———— - " - ¥ iia | “Bettefonte, Pa., December 17, 1909. re mre FRANK H. SWEET Ano. {Copyright, 1909, by American Press Asso- ciation.} T was the night before Christmas —and stormy. “Squash, squash!” went the wheels of the carriage in the mud. “Whew-ew-ew!” whistled the wind. And it blew Peter's hat out into the middle of the road. “Whoa!” yelled Peter and climbed down from his high seat. The princess poked her head out of the window. “What's the matter?” she asked. “My hat blew off,” Peter told her, “and the wheel is stuck in the mud, miss.” “Oh, Peter, Peter!” the princess chided. “You must get that wheel out of the mud at once.” “Which is easier said than done,” Peter grumbied. “It's that dark I can't see my hand before me.” “There's a light back there among the trees,” the princess informed him. “Perhaps you could get some one to help you.” “I'l go and see, miss, if you ain't afraid to stay alone,” said Peter, after some effort succeeding in quieting the plunging horses. “I am dreadfully afraid,” she adwmit- ted shiveringly. “but 1 suppose you will have to go.” Now, in the middie of the pine grove was set a little cottage. Peter knock- ed at the door. “Who's there?’ asked a childish voice, and a little girl poked her head out of the square window, “Our wheel is stuck in the mud,” Peter answered from the dark, “and I want to get a man to help me.” “There isn't any man here,” Jenny informed him. “There Is only me and Jessie, and our mother has gone to nurse a sick neighbor, and she won't be home until morning.” So Peter went back to the carriage and reported to the princess. “I shall freeze out here,” said the princess. “1 will go up to the house and sit by the fire while you look for some one to help you with the car- riage.” She climbed out of the carriage, and with Peter in the lead she plodded through the woods, and the wind blew her long coat this way and that, and at last, wet and panting, she came to the little house, * And once more Peter knocked, end once more Jenny came to the window. Then she flung the door wide open, and so tall was the princess that she had to stoop to enter it. It was a dingy little room, and there was a dumpy black stove in the corner, with a bubbling iron pot that gave forth a most appetizing odor. 0h, oh, how nice and warm it is!” said the princess as she held out her {hands to the fire. In all their lives the little girls had never beheid such a wonderful per- gon, for the princess wore a long red «cloak and a black velvet hat, with a ‘waving plume. and her muff was big and round and soft, and she had a scarf of the same soft fur about her peck. Her hair was pale gold, and she ‘had the bluest eyes and the reddest ips, and her smile was so sweet and tender that Jenny ran right up to her &nd cried, “Oh, T am so glad that you came!” Jessie from her little chair echoed her sister's words. But she did not ‘run, for there was a tiny crutch beside ! Jessie's chair in the square window. “And T am glad to be here.” said the | princess, whose quick eyes were tak- ‘ing in the details of the shabby room. “It's so nice and warm and cozy.” “Isn't it?" said Jenny happily. “And ‘we are getting ready for tomorrow.” On a small round table beside Jes- sle's chair was a tiny cedar bush, and Jessie's fingers had been busy with bits of gold and blue and scarlet pa- per. “We are going to pop some popcorn,” Jenny “and string it and hang it on the tree.” “Oh, may I kelp?” the princess asked. “] haven't popped any corn since I was a little girl” Jessie clasped her thin little hands. “1 think it would be the loveliest thing fn the world,” she said, “if you would stay.” | until he comes back.” | and underneath it she wore a shining “Peter is going to find some one to) Lelp with the carriage, and 1 will stay And when Peter had gone the prin- cess slipped off the long red cloak, silken gown, and around her neck was a collar of pearls. “And now if you will lend me an apron,” she said, “we will pop the corn.” But Jessie and Jennie were gazing at her speechless. “Oh, you must be a fairy princess!” casped little Jessie at last. The beautiful lady laughed joyously. “Peter calls me the princess,” she «nid. “He has lived with me ever since 1 was a little girl. But really I am just an everyday young woman and am going to spend Christmas with some friends in the next town.” She dismissed the subject with a wave of her hand. “Aud now to our popcorn,” she said. Jenny brought a green gingham apron, and the princess tied the apron on, making a big butterfly bow of the strings in the back, and then she danced over to the dumpy little stove and peeped into the bubbling pot. “Did you ever smell anything so good?" she asked. “I am as hungry us 2 bear.” The little girls laughed joyously. “It's bean soup,” Jenny said, “and we are going to have it for supper, with some little dumplings in it. 1 was afraid it wasn't nice enough for you." “Nice enough!" the delighted lady i exclaimed. “1 think bean soup and little dumplings are—um—um!” And she flung out her hands expressively. “I thought,” Jessie remarked faint- ily. “that fairy priccesses only ate honey and dew.” “Which shows that I am not a true princess,” said the beautiful lady, “for honey and dew would never satisfy me." Jenny got out three little blue bowls and set them on a table that was spread with a coarse but spotless cloth. There were an crusty loaf and clover sweet butter. and last and best of all there were the bean soup and the bobbing little dumplings served to- gether in an old mulberry tureen. It was perfectly wonderful to see the princess in her shining gown at the head of the table. aud little lame Jessie said: “You were just sent to us for Christmas, Why, it's just like— “The night before Christmas, when all through the house Not a creature was stirring, not even Ry mouse, The stockings wer» hung by the chimney with care In hopes that 8t. Nicholas soon would be there. The children were nestled all snug in’ their beds, | While visions of sugar plums danced in their heads.” “But our stockings weren't bung vet, and we weren't in bed,’ sald Jenny. “It was too early for that.” sald the princess, “but let's go on with the rhyme, just for fun. 1 see you know it all through, so you mustn't mind my changing it a little: “When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter Jenny sprang from her chair to see what was the matter. Away to the window she flew like a flash, Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash, When what to her wondering eyes should appear But a miniature sleigh and eight tiny reindeer! “Ol, no; 1 forgot! 1 mean— “When what to her wondering eyes should appear But a carriage stuck in the mud right out here And a little old driver, so lively and quick You must have thought Peter was dear old St, Nick.” The children laughed gleefully, and Jenny said: “We would have thought that, only we aren't going to hang up our stockings this Christmas at all Jessie and 1 aren't going to get any presents, for mother hasn't been well, and she couldn't get any sewing. But she said we could make our Christmas merry, and we were to pretend that we had been to the big stores in the city and had bought things for the tree and dolls and everything.” “That's a lovely way,” said the prin- cess gently, and she laid ber hand, with its flashing rings, over Jessie's thin ones. “and we are going to pretend.” Jes- sie said. “that our chicken is turkey. But we won't have to pretend about the mince pie, for mother has made a lovely one.” “] wish 1 could help you eat the chicken,” said the princess wistfully, “and I should like to meet your moth- er. 1 know she is lovely. And 1 haven't any mother, you know.” “Oh!” said the little girls, round eyed with sympathy. And then the princess told them that all her life she had lived in a big, lonely house and she had always yearned for a cozy home and for a sister. After supper they popped the corn, and just as they finished in came Pe- ter. “] can't find any one to help, miss,” he announced, “and it's snowing. I'll have to unhitch the horses and go back to town and get something to take you over in.” “No,” the princess demurred as she stood in the middle of the room with a heaped up dish of snowy kernels in her hand. “No, Peter, I'm going to stay here all night.” Peter stared, and the little girls cried, “Oh, will you?” And the princess said: “I really will And, Peter, you can bring up the steamer trunk and my bag.” “Won't your friends expect you, miss?’ Peter inquired, as if awaiting orders. “1 will send a note by you,” was the calm response, And as the man went out she followed him and sbut the door behind her. “Oh, Peter, Peter!” she whispered confidentially. “1 am golug to give them such a Christmas!” “The lttle girls, miss?" “Yes. They are so sweet and brave! And 1 have the presents in my trunk that 1 was going to carry to the other children. Bat they will have so much that they won't miss them, and | shall spend my Christmas in a plain little house, but it will be a joyful house, Peter.” “Yes, miss.” standingly. “1 wish we had a big tree.” said the princess regretfully. “Well, leave that to me, miss,” Peter told her eagerly. “You just get them litle things to sleep early, and I'll ba here with a tree.” “Oh, Peter, Peter—Santa Claus!” ex- riaimed the princess gleefully. “It will oe «ue nicest Christmas that I have had since 1 was a wee bit of a girl.” 80 Peter went away, and the prin- cess, with her eyes shining like stars, danced buck into the room and said, “Oh, let's play mariners!” Jessie and Jenny had never heard of such a game, but the princess told them that she was a ship on the high sens and that they were to tell from her cargo what country she hailed from. “1 carry tea.” she began. “Where do 1 hail from?’ “China,” guessed Jenny, “No.” “Japan,” cried Jessie, with her little face glowing. “No.” Then the little girls pondered. “It might be India,” ventured Jenny, but the princess shook her head. Then Jessie cried, “It's Ceylon!” And that was right. And after that Jessie brought a car- go of oranges from Florida and Jenny brought a cargo of rugs from Persia, and there were cargoes of spices and of coal and of coffee and of fish and of grain and of lumber, and the prin- cess finished triumphantly by carrying a cargo of oysters from the Chesa- peake bay. “One more,” begged Jessie, “1 carry a cargo of castles,” said the sparkling princess, “Where do 1 hail from?” ' The little girls guessed and guessed, and at last the princess said: “That wasn't a fair one, really, for my castles are castles in Spain.” Then, with Jessie fn her arms, she told them of her own castle building, and when she had finished she said, “And so your mother shall have all of my sewing, and that will keep her busy until spring.” “Ol, you are going to be married and live happy ever after!” sighed Jes- sie rapturously. “It's just what a fairy princess should do.” “And what you should do.” said the princess, looking at the clock, “is to go to bed, bed. bed, so that you can wake up early in the morning.” She tucked them In and came back later in a fascinating pink kimono, with her hair in a thick yellow braid, and she kissed them both. But it was little lame Jessie that she kissed last. And then she went away like a glo- Peter agreed under- rious vision, and the little girls sank into slumber. | In the next room the princess open- ed the door cautiously, and there was Peter with snow all over him, and his arms were full of holly and mis- tletoe, and a great tree was propped against the doorpost. “Quietly. quietly, Peter,” warned the princess, and Peter tiptoed in and set the tree up in the corner, and its top reached to the ceiling. The princess opened the steamer trunk and took out two white Teddy bears, one with a flaring blue bow and the other with a flaring pink one, and then she took out a green and a yellow and a red and a blue falry book and a beautiful square basket of candy, tied with holly ribbon, and then from the very bottom of the trunk she drew string after string of shining little silver bells, fastened on red and pale green ribbons. “] was going to get up a cotillon for the children at the other house,” the princess explained to Peter, “but these little folks need it so much more.” The little bells went “tinkle, tinkle,” as Peter hung them, and Jessie, greaming in her little bed, heard the sound and thought it a part of her dream. And while Peter and the princess trimmed and whispered and laughed some one rattled the doorknob. Peter opened the door, and there stood a white faced. shivering little woman. “Oh, what has happened to my little girls?” she panted. “I saw the light, and it is so late.” Then as she bebeld the golden haired vision in pink and the gay tree and Peter in his trim liv- ery she gasped, “Why, 1 believe it is fairies!” And she sat down very sud- denly in Jessie's chair. “You are the little mother,” said the princess as she knelt beside her and put her arms around her and told her how she came to be there, and when she had finished she said simoly, “And I have wanted my own moiher so much this Christmas, and the little girls were so sweet that 1 knew I should love you.” “You poor little thing!” cried the lit- tle mother to the tall princess, and the beautiful lady put her head down on the other's shabby shoulder and wept, because in spite of her riches she bad been very, very lonely in her big house. And after Peter had gone they talk. ed until midnight of Jessie and Jenny, and then they concocted great plans about the pretty things that the little mother was to make for the princess. And in the morning Jessie and Jen- ny, waking in the early dawn, saw sitting on the footboard of the bed two Teddy bears, one with a flaring pink bow and one with a flaring blue bow, and the Teddy bears held out thelr arms sauclly and gazed at the happy little girls with twinkling eyes. “Oo-oh!” eried the little girls, who had never seen a Teddy bear before. And that was the beginning of the most wonderful! day of their lives, for ail day the tree went “tinkle, tinkle,” as they foraged In its branches for bonbons, And the chicken dinner was a delicious success. And in the after- noon they all took a ride in the prin- cess’ sleigh, with Peter driving on the box. and when at last he set them down on their own humble doorstep and lifted little Jessie in his arms the princess smiled at them radiantly from under her plumy hat. “Remember, Peter will come for you every Saturday, and you are to stay at my house all day,” she said, “Oh, yes!” Jenny sighed, with rap- ture, “And you are to come to my wed- ding in the spring—all of you,” said the princess gayly. “And see the prince!” sald Jessie over Peter's shoulder, “And you are going to let me share a third of your mother?” “Yes, oh, yes!” from both of the lit- tle girls. “Then you shall share a third of Pe- ter,” the princess called back as the smiling coachman drove her away through the glistening snow. The Present Said “Papa!” In station K, in New York city, a young clerk who was sorting a sack of Christmas mail was amazed to see a package in the sack move. He car- ried the sack to the sorting table and duwaped out the contents. Something suddenly exclaimed: “Papa: Papa!" The frightened clerk examined every package carefully. In the one that moved he found a live kitten packed in a small bird cage. The kitten had a pink bow of ribbon at its neck, and attacked to the ribbon was a card bear- ing the inscription: “A Merry Christmas from Uncle Jack.” Further investigation brought forth the fact that the cry “Papa!” came from a doll with blond curls that call- ed “Pana!” each time it was squeezed. In moving the mail sack the postal clerk had frightened the kitten in one package and squeezed the mechanical doll in the other package. He was much relieved when he had unraveled the double mystery, Revised For Christmas. “You say Jack writes he can't be here With you on Christmas day? Well, ‘Absence makes the heart grow fonder,’ So the poets say.” *“*Tis not Jack's absence. What care I Because he can't be near? It's absence of the presents That I, of all, most fear.” For sake of up to dateness now We'll chunge this little rhyme. “ "Tis presents make the heart grow fond. est” Just at Christmas time. -—Walter Wellman. Daddy's Christmas Dream. That Christmas comes but once a year Is rather sad for Willy, And likewise limits much the cheer Of Mabel, Maud and Milly, For they would welcome ten or twelve To shout around the shanty And in their stockings deep to delve For goodies left by Santy. But once a year is quite enough (Since buying’'s such a bother When times are panicky and tough) For these dear youngsters’ father— In fact, poor daddy hopes the fates Will cause (to get a cheap year) fhe calendar to change its dates And Christmas swap with leap year, ROBERTUS LOVE. Charming Away Tigers. No woodcutter will go about his task in the Indian forests unless he is accompanied by a faker, who is sup- posed to exercise power over tigers and wild animals generally. Before work is commenced the faker assem- bles all the members of his party in a clearance at the edge of the forest and erects a number of huts, in which he places images of certain deities. After offerings have been presented to the images the particular forest is declar- ed to be free of tigers, and the wood- cutters in virtue of the presents they have made to the deities are supposed to be under their special protection. If after all these precautions a tiger seizes one of the party the faker speedily takes his departure without waiting to offer superfluous explana- tions.—Calcutta Statesman. Not Mechanical. A song and dance comedian was working in a cheap vaudeville house where a performance was given hour- ly. The tired performer had made nine appearances and bad fallen asleep on his trunk when the manager poked him in the ribs and said: “Hey, you—wake up! you to go on again.” “Say,” retorted the performer, “I can't go on again. What do you take me for—a film ?"—Metropolitan Maga- zive, It's time for His Preference. Pompano—Why do you work so hard, Bagley? You slave from morning un- til night. Bagley—I know I do. 1 wish to get rich. 1 want to die worth a million. Pompano—Well, there's no accounting for tastes. Now, I would much prefer to live worth half a mil- lion.—Philadelphia Call. A Limited “Forever.” “What's the matter, Clara?’ asked a father of his daughter. “Ferdy and 1 have parted forever.” “Um Iu that case | s'pose he won't be calling for a couple of nights!” His Delusion. Howeli—1 had the nightmare last night. [Poweli—That so? Howell— Yes: | thought that | was being kicked by the foot of the bed.—New York ress. Bellefonte Shoe Emporium, Y64081s Shoe dlore Bellefonte, Pa. PR ——— We are ready to show you anything that you mav need in the line of Shoes, Slippers, Rubbers, or anything that goes on the feet. When you are doing your Christmas Shopping remem- ber you can always find just what you are looking for at BT ———— YEAGER’S SHOE STORE, . successor to Yeager & Davis. Bush Arcade Building, BELLEFONTE, PA. A En ¥ Lyon & Co. Lvon & Co. LYON & CO. CHRISTMAS OPENING. We are prepared for the early Christmas buyers. We will make shopping casy for you. Come in and see our large assortments. Here is just a small list of the many things to select from: FURS, FURS. The largest assortment of Furs, Pillow Muffs, Rug Muffs in black and colors to match. The new shapes in the long pelerine and throw scarfs. Prices the lowest; qualities the best. SILK SCARFS. Our assortment of Silk Hemstitched Scarfs is the best ever shown in the town. All colors, Black and white from soc. to $5.00. PETTICOATS. A handsome gift and appreciated by all women A fine Silk Petticoat or a handsome Heather- bloom Petticoat. Prices always the lowest. SILKS, SILKS. Silk Messaline and Silk Crepe De Chine. The largest assortment of black and colored Silk and Messaline suitable for waists, street and evening gowns. BLACK TAFFETA SILK. SpeciaL—We just received a soft Taffeta Silk {in black only). Suitable for dresses, skirts and linings, 36 inches wide. Special price 85c per yd. LINENS, LINENS. Our assortment of Table Linens is better and larger than you will see in any other store. See our 2-yard-wide in the stripe and floral patterns. Also have 23{ yard Satin Damask in the rose stripe patterns. Napkins to match all table linen. Linen Scarts, hemstitched and lace and inser- tion trimmed, from 25c up. Handsome Doilies, lace edge and drawn work insertion. HANDEERCHIEFS, In Cotton, Linen and Silk, iniiial and plain, hemstitched, al- white and colored border; fur men, wumen or children. HOSIERY. Hose in cotton, wool and lisie gauze, in bluck and all colors, to fit the youngest or the oldest. LACE COLLARS, Lace Collars and Jabots in all styles from the ¢ up, in- eluding the handsome baby frish Jubots and te Cora LEATHER GOODS. The latest styles in Leather Goods, Everything new in Chate Iafne Bags and Pocket Books. 8 Big reductions in all Ladies’ and Misses' Coats and Coat Suits and Children's Coats. Come into our store and we will save you money and help you do your Christmas buying with little worry. LYON & COMPANY, 17-12 Allegheny St., Bellefonte, Pa.