S LW T J -V m mm mm MmXi 1 I j i J in i ii i n i i mi Ji i i i i 1 t r il cm y Aii 3f lpS3tfJ i Vfkt3MadIC pjr3mft sHANTmea rhyme of HENEVER possible I pre urmstrnas Smd me a lbvial Andthough it is filled vith I - laudhter j Let it be pure and strong Sihd of the hearts brimmed over with the story of the day Of the echo of childish voices That will notdieaway Of the blare of thetasseled budie And the timeless clatter and oeat Of the drum that throbs to muster Squadrons of scampering feet ButOJetyour voice tall fainter Till blent with a minor tone ftra temper your song with the beauty Of the pity Christ hath shown Andsind one verse for the voiceless Andyet ere the song be done A verse for the ears that hear not And a verse for the sidhtless one For thoughit belime fbrsihging A merry Christmas See Let a low sweetvoice ofpatnos Hun through the melody JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY MISS DUPREES HOLIDAY JOY She Recalls One Memorable Christ- nrtas Performance in the City of New Orleans VESBESm fer spending Christmas with my family out on Long Island and unless my engagements take me too far away I always make it a point to be with them on that day There are times however in this profession when the wish must take second place to necessity and from the viewpoint of actual novelty I sup pose my most interesting Christmas was the one I spent in the southland Our routing took us into New Orleans at Christmas and to me who had al ways up to that time spent the day in the colder north the novelty of seeing trees in leaf and flowers blooming was as pleasing as it was unusual On Christmas afternoon when oth ers were home enjoying the big dinner with the family I was getting ready for a special holiday matinee I was not pleased with myself or with a pro fession that demanded of its members that they labor on Christmas day above all others and it was not with a particularly light heart that I dressed for my part But when the curtain went up on the first act and I made my entrance the welcome I received compensated for the disappointment I felt It was a special matinee arranged for the poor children of the poorest quarter of New Orleans and the en joyment of those childish auditors soon melted the disappoinment out of my heart After the matinee I had arranged with my manager that I would receive the little folks on the stage and the wise man in his knowledge of childish hearts sent out a hurry order for candy and other things that make Christmas a day of cheer to kiddies At the conclusion of the last act the stage was cleared and I held the most unusual reception that I ever experi enced Clean as pins but with their little bodies clothed in many cases in gar ments ragged and frayed they came up pa the stage were introduced and sent away after a handshake each with a box of candy -9 I have spent many other delightful and out-of-the-ordinary Christmases on the road but none that afforded me more real rarefaction than the one In New Orleans AIINNIE DUPREE i MISS GEORGES CHRISTMAS Happy Memory of a Season When She Did Not Write One Glad Holiday Story mm rT f Jiop H my happiest Christmas I did not then realize it but I recall it now with a ra diant glow of delight It was my first season upon the stage I was only a novice one day soaring upon the buoyant wings of boundless ambition the next plunged in an abysmal depth of doubt despair and self depreciation It was a very tiny part that had fallen to me The compensation was hut mffioiont for the barest necessities The route bristled with all the horrors of the one night stands At midnight huddled miserably worn dejected and wretched in the waiting room of a country station listening in vain for the whistle of a belated train I confess to a sudden flood of tears What a mockery this Christmas day had been Even the chimes had sounded like the tolling of a funeral knell The cheerless rite comforts of a cheap hotel the unsa vory slatternly served travesty upon a Christmas dinner the cold chill of a shabby musty dressing room the added toil of an extra matinee for a mere handful of people and now the hungry wait for an accommodation train of dingy day coaches That was all Christmas had meant to me Iowa was blizzard swept Mails were delayed and tangled wires hung useless vin gathering snowdrifts No message of cheer no souvenir of remembrance had come to any of us Our hollow half hearted exchange of Christmas greeting had carried no conviction We were only strolling vagabonds outside the pale of sym pathy debarred from the domestic joys of living mere dispirited rain bow chasers with success ever mock ingly elusive But as I recall it all now I am sub merged by a great wave of passion ate longing regret for I know that such a Yuletide will never come to me again while I am upon the stage It was my happiest Christens be cause the first and only ozie since I began to tread the thorny and tor tuous path of my profession that I have not been called upon to write a Christmas story GRACE GEORGE Speak as you think be what you are pay your debts of all kinds Montfort li Wf mips Sf H nil 1 lHMn w IK KHrBI I HAT a lot of things can happen be tween July and Christmas Kate said it to herself and said it aloud SM5re8K8H startled her For she was alone Mother was off on an eleventh hour and unsatisfactory wrestle with the Christmas shopping problem Sis had chosen this gray afternoon to call on a chum home from college So Kate had opportunity to make herself as miserable as she desired It was now six weeks since Jack had called and six weeks is a long time when a man is 25 and a girl is 20 and each is very much interested in the other Just how much Kate was interested was something unsus pected Once Jack thought he knew but now all he knew was that he did not know When Jack suddenly disap peared from Kates perspective no one noticed his absence from the picture To most people Jack had seemed a part of Kates social background Some who had seen them together at Grand Traverse had advanced him to the middle distance But of the fore ground no one thought What happened in July was this The Wilsons were no more than firmly established in their cottage which looks over Grand Traverse bay than Jack appeared at the hotel which looks over them both That was not remarkable for all had been members of that particular summer colony for years Then the day of the picnic on the Point Jack and Kate found themselves sitting at the green fringe of the forest looking out over the blue expanse of the bay A hundred yards in front of them Mrs Wilson was gathering up the table cloth and things There was a little sense of chill in the air a harbinger of autumn And there was a change in the atmosphere between the two The girls lips were tremulous The man was agitated and strangely tender and brutal in his speech It will not interest you he said but I am going down to morrow But why so tragic We will be back in town in a week ourselves and yet I do not feel so horribly blue about it Well things down there are dif ferent Yes they are different but not un pleasant when you first get back to them I shall miss the canna in front of your hotel but I have no doubt the fall millinery on State street will be quite as gorgeo You are clever and like most clever people a little hearties You know how things are different down there The people are diffez sat wh we are different ourselves And it is just the difference of which you speak the difference between these flowers and flowers of silk and satin between those lilies out there and lily stems of wire and paper You are a little unkind Jack she said gently 1 The soft reproof more suggestive of tears than anger brought the story to his very lips He wondered how he should tell it Then an old schoolboy trick came back to him He brought out his penknife Beside them was a little spruce and in the soft flaky bark he carved a heart Within its lines he dug deeply the initials of two people The girl caught her breath anti blushed a little which are the proper and cus tomary things for a girl to do at such a time Then he told her what was in his mind It left her a little panic stricken and she took the refuge her sisters al ways have taken she asked him to wait for his answer In such a case there is but one thing for the man to do and that is to wait until to morrow But when a man is terribly in earnest he takes people seriously When I see this carving of yours again then we will talk about this Jack if you still think this way She thought she was putting him on a most proper probation It was only a womans reluctance to give up her freedom But he took her at her word Next day he went away Back In town again at first he saw her often His restraint she imagined was resentment In November a month of storms arid dreary skies they quarreled That was six weeks ago All that six weeks he pondered the matter by lonely fires and over break fasts late and bad Then he resolved to end the suspense and still keep his word One day a young man whom the na tives were satisfied was most cer tainly insane stepped off the train into a snowdrift He wanted a team a guide a shovel and an ax As he had money and determination he got them This crazy young man drove four miles and waded through two more Miilli W limW wl I III B J f wwMlM Rang the Door Bell Violently On the Point now bleak with winter he stopped by a tiny spruce protruding from the snow and began digging as furiously as if he were hunting for buried treasure A half dozen little trees he uncov ered At last with a boyish laugh he laid the ax at the foot of one until the chips flew That night the crazy man who had come 300 miles for a Christmas tree started homeward again Christmas eve the man and the Christmas tree mounted the steps of the Wilson resi dence and rang the door bell violently Well what else could she do That night they went out into the Christmas crowds together and bought the tin sel for the first Christmas trea Kate had had in years and the very best Copyright 150S by Wright A Patterson jlww rpr IMstaas Sweett WORSHIP AT CROSS OF ICE Scattered Christian Tribes in Turkey Celebrate Christmas with Im pressive Ceremonies MM OHAMMEDISM is the pre vailing religion in Turkey and for that reason only the few scattered Christian tribes observe the birthday of Christ in aay manner The Mo hammedan Turks have but two holi days in the entire year those being Car Bon Biram the day of forgive ness which is the Mohammedan New Year and Bairam the anniversary of the date when Mohammed gave to his people his scripture The Fri day of the Christian is the Sabbath of the Mohammedan and is observed by him in the same manner as Sunday with the Christians The Christian Turks who include the Bulgarians Servians Monte negrins and other smaller tribes ob serve Christmas with impressive re ligious ceremonies- s Three days before Christmas the Bladego appoints a delegation of 100 men form each congregation who go to the river and hew out immense cakes of ice after which they con struct a huge pyramid near by A great cross measuring about 40 by 6 feet and cut from the bed of ice is set up against the pyramid and the nlnpp of worship for Christmas day is completed Early on Christmas morning all the people march to the pyramid where the initial exercises are conducted by th Bladego A small crucifix used by him in the exer cises is the prize of the younger men of the tribe who dive into the ice cold water after it as the Bladego throws it in Many are drowned annually in this practice but they all consider themselves fortunate to die while on such a mission From the pyramid the procession marches to the home of the priest where bread is blessed and broken by the Bladego and all present partake of the food Keep ever in the path of duty but tail not to climb the steep of nedge Newton Jam lPlk j W WS Mi IN THE REALM OF THE CZAR Russians Look Upon Christmas as the Most Sacred and Most Celebrated Holiday HRISTMAS is the most sa cred and most celebrated holiday in Russia Contrary to the custom in nearly all other countries Christmas there always comes on Sunday and a continuous celebration is held until midnight on January 2 The Russian believes in devout re ligious services In honor of the birth of Christ and each day during the season each family including all Its members attends church at least once On Christmas morning the most important services take place Each congregation marches solemnly to the nearest river which Is always frozen over the ice being sometimes as much as three feet thick After a large hole has been chopped in the ice the priest dips his cross in the water and prayers are pronounced after which the priest holds baptismal exercises Having been blessed by the priest the water is considered to be holy and as fast as the people can file by the hole in the ice bottles of all sizes and descriptions are filled with the water This water is prized the most ly of anything in the home and bottles of it are sometimes found a century or more old Some fanatics secure large quantities of it and bathe in it at regular intervals during the year There is one custom which many Americans would cherish in their own Christmas celebration and especially the young people It is that of kissing for on Christmas day every one steals a kiss from whomsoever he meets In some cases and among the older peo ple the hearty handshake is much used but the younger element clings closely to the old style Santa Claus is unknown to Russian children but the Babushka an old woman witch carrying a long stick and attired in the usual witch cos tume visits the homes In every vil lage and city and distributes greetings and then comes at night and leaves the gifts for both old and young - f I i - i Ik rA T m VsS 1 V Ih ivi il