go home." Tom noticed these symptoms, and, wisely concluding to press his suit no further just then, walked along by her side without saying another word. He knew if tears did come it would relieve the pressure on the dear little heart which was now pleading for him, and the cruel fellow thought it best to leave it there. n. There was to be a balloon ascension, and Tom Arrington was to be one of the party of aeronauts. He hud been on several such expeditions before, and was quite an eiithuuliuit nn tho subject of nerial navigation—had even tried his hand at inventing a steering apparatus for balloons, but had always failed of discovering the one thing needful to make it a complete success. There was a crowd collected around the inelosure when the big oil silk bag was being intlated with gas. Tom was inside the inelosure with Jenny, her two maiden aunts and Morley, who had 'joined them, much to the young aero naut's chagrin. 44 How should you like to go up in her, Jenny ?" he asked. 44 O, I think it w T ould be splendid, if I wasu't frightened, as I am sure I should be," replied Jenny. "I don't mean to make the trip; but just a little way." 44 How could we do that?" 44 Easy enough. We'll get in the car, and the man will pay out the rope until wo are a hundred feet or so from the ground, and when you have seen what it is like they'll pull us down again. Come, get iu and try it; you've no idea how nice it is." Jennie hesitated, looking at her aunts. 44 No, Jenny," said Aunt Jane, for whom she had been named, 4 'l'll not permit you to try any such experiment Sup pose the rope were to break; where would vou be then?" Tom said there was no danger of the rope breaking, and Aunt Sarah, who had made up her mind to be one of the party, said she didn't believe there was. 4< Will you go, aunty? " asked Jenny, whose heart was all in a flutter between excitement and fear at the idea. 4 * Yes," replied tho maiden lady decid edly, 44 I've always wished that I could go up in a balloon, and now that I've got a chance to do it without danger—there is no danger, 31 r. Arlington?" "None whutever," said Tom. "Then I'll go." "Why, Sarah!" cried Miss Jane. 4 'l'm astonished at your encouraging Jenny in such a wild, harum-scarum adven ture." "There's nothing wild or harum scarum about it that I can see," said Miss Sarah; "everyone, I dare say, lias a natural curiosity to know from ex- I perience what ballooning is like, and I'll j Tom soon had his arrangements all J made, and helped the two ladies into the car. ' 4 Will you go?" he said, not fery cor dially, to Morley. "No, thank you," was the reply. "Why, you are not afraid?" "No, I'm not afraid, but I will stay on terru tirma." "All right," said Tom, stepping into the car where the ladies were already | seated. "Let her out," to the men at the rope. "That fellow hasn't the pluck of a woman," he growled, as they slowly j arose. "Oh, how nice!" exclaimed Jenny, j when the balloon came to a stand, about \ 150 feet from the ground. "Isn't it, aunty?" 4 4 Are you sure there is no danger of the rope breaking, Mr. Arriugton?" asked Miss Sarah, instead of replying to her niece. "It is brand new," replied Tom. "Then it is a very agreeable sensation," said the lady. After giving bis companions sufficient j time to fully enjoy the pleasures of their novel situation, Tom made a sign to the man below, and they commenced to haul in the rope. Tho balloon seemed rather reluctant to leave her native ele ment—if one may call it so—but was at last secured near enough to the ground for the occupants to alight from the cur. After giving liis assistance to Miss Sarah, Tom turned to Jenny, who was preparing to follow her aunt : "How would you like to try it again?" he said, in a low tone. "O, so much," was the reply. In an instant he was back in the car. the signal was given to the men to pay out the rope, and when Aunt Sarah looked around her niece was fifty feet above her in the air. I don't know if Tom Arrington had had any such intention from the begin ning; but while Jenny was looking over the edge of she car, waving her handker chief to those below, he took his pen knife out of his pocket and cut the rope and the balloon sliot up in the blue sky like a wild bird set free from captivity. HI. At first Jenny was so astonished and frightened that she could not speak; then she said: "O, Tom, I thought you said there was no danger of the rope breaking." 44 1 said what I believed to be true," replied that equivocating scamp, who had slipped his knife back into his pock et, "but don't be frightened." "llow can I help being frightened?" she asked in a trembling voice, as she looked below and saw houses and trees rapidly diminishing in size—the people already appearing like black ants squir ming about on an ant-hill. "What will become of us, Tom ?" "I don't know," said Tom. "O, Tom! I thought you were an aero naut." "So I am." "Don't talk such nonsense. You ought to be ashamed to try to make me more frightened than I am." "I am not trying to frighten you, but now that I have got you up here all to myself I'm going to tarry you to the moon, where gills are not sold for money." "O, Tom," cried the girl, beginning j to think that she was in the power of a | maniac, 44 what do you mean?" 4 'Mean? Why it's plain enough. Don't you know the moon is made of silver? Can't you sec it for yourself? 4 Roll on, silver moon,' etc. And what would they want of money there?" and lie burst out laughing when he saw that she really thought he was mad. "Come, Jenny," he said, "I was only joking: we'll come out all right." 44 Y0u—ought—to bo—ashamed to— frighten me so," said Jenny, sobbing, while Tom, taking advantage of her h lpless condition, put his arm around her waist. "Come, Jenny," said he, polling at the halyard that connected with the valve with his disengaged hand, "come, dear, we'll be all right, so don't cry." "I can't help it," said Jenny, laying her pretty head on his shoulder—she felt less frightened that way—"l—can't— help—it; you are—so—so —cruel. 1 didu't—think you—would—be cruel— to—me —Tom." "And I don't want to be cruel to you, darling," said Tom, kissing her. "I want to love you, aud I want you to love . me—that's all." They were gliding along now easily ( and smoothly, but at a rapid rate, though I that fact was imperceptible to Jenny. 'I he landscape seemed to be swimming along beneath her, ever changing and beautiful, but she could perceive no motion in the balloon. 44 What are you doing with the rope, : Tom?" she asked, having somewhat rc i covered under his treatment, s "I'm steering it," he said, with a com f ical smile. "Steering it? I thought balloons couldn't be steered." "Oh, yes, they can—when the wind's favorable. At any rate, I'm steering this one." "Where arc you steering it to?" "Right straight to Hymen's bower." "Now you are beginning again to talk as if you were insane, and I shall get frightened again if you don't hush." Tom pressed her closer to him. "Don't you love me, Jenny?" he asked. She turned her eyes up to him, but didn't say a word. Her head was still lying on his shoulder. ♦ "Don't you think it would be nice to sail along "this way all by ourselves, away from Morley and the two old aunties and everybody, forever?" "I don't know, Tom; perhaps we might get tired." "Never!" said Tom. He had been discharging gas all the time, and the balloon had slowly settled down towards the earth till now every thing on it was plain to the naked eye— houses, trees, and even people, who stopped to gaze up at them as they passed over, and Jenny, much to her lover's regret, had lifted her pretty head from its recumbent position to look over the edge of the car. "Do you see that little white church, Jenny?" lie asked. " Yes." "Well, that's what I've been steering for. Do you know why?" "No; how should I?" " How should you? Don't you know what people generally do in church?" " They preach, and pray, and sing hymns." " Nothing else?" " Y-e s, I believe so." "You believe so. I know so, and that's just what we are going to do." " O Tom, we can't." "Can't we, though? Who's to hinder? Not the aunties; not Morley surely. They are a long way from here, and wo can do just as we please about it, and tell 'em afterwards. Come, Jenny, you've got to promise to do just as I say, or I'll carry you up in the clouds again, and keep you there forever." 44 O Tom, you ought to be ashamed of , yourself to take advantage of my situation j to make me do as you please," said Jenny reproachfully, but at tne same time cling ing closer to him; " you haven't got any right to do it." 44 I've a perfect right to make you do what you want to dtf, and what is for your happiness. Come, promise! We | are almost to the church, and if you don't I'll let her loose; I've only to throw out some of these little bags, and up she goes," and he picked up one of the sand bags, as if to heave it out. 44 Don't, don't, Tom," said Jennie, lay ing her baud on his arm; 44 1'1l promise." 44 All right," said Tom, and in a few minutes the balloon was skimming along I not far from the ground, over an inclosed I field. He threw out his anchor, almost l immediately, and it caught in the panel I of a fence, bringing the balloon too with a sudden jerk, 44 O!" exclaimed Jenny, clasping her arms about her lover's neck. 44 I thought 1 was going to bounce out." 44 "We will bounce out, and that right <|uickly," said Tom kissing her blushing face two or three times. 44 Yonder is the church, parson can't be far off, and— aud—l've got the license in my pocket."* 44 O, Tom," said Jennie, 44 aren't you ashamed of yourself—to play me such a trick?" Hut Tom wasn't a bit ashamed, and afterwards, whenever his pretty wife twitted him with it, as she did occasion ally, he said it was a trick worth any two or a dozen that he had ever heard of.— [New Orleans Picayune. A Mystery of the Setu A mystery of the sea has at last been cleared up after a lapse of twenty-seven years. In 1803 Andrew Baxter, a well known sea captain, living at Batsto, Burlington county, N. J., sailed from New York on a voyage to the Pacific. His family heard from him on his arrival at San Francisco. He sailed from that port and has never been heard of since, the supposition being that he was lost at i sea. Recently the Seaman's Bank of New Vork city sent a letter to the postmaster at Batsto asking if any relatives of Cap tain Baxter were living and saying that he had left a sum of money on deposit in that institution. The only living rela tive of the missing captain is Mrs. Dailey, wife of James J. Dailey, foreman of the composing room of the Philadel phia Ledger. Mrs. Dailey was commu nicated with by the Seaman's Bank, and immediately sent proofs establishing her identity. Mr. Dailey went to Mount Holly and took out letters of adminis tration on the estate of his wife's father, f The money in the Seaman's Bank was deposited in 1808, before Captain Bax ter sailed from New York, andwassome- I thing over $-100. By the accumulation 1 of interest in the interval it now amounts j to over $1,200. —[Washington Star. A Curious Wedding Trip. David G. Gale and Jennie Mathews were married in Detroit and immediately started on a wedding trip in a fifteen-foot double pointed cedar skiff. The first day they bad head winds and made but twenty miles, and found lodging for the night beneath a farm-house roof near the shore. For two subsequent days they had delightful rowing weather and got ! along swimmingly. The third day came I a storm, aud it was thought advisable for Mrs. Gale to get out and walk along the I beach, which she did a distance of about | eight miles, while her husband pulled I along in sight. Wind and oar, and an occasional tow from a steam barge and j launch, took the bridal couple along rapidly, and at noon of the fifth day they arrived at Oakdalo harbor, just'34o miles by the coast line measure. The longest distance made in any one day was ninety two miles, and the average was sixty-two miles per day. They returned by rail. Both were browned by exposure, but de lighted. A Man Who Charms Frogs. Mr. Sullivan, living on the Welland Canal, possesses the marvelous power of charming frogs. The operation is per formed by a peculiar chirping whistle, followed by a strange gurgle in the larynx, which lie has cultivated for years, and has now become so proficient, in the art that the imitation of the sweet singing of the female frog calling its mate is as perfect as nature. A few evenings ago Mr. Sullivan gave an exhi bition of his powers. When the frogs were chirping at a lively rate in the pond Mr. Hare, Mr. Boyle and Mr. Crogan were present. After a few notes had been whistled frogs of all sizes, to the number of about 100, came hopping from all directions up to the doors of the lock shanty, much to the astonishment of those present. Good bullfrogs are worth about fifty cents per dozen, and Mr. Sul livan is engaged in shipping them to the Amerieuu market.—|New York Sun. THE JOKER'S BUDGET. JESTS AND YARNS BY FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. A Neighborly Growl—Making Five Cents Go a Dong Way—lt Was Not a Hobby, Etc., Etc. UNDOUBTEDLY. Johnny—Did the ancient knights use to wear shoes made of iron? Papa—Yes, my son. Johnny—Well, I suppose it was then that men first "felt tne iron entering their soles." A NEIGHBORLY GROWL. Mr. Gordon Settaire (angrily)— That dog of yours is barking all night. Mr. Onderschod —So is yours. Mr. Gordon Settaire —Well, I've got used to mine.—[Puck. NO WOODPILE IN HIS. First Wanderer—Why does some kind hearted people spoil their charities, Bill, by forgcttin' that the poor has feeliu's? Second Ditto—l duuW, Jim; but many on 'em does it. I was offered the finest breakfast y'ever seen this mornin', but a wood-pile went with it. I had ter say no.—[Bazar. INSULTED. Dicky (entering the club in a state of great agitation)—Oh! Chorus of clubmen—What's the mat ter? Dicky—A wiotous fellow on the street insulted me. Chorus—What did he do? Dicky—He—he looked at me. Chorus—Call the police.—LLifc. IN A JEWELRY STORE. 1 'Huh 1" exclaimed in disgust the watch to the hall clock, "you think because you are tall and have a handsome face that you can run me down." "Do not set me going," angrily re plied the clock; "you had better wind up your nonsense, for I am dangerous when I strike." And the Jurgenscn stopped.—[Jewel ers' Circular. AN EXPENSIVE JOKE. "Mrs. Boggs," said Boggs in a hesita ting way, while he and his wife were eating dinner. "If I felt sure that you could keep a thing to yourself, and not breathe it to any living person " "Oh, don't keep me waiting all day, now," said Mrs. Boggs. "What is it?" "I was going to offer you one of these raw onions," said Boggs, but she was too mad to take anything less that $lO. —[Detroit Free Press. A POOR PEACH TREE. City Boarder (putting his host at ease) —How may peaches did this tree have on I this year? Farmer—Nary one. City Boarder—What, not a single one! (sportively) what kind of a tree is this ? Farmer—Plum. —[Munsey. TWO OF A KIND. Mrs.Welloff—That is a splendid charger you are riding, Mr. Poorbody. j Mr. Poorbody (who has spent his week's wages for an airing through the park)—H'm—er—yes. Something like the livery man of whom I hired him.— [Smith, Gray & Co.'s Monthly. j MAKING FIVE CENTS GO A LONG WAY. Philanthropist—You asked mc for a nickel to get something to eat with. 1 j gave it to you, aud here you are drinking a glass of beer. Tramp—Yes; hut wait until you sec me get at the lunch counter. —[Chatter. FORCE OF HABIT. Harry—Dearest, I love you better than any one 011 earth. If you will consent to be mine I will be your humble slave until death calls mc hence. My heart is wholly yours. I love you distractedly. If this does not satisfy you of my devo tion, what will? | Dearest—Cash! She was a saleslady, and the word came to her ruby lips by force of habit. But it came like a cruel blow, and Harry, with a great gulp of sorrow, turned away and went out into the silent night to tell his griefs to the cold, unfeeling stars in the ebon vault above.—[Boston Transcript. BUT OTHERS HAD. I lie--You are the only girl I ever loved. She—And you are the only man I ever gave my heart to. j He—l am not good enough for you. 1 She—Please don't say that. lam tired of those words. He—Why, I never used them before. She—No—not you.—[Yankee Blade. THEY DID NOT WAIT ANY LONGER. Two lone maids spake: "Let's call our selves As Time and Tide this year. They wait, 'tis said, for no man, and Behold no man is here." —[Philadelphia Times. THE SERVANTS' PLACE. "I don't believe in allowing domestics to get the upper hand. I made my serv ant keep her place! " i "You are lucky. Ours never does for more than three weeks."—[American Grocer. CAREFUL OF HIS TROUSERS. I Miss Cashlcy—You have dropped your handkerchief on the floor, Mr. Van Dudekin. Van Dudekin (preparing to get on his knees) —I did it with a purpose, dear Miss Cashley—er—Edith, I love you; will you be my wife?—[Puck. SHE LIKED THE RING. I A young woman, on becoming engaged for the second time, was somewhat as tonished at receiving from number two | the identical ring she returned to her j first love. "Why, Charles," she said, "this is the same ring I had when I was engaged to Harry." "I know it," replied the young man. "Harry is an old friend of mine, and when he heard of our engagement he came around to congratulate me and offered to sell me the ring for half cost. He said you liked it very much, and it fitted, so I took it. Good scheme, eh?" The young woman's sensations are not described.—[Judge. ANOTHER THING. "Did you tell Skittles that I was an infamous liar?" "No, I did not. Quite the reverse, in fact. I said you were a famous one." L HIS SACRIFICE. ' Highwayman (to deaf individual) — Money or your life. 1 Deaf Individual (in carriage with wife) —What's that? Money or my wife. 5 Well, then, take my wife.—[Epoch. ONLY ONE DEFICIENCY. Silversmith—That teapot is for a mem ber of Congress, lsu't it a beauty? Philosopher —I think you have not made enough of one feature. Silversmith—What's that? Philosopher—The spout.—[Jewelers' Weekly. EVIDENCE OF THE TRUTH. Horse Dealer—Count, you had cer tainly better buy that horse. He is per fectly sound. "I believe you. If he hadn't been sound he would never have lived to such an age."—[Flicgende Blatter. THE DEAR GIRLS. Ethel—l find twilight more conducive to love making than any other time. Maud—Of course. Your features aro partly concealed then.—[Munscy's. BAD ADVICE. "I assure you, judge, that my physi cian is responsible for my being a thief." "Do you mean to say that he hypno tized you and compelled you to commit a crime?" "I won't say that, but I do know that he ordered me to take something before going to bed."—[New York Herald. AN ANCIENT PRACTICE. "Lynching was common in ancient times, if one may judge from the litera ture." "I thought that was u modern institu tion." "No, haven't you read about the stringing up of the lyre?" WOULD LOVE IIIM LONG. "Oh, wilt thou love me long, my dear?" She gazed upon his form so tall. "Of course, I'll have to love thee long, If e'er I love thee, Jake, at all!" IT WAS NOT A HOBBY. Pousonby—There's a man up town who has at least 200 clocks of all kinds and descriptions. Popinjay—That's a remarkable hobby. Ponsouby—Not so much so when you remember that he keeps a jewelry store. —[Jewelers' Circular. PREPARING HIS DEFENCE. " You claim that you were insuue when you proposed to her ?" " Yes, sir." " Can you prove it ?" "Yes, sir." " How ?" "By producing the plaintiff in court and letting the jury look at her."—[New York Sun. PRINCIPLE AND PRINCIPAL. Mrs. du Temps—l don't approve of Mr. Moneybag's suit, my dear. I don't think he is the man for you, for he doesn't seem to have a spark of prin ciple. Miss du Temps—He has a principal, ma, of $200,000, that yields him 10 per cent, annually. What more do you want? —[Lawrence American. HE DID THEM JUSTICE. She (indignantly)—l don't think you give us girls credit for thinking of any thing else but dress. He (suavely)—Oh, you wrong me! I , do give you credit for thinking of more than dresses. "Of what else?" "Bonnets."—[The Epoch. NE SPOKE FROM EXPERIENCE. "I have a mind to get married." "Well, you won't have any afterwards, I can tell you."—[Epoch. FRED'S MISTAKE. Amy—Fred, I hear that your engage ment with Miss Blcsser is broken. Fred—Yes, it is. Amy—lt must have been built on the sand to fall so soon. Fred—l thought it was founded on rocks, but I discovered she hadn't any. —[Munsey's Weekly. A NATURAL RESULT. Visitor to insane avium (to keeper)— And who is that gibbering idiot over there? Keeper (sadly) -T iat poor fellow was one of our most promising young lawyers till he took a young lady to a ball game one afternoon and attempted to watch the game and explain it to her at the same time.—[Lawrence American. WISE BEYOND HER YEARS. Reginald—l love you, Madeline. For you 1 would give up family, position, wealth Madeline—Hold, Reginald. Giving up family is all right—l fain would be spared a motber-in-all—give up your position, if you can get a better one, but for heaven's sake hold on to your wealth. We may need it.—[Texas Sittings. AN EVENTFUL DEAL. "Speaking of poker hands," said young Pecan, of Texas, "I once played in a three-cornered game in which one man held five aces and the other man a six-shooter " "And you?" "And 1 held an inquest."—[St. Joseph News. RECIPROCITY. They had a quarrel, and she sent His letters back next day; His rin£ and all his presents went To him without delay. "Pray send my kisses back to me," He wrote, "Could you forget them?" She answered speedily that he Must come himself and get thein! Two Funny War Stories. Congressman Allen, of Mississippi, never tires of telling funny tales about the war. Here are two: A confederate soldier in a certain reg iment had become noted for running away from every fight. On one occasion his Captain found liim in line as an unex pected attack opened. Standing behind him, the captain drew his pistol and said: "Now, John, up to this time you have run from every fight. You have dis graced yourself 011 all occasions. Now, if you stir from the line this time I in tend to shoot you dead. I shall stand here, right behind yon, and i? you start to run 1 shall certainly kill you." John heard the Captain through, and, drawing himself up to an unusual height, replied: "Wall, Captain, you may shoot me if you like, but I'll never give any low lived, low-down Yankee the privilege of doing it." At Murfreesborough a Confederate soldier was rushing to the rear with all the speed he could command. An of ficer hailed hiru and sneeringly inquired why he was running so fast away from the \ankeeß. The soldier, without stopping, yelled back: "Because I can't fly." THE PARIS MORGUE. GRUESOME SIGHTS IN A FAM OUS FRENCH INSTITUTION. Bodies Frozen Stiff for Future Iden tification—A Lugubrious Photo graph Album—A Ghastly Revel. It is difficult for the average tourist in Paris to decide which of two famous sights he will first enjoy—the Louvre or the Morgue. It is perhaps the latter that luis the better patronage from foreigners. Everything in Paris under the present government is systematized, and the po litical machinery, even to the smallest wheels, is so well oiled and runs so smoothly that there is little room for fancy, particularly when hard facts are encountered at every turn. The Morgue 1 is on the island of "the city, that small, I picturesque bit of land, the nucleus of i old Paris, and which parts in twain the I turgid waters of the river Seine. The island is the site of all the princi- j pal public buildings—the criminal courts, the Prefecture of Police and the other ' edifices consecrated to the administra- | tion of justice. The Morgue itself is i rather a hard place to finu, and when 1 found, so insignificant that the visitor j feels at once a distinct pang of disap- I pointment. It is a low, one-storied I structure, half hidden in the shadow of j the great basilica of Notre Dame. In front is a small park, bright and cheery, j where quaint women in large,' stiff-frilled caps, sell nosegays on fete ' days. Behind it is the Seine, from i whose foul waters so much of its ghastly crop is plucked. The building is fashioned after the model of a Grecian tomb with two nine teenth century wings. The main hall in- i side is a square room, around which, un der glass cases, something liko the windows of shops, are exposed the corpses, the flotsam and jetsam of Paris, which come in with the tide. The bodies are dressed in their ordinary attire, and being frozen present the appearance of models in wax. The inner room behind the showcase is used for dissecting, and also for the identification of the dead. A large leaden table 011 a pivot is its principal feature, on which is stretched the cadaver. The ceiling is lighted by a roof of ground glass and every facility is given for the recognition of the dead by their friends. It is here that the mur derer is often brought face to face with his victim, and this small room has been the scene of many a drama. A third room behind this is arranged like a ward iu a hospital. On each side of a broad pathway huge cop per cylinders are placed at regular inter vals, like beds of patients in a hospital. These cylinders are each provided with a freezing apparatus into which after a few days' exposition the unidentified dead are placed and immediately frozen to the consistency of stone and stored away, awaiting the great day of identification. Whenever a body is found—either in the Seine, the streets or at a private house, when the cause of death is sus picious—the case is immediately reported to the authorities and the dead-cart brought to the scene. On arrival at the morgue the body is stripped of its cloth ing and placed in a species of trough lined with zinc. A double hose is im mediately brought into action and the subject is thoroughly cleansed with clear, cold water. It is then examined and its especial features noted, which, together with the time and place of finding and other details, are registered. The corpse is dressed again in its original clothes, placed in one of the receptacles and frozen. Besides the regular registry, in which the names, marks, clothing and other means of identification are written, a photograph is taken of each subject, and these lugubrious albums are open to the public twice a week. Every person who dies in a public place is brought to the morgue. A corps of physicians are there to dissect and perform autopsies, and every means is taken to identify the dead or to trace out the cause of sudden death. The present system is a wonderful im provement on that of other days. Mr. Mace gives a graphic and horrible descrip tion of the morgue during the first half of | the century. The guardians of the dead I were appointed by a low class of politi cians, the office, although without salary, being self-supporting. The dead them selves were facetiously called "tho board - ■ ers." Everything appertaining to the subjects was sold. There was a box called "The Casket of the Maccabees." ! In this wero placed the teeth and the hair i of the dead, which wero sold to dentists and hair-dressers. The garments were sold to old-clothes men, and the por : quisites of the guardian of the dead, or j "Morguer," were extremely profitable. ! This is only half the story. One of the Morgueurs, who had amassed quite a fortune from liis ghoulish work, gave somewhere in the thirties an entertain j ment in the grand hall of the Morgue, j His guests were the most depraved and ' most distinguished members of the crim inal classes in Paris. The drink which formed the chief refreshment on the oc casion was brandy, known in French as "cau de vie" and baptized for the oeca j sion as "cau de morts." from water of life to water of death. The music was | furnished by instruments something like j flutes made from the bones of the dead, I and the drum accompaniment was beaten j j on skulls with parts of arms and legs. I For light a novel effect was introduced, j Twenty corpses which had entered a ' i sufficient stage of decay were ranged j I along the walls and the eyeless sockets | and mouths were lighted, the gas from j tho corrupting bodies burning with a ! fierce and brilliant light. The Morgue at present is a bright ex ample of a well-organized institution, thanks to the Republic. In the days of the Empire it was the custom to give to anyone bringing from the river the body ot a person still living 15 francs; for j corpse, 25 francs. Gaffer Riderhood. ! Dickens' novel of "Our Mutual K.end. ! was a well-known type on the Seine, and many a murder was committed for the sake of the 25 francs. Now the propor tion is changed, and 15 francs is the price for the dead and 25 for the living. The garments are burned, and a well regulated police see that there is no more unseemly traffic. J The Morgue is free. There is no charge for the burial of the dead, and the expo sition of subjects is open at all times to the public. In it were placed the victims j of the civil wars of 1830, 1848, 1851 and 1871, and during the siege many Prussian soldiers found their way into this grue some museum. The Morgue is a book in itself. From its archives many thrilling , romances could be written. One peculiar ' circumstance is, however, specially wor- I thy of preservation. For nearly a hun dred years a certain family of working people in Paris have ended their lives by suicide From father to son, from mother to daughter, has been handed a plain gold ring, and on the finger of each lias been found this trinket. It has been called tho fatal r.ng, and only year it made its appearance on tho finger of a young m*n—the last of the race. The was buried with the corpse. The cupidity of not even the most grasping body finder could be tempted to the pos session of this ominous golden circle.— [New York World. TAMING A FLOCK OF GUAILS. Buckwheat and Gradual Advances Conquer the Wild Birds. Several weeks ago Mrs. D. N. Snyder, of Jefferson township, Penn., saw a lot of quails dusting themselves under some currant bushes in the back end of her garden. The birds looked so happy and contented that she thought it would be too bad to disturb them, so she returned home without pulling the weeds out of a patch of onions that she had gone there for the purpose of doing. In an hour or so the quails had disappeared in the tall timothy of the adjoining meadow, and 1 Mrs. Snyder scattered some buckwheat i around where they had been wallowing. On the following day tho birds came | there again, gobbled up the buckwheat i and hau a good time. Every day for a week or so Mrs. Snyder scattered grain ! among the bushes for the quails to feed j on, and the birds so that they | looked for food ii.ihc garden as regularly | as they did for a resting place at night 1 out in the woods,bac!c of the big meadow lot. One morning the kind-hearted woman forgot to throw the buckwheat, but the quails reminded her of her negligence by appearing at the usual hour and making a great, fuss and noi c because there wasn't any grain in the garden for them to pick up. Mrs. Snyder let the birds hunt for other kind of food that day, and for several mornings after that she didn't fail to give them a good feed of buck wheat. Then she missed a morning on purpose to see how the quails would act when they didn't find any grain near the currant bushes, watching from a second story window for them to make their ap pearance. Promptly on time the whole flock crept under the garden fence from the meadow, ran among the bushes, and be gan to dodge and flutter about where they had been in the habit of finding the buckwheat. When they searched long enough to learn that no grain hud been put there for them, the birds piped iu low tones, fluttered uneasily, scattered into the vegetable beds, and * appeared to be very much disappointed. In a little while the quails gave up the search, assembled under the currant bushes, aud went to dusting themselves in the soil. Mrs. Snyder couuted four teen in the flock, and then she wont down stairs, got a handful of buckwheat, and tiptoed her way into the garden. When she had got as near to the quails as she could get without scaring them, Mrs. Snyder flung a hand : ful of buckwheat toward tho quiet little flock. It fell among them and they , all scampered under the fence and went J out of sight in a hurry. Then she threw ! some more of the grain on the ground where thev had been, and secreted her i self behind a row of pea vines. Presontly one of the birds ventured to crawl under the fence into the garden. It soon found j the buckwheat and set to filling its crop, and at this the other birds took courage, filed from their biding places, and went to picking up the gram as though each | was determined to get its share. ; From her place of concealment Mrs. Snyder flung a handful of buckwheat | into the air, so that it fell into the midst •of the flock. It scared the birds a little, ! but they quickly resumed their feeding, 1 and Mrs. Snyder began to whistle to them, j flinging more grain into tho air as she whistled. That excited their curiosity I just enough to make them look up for a moment, and Mrs. Snyder emptied tho I basin and stole away, without letting the birds see her. She fed the quails in this 1 way for a few days, gradually got them used to her whistle and voice, and let j them get sight of her by degrees. In side of a month from tho time she first saw the birds in the garden she had them so well tamed that they fluttered I out of tho meadow whenever she called them, ate iu her presence, and did not seem to fear her at all. Since then Mrs. Snyder has taken a good deal of comfort with her strange little flock, aud she said the othor day that the confidence the birds have iu her pays her many times over for all the trouble she has made herself in getting the wild little creatures to be as tame as they are. Using Cats as Clocks. Every one knows that cats can see in the dark, and the reason they can do so i 9 because of tho peculiar construction of their eyes. You may have noticed that in a moderate light the pupil or bluck part of pussy's eye is small and of an oval shape, while in a full glare of light it be coinos narrow. Now, in the dark it ex pands to a circle and nearly tills the sur face of the eyeball. This peculiarity of the cat's eyes is turned to account in a curious manner by the Chinese. The Abbe Hue relates that when he was trav eling in China he asked his attendant what time it was. The man went over to a cut that was quietly basking in the sun, and examining its eyes told the Abbe that it was about two hours after noon, and on being questioned how he knew that, he explained that the pupils of a cat's eyes were largest in the morn ing aud that they gradually grew smaller as the light inereuscd, till they reached their minimum at noou; that then they began to widen again, till at night they once more became large. The good Abbe was filled with admiration for the ingenuity of a people who could use cats as clocks. But it must be admitted that this way of telling the time of day is rather a loose one and could only be trusted in very clear and serene weather, for temporary gloom or the darkness of a storm would sadly derange your four footed clock and put it all wrong. Women as Watchmakers. 4 'Now that women are making their way in almost every trade and profession in this country," said a well known jew eler, "it seems strange to me that so few of them work at watchmaking." In Switzer land, even years ago, when I learned the trade there, there were many women watchmakers. Now, in that country, there are nearly as many women in the business as there are men. ilut iu all New York there are only four women watchmakers whom I know of, aud I am reasonably well informed. One of these women lives up iu Harlem, far away from the business portion of the town, and she must make, on an average, from $25 to $35 a week. I send many of the more delicate watches which are brought to me to be repaired, to her.and other jewel ers do the same thing. She does good work and she lives in a quiet neighbor hood. The latter is, you know, very im portant to a watchmaker sometimes. The jar caused by the passing of heavily loaded trucks and by the elevated rail road and soon, is sometimes so violent down here in the business part of the town that it is almost impossible to do flue work."