Page:St. Nicholas - Volume 41, Part 1.djvu/127

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107
MISS SANTA CLAUS OF THE PULLMAN
[1913.

golden circlet, although, of course, it was n't possible for her to forget such a lovely time, even in centuries. And Libby might forget about the star-flowers unless she had a daily reminder.

She held it in her hand a moment, hesitating, till the message came again, “Send it! Then there was no longer any indecision. When she shut it in its little box. and stuffed the box down past the lantern and the orange and the nuts and the peppermints into the very toe, such a warm, glad Christmasy feeling sent its glow through her, that she knew past all doubting she had interpreted the sky road message aright.

Many of the passengers had left the car by this time, and the greater number of those who remained were nodding uncomfortably in their seats. But those who happened to be awake and alert, saw a picture they never forgot, when a lovely young girl, her face alight with the joy of Christmas love and giving, stole down the aisle and silently fastened something on the back of the seat above each little sleeper. It was a stocking, red and shining as a cherry, and silver-bordered with glistening fairy fringe.

When they looked again, she had disappeared, but the stockings still hung there, tokens which were to prove to those same little sleepers on their awakening that the star-flower charm is true.

For love indeed works miracles, and every message from the sky road is but an echo of the one the Christmas angels sang when first they came along that shining highway, the heralds of good-will and peace to all the earth.

THE END.


We ’ve dipped the pen into the ink;:
Now hald your hand just so.
And first we ’ll make a big round “S,”
To start the word, you know.

And then a little “a” comes next,
An “n,”, a “t” and “a”—
Perhaps, if we try very hard,
We 'll finish it to-day.