* Pewee Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 24, 1897. UNCLE WILL'S GIFT A TRUE STORY RELATED BY HIS NEPHEW. On Christmas day Uncle William re- ceived a card inscribed as follows: William Bunting, Esq., debtor to his nephews Alexander and Fred and to his nieces Norah and Dorothea, for money expended in his behalf ....cccvvveeeeees,.$0 16 Uncle William paid the money at once, but he wrote to say that he should like to know how it happened that he owed us 16 cents. It was Alexander who had sent the bill in—for a boy of 12 he really is most WE SPENT THE ODD FOURTEEN CENTS ON A WHITE JAVA MOUSE. businesslike—and we deputed him to an- swer Uncle William’s letter. He did so. He replied that the 16 cents was the sum spent in excess of the sum subscribed by Alexander, Fred, Norah and Dorothea for the purpose of giving Uncle William a Christmas present. Then Uncle William wanted to know how, if this was the case, it happened he never got the Christmas present from us. Alexander said that he did not feel inclined to go into any further details. He sent Uncle William back the bill properly receipted and a little note to say that the correspondence on this subject must now terminate. Perhaps the thing does seem a little strange, but the explanation is perfectly: simple, and I give it. I am Norah, and Alexander and I are twins. The other two are quite young. It was I who first had the notion that we ought to give Uncle William a Christmas present. When any of us has a notion, she or he calls a meet- ing of the others. That was what I did. I said that Uncle William was always giving us presents and yet we never gave him anything. It was true that he had said nothing about it, but I was sure that he must have felt it. Christmas was now near, and it would be a good opportunity for us. This was agreed. Alexander and I each contributed 30 cents—10 cents more than Fred or Dorothea. Thus the total sum was $1, for which a very good present might have been bought — something which ! would have shown uncle every time he looked at it that his nephews and nieces thought about him a good deal and tried to please him, even at some personal sac- rifice to themselves. We did not decide what the present was to be at once, be- cause Alexandersaid that would have been grossly irregular. We were to have com- mittee meetings every day about it and discuss it thoroughly. Fred was appoint- ed treasurer of the fund. He putit allina waistcoat pocket and got me to sew the pocket up for him in case of accidents. At the next meeting Dorothea suggest- ed that we should buy chocolates (French) in a box. It was objected that Uncle William never ate chocolates. *“No,” said Dorothea, ‘he doesn’t, but he sometimes gives them away. Then next time he wanted to give anybody any he wouldn’t have to buy them.” = Fred thought that it would be dishonorable to give chacolates, and we agreed with him. We then decid- ed to buy a tobacco pouch, which certain- ly would have been a suitable present. There are very few shops in our village, so - an inventive mandarin, 2,000 years ago, ana to pe reimpursea Ouv or the Tana. The two return tickets were 20 cents, and we had refreshments at the station which came to 16 cents. Alexander said that this was usual and committees always had refreshments. We were left with 64 cents to spend on the pouch. However, we found that we could get very good pouches for 50 cents each. I wanted to get a black one and Alexander wanted brown. So we decided not to buy either yet, but to take the votes of the whole committee on it. We spent the odd 14 cents on a white Java mouse. We felt sure Uncle William would like it. The man in the store said that people often came in offering as much as 25 cents each for mice of that particular kind. When we got back—the mouse traveled in Alexander’s pocket—we at once held another commit- tee meeting. Dorothea said that if Alexander and I had refreshments the rest of the committee ought to have them also. So we had chocolates—10 cents’ worth. We agreed to purchase the black pouch. Fred suggest- ed that there was just a possibility that Uncle William would not care about the mouse Alexander said that he would tel- egraph about it, and did. This was the telegram: UNCLE WiLLiAM—Do you like white Java mouse? Tame. Eats anything. ALEXANDER. In about an hour the answer came back: Most certainly not. This caused us some consternation. It was thought better to go to town again on the morrow and see if the man in the store would take back the mouse. In the mean- time Fred’s pocket was unpicked and the entire fund handed over to Alexander in order that he might reimburse himself. Alexander said that he would keep ac- counts, and if there was anything over he would get some very cheap present—per- haps a card. The pouch was, of course, now impossible. He and I went together as before. While we were having refreshments at the sta- tion he did his accounts. “They don't come out very well,” he said rather dolefully, ‘but perhaps we shall be taking the mouse back just when some one is wanting to give a quarter for a real Java one.” He felt in his coat pocket as he spoke, and then he looked more doleful still. The mouse had escaped during the journey. The accounts were thus: Expenses of first visit to town White Java mouse Chocolates...... ‘““We are 16 cents to the bad,” I said, ‘‘and we haven’t got any present. The re- freshments have come to so much this time. ”’ : ‘All committees and delegates of com: mittees have refreshments,’’ said Alexan- der dictatorially. ‘It doesn’t matter. I've paid the deficit so far, but Uncle William will have to make it up. It’s all his fault. If he hadn’t been there, we shouldn’t have wanted to be generous to him.”’ So we sent Uncle William the bill. He is still rather puzzled about it. Fred and Dorothea think the thing was misman- aged. I don’t. No more does Alexander. Christmas and Chess? Fiction and Facts Concerning the the Origin of the Game The oldest game known is associated with the season we now designate as holi- day week. According tc the Brahmans, chess was invented in the second age of the world, about the time of the shortest day of the year, by the wife of Ravan, king of Lauka, then capital of Ceylon, in order to furnish him with amusement by an image- ry of war, it being supposed he was per- sonally unable to participate in its excite- ments and dangers while his chief city was closely besieged by an enemy. Similarly the Chinese annals relate that while on a military expedition—when the sun shone the fewest hours—whose labori- ous effects undermined the endurance and esprit de corps of his soldiers, devised the game of chess as an exercise which would at the same time not only amuse but in- spire them with martial ardor. The oft told story of Palamedes is but a repetition of the mandarin anecdote, only that he was then at the siege of Troy and, presumably, had many ‘spare moments’’ during those weary ten years. But it is | wholly impossible for chess either to have : had its beginning in the manner purport- | ed or to have been accepted enthusiastical- ly and intelligently by a camp of ignorant, | barbarous soldiery. Like friendship, it must have been ‘‘a plant of slow growth, * and in its infancy represented the attacks : and stratagems of two or three opposing ' | forces. These tales are fables—creations i of the fancy—while the veritable history | of the game may be divided into three | epochs: (1) That of the ancient Hindoo | game called chaturanga, which is coeval ' with the most ancient period of Indian i chronology and extends to the beginning of the fifteenth century; (2) that lasting but 100 years, ending in the sixteenth cen- tury, up to which time the moves and pow- | ers of the chessmen remained principally WHILE WE WERE HAVING BREAKFAST AT THE STATION HE DID HIS ACCOUNTS. Alexander and I took the train next after- noon to a larger town, in order to buy the vouch. Alexander was to nav avarvéhi-—~ as in the chaturanga, though the men were ranked in two armies instead of in four and two of the kings were trans- formed into queens; (8) the modern epoch in which the moves of the queen and of the bishop have been greatly ex- tended and the privilege and practice of ‘‘castling’’ has been introduced. The game has consequently undergone a gradual im- provement and extension as skilled ex- ponents have brought to bear upon it their ingenuity and experienna. A Comedian’s Plight. Adventure That Befell Nat Goodwin on a Christ- Nicht, ‘Uhe most eventful Christmas I ever passed was in 1891 We had played in Utica Christmas eve and were to leave on an early morning train for Poughkeepsie. The company caught the train all right, but it was frightfully cold and a blizzard was raging. I decided to wait for a later train, which would reach Poughkeepsie about 5 o'clock. Instead of clearing up, however, the storm grew worse, and the train that I waited for never came. It was stalled in a drift up the road some- where I began to realize then that it was a cold day for me in more senses than one. 1 tried to hire an engine, but didn’t suc- ceed, for there was none. 1 finally gave it up in despair and went back to the ho- tel. George Appleton, my manager, was made of sterner stuff than I, however, and in about two hours had organized a party of storm bound passengers and persuaded an- other railroad to make up a mixed train and try to get us through to the uncom- pleted bridge at Poughkeepsie. We would be landed on the opposite side of the river, they said, but we could get across to the town by the ferry. The depot was about three miles outside of Utica, and it took | us three hours and a quarter to reach it. | There was no fire in the cars we secured, and mighty little in the engine. At 8 o’clock Christmas night we were dumped out at the landing opposite Poughkeepsie. The river was full of jagged masses of ice and the ferryboats had been compelled to stop running at 6 o'clock. There was THE GUARD WAS OBDURATE. no possible way of crossing except by the half finished railroad bridge, and that was guarded at either end by watchmen, who had orders to allow no one to pass. More- over, there was no approach to the bridge, whose ice clad buttress arose abruptly from the river's edge to a height of a hundred feet or more. The other passengers stopped right there and sought shelter in a neigh- boring hotel. I wanted to follow their good example, but Appleton wouldn’t let me. He said we had gone too far to turn back then, and, besides, a sturdy small boy at the hotel had offered to show us how to climb to the bridge. He was rewarded in advance, and then we set out to battle with fate. The small boy took the lead, Appleton followed him, I made a close third, and my valet, Jack, formed a kind of rear guard to look after my remains in case of accident. Our small guide led us straight to the huge buttress of the bridge, which was built of massive blocks of stone arranged in terrace form from its broad base to its narrow apex. These terraces were about 15 feet high and covered with , ice and snow It was impossible for a man to climb them unaided, but the boy was equal to the emergency. After prowling about for a few minutes he found a ladder which had been used by the workmen I can’t begin to describe the difficulties and dangers of that climb, but at last we scrambled to the top, with clothes torn and hands bruised and bleeding Fortunately the watchman was walking toward the middle of the bridge, and we had a chance for a good start before he could stop us. After a short breathing spell Appleton, Jack and 1 began our perilous journey along the narrow footpath that stretched across the ghastly looking ironwork, but before we had reached the middle of the bridge the watchman stopped us and or- dered us to go buck. We pleaded and pro- tested and argued, but it was of no use. He wouldn’t even take a bribe Hereupon the boy Jack loudly called my attention to the fact that the water looked awfully cold down below Appleton quickly added that under certain circumstances it would make an excellent plunge bath, and I chipped in with a flippant remark about it being a 8 to 1 shot. That watchman evidently thought we meditated murder or some equally desper- ate crime, for his eyes fairly bulged from their sockets as he backed away from us as far as the narrow fcotpath would per- mit. We brushed by him instantly and continued on our way without any further interference from him. The watchman at the other end of the bridge, howeves proved of different metal. He was as big as two of us, and we didn’t dare to attempt any bluff with him. He was even more obdurate than the other fellow. It began to look as though all our labor was to be in vain when Appleton whispered to me to run while he engaged the watchman in conversation. Well, I scooted, and so did Jack, but we didn’t scoot far, for we were brought to a sudden standstill by the ab- rupt termination of the bridge at the but- trees. It was a sheer 100 feet to the ground and there was no ladder. I gave it up again and could have wept scalding tears if it hadn't been so cold. Appleton, how- awr. succeeded in nacifving the wawhmsn i and came to our rescue with grim ae- termination in his stride. He boldly jumped down the first terrace and called upon Jack and me to follow. Jack did so, but I hesitated. That 15 feet seemed like a precipice, and the landing on the next terrace looked awfully hard and insecure. I didn’t dare to jump, so I compromised by taking a kind of toboggan slide on my coattail. It wasn’t as exhilarating or as fascinating as many other slides I have had, but it was quite as exciting. In this way I reached terra firma in a somewhat dismantled condition. Incidentally I bade a tearful goodby to my trousers next day. It was about two miles from the bridge to the opera house, and we had to foot it, because there wasn’t a vehicle abroad that night. We ran most of the way to keep from freezing, and after frightening a cou- ple of women into hysterics, because they misunderstood our hurried request for in- formation, we arrived at the theater at a quarter past 9 and proceeded with the per- formance. As there was no time to change 1 went on just as I was, looking like a scarecrow on a Massachusetts farm. The audience was good natured, though, and readily forgave me when they learned what had happened. NAT C. GoopwiN, Daring the War. The Christmas of 1861 at the south was not so much different from those that pre- ceded, but the Christmas of 1862 found the Confederate money at a heavy discount. Wood was $45 per cord and turkeys $11 each, but even at those prices many were still able to enjoy them, and there were still some toys to give the little folks. Then came the bitter year of 1863, with the fall of Vicksburg and the defeat at Gettysburg With sad faces, harmonizing well with their dresses of coarse black stuff, the women of the south devoted themselves to picking lint and spinning and weaving for husbands, fathers, broth- ers and sweethearts in the field Christ- mas cheer—such as could be obtained— cost a fabulous sum, for one bright golden dollar was then worth $28 in Confederate money Sugar was from $5 to $10 per pound, turkeys $50 apiece and flour $25 per barrel. : ‘* Christmas, 1864—the last Christmas of war times—dawned, and what a gloomy festival it was for the people of the south,’ says a southern lady ‘‘Of manufactured products we had practically none. Our hairpins were made of long, black thorns, with a ball of sealing wax on one end. We had made into dresses every scrap of avail- able material, and now our gowns consist- ed of window curtains, ‘homespuns’ and paper muslin or colored cambric that had once done duty as a lining, while our feet were incased in’ homemade cloth shoes. At a Christmas dinner in a typical south- ern home that day the festive board pre- sented a turkey that had cost $200, a ham worth $300, hominy’ and potatoes at cor- respondingly high prices and black mo- lasses—as dessert—at $60 per gallon. The Confederate dollar was then worth just 2 cents in gold Wood was $100 a cord, beef $35 a pound, flour $600 per barrel, butter $40 per pound and sugar $30 per pound. All was silent in the negro quarters. There was no singing or dancing there as usual. The slaves, having all heard of ‘de 'mancipation poclaration,’ knew that they were free and had all scattered away. Desolation seemed to reign over every- thing.” An Early Christmas Drinking Song. The following verses from the original in old Norman French are said to be the first drinking song composed in England: Lordlings from a distant home, To seek old Christmas are we come. Who loves our minstrelsy ? And here, unless report missay, The graybeard dwells, and on this day Keeps yearly wassail, ever gay With festive mirth and glee. Yule Cakes. Yule dough, a kind of baby or little image intended to represent the child Je- sus, made of paste, was formerly baked a Christmas and presented by bakers to their customers ‘‘in the same manner as the chandlers gave candles.” They are still called Yule cakes in the county of Durham, England. A CHRISMAS LULLABY. Bylow, my babe, bylow, Here on thy mother’s breast, And, cuddled warm by her loving arm, Droop down thy head to rest— Poor, weary head, so filled with doubt Of life and what it’s all about! Bylow, my babe, bylow, Curl up in flower wise Thy rosy feet and white limbs sweet, My bud of paradise— Dear, tender limbs, too frail to share The burden e’en which babes must bear! Bylow, my babe, bylow, Let tired eyelids kiss, * And from thy sight shut this world’s light And thy world’s light from this— Love radiant eyes, twin stars that shine Through darkling doubt with trust divine! Bylow, my babe, bylow, So shone the star of love Long years ago, with guiding glow, The newborn Christ above And found an answering heavenly ray Within the manger where he lay! Bylow, my babe, bylow, The star still rains its fire, And the Master mild in the heart of a child Bids echoing flame aspire, And sphere and soul in concord sing, “The King is born, and love is king!” MARIOR MiLis MILLER.