a Dewortaic atc He dua Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 23, 1892. TWO LITTLE STOCKINGS. Two little stockings hung side by side, Close to the fireplace broad and wide. “Two #" said Saint Nick, as down he came, Loaded with toys and many a game “Ho, ho I” said he, with a laugh of fun, “I'I1 have no cheating, my pretty one ; I know who dwells in this house, my dear, There's only one little g rl lives near,” So he crept up close to the chimney place, And measured asock with a sober face. Just then a wee little note fell out, And flutteredilow like a bird about. “Aha! what's this ?”? said he in surprise, As he pushed his specs close up to his eyes, And read the address in a childs rough plan, “Dear Saint Nicholas,” so it began : “The other stocking you see on the wall I have hung for a chald named Clara Hall, She's a poor girl, but very good, So I thought, perhaps, you kindly would Fill up her stocking, too, to night, And help to make her Christmas bright. If you've not enough for both stockings there Please put all in Clara's, 1 shall not care.” Saint Nicholas brushed a tear from his eye, And, “God bless you, darling,‘ he said with a sigh. Then Sofily he blew through the chimney ig A note like a bird's, as it soars on high, When down came two of the funniest mortals That ever were seen this side earth’s portal’s. “Hurry up,” said Saint Nick, “and nicely pre- pare : 5 All a little girl needs where money is rare. Then oh, what a scene there was in that room’! Away went the elves, but down from the gloom : Of the socty old chimney comes trumbling OW. A child’s whole wardrobe, from head to toe. How Santa Claus laughed, as he gathered them in And fastened each one to the sock with a pin Right to the toe he hung a blue dress, “She'll think it came from the sky, I guess,” Said Saint Nicholas, smoothing the folds of blue And tying the hood to the stocking, too. When all the warm clothes were fastened on, And bot little socks were filled and done, Then Sauta Claus tucked a toy hers and there, And hurried away to the frosty air, Saying, “God pity the poor, and bless the dear child Who pities them, too, on this night so wild.’ The wind caught the words and bore them, on high Till they died Avex on the midnight sky; While Saint Nicholas flew through the icy air, Bringing ‘‘peace and good wlll” with him everywhere. THE EPITOR’S CHRISTMAS, To Farmer Brown our thanks are due for one big jug of rye ; (The Sons of Temperance meet to-night—sup- pose they'll leave it dry. To Jones, the well-known jeweler, one collar button tin ; (Now, we'd be happy if we had a shirt to wear it in. To Parson Brown for sixteen tracts—a Bible fair to see : (It’s very fortunats for us they made salvation ree One box of collars—celluloid—that do not take to dirt: (But like the collar button, they're no good without the shirt.) One stove, w.th pots and pans—hurrah !—and wood at least a cord : Three turkeys and an appetite ! (We're in it vraise the Lord!) — Atlanta Constitution. DEACON ALLAWATER'S BABY. BY FLORENCE WATTERS SNEDEKER. It was a stormy night. Without, the north wind howled over the waste ot snow. It rattled the doors and win- .dows of the deacou’s great house, clat- tered the loose clapboards, shrieked down the chimneys. Within, myste- rious noises stirred 1n the deserted rooms and halls and crept up and down the stairs. The only dire that burned smouldered low in the deacon’s sitting- room, and the deacon sat there alone. It was a crisis in Deacon Allawater’s life. To be sure bis life had many cri- ses—one might say, had been a series of them, It was a crisis when the dea- con snatched from the wall his forefa- ther’s sword ot the Revolution, and at its point chased his eldest son Albert “around the breakfast table and out of the house; it was a crisis when Helen, his oldest daughter, ran away from boarding-schocl; and another when she came with her husband to beg for- givenessin vain ; till others were when the remaining children departed in wrath ; and then came ove when bis wife laid down her weary life, and her spirit escaped to the land that knows no tumult. But this crisis was different, wholly difterent. This time it wus his wealth that was gone; that wealth for which he had worked and hoarded and en- slaved his wife and children and fought his neighbors and squeezed the poor and denied the church. It was gone. It had vanished in a day. The deacon clutched his straggling white locks and groaned. Help! Help he must drooped upon his kuees. : Oh, he had been a master-hand at prayer, the deacon! So said tne com- munity; and so he knew. The phras- es had rollel from his lips full and sounding, At his tongue’s-end was all the Scripture gathered from forty years of beating it into his uunregener- ate children. The deacon opened his mouth to pray. Cold—ecold as a stone lay his beart within his bosom. By no effort of his once all-powerful will, by no mental tension could he put life into the words. It was no use to struggle, to beat the air, to wring his hands. The convic- tion dawned slowly, overwhelmingly upon him, that with his wealth he had lost his religion, He staggered to his feet, went out in- to the freezing hall, and by the creak- ing stair rail dragged himself up to his bedroom. As be entered, the moon looked in through flying clouds like a pallid face. The deacon shuddered, fled across its track, and, with tremb- ling fingers, unlocked the top drawer of his bureau. Yes, it it was there. He took it from its case. Ile opened it, aud held it out to glitter in the mooolight. He drew it along his coat sleeve—first one side, then the other. But Deacon Allawater's theology had always been clear and orthodox. Firmly as he had believed in God had he believed in the devil ; in a personal devil, too, with horns and cloven hoofs, fit to hale impenitent sinners down to a pit whence arose flames, odor of brime- stone. The deacon’s hair rose upon his head, With all his strength he flung the razor from him, ; It shivered the window. Through the broken pane came a gust that flappped the curtain out against the ceiling and sent some papers a-whirring have. He RS CER Td RA a SEE about the room and about the head of the deacon as he crouched upon the bed. His teeth chattered from cold and fright. Heinstantly expected the grip of theflend. The horror of expec: | tancy grew upon him— | Clang | went the doorbell. : The wretched deacon sank upon the | floor. | It was not until mary minutes had | passed and quiet had come back that Deacon Allawater gathered his quak- ing limbs together, went down to the deor, drew back the fastenings and cautiously turned the knob. No one was there. As he peered out, the wild rack of the clouds alone met his wild eyes. But what was this at his feet? A common willow basket! Was it real? Was it dangerous? Should he touch it? He poked at it and pried it, growing bolder. Thea, holding it gingerly at arm’s-length, he carried it into the sitting-room and set it upon the table. He turned up the light. He raked the fire into a blaze. There had been treasures hid in baskets before this. He carefully took off the cover. Be- neath was a flannel blanket. With a dawning presentiment he angrily thrust aside the wrappings, and—yes, there lay a baby. A sleeping baby, with warm red cheeks, and rings of yellow hair moist upon its blue-veined temples, and par- ted lips, and sweet breath stealing through, A living, breathing baby. Now ‘the light upon his eyelids pricked them wide.” Two blue eyes looked out in wonderment. Upright in its nest eat the baby, saw the bright- ness, felt the warmth, threw up its arms and laughed in the deacon’s scowling face. “Land o’Goshen |” Mrs, Harris stood rigid on the sill of the deacon’s sitting room, her bon: net strings jerked to the point of stran- “ gulation, her best black shawl dropped ruthlessly to the floor. Deacon Allawater, sitting up in his rocking-chair, began to rub his stiff knees, Ilis companion, on the lounge as if aroused at once to the daylight and to the perils of existence, eparred out with his pink fists, opened his mouth, and sent forth a preliminary yell. © “Where did it come from ? Whose is it? What—" “Woman, you know as much about it as I do,” snarled the master of the house, getting upon his feet. “Take the thing, can’t you? There! stop its aoise someway.” : When he came down to breakfast his haggard face was so unlovely that good Mrs. Harris, her eyes going back to the baby on her knee, was reminded of King Herod and the babes of Beth- lehem. : “Those Jenkenses are at the bottom of this,” mused the deacon over his coffee, his eyes, too, on the now crow: ing baby. “They always have a house- ful of brats. Little villains! They’ve tormented me these ten years—racing through my grain-fields, tearing down my stone walls, stealing my fruit—and soundly have they been thrashed for it. Bat I'll have the law on them for this, this very day!” “I must say, it don’t appear likely,” remonstrated Mrs. Harrie. “They're poor enough, goodness knows, But this they would’nt do. Such a fine- grown boy! Must be a year old at the least calculation,” But he did not go out immediately. Indeed, before the morning was over he had decided to let the Jenkenses alone until the next day. Another matter was troubling him. Tonight the revival meetings were to begin at church. It was a trying day for Mra. Harris. While the deacon paced the house, wandered from room to room, or fll in- to dark reverie, she was mentally pit- ting her strength against his, and fore- casting the issue of a hand-to-band tus sle. For, whenever his eyes fell upon the baby, when he once or twice stood still to watch it, her heart, as she after wards related, jumped into her mouth, expecting to see the poor innocent pitched through the window, or into the clothes-biler with the suds a stirrin’ and a-foamin’, the Lord forgive me the thought!” That night there was a goodly gath- ering in the village church. ‘Deacon Allawater will lead in prayer,” an nounced the young minister. The pause was, perhaps, a trifle long. But when the deacon prayed, it was with all his usual fervor. They spoke of it as they gathered around the stove after meeting. “It's wonderful—wondernl I” said one sister. “His gift does beat every- thing! It fairly takes you off your feet. Aud his language——as easy and beautiful as the newspaper! The min- ister himself can’t do better. But to think of the stories about him!" “I believe them,” exclaimed a jaunty looking girl in a red bonnet. “Did you see him go out of church to-night? ‘Good-evening, deacon,’ says I as pleas- ant as could be. He never answered a word, but locked at me as hateful, I declare, for the minute, I was really scared.” Mis. Harris stood waiting with her bonnet and shawl on when Deacon Allawater entered his tront door. “] only want to say, deacon, my daughter Cynthy’s home now, and she’s powerful fond of children. And, until you find out where it belongs—"’ “Who? What? There, woman, go!” Poor Mrs. Harris, stumbling along the lane, had a second, more painful vision of King Herod and the babes, His door was not shut before the dea- con repented him. That nuisance of a child! If it had not been for his pride, he would have called Mrs. Harris back, and told her to take it. Moodily he fastened up the house. The baby slept again in the corner of the sitting room lounge. Lamp in hand he stopped be- fore it. Where had he seen pictures with a light abont a baby’s head—and angels too? What smiling? He watched | the little mouth quiver. ‘Babies smile when the angels kiss them,” he had heard people say. How and if a man given over to the fiends— Shamefaced, he gathered the child in his arms, and, secure in his room, laid it in his own bed. Hours passed ere he slept. Then a grisly dream came, He gasped himself awake, and fumbled about until his withered hand found and held one like a crumpled rose. Four long weeks the revival meetings continued. Each night saw Deacon Allawater in his place; and each night | he drove home like one pursued, and | glept holding the baby’s hand. Mrs. Harris's fears were gradually allayed, especially as the child throve. But what deep schemes could the dea- con be laying? The day after the re- vival meetings closed she gathered heart of grace to speak again. “You've no cause to lay this up against these Jenkenses, Deacon Alla. water. All I can make out of it, or you either, is some poor-house affair.” “Of course you know. Women al- was do,” answered the deacon, aroused from watching the infant gymnast up- on the floor. He spent considerable time in the same fashion. He was very lonely, ‘very idle; and idle and lonely Deacon Allawater had not been before in all his seventy years. A man is naturally busy who has a fortune to increase, a wife to worry, a half-dozen children to battle with, or plan revenge upon. But when these occupations vanish, why a man may even fall to watching a baby. He may curiously scan again and again the pretiy features; may furtive- ly draw a ring of hair around a knobby forefinger, wondering at the silkiness; may be surprised into a laugh, when a funny fuzzle-top lifts up unexpectedly at his knee, and little fingers catch at his watch-chain ; may even envelop his old head in his handkerchief, and leer from behind it, to send a small person into a collapse of laughter. In which feat being almoet surprised by Mrs. Harris, Deacon Allawater slammed his slippers across the room and the door behind his back in such a rage that that poor lady caught up the now frightened child and mingled her tears with its own, amid desperate thoughts of fleeing with it, and protestations that it “shouldn’t be hurt—no, it shouldn’t —by any wicked, wicked old deacon, the darling!” Long ago oue other baby had dared such liberties with Deacon Allawater— his youngest daughter, Emily. She had blue eyes too, and just such hair. Her desertion had touched him deepest, and brought down his heaviest wrath. Was the fellow so worthless, after all ? The deacon bad so much time for thinking, these days, that strange thoughts came. He took to driving into the village by the back road, passing . a certain small house in the twilight. It Jooked trim ; was rather a pretty picture. The baby there seemed about as big as his—that is, as the baby at his house ; and that boy romping with the father—named after himself, as he had heard—must be six years old. But Emily looked looked pale—worked too hard, proba- bly. other strange thoughtcame, these days. “When a man has but a miser- able pittance, how much good is there in hanging on to it?” There was a sensation in the small house one morning. An envelope found under the door held a fifty dol- lar bill. Ned could not think what made his mother’s face so red, when she just stood still and said, “Oh!” Nor did he see any use in his having to play around by the gate, and watch for the grandfather who never noticed him on the rare occasions of his passing. When the grandfather did come by oue evening in the twilight, he looked so dreadful as he shook his whip and cried, “Ga’ap!” that Ned fled to his mother for safety. Why Dobbs, the grocer, suddenly raised the wages of his clerk, the dea- con’s youngest son, Stuart, was a mys- tery to the clerk himself. Dobbs was good, and a kind at heart; knew too, of his clerk’s struggle for an education; and that it was his determination to enter the college, instead of business, which had barred his father’s door against him. But Dobbs was rather close. It was a matter that Stuart All- awater pondered as the grain ripened and the fruit waxed mellow. Early in the autumn the deacon as- tonished Mrs. Harris and the commu- nity by a trip to the city. “Went off as grand as could be in his best suit, with only the word, ‘Look after things till I come back, Mrs Harris,” reported that lady, burdened with a sense of the mysterious, How muen would her burden have been increased had she been able to follow up her master’s movements ! : For, avoiding the city thoroughfares, stealing through back streets and alleys, hanging in the evenings about windows in a way to interest policemen, ques- tioning these elyly propitiated police- men, questioning children, picking up chance acquaintances with clerks and servants, the deacon passed the week. He came home satisfied. He had seen Albert, driven away from home at the point of the sword twenty-five years be- fore, and returned but once since—at his mother’s tuneral. He had satisfied hiimselt that rumor was right. Albert's business was a large one, and he had taken his unmaried sister into his house, and his younger brother Ear- nest into his store. For Barnest’s ill- health would never let him get ahead, and he had but lately recovered from a tedious illness. That week one fact went down in Earnest Allawater’s note-book with a line of interrogation points; his doec- tor’s bill had been sent in receipted. When the traveller reached home a package ot lately ordered papers was awaiting him—back numbers of the Chicago FKagle. “Wheu a girl runs | away from home it might, perhaps, be | a satisfaction if the fellow amounted to gomething,” reflected the deacon, as he | pored over the long hated periodical. “In such a case, could a nan be rea- sonatly expected to cling quite the same to his hatred?” had heard of such changes coming up- ‘on men when they stood at death’s | anew—~he, a pillar in the church, while For by this tie Deacon Allawater was sorely puzzled over the strange al- teratioa in himself. What had be come of his anger, of his thirst for re- venge? Could it be a warming? He door. Yes, a warning it must surely be. And what a conviction for a man who had lost his religion, and his| hope in God, and believed in nothing but the devil! Unhappy deacon! He knew his duty only too planly : to call in the young minister, to confess all, to begin the neighbors with whom he had quar- relled exulted in his downfall. It was too hard. He fled from the conviction, as often &s it came upon him, to his gole comforter, the baby. The child was learning to walk now, making poor work of it with his fat legs, and had constantly to be picked up and set right, and to be so often res- cued from destruction—DMrs. Harris be- ing busy, and if the truth be told, ne- glectful —that a man had hard work to make sense of his paper. Then, too, he needed much entertainment at this stage of his existence, and was develop- ing a wonderful talent for riding cock- horses, and ehouting at the antics of a hoary-headed lion that prowled and | growled about the floor with him. His conversational powers were still crude. But hiscapacity for listening torhymes and stories, when the wintry day closed in, and the firelight flickered in his drowsy eyes, was insatiable. So Christmas day came round, and found Deacon Allawater strangely comfortable for a man at whose feet death and perdition were yawning. The thought was in his mind as he crept out of his room that Christmas morning—crept out, shoes in hand, so as not to wake the baby. Perhaps it was that which so softened him. For, as he threw open the shutters and looked upon the tenderness of’the sky, the purity of the earth, the pink smoke curling up over the solemn hemlocks, tears, were in his eyes. When he had made the fires—he made the fires him- self now, Mrs. Harris coming late, and the baby being imperative on the point of an early breakfast-—and the rooms were pleasantly steeped in light and warmth, the fancy took him to go into the dark parlors, throw open the barred shutters, and look at tha portraits on the wall. There they all hung ina row, first the girls, and then the boys, and the mother at the end. It was unfortunate that oil portraits have such a same- ress that even frocks and trousers are not as distinctive as one could wish. Still the artist, clever fellow, had helped the matter immensely by giving all the boys hoops and sticks, and the girls baskets of flowers’ His wife wasn’t made good-looking enough ; for in those days she had been handsome. But she changed afterwards. How she did change! what with the work and his bad temper. But now she was at rest, striking the harp and wearing the crown, where not for one moment—no, not even to ask forgiveness----would be be allowed to look upon her in her glo- ry. Weeping softly before his wife's por- trait, a baby’s voice caught the ear of Deacon Allawater. He hurried back. But what sounds were these? They were all around him the next moment. They were laughing and cry- ing, caressing and explaining, in a breath. Did he think he could deceive them? But they had found him out! And now they would never leave him again. While the children capered, and the babies crowed, until Mrs. Har- ps burst in, bearing in triumph the ba- y ! Well, the women presently bore it off. Then, girls at home once more, they donned their aprons and went to work, setting fires a-leaping in all ‘the rooms, and savory odors a-wafting up the kitchen stairs. From top to bot- tom of the great house ranged the chil- dren, not forgetting the attic. And the men, the deacon’s strong sons, gather- ing about him, began a discussion of the times and the goings-on which made the old man rub his eyes and wonder where he had waked up. Then they met again about a Christ- mas table that might have gladdened the immortals. Such glorified turkeys! Such triumphs of pastry? Such smil- ing faces to garland the board! Cous- in answering to cousin with explosions of unsmotherable merriment. At the deacon’s right hand sat a baby; who the first thing, as though master ot cer- emonies, held up his face and demand- ed a kiss. Bending down, his hand oun the child’s head, the deacon gave it. The sight overcame Mrs. Harris. “Such a work of grace!” she sobbed behind her apron. Work of grace? and he a castaway ! Little she knows! Little they any of them knew, inwardly sorrowed the dea- con. But a change came slowly into the aged face----a light-- -a look of blessed understanding. Then, “Children, let us now return thanks,” said Deacon Allawater.— Harper's Bazar. Be Charitable. Again the Christmas-tide is here with its beautiful story, older than the story of the cross, and as dear to the heart of the Christian believer. The heart must be sad indeed that does not thrill anew at the thought of all that was meant by those wonderful words ; “On earth peace, good will to men.” We must remember that the day com- | memorates the birth of Him who gave | tomankind the greatest gift possible to bestow, eternal life—and not forget to give our mite from our abundance, ENVOL "Twas the night after Christmas, And all through the house Not a creature was sleeping— Not even a mcuse. Mince-pie, cheese and coflee Had got in a lick. And at four in the morning Were raising Old Nick — Puck. ET ECT How Johnny Got A Gun. Johnny Harney stood by the gate in front of the little white farm house where he lived, and watched the twilight darken into Christmas eve. There were trees about the house ; but a little ways beyond the road ran down to a great stretch of lowland thut was coverad in | the summer by tall, wiry mersh grass | and by the flowers that love damp places, and where courtless little green | frogs hopped about among the ham- mocks. Beyond this was the lake,—one great field of wild rice, with here and there a silver net-work, where the twi- light lingered on some open water. Way down at the foot of the lake the lights at the club house gleamed bright- | ly, tor to-morrow was Christmas, and all the sportsmen were up from the city for a Christmas dinner on ducks of their own shooting. John Harney was a good boy, and sel- dom discontented or out of sorts, but when ke thought of all the nice guns | that stood along the racks in the sitting | room, and the great bunches of ducks and squirrels that lay in the kitchen of the club house he did feel just a little bit covetous. For that was John’s greatest sorcow. He didn’t have a gun Oiten when chores were done, he would take the shabby little square-end- ed boat, and row down into the river to watch the hunters. He would hear the guns sound way off across the lake, and a flock of ducks would come flying over, growing less at every place where some canvas- coated sportsman waited among the grass. It was a sad sort of pleasure John got from this. But, then, a gun costs a great deal of money fora farmer's boy and the price of Tommy's spotted wood- en horse, Jimmy’s trumphet and all the other presents wouldn't nearly have bought one. It was growing colder all the time, and even through his thick new mittens John's hands were beginning to {feel namb ; so he started to go into the warm : kitchen fire. But then--a long drawn cry came faintly across the lake ; “Help!” It sends such a thrill of excitement a-ting- lingdown one’s nerves—that call for aid. He knew in an instant why the per- son had called. “Somebody’s got lost in the grass!’ he thought, as he hurried down to the lake ; he’d better not try tostay out all through this kind of a night ! ” It took along while to reach the place from where the shouts had come from and to get the hunter to the shore, for the poor fellow numbed and ex- hausted and lost among the great fields of grass, had dropped the oars and sat huddled in the stern, yielding to the drowsiness which is so often a fatal one. But he soon cane to, when Jobn had got him to the house, and what a jolly Christmas guest he was then—almost as good as if Santa Claus himself bad tied his deer to the fence and staid with them all the evening. With the little Harney’s clustered about the stranger’s knee, listening open-mouthed to his wondrous stories, the father leaning against the wall smoking his pipe, and the mother softly rocking. baby’s cradle—all lighted by the glow of the firelight, it was a pretty scene to see—one that the sprites of Christmas love to look upon. And when the Christmas guest was done, the mother told of that strange star of won- drous beauty that shone another Christ- mas night, above tbe manger where the infant King lay sleeping--so long ago, and so far away—in Bethlehem, of Ju- dea. And the father, looking backward to his earlier years, bethought him of a story altogether new—one that had slip- ped his memcry until now (as things of such slight import will) about a fierce gaunt wolf of monstrous size that he, Putman-like, had slain in a cave by the light of its own eyes. But John, of all these tales, heard not a word What were these childish stor- ies of bears and wolves and Indians to the sight of the beautiful gun, with its smooth round barrels and shapely stock, that belonged to the Christmas guest. and tbat stood in the corner by the door? The stranger, as he gazed around at his little audience, might have noticed where the boy's eyes were wandering, but if be did he said nothing, and kept right on with his stories. Santa Claus must have been very nearly . through with his gift-giving when the little Harneys went to bed, each witha bright new silver dollar clasped in his little fat hand; and the guest turned to John. “I won’t forget, my boy, what you have done for me,” he said solmnly. “They would have found me there, all cold and still among the grass, like they did pocr Phillips last winter, and my Christmas day would have been atthe home of Him, whose birth it celebrates. I thank you | now, and perbaps before long I may be | able to show my gratitude in a better | way.” And any one could see that he meant what he said. Then the lamps were put out, and the dream-folks came to take the place of the Christmas sprites, while the wind whistled around the corners and old Jack Frost peered | in through the green shutters; and all the fields and roads, and the woods and lowlands, took on a covering of snowy whiteness, Long before the first happy city tod- dler bad rushei to his stocking to find what Santa Claus had left, even before that merry old gentlemen and his fleet- footed reindeer had reached their icy northern home, the Harneys were awake and breakfast was on the table. | mas! It was a bounteous breakfast, too, for to the poor whom we have always with us. Make glad the heart of the widow and orphan by a load of wood, a barrel of apples or a turkey or a pie, aod your own heart will be glad, if! done in that spirit of faith which these ! words signify : “Inasmuch as ye have ! done it to one of the least of these ye have done it unto Me.” —— Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, that family; because, although the stranger did not know it, or at least did | not show that be knew it, all the goed things, that were to bave been forthe Christmas dinner were brought forth (to the great joy of the little Harneys, who could hardly have existed till noon without them,) and were placed before the Christmas guest. ! Soon after, when thanks and merry Christmas wishes had been given time and again, the hunter was obliged to de- STTINTIIRR part ; for, as he told ‘hem, his friends at the club house would be Digmeneg at his absence ; so heand John walked down to the landing together. “You n.ust visit me at the house,” he said, as be took the boy's hand in part- ing, and then, stepping into his cance, he was soon rapidly getting out of sight. “Ob, mister, wait; you forgot some- thing,” cailed a childish voice from be- hind. and one of the little Harnevs eame running down the road as fast as his short legs could earry him, with the stranger’s gun ! “Come back’ sir; you have left your gun !” shouted John, takiog the precious weapon in his bands and waving it above his head. But the Christmas guest came back not a stroke. He only rose to his feet, end placing his bands so as to form a trumpet, he shouted something back--something that made John’s face radiant with de- light, and bis heart almost burst with ! gratitude. “I didn’t forget it,” came faintly to the shore. “It’s yours. Merry Christ- And the little canoe and the Christmas guest were lost to sight among the grass.-—— Miss Annie M. Ness, in York Gazette. Says Santa; “For the child of the North, a rose from the summer land far; For the child of the South, a snowflake a-flash like a star; For the child of the West, a lark with the glad sunrise light ; For the child of the East,a whip-poor-will song and good night !” Billy’s Santa Claus Experience. Of course I don’t believe in ary such person as Santa Claus, but Tommy does. Tommy is my little brother, aged six. Last Christmas I thought I'd make some tun for the young one by playing Santa Claus, but as always happens when I try to amuase anybody 1 jes got myself into trouble. I went to bed pretty early on Christ- mas eve £0 as to give my parents a chance to get the presents out of the closet in mama's room, where they had been locked up since they were bought. I kept my close on except my shoes, and put my night gown over them so as I’d lock white if any of them came near me. Then I waited, pinchin my- self to keep awake. Afterawhile papa came into the room with a lot of things that he dumped on Tommy's bed. Then mama came in and put some things on mine and in our two stock- ings that were hung up by the chim- ney. Then thev both went out very quiet, and soon ali the lights went out too. I kep on pinchin myself and waitin for a time, and then when I was sure that everybody was asleep I got up. The first thing I went into was my sis- ter’s room, and got her white fur rug that mamma gave her on her birthday, and her sealskin cape that was hang- ing on the closet door. I tied the cape on my head with shoestrings and it made a good big cap. Then I put the fur rug around me and pinned it with big safety pios what I found on. Tom- my’s garters. Then I got mamma’s new scrap basket, trimmed with roses, what Mrs. Simmong broidered for the church fair, and piled all of the kid's toys into it. I fastened it to my back with papa’s suspenders, and then I started for the roof. I hurt my fingers some opening the scuttle, but kept right on. It was snow- ing hard and I stood and let myself get pretty well covered with flakes, Then I crawled over to the chimuey that went down into our room and climbed up on topofit. I had brought my bicycle lantern with me and I light- ed itso as Tommy could see me when I came down the chimney into the room. There did not seem to be any places inside the chimney where I could hold on by my feet, but the ceiling in our room was uot very high and I had of- ten jumped most as far, so I jest let her go, and I suppose I went down. Any- way, I did not know about anything fora long time. Then I woke up all in the dark with my head feelin queer, and when I tried to turn over in bed I found I wasn’tin bed at all; and then my arms and legs began to hurt ter- rible mostly one arm that was doubled up. I tried to get up, but I couldn’t because my bones hurt soand I was terrible cold and there was nothing to stand on. I was jes stuck. Then I began to cry, and pretty soon I heard mamma's voice sayic to papa : “Those must be sparrers that are making that noise in the chimney. Jes touch a match to the wood in the bovs’ fire place.” I heard papa strike a light and then the wood began to crackle. Then, by jinks! it began to get hot and smoky and I screamed; “Help! Murder! Pat out that fire lest you want to burn me up! Then I heard papa stamping on the wood and mamma calling out : “Where's Billy ? Where is my chile?” Next Tommy woke up aud began to cry and everything was terrible, spec: ially the pains all over me, Then papa called out very stern: “William, if you are in that chimney come down at once !” aud I answered, cryin, that I would if I could, but was stuck and couldn’t. Then I heard papa gettin dressed, and pretty coon he and Jonn froem the stable went up on the roof and let down ropes what I put around me and they hauled me up. It was jes daylight and I was all black and sooty and scratched and my arm was broken. Everybody scolded me except mamma I had spoiled my sister's white rug, and broken all of Tommy’s toys, and the snow what went in through the scuttle melted and marked the parlor ceiling, besides I guess it cost papa a good deal to get my arm mended. No- body would believe that I had jes meant to make some fun for Tommy, and my arm and all my bruised places hurt me awful for a long time. IfI live to be million I am never goin’ to play Santa Claus agin. ——A man may not be so badly off for presents it he only hae but pre- sence of mind.