!s{■%»'*' "*■*"' t+'V /■"' a ''* Spirit °f Christmas. Fill V i\ \ 112 with newvand interesting things. \/\ » y " ' Attune our ears to the general song L. jffl /jj \| j °f good cheer and mak( our hearts i JI |m vo ' ces responsive toil fiessage. jMHuy I \ ' Let us know ia.jjs full n./asure the I blessedness of the privilege both of rv V ? giving and of receiving, the interchange of the Christmas message of love and ll\ Help us to put aside the fear, the M\ \ \ \\\ worry and the petty strife of yester >A day, and to face tomorrow with the //j V(\. radiant face of those who have seen l^e star ' n '^ e eas ' V I\ Ni X heard the angels* message "Glory to ' Cod in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men." Christmas Right Bv tbeodosia (iarrijon Sometimes T think that Christmas night's the best. Before the nursery fire, when we're undressed And all the toys are put away, except Perhaps my engine and the baby's bear, Chen mother comes away from all the rest Downstairs to tell our Christmas story there. She takes the baby on her lap and we Sit 'round heron the hearth-rug so we see Che pictures in the fire, and then she tells About how Shepherds watched their flocks by night And what the angels said, and how the three Ulise Kings came riding - and the big star's light. Jind then she tells us how it showed the way Co iust a stable where the oxen stay. Jind there they found him in his mother's arms, ft little baby Christ-Child—and he smiled; Jlnd that ishe says) is what made Christmas day , Tor you and me and every little ' child. Before the nursery fire when we're undressed Sometimes T think that Christmas night's the best. -€»«rvfcOdv'l & Cs -» yj XMAS BEFORE THE MAST How a Crew Celebrated Merrily Off the Coast of California in the Early Days. A good many of you may have read Richard H. Dana's interesting story of sea life, "Two Years Before the Mast." Dana's vessel was collecting hides on the coast of California, when that coast was in a semi-civilized condi tion. He thus describes Christmas among the crew: "As there were no hides to take in, and nothing especial to do, the cap tain gave us a holiday, the first we had had except Sundays since leav ing Boston; and we had a plum duff for dinner. "The crew of the Russian brig, lying alongside us, following the 'old style,' had celebrated their Christmas 11 days before, when they had a grand 'blow-out;' and (as our men said) 'had drunk in the forecastle a keg of gin, ate up a bag of tallow and made a soup of the skin!'" Certain it is that Christmas is the one universal festival the round world over; and every resident of a Chris tian land carries Christmas in his heart wherever he may go. Christmas Cheer. "Old man," wrote the Billville citi zen, "it was my intendin' to give you a line present fer Christmas, but I come short this year by the sheriff levyin' on my cotton an' the govern ment on my corn; so I kin only send you a gallon jug of the last named, •which ain't much as my ambitions is fer you; but I'll say this, old boy; There's enough in that jug to make you have the jolliest time o' yer life fer a day or two; ef you can't buy a circus ticket, there's a whole circus in six drams, an' a eternal movin' pictur' show in 20; so make the most of it!" —Atlanta Constitution. Thoughtful. Ella —I'm going to hang up my .stockings on Christmas. Stella—What for? "By special request of papa and mamma. You know they believe In Jtyita Claus."—Life. BERLIN'S CHRISTMAS THE DAY NOT LIKE IT WAS FIFTY YEARS AGO. The Old Customs of the Burghers Have Been Forgotten by the New er Generation in the Modern Hub of Empire. /Cpvr —pMERICAN and English a 112 newspapers at Christ /xwyi J I mas time often have IJ® picturesque accounts I I the German Christ l J mas, which conjure up \ *Mk| gf&v a clear frosty atmo- J sphere and re-echo the song of the skates on the frozen lakes. For the Anglo-Saxon notion of the German Christmas is drawn from those child hood hours spent over Hans Andersen and Grimm, and the sight of a Christ mas tree brings to mind the wood-cut ter tramping home through the snow laden forest, trailing behind him the fir tree for his family Christmas cel ebration, while, in the towns, the black quadrangle of the venerable market place is picked out in lights blazing on the trees in the windows of the gabled houses. Fifty years ago, before the young German giant had awakened from the sleep of centuries, this idea of the peaceful German Christmas was cor- rect, the Berlin correspondent of the New York Evening Post says, nut if one of the burghers of old Berlin, re turning from making his Christmas purchases on Christmas eve, were to be transplanted into the roaring hub of empire which his haupstadt has become in the year of grace, 1909, the good man would probably expire on the spot. Fifty years ago, when Berlin was a dirty, unpretentious, provincial town, with ill-lighted, ill-paved streets, with a population renowned even in those days for its surly manners and un couthness. and with the iron hand of militarism unchecked over it all, the Christmas festival was the tranquil celebration of which one has read. In the Lustgarten, before the castle, a Christmas fair was annually estab lished, which the king and royal fam ily used to visit to buy jumping jacks and gingerbread for the palace Christ mas trees, like any other German family. The Lustgarten fair has passed away, the king of Prussia has become German emperor, Berlin has developed into a fair and beautiful city, and all that remains of thl> Christmas of once upon a time is the spirit—indeed, a precious inheritance, that still holds the branches of the myriads of Christmas trees which rich and poor alike set up in their houses on the eve of the feast. Christmas Booms Trade. "Christmas booms trades of all kinds," said a statistician of New York. "It is, on the whole, a bless ing. "Take groceries and fruit. A big grocer tells me that where ordinarily he sends out 100 tons of groceries a day at Christmas time he sends out 130 tons. And of oranges, he sells a million a week in December aa against 500,000 a week at other timesi. "Turkeys go from 6,000 to 14,00,' in this firm's output, nutmegs frot/S five to 18 tons, raisins from 2,000 id 9,000 boxes and cigars from 1,000 to 3,000 boxes. "Wines and spirits, which are pop ular Christmas gifts, sell 50 per cent, better than in any other month. I know a man who sold $225,000 worth of whisky last December as against an average of $125,000 for the other months of the year." A Way We Have at Christmas. She looked at the little man archly. "Hubby," she said, "do you know you are beginning to grow rather handsome?" "It's a way I have,"he answered, "as Christmas draws near." —New Or leans Times-Democrat. GAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER i 6, 1909. !□□□□□□□□□□□□□□! yiil Alibi Santa By Olivia Barton Strohm !□□□□□□□□□□□□□□! Copyright, 1900, by W. A. Patterson At a clearing of the forest stood MacGregor's store. It was'isometimes called "The Crossing," but as the branch had long been impassable be cause ,of quicksands, these l&eral mountain folk had come to crtll it only "The'Store/'* Here Jlie mail.was brought, from the railroad twice a week by carrier. But it sometimes chanced that somebody had an er rand in town, and would "fetch" the letters with him. j This was just what happened the eve before Christmas. MacGregor him self, went for the mail—and a goodly lot of it there was, too. Several post al cards, at least a dozen letters, and as many other parcels. lie alighted from the wagon, hitched the mules outside, and hur ried to the door which his daughter held open for him. "My, Pappy, what a lot of letters! Any for me?" Her father put them on the grocery counter, and, going back to the wa gon, returned with a package of pep permint candy—sticks of red and white like small barber poles. These he put in a glass jar, then noticed the girl. "Hello, Mamie, what's in that there writin?" "Nothin'," was the terse response, and Mamie slipped the letter in her belt. The man crossed to her with the swagger of conscious weakness. "Look'e here, Maine, if it's from that pie-faced teacher down thar at the Gap, it'll he the worst fer you and him, too. Thar's lots of us ready to take Bud Johnson's part." Her face flushed to the color of her Turkey red calico. "I'll never marry Bud Johnson so long as I'm alive! Shame on you, Pappy! It's all on ac count of that 20-acre lot. It's for sale; you are crazy for it, and you want me to marry Bud because he's promised to buy tiie lot if you make me marry him. Promise! he has promised every thing—from lhat land to a collar for Pepper's neck!" The tiny black dog snoozing under the counter heard his name and crept to her feet; she stooped and patted him. Her father paused in the act of pil ing the good apples on top of the barrel. "I know; it's all on account of that teacher man. And what's he done? Tried to get the mountain folks to send our youngsters to him to be larned how to work. Thunderation! Can't we larn ye that ourselves? If he'd give ye book-larnin', it wouldn't be so bad, but —" "That's foolishness, Pappy; there's a lot of good in this new kind of study ing that they call 'manual training.' It's just because you haven't been hearing it all your bora lives that you object. Why, you won't hear to any thing that isn't as old as the moun tains themselves!" Pepper dropped from her arms as she towered over her father. "How can we grow? How can we amount to a row of beans if you keep us in the same old rut? Only to-day 1 heard you tell Bill Dawson that you were sorry we were having such good weather. 'lt don't seem natural for Christmas,' you said, 'it don't seem like old times.' Old fiddlesticks! Just because the nasty wet fog is what we're used to this tinm of year, you don't want the sun to shine. Looks like you don't want the Lord to improve on his own weather!" A customer came in and got a nick el's worth of candy for his baby's Christmas stocking. "I hear you all air goin' to hev a celebration to-night; I'll be along and fetch the young uns," he said. "Who's goin' to play Santa Claus?" MacGregor looked at his daughter. "Dunno; Mame's fixed up a rig and says she'll find some un to wear it; some un to play Old Nick and give the things off the tree." AM this while Mamie was slyly re reading the letter. "Your father will not permit me tog 6 to you, sweetheart: but rail you come to me? By the pollard willow, at twilight to-night?" Mamie glanced qut of doors; the shadow of Mason's, bluff was already empurpling the valley; it would soon be dusk. She dived behind the counter, took out a suit of red flannel trimmed in white cotton, a peaked cap and mask with long, white beard attached. With this costunie ~wrapped in a bundle she was waylaid at the by her fatlyT. "AVhar ye goin'?" he demanded, sus piqiouisly.; j - t % ) i "To iind on'fc of the neighbor boys to play Santa Claus; then I'm coming back to fix the tree," and snatching a shawl from the forkedsJimb of a plhe which served as hat-rack, she slipped out. Tho. air was fresh and frosty; al ready there was promise of the dark. "At twilight," his note, had said, and she started off toward the bridge at the Gap. Kace to the ladies and back to the wall; Take a chaw o.' terbackur and balance all. The rafters of the cabin shook with the ehufliing feet, tho laughter of the dancers, the calls of the fiddler and the uncertain strains of "Old Dan Tucker." The fireplace smoked just enough to wrap the ceiling in picturesque Christmas swaddling clothes. Coal oil lamps fitfully illuminated the tree at the far end of the big room. There was a sudden commotion at its base, as without warning Santa Claus stood on a tar-barrel, holding aloft his bundle. "Promenade all; seats," roared the fiddler, and the dancers and the chil dren gathered around the tree —but not too close, for Mamie, as mistress of ceremonies, waved them away from the magic circle. As he, in a thin, disguised voice, called out the names, the owner would step up and claim the parcel. "Who is he?" one man asked, but MacGregor nudged the speaker. "Hush; it's one of the Jimson boys, most like; don't matter; we want to fool the youngsters and they think it's Old Nick himself.',' "Malcolm MacGregor." Now, it was not often that Mamie's father had heard himself thus ceremo niously addressed, and the canny Scot blood leaped in veins he thought long dead to pride. Somebody said: "Well, Mac, I reckon that's you," and he shuffled up to the tree and took the slip of paper Santa Clans proffered. It was a sworn promise to buy the 20-acre lot adjoin ing MacGregor's place, adding that the mysterious donor had stopped by the owner's farm and taken an option on it in favor of Malcolm MacGregor! Below the business form were the written words: "The one and only consideration therefor, to be the hand of his daughter, Mary, to be mine, to have and to hold from this day forth." MacGregor tottered to a chair, where he sat gazing at the precious paper. In the hubbub nobody noticed him; the children lingered about Santa Claus, sniffing at his empty bag, longing to touch the hem of his robe. He waved them away, signifying to Malcolm to follow him out of doors. Here, at the edge of the clearing, he awaited the man and his daughter. When they came he said, still in the disguised voice:"May I hope, Mr. Mac- Gregor, that you will accede to the plan—?" "Put her thar, Bud," aud Mac Gregor grasped his hand. But he reeled and leaned against a blasted tree for support when Santa Claus, throwing off the cap, revealed the smooth-shaven, square-jawed face of the teacher at Rabun's Gap. "Thank you, Mr. MacGregor," and the teacher moved to Mary's side. Her father rallied to swear and say: "But I thought—" "You thought you were swapping your daughter for a 20-acre lot, —and you were not mistaken; the only mis take is in the identity of the party, and that will scarcely matter. Or, perhaps, you prefer to let your friends know that —" But nobody ever did know, and the identity of Santa Claus was so well kept that to this day the children be lieve that lie hid in a cave, and the spring freshet rushed in and drowned him. Anyway, he has never coia<» back. Mourning Millinery By JULIA BOTTOMLEY. TWO lovely examples of mourning hats are pictured here made of the two materials most favored for mourning wear, crape and silk grenadine. The hat of English crape, shown in Fig. I, is a perfect example of the millin er's art using this exquisite material as a means of expression. The en tire hat is covered with crape, the brim made of narrow parallel folds. The crown has wide folds for its covering also a drapery of crape with a large buckle of dull jet, serve as a mounting for the pompon of down feathers?and aigrette mounted at the left side. In shape, this hat is graceful and of a kind that will not soon be'out' of style. Such shapes should be selected for mourning, as good mourning fabrics are very durable and will outlast the accepted periods of mourning,, if well selected. English crape should be chosen, as it is manufactured "to ftithfetand moisture which is ruinous to crapes not protected against it. In this particular fabric, the English excel all other manufacturers and the great modistes who specially design mourning use this crape. It is the most beautiful of the fabrics used for mourning. Silk grenadine is equally popular, although not universally recognized ae first mourning. There is much latitude in the selection of fabrics, however, and many persons prefer grenadine to any other. The hat and veil shown in Pig. 2 are of this beautiful fabric. It is also of English manufacture, although the English send to various parts of the world —including America —for the materials necessary to make and dye both crape and grenadine. Thlg mate rial is manufactured waterproof. This is very necessary in order that the rain or snow may not spot the grenadine. One can easily test the material by immersing it in water. If properly made the dye will not run and the fabric will remain unchanged. Crape should be subjected to the same test. The crimp is not affected by water and its color remains unchanged. VISITING DRESS. This elegant dress is carried out in champagne suede cloth, and is a iit ting princess, tucked und,er the arms. A band of braided cloth trims the low er edge of princess where the mate rial is slightly draped, below this the skirt part is plaited, the plaits being stitched down a few inches. A hand some braiding design surrounds the yoke of tucked silk, which is also trimmed with braid and small buttons. The sleeve is long, tight-Iltting, and trimmed to match. Hat of black beaver, trimmed with a feather mount. Materials required: 6% yards cloth 48 inches wide, 4 dozen yards braid. % yard tucked silk. Twenty-Inch Rof.e at Pearls. The lasnion in length icr a string of pearls has changed. K was once 14 inches, then 16; now tht correct string mi'st measure 20 inches. NOW THE RGBIN HOOD HAT Jtyle That Divides Favor with What Is Known as the Prairie, of Felt and Suede. Millinery is one of the most impor tant features in the toilette of the woman who wishes to be well dressed, and to-day the cult of the plain hat Is as carefully considered as the elabo rate, the subject being as inexhaustible as the budget Itself. The craze for beaver still continues, but it is safe to predict that as the winter ap proaches black will lead the van, C*orned with cinnamon and royal blue ostrich plumes for visiting and velvet for morning wear. The Robin Hood hat is the latest shape to make its de but carried out in this charming ma terial. As will be remembered, the hat worr. by the famous outlaw of this name was turned up on one side, had ratbwr a high crown, and was trimmed with two long quill-like feathers. The smart mondaine, although retaining shape, has substituted a rosette of thisel and a tuft of breast plumage | for the feathers. For traveling it will divide honors with the prairie hat, which is fashioned of felt and relieved with a band of suede of a contrasting shade. —From the Tatler. 0 A Golden Feather. It can be made of an old quill from which the battered feathers have been stripped. Gold lece is sewn as a scant ruffle on each side, the end being slightly pointed. You have no idea how effective this is on a fur turban. From this idea a departure into the realms of silver, bronze or jeweled lace can be made, j and at little cost. This quill, with a band of braid or lace to match, will furnish sufficient trimming for a velvet or fur toque. Shadow Lace. This is new, and because of its un -1 obtrusive pattern can be used in great | quantities without fear of overdecora ( tion. The pattern is woven in such a way [ that an uncertain shadowy effect ia produced. It is especially lovely in ; black and cream. The black shadow lace is used over black net and a ! white satin underslip. The cream ia effective over pale tints in evening, gowns. Gobelin Green Again. The hats of this winter will again 112 show that entrancing shade of greeD ' known as gobelin. It will be used ; in thick, short plumes and thick long, j ones, but not in ribbons or moire. 21