It’s lots of fun, sincerely done—we mean our holi- day wishes for you, of course! Richard H. Disque A purr-fect Christmas Day to you and many, many joy- ful and merry days ahead . these are the Yule ‘ witha we: send to you. Joe's Tn S Shop Main Street Dallas We're ringing in this day by saying to dll of our fri en ds “A most Merry Christmas to you.” Kuehn's Drug Store “The Rexall Store” Main Street Dallas May the noble teachings fill this Christmas and all your others: with true peace and . genuine well-being. FUNERAL SERVICE Telephone 424-R-13 Like the carolers, we sing out our Yu'etide wishes for you, heartily and with glad cheer. Kunkle Garage “The Home of the Thrifty Austin” Our greeting to you and yours glitters with best wishes for the merriest of Yule festivities. Ray Chappell’s Service Station Luzerne-Dallas Highway Phone 9067-R-T We’re wishing you a merry Christmas and hoping your days be as free of trouble as this snow is of tracks. Harold K. Ash Plumbing - Heating - Bottled Gas Phone 409-R-7 SSIES Shavertown, Pa. May each Christmas in your life stand above last year’s and good A blessed Yule to in happiness cheer. all of our friends. Donahue’s Restaurant DANIEL E. MEEKER, owner Kunkle, Pa Telephone Dallas 458-R-13 The sweetest thing on Christmas Day is not the candy stick, but the greet- ing true friends send. Merry Christmas to you. Purcell Oil Service THE TEXACO STATION Main Highway = Phone 9001-R-16 Trucksville We're popping up to give you this greeting . . . a sin- cere wish that you enjoy a most pleasant a n d merry Christmas. Willie's CONFECTIONERY STORE Fernbrook Corners Fernbrook We're hurrying with Santa to tell you of our greetings to all our friends. We're saying, “A very Merry Christmas to you.” How Christmas Cards Started (Continued from Page One) cards? Who were the people most responsible for founding a custom that brings infinite happiness into every American home? The first Christmas card, 1 learned, was discovered by, and is now on display in, the British Mu- seum, Holiday celebrations of the early Victorian period were en- graved into four scenes. In the upper-right corner, dancers. doing the Roger de Coverly suggest that Victorian England offered a much gayer life than has since been re- ported. : Elsewhere on the first Christmas card are scenes of a Punch and Judy show, top-hatted ice skaters, and a happy dinner party waiting for—you guessed it—plum pudding! The title, destined to become the = most popular Yuletide greeting ever composed, was -hand-lettered—“A Merry Christmas & A Happy New Year To You.” Commercially, this carefully ‘en- graved card was a failure. Young William Egley had neglected to color it—the one feature that has been shared by nearly every suc- cessful Christmas card since then. Nevertheless, Egley’s error set the stage for the cheerful Yuletide = season that we celebrate today. Charles Dickens, already in a lover’s quarrel with the straight- laced Victorian attitude, wrote the beloved “A Cchistmas Carol” in 1843, giving the Spirit of Scrooge its death-blow. In the next few years, artists and publishers intensified their ef- forts, and Christmas cards went through an. experimental or face- lifting period. Then, in 1866, Messrs. Marcus Ward and Co. of Belfast, Ireland, were commissioned by an English !firm to lithograph a set of four designs by the artist, C. H. Bennett. Reproductions from this set, it seems, were the fore- runners of the first ‘‘popular’” Christmas cards. : Standards for Christmas cards published by Marcus Ward and Co. ; were. extremely high. For years this firm monopolized most of the better-class trade. The Ward cards = were conventional, almost always, and the finished product embodied gala Christmas scenes, floral de- vices, and beautiful hand lettering. Before the 1860’s—the same era which saw bustles come into fash- ion—had passed, the exchange of greeting cards colorful Yuletide was one ‘of England's most cherished ‘customs. As might be ex- pected ‘between two countries whose cultural ties are so closely - g allied, Christmas cards soon mi- grated to America, Here, the story of their origin parallels the career of Louis Prang, a Hthograsher of many rare talents. 2 On April 6, 1850, Prang Brrived of in New York City, a political exile = from his native Germany, and in poor repair both physically and fi- nancially. In a brief 25 years, he was established in Boston as.one of our most important lithogra- phers, had published the first American Christmas could say of his career: “It was in 1865 that I inaugur- ated the chromo. I followed this up with the chromo business card in 1873, and with the artistic Christ- mas card in 1874-5, all of which publications made the tour around the world, and set more lithogra- phic presses to work all over Europe and America than any hE other special line of publications ever did before or after.” n The ‘‘chromos” Prang referred to ° were the product of a printing pro- Le cess, chromo-lithography, that he helped to perfect. Their vast range of colors and shades, simulating the woven texture of an artist's canvass, received popular and pro- fessional acclaim the world over. Today, Prang’s ‘‘chromos’ luable collector’s items. In 1880, Prang initiated his an- ne nual prize awards for the best Christmas card design by a free- lance artist. These contests, unique ol at that time, were instrumental i improving the artistic foundation 7 of Christmas card designs, and in attracting national attention to the : new-born Yuletide custom. 0 Christmas cards from galley 1 .. Ten years later, with an uncon- i tested claim to the title “Father ! of the American Christmas card”, Louis Prang abruptly discontinued card, and are. .va-.... publishing Christmas cards. Cheaper reproductive processes had been developed, and cheap novelty cards from Europe were flooding Bert and Co. Cutrate Store MAIN STREET C. Wayne Gordon Your Farm Bureau Agent Main Highway Phone 557 Shavertown MAIN STREET - DALLAS A few lines tell our story. The most merry of Christ- mases to you. PHONE 9085-R-7 Here’s a hope that the joy in your life grows as rap- idly as a snowball rolling XR I I SPL I RS RE REVERE NS TE To all, on this glorious day, whether you are near or far, we wish the most sin- cere greetings for a most the country. Prang decided to with- - draw from the field, rather than risk bankruptcy with his ‘more ex pensive ‘“chromos.” The modern era of - Christians hy cards dates from 1900-1910, when a number of new publishing firms were first established. But the big boom came immediately after World War I. At that time, public fancy was completely won over by the symbolic designs—Christmas trees, holly wreaths, gleaming can- dles, and church bells—which are as popular today as they were then. : down a snow-covered hill. = fins In war peace, however, Bs : wonderful Chr stmas. ¥ Christmas ini with some r variation of Clement Moore's mortal poem, “A Visit ‘From i Nicholas,” have always been pop- ular. One of the 1951 Christmas cards, for example, offers this friendly verse: i This greeting at Christmas Is sent to your house With good wishes for everyone . Even the mouse! y Paul Shaver Electrical Work of All Kinds Phone Dallas 63 “Phil” Cheney's Service Station In The Triangle Youngblood's Groceries Main Road, Dallas Dallas Phone Dallas 241-R-3 Penna.