Demorralic, Wate} Bellefonte, £a., Dec. 25, 1891. CHIRSTMAS DAY. (Uncle Seth loquitur.) A good old fashioned Chris’mas, with the legs upon the hearth, The table filled with feasters, an’ the room a-roar "ith mirth, i NE With the stockin’s erammed to bu’stin’, an the medders piled ’ith snow— A geod old fashioned Chris'mas like we had £0 long ago! Now that's the thing Id like to see ag’in afore ie : But Chrismas in the eity here—it’s different, ! oh my! With the crowded hustle bustle of the slushy, noisy street, An’ the scowl upon the faces of the strangers that you meet. Oh, there’s buy’, plenty of it, of a lot 0’ gor- geous toys; An’ it takes a mint 0’ money to please modern irls and boys. , ; Why, i mind the time a jack-knife an’ a taffy Jump for me na Made my little heartan’ stockin’ jus’ chuck full o' Chris'mas glee. An’ there's feastin’. Think o'feedin’ with these stuck up city folk! : ’ Why, ye have to speak in whispers, an’ ye oe crack a joke. Then remember how the tables looked all crowded with your kin, Wheu you couldn’t hear a whistle blow across the merry din! You see I'm s0 old fashioned like I don’t care much for style, An’ toeat your Chris’mas banquets here I wouldn't go a mile; 1d rather have, like Solomon, a good yarb dinner set : With real old friends than turtle soup with all the nobs you’d get. There's my next door neighbor Gurley—fancy how his brows *u’d lift If I'd holler, “Merry Chrig’'mas! Caught, old fellow, Chris’'mas gift !'l , Lordy-Lord, I'd like to tryit! Guess he'd nearly have a fit. : Hang this city stiffness, anyways, I can’t get used to it. . Then your heart it kept a swellin’ till it nearly bust your side, : : An’ by night your jaws were achin’ with your smile four inches wide, ' An’your enemy, the wo’st one, you'd just grab his hand an’ say : “Mebbe both of us was wrong, John, Come let's shake. It’s Chris’mas Day!” Mighty little Chris’'mas spirit seems to dwell ‘tween city walls, Where each snow flake brings a soot- flake for a brother as it falls: . Mighty little Chris’mas spirit! An’ I’m pinin’, don’t you know For a good old fashioned Chris'mas like we had 50 long ago. Alice Williams Brotherton, in Century. THE ANGEL OF ST. GUDULE'S, BY MARION HARLAND, PROLOGUE. Mine is a tale of fashionable life, and in this day nothing could be more com- monplace than the lives of people of fashion. The hero is, moreover, a com- monplace man, and so unimaginative that what really happened to him a year ago was the more remarkable. Sosing- ular did it appear to me that I have with difficulty restrained myself from telling in advance of the season what may, after all, be considered a common- place holiday story, manufactured to de- mand, with the conventional two mis- understandings, involving a couple of heart-breaks on Christmas Eve, and the one reconciliation next moruing to the clanging accompaniment of Christmas bells. Men who get rich fast, and whose wives are ambitions of social distinction, ought pot to be surprised that those who construct and raise the ladder are some- times ignored in the excitement of the ascent. Yet M. Daniel Barber was disagree- ably amazed when he shrank into the background ot his money-bags. He had two talents. The one -vhich he did not tie in a napkin and hide in the earth was an aptitude for amassing wealth that deserved to rank with gen- ius. The passage through the alpine range dividing poverty from affluence is oftener blasted than bored. Our. hero was neither briiliant nor a master of diplomatic arts, nor yet unscrupulous as to men and ‘measures, still his dollars multiplied amain. He was thirty-nine years of age, and “worth,” in technical parlance, two and a half millions on the 24th of December, 1889, when he set out to keep an evening business engage- ment at a down-town hotel. He had not left his home a block behind when fate, in the guise of his wife’s pet white setter, bounded on ahead of him, having stolen out of the house at his heels. ‘He whistled her back and retraced his steps. Mrs. Barber was where he had left her, in'a ‘luxurious chair before the li- brary fire; chatting with her sister Mrs. Cralle, who bad dined with them. The sister’s carriage was at the door, and she was drawing on her gloves. “Change your mind and go with me,” she was saying, ‘There will bea va- cant chair in the box. Or, maybe you expect company ?”’ She laughed, and her sister answered hastiliy, “I expect no one, but it 1s just possible that—?’ : Maida broke the sentence in two by trotting in between the speakers with an air of exaggerated innocence inter- preted instantly by her mistress. “Did she follow you again ?”’ seeing her husband, and flushing with surprise or vexation. “I am ever :s0 much obliged to you for bringing her back. She is getting dangerously fond of you. Mrs. Cralle granted him no space tor rejoinder. She was a little woman with black eyes that snapped, and shut up tightly when she laughed. Somebody had told her in “her girlhood that her cachinnation was musical, and she had prof by the suggestion ever since. er mirth was peculiar, running up the gamut in half-tones to sol and balancing there while sober people wondered at the chromatic feat. She ¢did” it again now. “I wish you were so dangerously fond of your own husband as to obey him. I'd persuade him to order you to go with meto t theatre, instead of moping here on th® chance that an ad- mirer may drop in. He doesn’t stay at home. + Why should you. I have my suspicions!” She laughed until there was hardly a crease between upper and lower lids, | “Helen knows that I never interfere with her engagements,’’ said Mr. Barber sedately cool, Mrs. Cralle spread her gloved palms dramatically. “Have yourown way— both of you. Each of you must know + the lesson pretty thoroughly by now. "I Hl. don’t know two moro independent peo- ple ; and I suppose perfect liberty has its advantages--even in married life.” Her brother-in-law attended her to louking after it with an irresolute ex- pression not commen to face or move- ment. ? “What a fool that woman is!” he said behind his teeth. ‘She'd put me | front ot him for some yards. in the lunatic asylum in a week.” As if still weighing the question to go | or to stay m his mind, he walked slowly | up the steps and let himself into the ball. His business appointment could | wait. If Helen wanted him to remain at howe he would send a telegram. As he removed his hat his hair showed whitely on the temples behind which | the brain drudged continually at his hfe task of million-making. Each year cut more sharply certain carves, brack- | eting nose and chin, that were not in! his face at thirty. He had never been | loquacious, but his taciturnity was be- | coming proverbial. Sisyphus probably | wasted little time in exclamation or | harangue while “up the Lill he heaved a huge round stone.” That the Harber | stone gathered auriferous soil as it rolled made the labor no easier, In the intervals of strain and lift he ; had many thoughts to-day that were ir- | relevant and foreign to daily toil. In a household where there are no children, Christmas giving is short and usually dull work. Mr. Barber had paid one visit to a jeweller’s and another toa modish carriage-maker’s shop on his wife’s behalf. She had, without doubt, bought something tasteful and possibly useful for him to be presented next day. Checks had done all the rest. The Cralles’, big and little, the employes of the house of Barber & Co., various char- itable institutions, and a mission or two, would reap the result of the check-writ- ing, which was so much like a business transaction as to have no holiday flavor about it. The truant and persistent thought that had haunted him would naturally visit his wife, as well, but of this she had given no sign. True, they had not met since breakfast until din- ner-time, and then there was that— blue jay! Country education and Mrs. Cralle’s costume of blue velvet and bro- cade combined to supply the simile. His wife still lay back in her loung- ing chair, one hand stroking the snowy silk of Maida’s coat. The dog sat on her haunches, close to her mistress gaz- ing, like her, into the wood fire. The husband surveyed the tableau from the doorway for an instant the hard curves relaxing and the deep-set eyes wistful, Mrs. Barber was thirty-three years old. In the blending light of fire and shaded lamp she wa. girlishly fair. Her pale brown hair was dresssed simply, waving naturally low upon the back of her head. Her gown ofsome creamy crepe-like stuff’ was trimmed with wine- colored velvet, yellowing laces softening the round of wrists and throat. Shedid not look a day older than when she pro- mised to marry him eleven years before. By-the way, she had worn white on that evenirg too, with wine-colored sash and ribbons ; but that must be a mere coin- cidence. The bound of his heart at the reminiscence did not jar his tone as he came forward. “Don’t be startled | I came back to ask —that is—is Maida’s collar marked with your name and address ?’’ The subterfuge was awkward and cowardly, and the knowledge of this stiffened him through and through. He had seen the quick color leap into her cheeks at his voice ; her complexion was as sensitive as a baby’s. In stoop- Ing to examine the silver band upon the dog’s neck, he did not note how sudden- ly the rose flush receded, or the slight curl of the languid lip. Her accents were politely listless. “Oh yes! Her only danger is trom dog thieves.” She did not look toward him, but again at the fire. “That’s all right, then” —raising him- self ¢Can I do anything for you down the street ? The shops will be closed to- morrow.” “Nothing, thank you. I hope Maida has not made you late for your appoir.t- ment.” She had not so much ‘as looked a de- sire to have stay. She almost hinted that he would better be gone. The night was unseasonable mild, the stars were dim, the atmosphere was oppres- sively humid. Twenty blocks lay be- tween him and the place of his business tryst, buthe chose to walk, forging ahead as if the mercury were below zero He was chilled to the heart. For Mr. Barber’s second talent, the one which he did wrap in the napkin of diffidence and hide under the ashes of humility, was his love for his wife. It bad always expressed itself in deeds rather than words. She was apt with graceful phrase: and ready turns of speech, He thought slowly, and words came tardily to the birth. Once, and for long, she had comprehended this. Ouly five years ago, when he presented her with the title-deeds of the handsome dweliing they mow occupied; he had told her, between kisses, that every stone in it was the token of ‘a loving thought of her. There was no vulgar exultation in his enjoyment of her so- cial trinmphs. Like herseif, he was re- fined 1ngrain. Unlike her, he ‘had few showy qualities. = She had once jesting- ly compared his conversational abilities to the Rothschild who, refused a seat in a Paris omnibus because he had no change in his pocket, offered the conduc- tos a note for a million francs, and 'ask- ed for the change. But if he was apt to be caught without small-talk, he com- forted himself likea correct, dignified gentleman at the dinners which her beauty, her vivacity and gracious tact made famous, He paid cheerfully ‘for the musical and dramatic talent that helped lift her ‘‘evenings’’ ahove the level of the monotonous ‘‘reception.” Her country-seat—also deeded to her— was a veritable Les Delices for lovliness of situation and variety of entertain- ments devised for guests. And when his wealth joined to her native gifts, had made her “the . fashion,” he discovered that the good things he had provided out of the fulness of his devotion were his rivals. In heaping up richcs for her he had barred the postern-gate leading into the dear old pleasant pastures, shut out the murmur of the still waters, Their lives touched at ‘fewer points as the months flew by. Hers was the bril- liant slavery of the world ; his the bond- age of the man of affairs. As often be- tides a wedded pair in such zircumstan- ces, she was the happier of the two. She her carriage, and as it rolled away stood | til this instant her lawful partner had ' never felt a twinge of jealously of him, mitted. dered, he could floated a glittering mote in the radiant stream she helped to glorify. “In which I have no place,” he re- flected drearily. “The best use I had for the money was to give her every- thing she wanted, and it divides us like a sea of molten gold.” Two men issued from the door of a fashionable club-house just as he passed it, fell into step, and kept directly in “I will go as faras the corner with you,” saida voice Barber thought he knew ; “but I am reaily due uptowu. I have an engagement to call upon the loveliest of her sex, the nicest woman in town, with but one drawback—she is married, and to a gold plated log,” +That’s worse for her than for you, I take 1t. Do we part here? Goud- night !” Without hesitation, Daniel Barber wheeled about as the first speaker cross- ed the avenue and started up the other side. He knew the man as a star in the social firmament of New York. He was well born, travelled, aocomplished, and handsome, and had on sundry occasions, in her husband’s presence, distinguished Mrs. Barber by marked attention. Un- or of any other man. Nine words had opened a erater at his feet. The two men tramped on in line, the width of the street between them, the complacent admirer of the loveliet of her sex never glancing toward the person who dogged him, even when he halted where the other had been certain he would stay his rapid walk, and rang the bell at Mrs. Rarber’s door. He was ad- Her sister had insinuated that she ex- pected an admirer.. Helen had checked her faint disclaimer at ‘‘it is just possible —’? with a conscious blush at seeing her, husband. Her toilette of studied sim- plicity, her uneasiness at the delay of his second and third departure—each trivial incident of theevening stood out in lurid distinctness. This, then was what had parted them and kept them asunder! In the full horror of the shock, he would have stak- ed his soul upon Helen’s honor. She would keep her marriage vow to the let- ter. It was only herimaginination that was led captive ; the feminine fondness for admiration was her snare. Admit- ting this, she was lost to him when her wifehood was named lightly and as a barrier in her chosen career. While thinking, he was walking, holding on the long stride that made other pedestrians turn to glance after him, so ill-suited was it to the close, clinging warmth ,of the evening and the general depression it induced. How far and in what various directions he wan- never recollect. He was exhausted and out of breath when, at eleven o'clock, he locked about him for a quite corner in which he could rest | and plan. Right beside him was a church with truncated towers and broad solemn front. Two windows were faintly illum inated, the rest dark, and he could hear in the stilling night-time the regular pulse of the organ. The door yielded to his push. The choir rehearsal for to- morrow’s service was over, but the or- ganist had remained for an hour’s pri- vate rehearsal. The gloomy spacious- ness from wall to wall was untenanted. Daniel Barber took a seat midway be- tween door and chancel, and drew a painful, shuddering breath ; the cold sweat dropped from his forehead. “O God !"’ It is the cry of the human when the possibility of human help is swept away and the naked, destitude soul hurls it- self, a battered moth, in the face of Him who, it feels, blindly and distractedly, ought to have succored it from ruin: Sometimes it is a prayer ; as often it is an imprecation. : Daniel Barber in his sane moments believed in a large and simple way, in the Father’s love and forgiveness. first coherent thought now was of thank- fulness that he had taken refuge in a church. He had serious matters in hand ; had formed a momentous resolu- tion. Whatever the devout people who worshipped here might think of his pur- pose. He, in whose honor the temple was built, knowing so much more of the facts in the case than they, might be brought around to his views on the sub- ject. . Aware at this point that thestyle of his argument was unconventional, if not irreverent he tried not to listen to the organ, The roll got mixed up wiih the pulsations of his brain. A sortof alter ego of his mind proper was tracing out the theme of the voluntary. He could meditate more clearly "upon his legs. He got up, and began to strolled up one aisle and down the other, bringing will to bear upon his scattering thoughts. His premises were few ‘and decided. His character and principles were block- ed out in a few and graphic lines. Thus he set the situation before the Reader of Hearts : +I love my. wife best of creat- ed things. 1 live oniy to make her happy. She has ceased to love me. I am no longer necessary to her happi- piness. Life has lost its value. A use- less thing should be dispensed with.” The chain had not a flaw. With the cessation of demand should cease supply. In every department of God's economy waste 18 a sin. Still pacing the aisles softly, he wrought out ti: details of leaving a world where he was no longer wanted. There was noneed to go home again. His will bequeathing every- thing to lis wife, was in his lawyers hands. He made it six years ago, a month after little Dan’s death on Christ- mas Eve. For four years the parents had kept the holiday quietly together, less sudly but not less lovingly with each recurrence of ‘the anniversary Last year imperative business calied him to Chicago u week before the holidays. He hud pushed affairs fiercely hard, and traveled day and night to surprise Helen by returning in time to pass the evening of Christmas Day with her. She had gone in the place of her sister, who was suddenly indisposed, to chaperon a thea- tre party of young people, and did not get home until midnight. Fashionable mothers must make short work of their mourning if they would discharge aright the duties they owe to “our set.” How far und fast they two had drifted apart in one short year! It could hardly have happened if the children had been spared. The second, a girl, was born dead. Dan would be His | nine years old on New Year's day if he prs v wu a —————— had lived. His eyes and winsome ways were the mother’s, but she insisted vehe- mentiy that he would grow up into his father’s image. Her heart would not be so empty to-nightif her boy were with her. Tender branches upon the -‘log” might give wifely affection something to which to cling : might even haye hin- dered the closing up of the golden plates. He had deplored childlessness as a misfortune. He saw it now as a curse. . Helen could never have grown superbly indifferent to her boy’s father, and the prattle of the baby girl would drown the call of tha river down which the ““log’’ must float at midnight. How- ever misery-stricken, he could not have foregone the pure joy of hearing the two shout in unison, “Merry Christmas to dear papa and mamma !”’ As it was, he had worked back in a circle to the starting point of the reverie. It must seem to be an accident. Helen would feel it to be a shock, not a sorrow. She bad her ‘‘circle” and her fortune. He sneered sourly in reflecting how much more valuable was the plating than the log inside oft. All beyond the small area immediate- ly about the organ-loft was in black shadow to one coniing in from the ar- ish streets. When Daniel Barber’s eyes got used to the darkness, pews, chancel, and altar took shape, e could trace the outline of the Christmas decorations the resinous perfume of which was op- pressive 1n the dank warmth of the night. The windows upon his right were brighter than the rest. One near the middle of the church received the direct force of the electric light without. The dull eyes strayed to it by and by in the same feeble impulse of unconscious cerebration that had lead him to follow the musical refrain. Right in the centre of the illuminated space an angel held a gleaming crown above the head of a kneeling figure. The gaze of the latter was heavenward ; her visage,chastened by sorrow, was full of holy peace, a rest and thankfulness ineffable and secure. About the bend- ing figure and victorious saint was writ- ten, us with a finger of light, the legend. “Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of life!’ While he still gazed, the wonderful thing I have spoken of happened. A strong voice, like a clarion for clearness and melody, uttered the words in the hearing of the half crazed man, and the organ throbbed an accompaniment. It was thrice repeated. In his bewilder- ment he recalled that it was always thus with true “signs.” “Be thou faithful’-~the recitative ris- ing majestically, distinct above full sus- tained ap death’ ,—the sigh and hush were as the passing of a soul ; then out burst soaring into a glorious crescendo of voice and organ peal, “and I—and I will give thee the crown of life 1” The visitor to the stately temple, standing, like ‘a pause in the day’s oc- cupations,”’ in mid-channel of the sweep of labor and life, may see for himself the memorial window set by filial love in the gray wall. To none besides the solitary wanderer within the sacred gates was it given to receive from an angel lips the message sent by Heaven that Christmas Eve to a soul ready to perish. “Faithful” unto the death so close upon him — the end presumptuously courted. Was the proffered crown for him who in a frenzy of impatience threw down the cross he was command- ed to bear ? What was thesoldier who, in mid-fight, turned his back upon his enemies? Wavering rays of light outlined the monitor ; with outstretched arms she seemed to lean toward him ; her look to grow more sweetly compassionate. In an agony of contrition he f>ll upon his knees, and tears, bursting vetween the fingers that veiled the shamed face, wese the savior of the over wrought brain. 2 As the organist, having extinguished the lights, was leaving the gallery, his eye was caught by the well defined ap- parition of a kneeling form right in the track of the mellowed glows flowing through the memorial window. It did not move at his approach, yet the in- truder was so evidently not a drowsy va- grant that he did not offer to touch him. “I beg your pardon,” he said, respect- fully, “but I am about to lock up the church.” : To his amazement he recognized the face ot the worshipper. “Thank you I’ Daniel Barber arose, dignified and unabashed, and walked slowly downthe aisle. The organist had never heard that the successful man, known to him as the generous patron of musical talent, was especially devout, but if millionaires had a fancy to say their prayers at mid- night in an empty sanctuary, organists who live upon sal ries subscribed by rich people had no right to find fault with their harmless whims. He whis- tled softly in pulling the big double leaved door shut, and made up his mind that the “interesting incident of Christ- mas Eve’ should not find its way into the newspapers through him. Somebody watching behind the par- lor curtains saw a cab deposit a passen- ger upon the sidewalk in front of the Barber mansion. Before the master of the house could get out his latch-key = figure in white and wine red stood in the open door. “Qh-h-h 1’ the long-drawn aspirate telling of suspense and unutterable relief. “How late you are, niy darling !” For answer he lifted her bodily in his arms and carried her back to the library. “You have nat sat upon my knee in twelve months,” he said, hungrily, dis- regarding her cry of terror and amuse- ment. ‘Nor called me ‘darling’ before in s1x.” “Whose fault was that ?”’ she began, saucily, then cried out again at sight of his baggard face : “Dan what has hap ened ? How strange and white you lovk. Where have you been ?” “In the valley of the shadow of death ”’ And while she trembled and paled and wept he told her everything. When he named the man he had dogged to her door she grew as criinson as a rose, and her imprisoned hands burned in his grasp. Her lips parted impulsively, “Not yet,” said her husband, gently decisive, ‘ Wait.” Surely no stranger or fuller confession was ever poured by aching heart’ into wondering ears. Helen Barber ‘was a proud womun, and her husband knew what risks he took. But to his honest way of thinking, fidelity implied fearless frankness. Let her disclose or keep back what she would, there was an end of re- serves on his part. The changes in the eloquent face of the auditor were more than be could bear at last. He con- cluded the story with averted eyes. “I blame you in nothing. I am not the mate of a woman like you. I can only love you with ally heart and soul, and work for you with all'my strength. While I have-delved in common soil, you have been climbing. As: I have grown dull, you have grown brighter. I am afraid it is too late to make me over’’—his features wrung by a faint, sorrowful smile. “If you had begun ten years earlier, I doub. if you could have tushioned me into such a man, for in- stance, as your visitor of this evening.” She wrested her hands impetuously from his, laid them on his shoulders, and looked at him with eyes that blazed. “You must stop there, Dan ! husband ! my love ! my darling !”’ flinging epithet after epithet breathlessly, as if she could not content herself with any lavishment of endearment. , “I am to blame. Oh, I must be terribly in faulvit you could ever 1u your inmost | thoughts link his name with mine! He i lied when he said that I expected him. | He had never found ie alone betore ; he will never find me at home again. Not , that he dared breathe of or look lke ' love—faugh !—to me. But he contrived to drop a word of sympathy for me in my loneliness, and to intimate that my tastes and pursuits were not yours. It was very adroitly done, so cleverly man- aged that I suspect he had said it to a dozen other ‘loveliest of their sex.” I told him what I thought of you ina few hot and hasty words, und in fewer, hotter and more hasty, I gave him my opinion of men like himself. He got himself out of the house in tolerable order”’—laugh- ing nervously—‘but he will make no more mistakes of that sort ; will make sure next time what manner of neglected wife he tries to console. That was at balf past nine. You had said at dinner that your engagement would not detain you long. I alluded to that when I be- gan the remark to Celia that Maida in- terrupted. ‘It is just possible that Dan may be in early, and he seldom has an evening at home now,” was what you would have heard if the runaway had not appeared at that second. I had planned 1t all in what I was half afraid you would consider an absurdly honey- moonish style. Tordered a nice supper to be served at half past ten. All of iy that isn’t spoiled, and the coffee that isn't made, you may see over there in the dining-roum, but it was to be eaten in here. You never notice what I wear nowadays, but I hoped you might ob- serve the new gown I had made for this occasion, and possibly recollect that I wore white und wine-color the evening we were engaged, and that it was in Christmas week, and then we would talk it all over and out together. Don’t you suppose I have scen that the rush of business is sweeping you one way and the race of pleasure sweeping me an- other, and had begun to take alarm at it? So I have taken myself to task lately. The truth is, I am awfully tired of meet- ing the same people and eating the same suppers everywhere, and talking the same frothy, flashy nothings, and the gray is coming out too rapidly in your hair and mustache to please a wife who wants you to live forever. These were but a few of the things we were to talk over to-night. Some of the rest we neverspeak of to other people. Celia, although she has children of her own, would nothave understood why the fact that her sudden illness last Christmas Eve obliged me to take her place, or dis- appoint her girls and their guests, was not a precedent for my joining her party to-night. I was unjust to you in think- ing that you hud forgotten our sadly sweet tryst, kept in the dear old times when you werenotso cruelly busy and I so criminally gay.”” ~~ Her hands had slid back into his grasp; tender light overflowed her eyes ; richer color was stealing into her cheeks; her lips trembled as she went on, her voice sink- ing to a whisper : “Last of all, I meant to teli you what IL have kept to myself until now. Because it was on Christmas Eve that our boy went away with the angels, because on Christmas Eve an- other little Child was bornin Bethlehem, I waited until to-night to let you know —""She said the rest with her lips upon his. The organist of St. Gudule's sang in public so seldom that not one of his choir suspected how fine was his barytone, and how correct his taste in vocal music. Not a false tone or inexpressive render- ing of the Christmas choral service es- caped him ; yet he was passably well satisfied when he turned his head from his high seat for a view of the slowly re- tiring congregation, his fingers straying among the harmonies of a familiar sym phony. A discord, unskilfully intro- duced, made two or three people glance up at the gallery in surprise. He saw only a man and a woman, whose bowed heads we e not lifted until the church was nearly empty. They knelt side by side 1n the pew occupied last night by the solitary devotee. Had he been nearer he would have ob- served, being keen of sight and wits, that their hands were clasped. He did detect the shine of tears upon the lashes of the beautiful eyes of the wife, pausing in the aisle, raised to the memorial win- dow, where—the. victor’s erown glowing as with living jewels in the Christmas sunlight, and Heaven’s love and promise in her face——stood ‘‘the angel of St. Gudule’s.” ? A Saucy Kid. Fr. m the Kansas City Times. furiously angry and a car load of people very merry this morning, He was sit- ting down quietly when this portly wo- man came in. As nobody got up to give her a seat she stood in the aisle at the mercy of the bumps and twists and turns of the road. The car had gone about two blocks when the small boy got up, and in a whisper that could be heard all through the car said : “I'll be one of three men to give the lady a seat I” ——4“Well, Jimmie,” said Uncle George, as he watched the boy at work on his sled, ‘ara you polishing up the runners ?" “No,” suid Jimmie. “I'm shinin’ up the sliders. Sleds don’t run. A small boy made a big fat woman ——— MERRY CHRISTM \S. The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, St. Nick with his reindeers right early was. there, i But mamma and papa, of course, couldn’t: ., Sleep. Without stealing down and first taking a peep. The great joy of Christmas—the swestest that’s. known— Upon their glad faces is faithfully shown, And, while they are playing “3t. Nick” in the dark, A word to “us old folks” we wish to remark. 0, dow’: you remember with thrills of da- ight, : The Walling and watching for Santa Claus’ night, * How, eyes all a-sparkle and cheeks all a flume, You eagerly counted the days till it came. And then, how with care’ The biggist long stockings that mamma could you “hung by the ecnimney spare, And Arshad with your brothers and sisters 0 be Where visions of sugar plums danced through your head. 0, never a night was so long as that seemed ; You couldu’t get sleepy, you tassed till you dreamed ; At last came the morn when you quickly arose Almost too excited too button your clothe-x, Then downstairs : closed door, Then paused, hardly daring to further explore Lest naught might be there. Then—Hurrah * : what a shout You gave when you found Santa Claus Was about, you rushed to the parlor’g That moment supreme you can never forget, Ios ever good influence clings to you yet; Tis sweet to look back on and five through _ again, The joy of your lifetime *will always remain, So give to your children that memory bright, Of childhood’s most wonderful Christmas de. ight, And Sista aot one stocking—but two for each chic For nothin’s to good or too much for St. Nick. —H. C. Dodge, in Goodall’s Sun, ee — Your Wife's Christmas Gift. About this time your wife is wear. ing out her nerves in an endeavor to secure something that will gratify you at Christmas as her present to you,says an exchange. Her task is a loving one but weari- some—only wives know how wearisome There are so few things that are ap- propriate, and you already have so many of the few. Moreover, she must purchase judicious'y. She is limited in ways that you are not iu this Christ. mas business. She must secure the becoming gifts at a cost within the im- perfectly known limit of your financial ability, while you in buying something for her may be as extravagant as you please, because you can pinch the ex- travagance out of her allowance for household expenses afterwards. Besides all this, the gift you get for her costs you nothing but money ; the gifts she makes to you costs "her thought, worry and that most toilsome of all things, shopping. She must spend hours in stuffy, overcrowded shops; she must price things here, the:e and every-where; she must con- sult and consider, in distressing uncer- tainty as to the fitness of things to sat- isfy the whimsical masculine taste. And all this she does with a loving tenderness for you which is in itself a gift of priceless worth. Do you think it well, on the whole, to reward her toil, her patience and her love by get- ting off the cheap joke afterwards about your having to pay for your pre- sent yourself ? There is not any wit in that joke; it is as stale as a loaf of bread from a Pompeian oven, and its utterance is ill. mannered, inconsiderate, brutal. Moreover, it isn’t true. If you have a good wife she earns every dollar she spends, whether upon herself or for you. The mere fact she receives the money from you and not from an out- sider, and that it goes to her at irregu- lar times and in uncertain sums, makes no manner of difference. The money is hers, and the money is the very smallest part of what she invests in your Christmas present. She puts her precious affectiyns into its procure- ment, and if you have any true appre- ciation in your soul you will value her gift for what it signifies, not merely for what it is. Especially you will avoid the mis- take of supposing that you paid for it. If you are commonplace enough to en- tertain snch a thought you are bank- rupt in the kind of treasure that has gone to purchase your wife's gift to yon, and could not have paid for it to save your very small soul. A ES. Excursion to Washington. A series of personaity conducted tours. 10 Washington has been arranged, via. the Royal Blue Line, for December 29th, January 7th. The tickets include ull necessary expenses: of a three day’s. | trip, and provide for hatel accommoda- tions at ‘Washington, meals en route, baggage transfers, etc. Rates from New York $11.50, $12.50 and $15.00. Pro- | portionate rates from Boston and other: i New England points. For programme j describing these tours write to Thos. Cook and Son, Agents for B. & O. R.. | R., at 261 and 1225 Broadway, New ! York, or 332 Washington street Bos- ‘on. 1t | | —— When the robing nest again,” i she said, “I suppose my cold will get. well.” So he felt very sad, but sudden- ly bethought him of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup. The cough was cured and those i two were happy. ——Allow me to add. my tribute to the efficacy of Ely’s Cream Baim. I was suffering from a savere attack of in- fluenza and catarrh and. was induced to try your remedy. The result was mar- velous. © I could hardly articulate, and in less than twenty-four hours the ca- tarrhal symptoms and my hoarseness disappeared and I. was able to sing a heavy role in Grand. Opera with voice. unimpaired. I strongly recommend it to all singers. — Wm. H;, Hamilton, Leading Basso of the C. D.. Hess Grand Opera Co. —- People call it backache.and do nothing for it until the doctor is. called and he pronouncesitrheumatism. If they Lad used Salvation Qil in time the doc- tors bill could haye.been saved