CHRISTMAS CHILDREN. kme Famous lien Who Were Born on Christ's Ulrthtlay. Even were It not for its celebration as the birthday of the Saviour, Dec. 25 would rank as quite a notable date in the year for the number of eminent persons whose natal day it Is. Curi ously enough, however, we seldom think of tlie day as tin; beginning of the career of any one on eartli other than He to winim custom has assigned it. We kno.v that historical events of all sorts batt.es, sieves, i.inl so forth— have occurred on Chri..iuias, for arti cles almost without end dealing with this interesting s'de of the history of the day have been written, but of its biographical side little lias been said, the more odd this because the fact that many notables have been born on tlie day cannot fail to prove of interest. The biographical index of Christmas is comparatively long anil includes such names as Sir Isaac Newton, William Collins, tlie lyric poet; I*. S. Gilinore, the musician and bandmaster; Kiehard Porson, tlie greatest classical scholar England ever produced: Johann Jacob lteiske, the celebrated German orien talist; Clara Barton, Admiral S. C. Bo han and a number of others. Unhappy little shavers they must have been in their childhood with their birthday and tlieir Christmas rejoicings all merged in one.—St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. CHRISTMAS IN WEST INDIES How the Darkles of tlte Antilles Celebrate the Holiday. Christmas in tlie West Indies is a very Jovial, rollicking affair—at least in the estimation of the darkles. The great feature of the season is the se ries of masquerades or mystery plays enacted by strolling negro performers. These are of two sorts. Representa tions of such Biblical stories as that of David and Goliath—when you may see the dramatis personae clad in such his torically accurate garments as "bed tick" trousers and cretonne coats of flaming pattern—and those of a purely local character. Of these last is the mongoose play, which is peculiar to St. Kitts, and the object of which is to wage mimic war against tlie destruc tive pest which is the curse of the is land. These strolling players are the chief feature of Christmas celebra tions. They are quite an imposing lot of men, with a good ear for music, and as you watch their antics you might easi ly imagine that, Instead of being in a civilized British colony, you were back in tlie heart of Africa, assisting at some savage death dance or oilier heathen rite. Christinas In Tibet. Tibet, tiie home of tin 1 strangest and least known people on the face of the earth, is also tlie home of the strangest of Christmas customs. The feast of ijueen Winter in Tibet cor responds with our own Christmas fes tival. The figure of this queen, or goddess, is painted blue and mounted on a camel, surrounded by a string of human skulls. The dance celebrated at this feast is called tsam, and the masked figures which take part in it would lie comic if they were not so horrible. One represents a homed bull, another a deer, but this deer, pe culiarly enough, has a horse's head, an ancient symbol among the Tibetans of the messenger of death. There are evil spirits in hordes, demons and other bad spirits to shock tlie ignorant people Into blind obedience to the lamas. One god curses another, and every town has its local protecting di vinity. There are serpent gods repre senting the spirit of evil, but they are fought by such protecting divinities as Garuda, who is always represented in lauiaism with a stout body, human arms, wings and the head of a bird.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. Christmas Cards. The Christmas card as we know It has an origin easily traceable, and it is doubtless at least sixty years since the first was designed. The artist who claimed to be its originator and who was, at any rate, the first to see its possibilities was W. C. T. Dobsou, it. A., who, when quite u young man, Sii 1N44. was prompted at Christmas to make a little sketch symbolic of tlie season's joys and festivities and to send It to a friend. It seemed to give great pleasure, and the next year Mr. Dobson determined to follow up tlie idea on a larger scale, and by having liis card photographed was enabled to send copies to twenty-five or thirty friends. The delight with which they were received was so great that Mr. Dobson was quick to perceive that lie had found out a new pleasure for Christmas.—-New York Mail and Ex press. "Man Wants but Little"— "Made known your wants for Christ mas yet?" "Sure. Asked the forty-seven friends who sent me suspenders last year to send trousers to match them this."— Cincinna t i Times-Star. Tlie Dnvvn of Christmas. Christmas day begins in the middle Of the Pacific ocean, and there is where Santa Clans starts and ends his great Hud only journey of the year. A Prayer For the Poor. Col' win' a-tryln' Ter break down de do'— LawJ sen' de Chrls'mus Of peace ter de po'! Lean wolf a-howlln' Out dar In de snow— I Lawd sen' de Chrls'mus lj Of peace ter de po'! i i Sw-pt in chillun Wld nowhar ter go— Lawd sen" do Chrls'mus Of love ter de po'! —Atlanta CJonstltutloa. WIVES ON CHRISTMAS TREES Str«nnri> Christmas Cniitonia That Prevail t» I'urtn of ltussia. Of nil Christmas tree customs, one of the strangest prevails In parts of Bus sia. A gift tree Is sot up in the village, on the branches of which roost young unmarried women, cloaked and hooded anil veiled so that their identity is con cealed. The swains arc ndmitted one by one. Just as they arc in our familiar American game of "spat in, spat out." Each a.s lie enters lifts a veil—of course at random —and the face thus disclos ed belongs to his future wife. The act of lifting the veil betroths the couple, the penalty for breaking the engage ment being a heavy line to be paid into the village treasury. Another Itusslan custom is a proces sion of children dressed In fantastic animal costumes. One boy holds aloft A RUSSIAN CHRISTMAS TllliE. a star shaped paper lantern to repre sent the "star of the east;" another car ries on his back a miniature theater, 011 the stage of which puppet perform ances like "Punch and Judy" shows are given at every farmhouse where the motley pageant halts. The modern Christmas tree comes to us from Germany, the Yule log from Scandinavia, Santa Claus from Hol land and the Christmas stocking from France, but the Christmas turkey—all, that is America's contribution to the world's stock ol' Christmas cheer! But there is one part of the world where the people are afraid to eat turkey. In Armenia it would be too much like treason to their cruel ruler, the Turk. If tliey do venture to eat the fowl they call It "Egyptian hen." Down in Egypt they name it "Indian lion." Thus both Armenians and Egyptians save them selves from Moslem vengeance,—l'itts burg Dispatch. Christmiin TabJo Decoration*. The dinner table itself should claim the season by its decoration. A snowy cloth patterned witii holly leaves or mistletoe, a centerpiece of glossy holly leaves and brilliant berries, sil ver candelabra and silver bonbon dishes are appropriate and dignified. Flat wreaths of holly tied with bows of "berry" red ribbon are very effec tive 011 the table, one in the center and one encircling each candelabrum. A sil ver or a cut glass bowl of holly and meteor roses or holly and mistletoe may be set in the wreath to com plete the centerpiece. The outline of the Christmas star may be used instead of the wreaths. In tiiis case the bows of ribbon are omitted. And for the guest cards either bells, stars, plum puddings, holly or ivy leaves, cut out and painted and ornamented with Christmas verse or greetings, are ap propriate, and a little silk stocking of bonbons may be laid by each card as a souvenir. Chrlut** Birthday. There is something akin to sadness in tlie fact that in tracing the origin of many of our church festivals we find it in pagan celebrations antedating the Christian era. There is nothing cer tain even about tlit- birthday of Christ. Some authorities assert that Decem ber was in the dry season, when shep herds were 011 duty day and night. In the controversy over the date, extend ing from December to May, Pope Ju lius had an Investigation made by St. Cyril and was satisfied that the :!."ith of December was correct. It was so established in the Roman church, ami before the end of the fourth century the dictum was uni versally accepted. Boston Herald. Mrs. Lender's Liberality. Struggling Pastor—Nearly all the congregation lias subscribed liberally for the Christmas tree fund, and I fuel sure that 1 can also have your hearty co-operation, ilow much will you— Mrs. Leader—Let me see. Oh, I am the only member who lias a carriage and coachman. I think. "Yes. The rest are poor." "Well, I will drive around and col lect the subscriptions." Christmas liny, Oh, blessed day which gives the eternal ! lie To self and sense and all the brute with- I In ch, come to us amid this war of life; To hall .and hovel come; to all who toll 1 In senate, shop or study and to those Who, sundered by the wastes of half a ! world, 111 warm d am! sorely tempted, over faco | Nature's brut" power:! and nun unman- ' ned to brutes— Coni" to tli 1.1"" and bl-.i.i'n?, Christ- • mc.a day. Tell 11:- m one" more t!: • t . «.f r>th!e hf m : ' 1 the Baba An 1 U t. vi 1 .m.l, 112 .i." <".".r»st d • y. —Ciixrl'-:! Iving.»l«y. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1904. THE MYSTIC MISTLETOE. Once a Feature of l'nirnii Kites, It Slow Brlongf to L«*(rs, From time immemorial the white berried mistletoe has played a leading part In Yuletide festivities, though It has not always conveyed the oscillato ry privileges which give it Its value in the eyes of the romantic youth of to day. Like so many other features of the Christmas celebration, mistletoe has been borrowed from tlie pagans of antiquity and Christianized by the lapse of centuries. Tlie Persians be fore the birth of Christ used the mis tletoe in their sacred rites, and in parts of India pagan priests still incorporate it in their ritual. It figures largely in Scandinavian mythology. Baldur, the son of Odin, though a demigod, was slain by a spear of mistletoe, a proof of its magic powers. It is from the Druids of old England, however, that mistletoe has come to us. The Druldlcal priests, sprung, It is said, from the magi of the east, the wise men who worshiped at the cradle of the infant Saviour, held the mistle toe as their most sacred possession, and the cutting of the pretty parasite from the oak, the tree which the Druids claimed God loved more than any other, was attended with the greatest solemnity. On the Druids' fes tival day a grand procession, leading two white oxen, moved to tlie mystic grove. There the oxen were fastened to the oak by their horns, and a white robed priest climbed into the leafless branches and cut the bunches of mis tletoe with n golden knife. The oxen were then sacrificed and religious serv ices performed, after which tlie pro cession returned to the temple in tlie forest and the mistletoe was deposited in the Druldlcal arcanum. Besides taking its place in the reli gious observances of the Druids, the mistletoe, which the priests gave a name meaning "all healing," was made into many curious decoctions by proc esses in which times and seasons and incantations were supposed to add to its mysterious powers. These medi cines were regarded as cures for human Ills generally, whether of mind or body. With the advance of civilization and the death of superstition mistletoe has lost its religious character, but not its popularity, and the forests of England and of our own southern states are as eagerly frequented by mistletoe gath erers as ever were the dark woods of the ancient 1 >ruids. CHRISTMAS IN SWEDEN. One l>:iy When There Are Neither Klc*!i \or I'oor, If you were in Sweden on Christmas eve you would hear the church bolls begin to ring at 5 o'clock, for every body stops work then and the festivi ties begin in great earnest everywhere in the kingdom. Class distinctions are forgotten and servants are allowed to sit at table with the family. After sup per comes the universal Christmas tree, for Sweden is one of the early homes of this beautiful custom. On Christmas morning at t! o'clock, i while it is still dark, you would goto 1 church, for everybody goes, unless you stayed at home to mind the lights in the house, for every home In the king- I dom is illuminated. There is almost i sure to be a deep snow, and you would goto church in a sleigh. Behind every j sleigh you would see two boys stand- ! ing on the runners and holding pine 1 torches—a beautiful spectacle as a long ; procession of sleighs glides over the j snow on a forest road. These torches | are stuck up in a circle around the ; church. A whole week is given to good cli°cr and hospitality. A Friendship Calendar. A friendship calendar as a Christmas gift was a source of much pleasure to an elderly lady living alone, says Good j Housekeeping. At her request each 1 one of fifty-two of her friends, repre senting the fifty-two weeks of the year, furnished material for every day of the seven in his week. Each one followed out his own idea for the week's calen dar, contributing favorite quotations, short poems, anecdotes and reminis cences, some even adding cherished recipes. In many instances the contrl- | butions were original. Others were il lustrated with small pictures cut from j current magazines. The result was a j perpetual calendar, each day represent- j ing the loving thought of a friend. A Christmas Uamc. "Christinas candles" is a good old j time game. A lighted candle is placed ! upon a table. The player is blindfold- | ed and stationed with his back to the j caudle, about a foot from it. He's j then told to take three steps forward, j turn around three times, then to walk | four steps toward the candle and blow i it out. I lis attempt to do so will prob- j ably be as amusing to the audience as j disconcerting to himself.—Country Life ' In America. ,\ Laughiin jj i Fountain M | IB THE PEER Of ALL - " J 1 PENS AND HAS NO rJWgjS |l EQUAL ANYWHERE. ~-J FINEST GRADE I4K. IF 112 GOLD PEN YOUR CHOICE OK THESE |«I TWO POPULAR STYLES FOR MR |J, SI.OO I | SUPERIOR TO OTHER |M l| MAKES AT S3 Jg The Laughiin Fountain üßffiffk IrfTj Pen Holder is made of fin- ! M L j _| est quality hard rubber, it itf/fIF S 1 1 fitted with highest grade, All N I large size. 14k. gold pen, 'ifltt: Jl IV! of anv desired flexibility, and has the only perfect jt|B ■ (T| r. feeding device known. U Hi Either style, richly gold zfjHi 9 :| rP, r r | mounted, for presentation j S#« fl 'I |L l J purposes, $1.50 extra. Iff) Surely you will cot be ImK. IB ' JiM { able to secure anything Rt Haß ■ [T r 1 1 3 tbrectlnes the pries that will HBnftt «■ i, I li j&t S give such continuous ifftW jl IT PlCa ' Ure * erV ' Ce JLg l 'z* -i i §' l il m II) m fi \i B m te *§ i ii S M m s* nl % b m § ~ i I » i Wh ' tti W The American Woman, It is alaet that Americau women have degenerated in |niint of health ami phy- ! siijue until ihey have litenlly became a i race of invalids. Thompson's Barostnu j | will remove that Hallow complexion, that ' i tired feeling, that bearing down seusa- ' ! lion. Thompson's Barosma invigorates i ! all the organs, .strengthens and builds up I ; the entire system. All druggists. 81 | j per bottle, 6 lor §f>. i Prayers uttered in fear are still more ; | sincere than prayers offeied in a spirit of I ; boast in''. ltevoluttou Imminent. 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Proprietors.^ ** "•"••" —1 - 1 —— N REMEMBER the store room next to JOHNSON & McNARNEV' S Law Office has been 14 || rented and stocked with a large assortment of goods. US & *st an m** #% jest *st j* #Hk if* *p-at nerves connect I | ing them with the stomach and the heart I The stomach is constantly getting out of | j order and bloatini: and palpitation of the 1 | heart sets in leading many to believe that ! they are sufleriuu fioui nervousness, , stomach trouble and heart disease. .Thompson's Barosma at <.nee corrects the kidney, soothes the nerves and restores I the stomach and heart to their normal conditions. Thompson s Barosma is pleasant to take. l?\.r sale by B. C. Dodson. Try to make two virtues look like 10, and they will get so thin you won't know them. ; A Pleasant Pill. No pill is a* pleasant, and positive as ! DeWitt's Little Karly Risers. DeWitt's j Little Karly Ilisersare so mild and ef-' fective that children. indicate ladies and j weak people enjoy their cleansing effect, j while strong people say they are the best j liver pills sold. Sold i>v B C. Dodson. No More Suffering. If you iire troubled with indigent.on | fret a bottle of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure j aud see how quickly it will cure you. Geo. A. Thompson, of SpeDcer, la., J Hays: "Have hat] Dyspepsia for twenty I years. My case was almost hopeless. ! Kodol Dyspepsia (Jure was recommended and I used a few bottles of it and it is the only thing that has relieved me. Would ! not be without it. Have doctored with local physicians and also ar Chicago, and even went to Norway with hopes of get ting some relief, but Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is the only remedy that has done me any good, and I heartily recommend it. Every person suffering with Indiges tion nr Dyspepsia should use it." Sold by R. C. llod-ton. When poverty comes in at the window love crawls under the bed. 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