'fgp ROM her to him: If 112 ibA I'm so perplexed, \ 80 altogether tired W out and vexed; a I've tramped through miles vyffl//777// ' and mite" and ■V'//////J' mtle9 of store, I've handled gloves and ties and trash galore. The girls are all disposed of—any stuff That looks expenslve's always good enough— But you men, who grow humorous at a tie And mock us for the poor cigars we buy. (This wisdom Isn't cribbed from out the pater's— For my enlightenment, see comic papers) You know a smoking cap would make you mad; Please, Is there anything you haven't had? Just mention any trifle you prefer— What is it that you want for Christmas, sir. And I will bless you with my latest breath, Most cordially, your friend, Elizabeth." "Dear Girl," he wrote, "I'm sorry that you're harassed, Although you've made me frightfully em barrassed. Each Christmas of my life I've been so haunted By all the awful things I haven't wanted. I hardly can believe the tale Is true That I'm at last to have a thing. I do. In fact, your letter really seems to say, You are to dictate, I am to obey. So poor, rash child, no longer 1 demur; These are the little trifles 1 prefer; Imprlmus then: Two certain eyes of blue That tell unbid the hidden thoughts of you; Second: Your strong, young hands, alert to lend Their tender strength to help and hold a friend; And third: That laugh of yours that rings as gay As happy bells upon a hallday; And fourth; Your sweetness, tender ness and truth. The felory and the gladness of your youth. Dear little Madam Santa Claus, a line To tell me If this present maybe mine. Oh, child, be generous this Christmas' day. And your petitioner will ever pray The right to sign himself, with sweet Intent, Always your grateful, glad Recipient." —Theodosia Pickering Garrison, in N. Y. Life. NG S?TOOK 1 Auberts were J S I taking a step up J. in life. From be- Hr y passage in a ten f ement house, free to fiit by the midnight train to Can ada whenever fancy dictated, they were evolving into landowners and had bought a house. It was a very little house on the hillside, which overlooked the village where Jean Aubert and Delia and Henri worked in the mills, but two acres of land went with it, and already the little Auberts were growing rosy and fat legged. Hitherto the gates of Para dise had been effectually closed to them, and with woods and fields no more than half a mile away and the whole street on the other side linsd with green lawns to tempt their very eyes, they had never till now kicked up their heels on grass. Peeping out of the two street win dows of the yardless double tenement house which had been their home, or playing softly round the doorstep on hot summer evenings, they had looked like a family of mice, noiseless, briglit-eyed and shy. Mamma Aubert was the mother mouse, a thin, dark eyed, decent Freneh-Canadian wom an, seldom seen outdoors, but often of an afternoon by the window with a bald-headed baby in her arms and a rather hectic flush upon her cheeks. In school the little Auberts wore perennial high-necked, long-sleeved, pink calico aprons, and still main taining their mouse-like manners did excellent work. The boys were black-eyed rogues, but like true Frenchmen took kindly to instruction in cap-doffing and excuse-me. They all had a gift for penmanship and drawing, and Robert Aubert was the artist of the school. The year before the horse was bought the two eldest children had graduated into the woolen mill, and Delia's deft fingers earned enough money to pay her board, clothe her self tastefully and have a little mar gin left, which she laid by for furni ture for the. room which they were going to call parlor. There was one shadow on the fam ily happin ess, und that was the mort gage; and junt before Christmas this shadow began to assume alarming proportions. It had looked easy in the spring, when they first moved into the new home, to meet the pay ment which was due in Detember. Jean Aubert was carpenter and ma chinist in one of the factories, and a steady and capable man, but the proc ess of evolution is never without a struggle, and. do the best ha could, the interest was all lie could pay. Even for that, what with the cold coming suddenly on and his uestful ■of young ones being uncommonly hungry and hard on their clothes «fter their summer out doors, the family resources were strained to the utmost. Delia and Henri contributed their savings, the parlor that was to be was shut up, and they t»'l came down to a pretty strict diit of pud ding and milk. It was a poor out look for Christmas, for ahead of them loomed up more interest and other payments, besides the continuous outgo for their living. "I don't know but I've undertaken too much," Jean Aubert said, soberly. "It costs more over here than it did on the street. If we don't save more this winter than we have since we came, we shall have to move back," and in the melancholy silence that followed Mamma Aubert gave up her chickens and cow, Delia saw her dream of muslin curtains and an or gan vanish in air, and the children suffered that depression of spirits which is always induced by a verdict adverse to Christmas. Fortune has a way of experiment ing with full cups to see how much more they can hold after they are apparently brimming The Auberts thought they had all the mouths they could feed and all the cares they could compass consistent with the which they were not yet prepared to relinquish, of owning their house, when the very next day after the family council a knock came at their humble door and Madame Au bert opened it on an old man, who asked if Jean Aubert lived there. "I come to see him from Canada," said he. It was three o'cloek in the after noon, but Madame Aubert made the visitor comfortable by the fire. He was old and poorly dressed, and had with him a shabby carpetbag. "You know me?" he asked, as he took off bis coat and prepared to make himself at home. "No? Ah, Jean remember. His father my old neighbor—frien'—up in Chateau grand." Mladame Aubert went about her work, the little Auberts resumed their play, the older children came stamping in from school. The ques tions they all entertained in respect ful silence about the stranger who sat dozing by their fire—Who was he? Had he come to stay? What should they do with him?—waited till Jeau should come. That evening they all sat up and listened to the fine old story of the Itoy Who Went to Seek His Fortune —or was it the Prodigal Son? It was told in French, with many gestures and much dramatic effect and Pierre Demarest. its hero and narrator, was assisted by the smiles and tears and enthusiastic applause of all the Au berts, from Jean Aubert down. In the seignory in Canada where the Auberts lived the Demarests had been their neighbors. Old Demarest had been a father to Jean's father, and Pierre Demarest had been his dearest friend. But Pierre had chosen to wander, and while young Aubert settled and married and became a "AND NOW I GO AWAY." farmer on the land adjoining old De marest's. l'ierre went west and dis appeared. No word came from him, and except in Aubert's stories to his children of the friendship he and Pierre had had together in the days when Aubert was a stranger and Father Demarest had taken him in, the very memory of Pierre Demarest seemed to have died. Gone 30 years! His audience gathered that he had first drifted beyond the pale of civil ization in company with a party of railroad engineers; that he had been a guide and hunter in the Rocky mountains; that he had had some ex perience in mining, and that he had been to Alaska. He talked of In dians and bears with a familiarity that made the Aubert boys' hearts burn within them. But he dwelt with most particularity upon his home-coming, "I think I see my home before I die," he said. "I come to Chateau grand. I tuke my hag and walk down the road—two miles—to my old home. No one know me. My father dead, my mother dead, my brother Selim say no room for me. lie not care. He say he think me dead. Why not me write so many years? My broth er Leonard live in Chateau-grand. I ;*o to him. I walk back all the way to his house. lie have big, good house. lie woman scowl at me—so! —and say: 'You ole man, you poor, you come to live on us, you go 'way.' They give me no supper. I take my bag and think of my frien' Aubert. I go again into the country. I come to my frien' Aubert's house. He dead, too, but his son just like him. Glad to see me 'fore he knew me. Give me supper. When he find out who I am, lie seize my hand, he laugh, he cry, he say: 'My father's frien'!' I cry, too. 1 stay two weeks with him and his brother on next farm. They very kind to me. I say: 'Where your brother Jean? He little boy when I leave home.' They say: 'He in the states, hi Harwichtown, New Hamp shire. He work in mills. l)o well. Have wife and children.' 1 say: 'I goto fcCt him. Christmas with CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1900. him. If he glad to see me.' Not see my brothers any more. They 'fraid I cost them money. I not trouble them." Jean Aubert grasped the old man's hand. "We are truly glad to see you," said he. "We are not so well off as we were, because we struggle hard to buy this house. The little children want the air. My woman like a cow and chickens. My girl here, Delia, want a little room—a parlor —for her beau». We work hard all together for the pay. But we see our friends. If you'll take what we can give you, you are kindly welcome. Many times I've heard my father tell how kind your father was to him. And the children here will like to hear some more about your life." In the days that followed the fam ily made good Jean's welcome, and both by word and act caused their old visitor to feel at home. Their na tive French politeness, united with real kindliness of heart, concealed the inconvenience which his presence caused them, and in truth, except for the fact that the family divisor had already seemed as big as it could well be, and that it is always a prob lem how to put 12 persons to sleep in five beds, Pierre was very little trouble. He sat for the most part by the fire, quiet and content. In the evening when they were all at home he told stories and talked with Jean about old times. The children ceased to be shy before him. Robert fur tively drew his picture—on a shingle, as many a brother artist has been driven by stress of circumstances to do. He was a man of medium size and much weather-beaten —a study in brown, with a keen old face, little gold rings in his ears, bright eyes, and small, strong hands. He was old. but not feeble, he was silent, but not stupid, and after 'his own fashion seemed cheerful and at ease. Robert finished him, and after a moment's contemplation added a beard, a fur cap, and trimmed his old coat with fur; rounded his waist line up a bit and put on a belt, and then, the fancy growing, represented him as sur rounded with various articles suited to the holiday ambitions of the young Auberts —for instance, a paint box and heaps of drawing paper labeled "Robert," a watch and chain such as Delia hankered after, and a bicycle for Henri. In spite of the quietus Papa Aubert had put upon Christmas, the children could not help planning tor some sort of a celebration. They could at least have a tree to look at; spruces were to be had for the cutting on the hill that overshadowed the village. The little boys would get one. Uobert should make a paper angel for the top. They would color egg shells for ornaments, and Mamma Aubert prom ised them a cake and snow ice-cream. "And we will say," they declared, and it was a piece of philosophy worthy of older heads, "we will say, when the time comes to take off the presents, that this house is our pres ent." What was that? Did old Demarest chuckle, or merely cough in his sleep? They thought he was dozing, as, with six heads in a bunch, they whispered their plans in the corner on the other side of the fire. If they only could have seen what was written inside that rusty old envelope of a man! Has any body imagined how it must feel to be Santa Claus? If it is true that it is more blessed to give than to receive, and that, whatever the joys of posses sion, generosity feels better than gratitude, St. Nick must be the hap piest being i.n the universe. And Pierre Demarest was planning to be the Au berts' St. Nicholas. The day before Christmas he but toned on his coat and trudged over to the village. "1 buy same little things for you' young ones," he said to Mine. Aubert. That night he took Robert and Delia into his confidence. Robert was togo next dia.y and get what, lie had bought and Delia was to smuggle the parcels into the house and put them on the tree. 'Von not tell," he said, impressively; and then with a twinkle: "1 like to see what the chil'ren say." Delia will never forget that Christ mas. not merely for what happened in the evening, but for the responsibilities which beset her during the day. If they had not a.l gone off to church in the morning except Robert and herself and the baby, she never could have managed it. Robert came home fairly staggering nude ■ the weight of the things the old man had bought. I here are candies, Delia," he pant ed, aud a lot of those shiny things from flea forth'* t<» h«nf on the tree, and I haven't got them all, either. The team's coming from Brown & TayJor'a to bring the rest." "Why," said Delia, "why—l thought he was poor! He said: 'A few little tilings to please the children.' Where sha.l we put tihern all? I know, here in the parlor, and oh, Robert, bring the tree in there, and we'll hang up evergreens, and nobody'll mind if there isn't any furniture; they'll be looking at the tree." At seven o'clock that Christmas evening the parlor door wasopened and the Auberts, with mingled feelings of self-denial and expectancy, were mar shaled in. "There are presents!" they gasped. Where were Robert's angel and the egg shells? "There are candles! And can dy! And stars! And shining balls!" And from-awe-struck surpoise they mounted by rapid strides into ecstasy, and from gasping took to shouting. There were dolls and dishes and a rocking-horse. There was a paste board village and a Noah's ark and a box of blocks. In .bewildered surprise Robert saw a paint-box and a parcel of draw ing paper labeled "Robert." Del it* fairly turned pale at finding that * small package for her contained a lit. tie silver watch and chatelaine. Henri was speechless over an order for a bi cycle. "What does this mean?" demanded Jean Aubert, sternly. "It means." said Pierre Demarest. standing before him, "that I not a poor man. My brothers make one big mistake. They think me eorne to live on them- I buy them out if 1 like! They turn old. poor man—brother—many years gone—out into the street. Tl.ey not get any of my money! But frien' —ol' frien's boys—ol' frien' Aubert's boys, who know me not. they think of their father, pity poor old man—kind to me. take me in, make me at home. I pay them back! An' you. that was frien' Aubert's little boy, you glad to see me, too. I come to try you! You many chil'ren—good chil'ren, little house, work hard to pay for it. You give me what you got, you make me feel at home. 1 hear the little chil'ren whisper 'bout their Christmas. They not look cross at me and wish me go away. I see what Robert draw —ol' Santa Claus that look like me an' what lie bring him. I hear the chil'ren say this house their Christmas pres ent. I give it to them! You say the mortgage thousand dollars. I give you $2,000. I give you' brothers same. Because you kind to me. I stranger and you took me in!" and into Jean's astonished) hand Pierre thrust a check for that amazing sum. "And now I go away," said the old fellow; "to-night, right now. I stay two weeks. 1 fin' my frien's. They know me when I come again—remem- ber ol' Pierre! You pay your mort gage. Be happy." And in spite of their remonstrances, as if he would not burden them with having to express their gratitude or did not care to see them try, he then and there, before that wonderful evening was half over, girded on the old coat, seized' his faded bag and trudged off manfully in the moon light, vanishing as suddenly as he came. I shall not try to describe the emo tions that possessed the Aubert fam ily on that never-to-be-forgotten Christmas night and during the suc ceeding week. The older ones walked in a dream, doubting whether that precious piece of paper which was to set them securely on t'he plane of in dependence might not be worthless, until word came from New York that it was genuine and Jean might get $2,000 for it any day. Which he did— -2.000 one-dollar bills, and sat up all night with his wife counting it over and trying to realize the magnitude of his good fortune. "The fact is, sir." he said next daj when he went to discharge the mort gage, "my wife and I never saw s6 much money before in all our lives We wanted to sort of take it in. So we kept it all by us over night. Put the rest of it in the bank? Well, no sir. You see we feel richer to have the real money right by us. And maybe we shall use some of it to fix up the house. My girl, she set on having some parlor furniture, and- my wife, she want piazza on the front." —Kate M. Cone, in Springfield (Mass.) Republican. A MEAN MAN, Gilson—l understand that Gilchrist's wife has left him. Willets—ls that so? What, was the trouble? (iilson—She asked him what he was going to give her for a Christmas pres ent. Willets— Yes? (iilson—He said he had decided to let her get her teeth fixed.—N. Y. Press. Diiy of TliniikMiflvins.. The deepest note of Christmas is thanksgiving. The angels saugit* first Te Deum for all men to learn. And out Christmas prayer shall be: "(Jive u; day by day this day's doxology; teac'i our common lives to sing 'Glory t.i God.' " —T. 11. Darlow. Building of an Isthmian Canal at PA The French Project in Which the Government Is Offered a Controlling Interest SO CLOSELY has the American pulj lie connected the Panama canal en terprise with the name of I»e Les •eps, and so familiar are we with the circumstances surrounding' the failure of that great engineer and the scandal that followed him to his g.rave. that we are prone to look upon any project con nected with the Panama venture as a swindle. When De Lesseps began the construction of the Panama canal we dreamed of a grand reality; when he failed we awoke to find our reality but »• dream. But in 1894 a new company took hold of the work where the De Lessepscom pany dropped it. Of that new company we have heard, or seemingly cared, but little, until now they offer to our gov ernment a controlling interest in their project if we will finish it. The first impression is that they have nothing but a concession and a vast amount of worn and antiquated machinery to dis pose of, but that is wrong; they have n partially completed canal, a canal that is nearer completion than we prob ably realize, and. while it may not be good policy on the part'of our gov ernment to buy, it would seem to be poor policy on the part of the French company to stop their work at the pres ent time and lose the hundreds of mil lions that have been invested so far. The result may be two canals where T\l* have so long wished for one. THE GREAT CULEBRA OUT, 34 MILEB FROM THE ATLANTIC. At the present time about 4,000 men are engaged in the work of separating North and South America at Panama. Work is being pushed almost entirely from the Atlantic side, and of the 46'/ 3 miles that it is necessary to cut through before ships can pass from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans 15 miles are already completed. This channel completes the tidewater section of the eanal on the Atlantic side—nearly one third of the entire cut. It has been dredged to a depth of nine meters, or more than 30 feet, and 30 meters wide at the bottom. A glance at the accompanying map ehovvs the route of the canal, and also •hows the Charges river. The greatest engineering difficulties encountered are occasioned by the crossing of this river in several places. While during ATLANTIC < OCtAN M&'s • / I J ACIFIC VS OCEAN MAP SHOWINQ ROUTE OF THE PANAMA CANAL. the greater porlion of the year the Charges river is but little more than a brook, there are times when it becomes a raging torrent. To control this tor rent of water and store it as a supply for feeding the canal is the problem that has taxed the ingenuity of the en gineers, and yet, now that they have solved the problem, it seems decidedly simple. The Charges river rises in a series of deep ravines some miles to the north east of the route of the canal. It is from these ravines that much of the water conies which produces the floods. To stop these floods the engineers have dammed the mouth of the ravines and by this meass have formed a lake ca pable of holding back the greater part of the water that would carry destruc tion with it if permitted togo unob structed and at the same time sup ply a feeder for the canal. The Hohio lak* shown in the map is •inother deep cut through which the 112 iver flows and which will become a part of the canal as well as a storage reservoir for tlie water needed to feed it. This is accomplished by damrying tlie mouth of tie cut and placing a lock at the lower en.l. The difficulties of caring for the floods in ihe Charges river and provid ing a watet for the caual over-1 come, the remainder o-f the work re solves itself into the digging 1 of the big ditch and the building of the system of looks that will raise a vessel over the divide between the two oceans. / To accomplish this there will i>e a system of eight lockages, the first one in from the Atlantic side being at the outlet of the Ik>hio lake. The line of the canal, however, has been so selected that it will be possible to make it a tide water channel whenever conditions warrant the ex pense. Of the present canal the di viding reach will be about 21 meter® above the mean level of the sea. Towards the work of digging the great ditch itself great progress has been made. Not only has the canal been practically completed from Colon, on the Atlantic side, to the Bohio locks, but beyond that a great amount of work has been done. At San Pablo, 23 miles from the Atlantic, the canal is now large and deep enough to float an ordinary sized ves sel, and at La Corosita, 2X miles from the Atlantic, the cut is rapidly Hear ing completion. Of the work of excavating the Culebra cut presented the greatest difficulties. This cut carries the canal through the divide between the two oceans, and is some Ave miles ir» length. Some idea of the amount of work that has been done on it may be had from the accompanying en graving, which shows the cut as it is 34 miles from the Atlantic. The work of excavating has been carried to a point within eight miles of the Pa cific, while some work has been done at Panama, the Pacific terminus of the canal. From this brief description of the work that has already been accom plished it may be seen that the French company has something more than a plan to sell to us, even though it may not be a feasible proposition for this government to buy. At the same time, with so much accom plished it would seem to be almost a settled fact that the company behind | the enterprise would push it to final completion, whether we build anoth er waterway to connect the two oceans or not. [ Of the machinery of which so much has been said, there are millions of dollars' worth of antiquated dredges, excavators and other expensive ma chines piled in heaps along the route of the canal just as they were left, by the De Lesseps company. These are scarcely worth the expense of marketing as old metal, but many of the machines now in use by the new company are modern, and at least one-half of them are of Amer ican build. In a word, the new com pany has been administered with economy, and a desire to complete the work of construction with as lit tle expense as possible. WRIGHT A. PATTERSON. (Intrr Ice llnkliiK. Water in a shallow pan. in a shel tered place, will freeze even when the thermometer is above the freezing point. This is due to the rapid loss of heat of the earth after nightfall. In some hot. countries ice is obtained ire commercial quantities by setting shal low earthenware pans of water on the ground protected from the wind. —Science. Incomplete In Hi ruction. "Here's a sermon on 'How to Bring Men to Church.' " "Does it say anything about how to keep men awake in church after you gel. them there?"— Chicago Record. Ilcnnl at the Clult. Cleverton—How was the dinner last night ? Dashaway—Fine, old man. It was the best dinner 1 ever drank.—Town Topics. (Jot Klrli Ouirk. Sam llernharclt\s long- engagement in "I,'Aiglon" at her Paris theater, just closed, is said to have averaged in receipts $2,100 a performance. Won't Work lloth (!ive to a pig when it grunts and a child when il cries, and you will have a line pij> anil u bad child. 11