25215.7???" Ornamenf making [.14 Citing: jmlualrg " _ Those colored glass ornaments‘ that we hang on our Christmas trees used to come from Germany, Czechoslovakia and Poland. A small number were made in Japan. When the war cut ofl these supplies, American glass manufacturers, who thad never bothered \vith these prod- ucts before, turned part o! their la- cilities over to making the pretty iHQWBEWI. Mechanical methods were noon developed that could blow as many ornaments in an hour as a European glassblower could make in a month. Thus modern efficien- icy may doom this picturesque little industry, carried on in the moun- tainous towns oi eastern Europe. Ornament making is a typical "cottage industry" in the little vil~ lages that cling to the steep moun- ‘tainsiries. Families specialize in cer- tain shapes and designs, patterns that may date back for hundreds oi I ears unchanged. The lather, using a bunsan burner, carefully blows ithe thin glass tubing to the de- sired shape, with the aid of an iron Ymold. His son, acting as molrl boy, removes the hot ornament to a ‘cooling table. Next the mother sil» were Q10 infield, and finally the aughter applies paint and perhaps decorative designs. Christmas Rose Has Real Significance Legend tells us that a young shep- lherd girl was weeping bitterly as she watched the Wise Men on their take gifts to the Christ Child. ,way to i {An angel appeared, and after as- zcertaining why the young girl was -crying. she waved her wand, and instantly the ground was carpeted with glittering white Christmas roses. The young girl quickly gath- ered these blooms. When she pre- sented her gilt, the Christ Child smiled, and as his fingers touched '~the white flowers the petals became ii t l . . , l, This custom originated with the,‘ utch. They used their wooden‘ hoes instead of stockings. ' When the Dutch come to New Am- terdam, this custom came with them—the wooden shoes being grad- ually replaced by stockings made tor ‘the occasion out ot net-like materi- ls. As nearly every home had a‘ ‘ eplaoe the usual place to hang the, hocking! was ever the fireplace. flTreating Trees To iPreserve Needles , ' Dropping needles or leaves o! ristmas trees, which strip the trees o1 color and litter the door, llong have been a Yuletide bane. Therefore, the discovery oi the ‘New York State College of Forestry? lthat waterglass spray will preventl the spruce leaves trom iallingl comes as welcome new! to family} and housewife alike. Besides preserving the !ollage,. lthe waterglass spray adds to the idecorative efiect o! the spruce by ‘leaving a slight silver sheen to the ‘green o! the needle-like leaves. The waterglass also has been found to be a good fire retardant. The college found that the shed- ding o! spruce leaves also can be retarded by placing the base o! the tree in a bucket of moist earth, peat moss or water. Users have re- ported the success of this treat- ngn‘ . . Our Most Famous ‘Ch ristmas Tree: Most famous o! the nation's fihfstmaa trees are growing on the ceded. rolling acres of the Roose- _ elt estate at Hyde Park, N. Y. De? veloped as a result o! hobby which occupied much of the late Pres» lFranklin D. Roosevelt's spare time, lthe groves of Yule trees now are ‘scattered on odd patches and par-f eels o! land throughout the estatefi; , The trees, about 270,000 in num-j ber, are principally of Norway gpmct, white spruce end Douglas fir, with a few balsam: also in- 'cludcd. Although the tree growing was e ‘hobby with the late president, he insisted that the project pay its own way. Consequently about 2,000 to 3,000 trees are marketed every Christmas season. Quiz-Pics Solution ANSWERS 2. Address; (i. Royal Air Force; 4, Organ; 5. Light- lhlP; 6. Sherwood». The initial lcllers of ihcsc words make the 05rd; Carols. l. Cricket; 0 m mm m Rrdlkl’: and I In my cop. llod settled _ ' a long winter! no , when out on the lawn l rose suck a clatter, I sprang‘ from my bod our brains for ¢ 1'0 m wkal was the molten Away to the window I flew like a flash» Tore open the Shutter! and throw up the soils Buto allelic-lure slei “and elehl llnv rein O 0|‘: With o lilllc old d_l'l\l¢f so lively and QUICK» I knew ‘m a moment i mu$+ h¢ Sluflick» More rapid than eagles his couriers may lle wnistled and shouted m4 ooutl them-by name'- ‘llowmosherlnowmancerlsew. Prone ¢Glll¢9 9 ' nowalixenl l emban- . u: oer and Btu zen!“ “N” ‘"18 hi’ w +t..::..+t€?.‘;‘i.=' 0 when‘ away; out" g. . Mon/leave“ the wlld hurricane fly, wool with on ob- HQY Fl Willscrltlgflz? ll {ll I o: m6 and 5t lc I05 ‘l’ dlldlllcnilld heard onhe mo, l” Q°o ‘ltylllkllll I "s."aslz'aat'crz"r firm: GUARDIAN, CHARLQTTETOWN ‘Cm: the nlqhl before Christmas. when oll through the house Not o creature was stirring, not even o mouse: The stockings were lumq by llle chimney will: core. In hopes that SlzNlchoIos soon would be there; - The children were milled all snuq in their beds, While visions of suqonplums danced llwuqh their beads. The Holy Thorn woods nf rested in the crucifixion, Joseph qulred thc Oi Glastonbury In honor of the llnwlhnrn, whirl‘ lcgenrlurily shielded (Jlirist while lu- lit-lore Afllllillllilthl chose n thorn stuff when hr: alnrl- ed on his long journey to Britain shortly nflcr the death of Christ. Arriving at last ul. his new home in Glastonbury, Joseph stuck his walking slick Into llu- ground: ilu staff began to grow and soon iu- upurliciputt- in lhv usuul m».- :\". habit u! producingl lloucrs vault Christmas lit-c hury, published in 12"."; l or it. sprung Arimnlluirufs dry stuff. l final, lml lu-yulul nli sprnut: llfl mirurltliiilsl} Flilll rulvtular in 1751i. December 2.") nc\v style the Holy Turn would bloo whnn ll did not, many rofu OI Christmas. The evil oi The first lilcr:ir_\' Incnlinn of the lliorn is r-onininctl in ll~ lruWrl li--'~ lory and Antiquities of Glaston- n ll".\.~ work, Mr. l-Jyston slates: "Wheth- from Si. Joseph cannot ilispule \\'iu~n Brlluiiv nrlnpird llll‘ (irvgn- Zlllli) pi-r- sous nssomblvil nl Glnsionhitry on lo scc II in agreement with the new rnlcntlar, sml fa m chang- Stur of Belhlelicln The Star of Bethlehem has been the subject oi extensive research and discussion’. . Modern astronomers have con- sidered several natural phenome- non theories without attaching too much weight to any such hypo- thesis. SCQDLli-s regard the whole thing as mere invention. coloured with Oriental lmageryqdeslgned to hon- ing calendars xvus proven when the thorn blossomed on Jtiuuary b v Chrlsivnaa Evc- old style-and many ministers in the vicinity ol Glastonbury nppcused their con gregatlons hy announcing that Christmas would he observed ac cording to the old calendar. A culling of the Glastonbury thorn was brought to America Ill i900 and pantotl nom- Si. Alban'.'. school in Washington, Di‘... hy the late Right Rev. Henry Gales Sat- lerlec. The cutting grow into a tree, blossoming for the first time in Iiecomber. 1918', since then, it has blossomed eru-h your :1‘. Christ- mas time nnd attracts thousands oi flfiilora annually. - star as the supernatural phenome- non which proclaimed the birth of Jesus. ‘The llrst chapter o! the gospel our Christ; and iaith accepts the, Idrewlnnglyllc o waster-gun; Downllscclum, eloscomewu_ llcwqsomsedallmfiac luolloadloluo t- ed f“ mo: O klsclolkes were all lo - wouu with ashes and gull a bundle o? my; he use rlunfow ms ma, And kc leoidd llk¢ d p¢ddl¢f just opening his peck. t His eyes lus d how llcy lwinklel lmples how merry! llisckceks were like roses. , his n e IIK¢ o cherry. Ills droll I Hlc mouth was drown up like a bow, Add the board on his chin wosas white a6 Tllcslu t. "if new 59M lllpll $ SIGN» e . And {he smokgllt emircl ms heocl like a wre l m... r¢ and o lillle round belly The) shook when he I like o bowl tull of lle woqcnut; and 911F113 e Iy. lump-v old elf- o vléhif V . And l? logo ’d when l sow tum m s lte or myself. A wlnk_ of l1 s and Soonmqr: °ltl¢h§0 k now I "e ‘fiat-in l ‘lint giro And tilled all then turned wllll o stock’: And laying his tir or lg: nose» And qlynugo nochugelne c mney kc ro llcoorouglo tussle my "".it‘tf""l‘t?,"tllt" tlncclownoea lli Bulllaeord klm liedroveoulo ‘mp;- 0911s! + eoldlo oll $526911 JFK ‘slit? lldd to clreocl. bul- gs: ‘V according to St. MRlMIGW ht-ginsz "The book of the gmc-ralinn oi‘ Jesus Christ. the son oi Dmlrl, the son of Abraham . . . ." And confirming Bethlehem as the city oi David, the angel ot Lllc Lord declared: ~ "For unto you is born this day. in the city oi David a Saviour which is CHRIST the Lorri.“ St. Luke 2:ll. Considering trafltlnn, which ac- cepts thag King Davids shield Iormed a. six-pointed star the Star of Bethlehem appropriately. " . . . stood over where the young Child was," Si. Matthew 31.9.- Whieh ls Which‘? Solution ANSWERS The correct pairs urc as Kollowa. ~l nntl l0 (ice hockey stick and skull-l; 2 mul ll (top and whip); ll nfitl l2 (i-rickvt Nllllllph and bRlI; 4 llllll 7 llPlllllS not and rncquell; ti sunl ll iriniutihtsmun and drnughtsbuurdl; 5 and d (dotlboard nnd dart). n USED AS GOOD LUCK CHARM Rings o! mistletoe were worn nruunri the neck in Sweden to p". vent sickness DECEMBER 2o. m; I Christmat Held _ Tuice Yearly l n children lnste a I " ante were allowed. to“ calla: D3?- femily homesite, the tiny 38m“, V‘ lage ofRodanthe, N. C., would game a metropolis overnight: ere: a place they celebrate 4W1 Christmases every year. ' o Santa Claus, his reindeer m? ~ paring over the sands o] jqom Carolina's outer banks, make, l-i first stop in Rodanthe durinffil“ annual world tour on the h1g5; w December 24. Hardly have the dren recovered from their ovcrsu ab’ a! candy and~wild duck whfl Santa returns in time im- no," Christmas," which for hundrels years Rodantheans have cclebrsim on January 5. This time, howetcr, Santa is accompanied by a mwac‘ Iing ogre, known as “Old Biieligl Who l-BkcS care oi’ llic had t‘ while Santa administers to lht _tnd_ The historical background M3015 Christmas" is uncertain. It nuii.‘ b‘; a throwback to the Gregorian when, dar or it may have stair-m: us‘; celebration of the T\vclfili Fight... when the wise men came to Bmhfe. hem bearing gifts for the Curie] chi1d~that somehow" got oil suited- ule a day. Elsewhere the "hi-club Night is celebrated on Jillllldly 6. But those celebrations are fm till. ferent from Rodauthcflc. "Old ting“. mas," winch only in recent wars has been supplemented by lilc ab. servance of December 25. ~ The poinsettia has no Christmas legend and its adoption as a symbol or decoration {or Christmas is o! recent origin. In Spain it is l-znown as the flor dc noche-buene, and is connected with the sentiment ol Christmas. lts beautiful flaming star is one ol the favorite flowers oi the Christina! season, and its use as an indoor decl .yoration is universal. ‘ | Ablrre viation, Xmas Of Greek Origin There has been much unlavo: able comment on the abbreviated form for Christmas that is commonly used. Many think it inappropriate and undignii-led to use the shortmedl form, Xmas. i The explanation o! its origin ill that the initial letter of the Greekl name for Christ is X and the coin-‘ cidence oi its cruiciiorm shape led to an early adoption oi this lcttcr as the flgure and symbol of Christ. X. is frequently found on walls of lhs catacombs. When the early Chris- tians wished to make a representa- lion o! the Trinity, they would place either a cross or an X beside the names oi the Father and the lloly. Ghost. From this came the short- ened form Xmas, instead o! CllflSV mas. Legends of [lolly Many belieis are connected with the Christmas holly: Legends relate that the Cl’0\\l| ol thorns was plaited from the ltilivn the vshile bcrrzcs turning red like drops of blood lllc er the cruciiixio-i. ll is said 1118' ' whoever brings the holly into the house first, either husband‘ or wife, is the on! who will rule in the ensuing year» ' For man)‘ .\L‘i§l'! the superstition persisted that lllll< ly was hateful to witches. ll Wu placed on doors end window! keep out evil spirits. Reduce Chrishnas Hazards With Car/r To avoid tragic Christmas ‘twi- dente in the home, the l<‘\re Pwl“ tion institute issues these PM“, tionary tips: t‘ -~Use a flame-prool cnmptmnilfj sprlay wreaths and other l>1l1° ""-‘°j rat one. --Uae materials marked IlfIIT-al prooi for tree trimmings and decorations if they l" °blamflhw -Inspect Christmas tree 112; S and repair irayed wires or 111° sockets. - l. h, -Nover leave Christina! 18 d burning unless someone is Kiwi’: __Nm." unwrap gifts of?" D‘ open tire or flickerm! liar?“ m‘ pose of pap,“- nnd qetdhergelm a ‘ ,mable. wrapping: imm l8 l ________________ . unvrzs armcNn-ru I" “RllSTLI-ZR ln Holstein it is bclicml lllerlé’: is not only a cure for n11 {Wu}, wounds. but that it Wl" mhl success in the chase “"5 “i,” strength" to the wrestler, it m»- toe il worn.