I THE WHITE HOUSE How Presidents of Past Enjoyed Christmas Hoiidays. No Celebration by John Quincy Adams Because He Regarded Religious Festival as a Foolish Extravagance. A CCORDING to history the only president of the United Stales i who did not celebrate Christmas (because he regarded it as a foolish pxtravagance) was John Quincy Ad- | ams, “the most economical man known in public life.” Mrs. John Adams, the wife of the | second president of the United States, had a most discouraging time trying to make merry in the White House during the Christmas holidays. (She was the first wife of a president to celebrate Christmas in the executive mansion in Washington, for the presi- dent and Mrs. Washington were al- ways at Mount Vernon for the holi- days.) She had no dominating sense of economy, but it was the White House itself that was shabby, and a Christmas reception given to the mem- bers of congress by the president proved, from her point of view, to be | a ghastly failure. President Jefferson was a widower | with four daughters, and during his second administration Martha, the eld- est, was the head of her father’s household, and made Christmas the happy and festive occasion it was de- signed to be from that time when the star stood still above the manger in | Bethlehem. There were trees, and decorations, and all sorts of entertainments for the | children of the official families, as well as gifts for the poor of the capital. Although the Madisons did not | spend all of their Christmases in the White House, on account of the little historical interruption by the British, ; when they occupied other quarters for | a time, the brilliant Dolly managed a record for holiday hospitality and | merrymaking that has never been sur- passed. When Andrew Jackson came to the White House he was bowed and bro- ken by the death of his wife and de- pressed by political animosities. clination for holiday celebrations, yet he pulled himself tegether at Christ- mas time, and saw to it that the day meant something happy to those in the White House. In the meantime the Monroe admin- istration was marked by nothing in | the way of holiday celebrations be- yond what was conventionally pre- seribed, and after President Jackson's efforts at keeping the spirit of Christ- mas in spite of his own personal sor- | rows, President Harrison did not live | to see a Christmas in the White | House. Mrs. Tyler lived to celebrate only one Christmas in the White House. ! After his second marriage the Tyler administration was noted for its bril- liant entertainments. Whether it was Christmas or any other time of the year, hospitalities were dispensed in the old Virginia style, and there was | h 3 oir s rl no stint of merrymaking at the White | the goat in our alley? It’s his pitcher. House. The Polk administration reverted to | the grim and practical idea of John Quincy Adams. Perhaps it was not economy that changed the Christmas celebration at the White House; it is difficult to define the reason why Pres- ident Polk did not make the holidays a festive event in the executive man- sion; it may have been the tempera- ment of the chief executive; perhaps it was because Mrs. Polk did not be- lieve in the gay and festive way of celebrating the holidays, as, according to intimate history, she did not. President Zachary Taylor, brilliant figure in military history, who had no chance whatever in the social history of the White House, because he died in little more than a year after he ‘had taken his seat as president of the United States, and spent only one Christmas in the White House, be- queathed his administration to the Fillmores, people pitiably distin guished by sorrow and in no way adapted to the social obligations of the great national responsibility of sustaining the political and social ob- ligations of the White House. “Shortly after becoming president,” someone writes of President Fillmore, “his wife died, and a year later a daughter, an only child, passed to the great eternity.” : A CHRISTMAS HYMN No tramp of marching armies, No banners flaming far; A lamp within a stable And in the sky a Star. Their hymns of peace and gladness To earth the angels brought, Their Gloria in Excelsis To earth the angels taught: When in the lowly manger The Hely Mother Maid In tender adoration Her Babe of heaven laid. Born lowly in the darkness, And none as poor as he, The little children of the poor His very own shall be. No rush of hostile armies then, But just the huddling sheep, The angels singing of the Christ And all the world asleep. No flame of conquering banners, No legions sent afar, A lamp within a stable And in the sky a Star! —Margaret E. Sangster, Weekly. in Collier's He had neither heart nor the slightest in- | The Ten Commandments for Christmas Giving | \—= B, HARVEY PEAKE i he has sent the gift. ! 2. Thou shalt remember first the very young and the very old. 03, Thou shalt buy within thy means, remember. i ing the spirit of the gift aad not the value. How the Festive Season Is 0b- OU shalt love the giver of the gift, because | { 4. Thou shalt not become a party to the mere | exchange of gifts. Let thy heart go with each - and every greeting or present thou sendest out. 5. Thou shalt make such gifts as thy skill may warrant, inasmuch as the work of thy hands gives added value to the offering. : 5, Thou shalt tie up no bitter remembrances with a gift, but only peace and good will. . 7. Thou shalt have thy gifts ready several days before the time of delivery, that the immediate days before Christmas may be filled with peace . and happiness, and not with turmoil and frenzy. | 8, Thou shalt seek the abodes of the poor and | friendless with such wholesome gifts as may Te oy aE oo bods oes hearts. | 9. Thou shalt not gush over thy gifts. Thou shalt | show thy gratitude in more sincere ways. : 10. Thou shalt, at earliest opportunity, give written or verbal thanks for such kindnesses as thy friends may have bestowed upon thee at Christmas. TWO TOTS IN A TOY SHOP Little Denny Was Almost Beyond Hope in the Eyes of His Older Sister, Aged Six. She was six if she was a day; she had a little fat back in a little black | oat and her wisps of red hair matched her red tam-o’shanter. In | her firm hand she held a struggling boy about a year younger, and they were getting into the elevator at a big department store and making for ‘toys.” Children are not allowed, unaccom- | panied by guardians, in most large | shops, but such was her air of re- sponsibility, of decorum, that it would | have been a bold flcorwalker who jared to question her. Nor, evidently, was it her first visit. | The boy, still held in leash, ran in | front and made straight for the space i levoted to Santa Claus, his reindeer ! and his sleigh, piled with toys. There was a background of fir and cedar and a huge Christmas tree, but the pair sat down before the fascinat- ing old fellow in his red robe, his long white beard, hclding his big whip, and from his face the small boy iid not turn from worshiping in sol- | smn adoration. Across the room was a creche; also 2 wonderful and beautiful thing. "The ! infant Jesus in the manger, the moth- ar in her blue robes, St. Joseph, with | his staff, the three kings resplendent. still for fifteen minutes looking at Santa Claus, when the little girl whis- | pered to the boy. He squirmed, strug- , gled, but she was too much for him. She dislodged him from his ragged him to the creche, and with | motherly, Irish piety, pressed him on i his knees. Reverently she described the holy group, then would incite devotion from a more human motive. “See the cow, Denny; you mind the cow we used to milk last summer at the farm when we went on the fresh air? See the geat, Denny; you mind But Denny whined and pulled and | pulled to be back again to his idol. The little girl looked up. Her sigh was that given by every woman since the beginning, for every man for whose soul she holds herself respon- sible. “Denny,” she said, Santa Claus better than he likes God.” {fis bime to hang your stocking high And let yourn 12 to Santa fy J > Jtraight up the chimney A far away Jo youll get your presents ’ Sr Al 5 i BT Ar Pe Ar A A rr Ae Ae er fe iri May each Christmas, as it comes, find us more and more like him who, as at this time, became a little child for cur sake, more simple-minded, more humble, more holy, more affec- tionate, more resigned, more happy, more full of God.—J. H. Newman. BRT rr Tr Rr rR WR vr Tew PRR R RK KRKRRRRRIWW Home Made Presents. “I thought I'd be economical this year and make my Christmas pres- ents myself, instead of buying them,” said Mrs. Harlem; ‘so I bought a book of instructions and went ahead.” “How did you make out?’ asked Mrs. Bronx. “The materials footed up to $43.58, and I put in a month's hard sewing and cutting.” “How did that compare with 1ast year?” . “Last year I bought all I wanted for $35.” First Christmas Card. In December, 1844, Mr. W. A. Dob: son sent the first Christmas card. “Denny likes | The children had been perfectly | seat, | , see the thing through in “old navy” | fashion, and even King Neptune, when | he comes on board on ‘crossing the | than usual are allowed to “sleep in,” | and, after the tiniest minimum of CHRISTHNS IN NAVY served Aboard Ship. Not Much Work Is Done—Athletic Sports, Traditional Dinner and Evening Entertainment Fea- tures of Occasion. “spirit of Christmas” entered in- to more whole-heartedly than on board the ships of the United States | navy. Observance of this chief of all na- tional holidays varies, of course, ins: form with the location of the fleet at the time. : Into each of the continental “home ports” (headquarters of certain indi- vidual vessels) the big gray monsters come dropping in by twos and threes | till, in New York and Philadelphia, | and Norfolk and Frisco, it looks al- | most like a naval review. According to long established custom, they are there to give the boys in blue a run on the beach (“liberty,” as they call it in the service), and every man jack who is not actually undergoing pun- ishment is allowed and encouraged to take his look at the bright lights—go- home on leave or uptown for fun or anything else he likes as long as his money lasts but away from the ship in any event. This custom applies not alone to the enlisted men, but to the officers as well and, when Christ- mas morning dawns in a home port, there are not likely to be many more persons on board any man-o’-war than the regulations call for in the mini- mum. , ; The few “shipkeepers” cannot, un- iér such circumstances, make a very successful effort toward merriment, Rear Admiral Samuel McGowan writes in the National Monthly, but what they lack in numbers they invariably make up in other ways, one of these ways being the complete satisfaction of the inner man. ; | Abroad and at sea, though, it is al- together different. Every . soul on IN “Siete o in all the world is the i A Christmas Concert on Board Ship. board, from the usually sedate flag officer and the more or less. unap- proachable first lieutenant, down to “Jimmy-legs” and the ship’s cook and the messenger boy, voluntarily consti tutes himself a committee of one to line” to douse every hayseed and landlubber, has a formidable rival in the “spirit of Christmas.” It matters not much whether the ship be anchored off Vera Cruz or plowing through the Pacific ocean, the distance from home and friends makes it incumbent on all to do their level best to make at least a brave try for “Merry Christmas.” Routine drills are entirely suspend: ed; and, except for cleaning ship {cleanliness in the navy being deemed not only akin to, but actually neck and neck with godliness itself), not a lick of avoidable work is allowed to be done by anybody. “All hands” are called, to be sure, on scheduled time, but many more men tidying up, preparations for the day’s festivities are gotten under way. There is a varied athletic program that begins in the forenoon, and after an hour or so off for dinner at mid- day, continues well along toward sun- set. Sailors are taught to be thorough. So they go at their potato races and pic-eating contests and tugs of war and jumping contests with the same fervor that they show when trying for a 13-inch turret gun record or stamp- ing out a Caribbean revolution. There is no lack of interest. That can be de- pended on. And when call is sounded they are a tired lot. Toward sunset the various contests have been completed (or not unusu- ally called off “on account of dark- ness,” as the baseball people say), and, after an early supper, a stage is rigged up on the quarter-deck and the crowning event of the entire celebra- tion is on. Sometimes it is a minstrel show, another time a vaudeville per- formance, but without exception there is plenty of music and near music, and no such entertainment would be com- plete without the inevitable and inim- itable cakewalk. Some of the impro- vised costumes are fearfully and won- derfully made Bat they are striking and, for the most part, very appropri- ate, while the pirouetting and gyrating of the cakewalkers themselves are well worth seeing. The program is a long one. but int2rest never lags for a moment—fer .merican sailors are just as thorcus$ at play as they are while at work, RAY-O-LIGHT OIL. : -_—— CSR, RAY-0-LIGHT OIL: Gg, - . - r 7 for Christmas Sure, of course, you already have made up your mind just what you're going to give for Christmas. But what do you think, this year, you husbands and wives who are thinking of each other’s comfort, of adding just one more gift to your list ? What do you say to jotting down a Per- fection Oil Heater? Sounds funny, eh? Well, do you know there is no more prac- tical, useful, comfort-bringing gift you can buy than one of these same heaters? The PERFECTION Smokeless Oil Heaters kill the early morning chill of the bedroom and put a stop to chattering teeth while you are dressing. Just a scratch of the match and in less than five minutes your bedroom or bathroom is made comfortable and warm no matter how cold the weather outside may be, The Perfection is easy to operate, easy to take care of. There is no annoy- ance of smoke, soot, ashes or obnoxious odors. It burns kerosene, the most economical fuel you can buy. To get the best results you should use Atlantic Rayolight Oil, the purest high-grade kerosene sold. Scientifically refined to prevent the charring of wicks, to burn longer and give out the greatest heat. Perfection Oil Heaters are sold by dealers everywhere. you the superior merits of the Perfection. Ask anyone to show THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia [J fod Pe — % - Vs NE NN, © Funeral Director. H. N. KOCH Funeral Director Successor to R. M. Gordner. STATE COLLEGE, PENNA. - Day and Night Service. 60-21-tf. Bell and Commercial Phones. Flour and Feed. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain Manufactures and has on hand at all times the following brands of high grade flour: WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT The only place in the county where that extraor- dinarily fine grade of spring wheat Patent Flour SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock Food and feed of all kinds. All kinds of Grain bought at the office Flour xchanged for wheat. OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE. PA. MILL AT ROOPBSURG. 7-19 Meat Market. Get the Best Meats. You save nothing by buying poor, thin or gristly meats. 1useo: e : LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE Best Book Work and suppl! customers with the fresh- and est, Et oes blood and muscle mak- . . ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no J ob Printing higher than poorer meats are elsewhere. . I alwavs have Done Here. — DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa The Centre County Banking Company. “STOP, LOOK, LISTEN" A Lawyer received $10,000 for suggesting these words to a railroad. The sign, “Stop, Look, Lis- ten!” saved the road many thousands of dollars in damages. It’s a good sign. It’s worth $10,000. Wise people are often warned by a similar sign on the road of extravagance. They stop in time. How about yourself? Think this over seriously. A bank account is the Best Kind of Security at “any time. If you haven't a bank account now, “start one at once. Any account, however small you are able to begin with, will be welcomed and carefully conserved at THE CENTRE COUNTY BANK, 56-6 BELLEFONTE FA.