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the SPB.I.L OF CHRISTMAS,
1 f imc of year for the loving cup,
T 1 from hand to band
wh'-n th indf, of waxsai! ind revelry
arhoin g o'er the land
I ~ North, where th Acater the
And ith, where the r r!-Vi >ird sing«,
A wa; IT
y Cor no.- ingi
’T ( >f year for open hand,
And der he I t 111
IV h a r »f h.-* ■n lias -ft the skies
An<l the nmt •e 1. t h
The fl&ni leap* hi. re the h wa¬
t ey e* grow bright,
V >r a rr>< that nil may bear,
'Vas h irn** on tl ■ Christmas light.
Tin the time for th cordial word
And thw jrt e of the lif load,
For heather' wme to br T d P
,
* )ii th<- rou and stormy road,
’Ti* lime to bury t. ancient hat
And to make the quarrels up
No grudge Ua* roo a where the bloom
1 Christ m: inft <mp.
Ti* the ~ s ,f r for children ay,
And a - t row
l he fttor rr Z ;h hang in the c nook,
Ar.d ? reaming face*
And th dren turn and in sleep,
T Il'TJ 'O' e Will Ih* so gfl
For th iii ’er is n in this qu Old
earth
Like the mirth ( it mas Day.
’Ti» the time nf year for the iweet surprise
For the H ig we did not
Though straight f n the infinite love of
i
’Twoh corning to y< and nn
’Ti* the time for kin; m in
The sheen the Bethlehem star;
And for kiiPoliiij fain, with the age-long
train
Where the Babe and Mary are.
’Ti* the tiir d year for the loving,cup,
When the holt berries shine,
And with shout and mg of rua.iand maid,
'I lie cielar and fir we twin
A li! | mv the cup from the frozen North
To the South where th rohiu sings,
For a pulse of cheer to t,h* waning year
’i he Marry Christmas brings
—Mo nrr! K. Songster
THE DOCTOR’S GIFT.
A ( IIH IS I’M AS 8TOKY,
OTHER, r wish w
could have
and Santa Claus,
lots of nice things like
otliar peoph When
I was it,
\ It % Gooden’s had great to-day, piles of they pies
tl and cakes cooked,and
they have got a big turkey that they arc
Roing to roast, and the nn nice red
opplrs, and, oil! so many good things.
I u ish we could ever have things like
that.”
The mother laid down her sewing
with a sigh, and tears came into her eyes.
“I wish so, too, Bennie,” she said,
“and if it was possible, we would have
(hem. But we are poor folks, and poor
folks can’t, afford nice things, 1 am
sorry that l can’t give you more than 1
<1 You know 1 work hard all day
long and earn all I can, but people don’t
pay much for plain sewing, ami it takes
all the money l can get to buy food and
clothing, and hire wood chopped. Poor
little Sis bus to have medicine and the
doctor must be paid, and I’m a - i
won’t have money to pay for it ail ~ :ior
children, l feel sorry for you, and wish I
could earn more for your sake*,” and
poor Mrs. Benton buried her face in her
hands, and was a long time silent.
“Don’t, mother,” Bennie said, coining
and putting his arms about her neck.
“Don’t cry. You are the best mother
that ever was, and when I am. old enough
to work, I’ll earn money for you, and
then we’ll have nice things and grand
Christmases, and be as happy as can be.”
J u
1! \ m yggp
:w-: tv
~Ti ) T
*i
/ /i '
The mother pressed her boy to her
breast and blessed him, and for his sake
affected a cheerfulness she was far from
feeling. While the remained thus.
talking of what all Bennie was going to
do when he was older, the doct in
to Sis, the little lame girl, as was hi:
custom
“She is much better he said, after
his examination mild will In able to
walk again in a little while Then he
bustled out and was gone, for he was
kept very busy visiting his patients
Mrs. Benton and Bennie rejoiced at
the doctor s announcement, and they felt
that they had something to he thankful
for, if they were poor, for they had long
feared that 8is would always be •*
cripple
“It's a,great consolation to know that
little Sis will soon be well and strong
again the mother said.
It’s better than any Christmas pres
ent ” Bennie assented.
After Bennie was in bed asleep. Mrs
Benton sat till long in the night over ocr
sewing, and, as she stitched up the
tedious, tiresome- seams, tears rolled from
her eves down her cheeks.
It was a bitterly cold night, and a deep
snow lay on the ground, and as the shrill
north winds swept ruthlessly around the
house, rattling the loose doors mid Will
flows, the poor woman remembered that
the wood-pile was almost gone, and thqt
the larder was - K empty, and her
THE MONROE ADVERTISER. FORSYTH. GA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER ‘24,1889-EIGHT PAGES
sank within her. At last her task
w, done, and going t > the little bed in
the corner, she kiss ed the two un
conscioui sleepers, d with a heavy
heart r< ed to her own poor couch
Meanwhile Dr. Custer went ou his
rounds He was a gruff old man, but
t jieoplc all knew him and lov him
for he had a kind heart, and was always
ready to sympathize with the >r and
needy. II visited many patients that
night, and he stopped at many houses
where there were no patient for.he had
an object in view, and the cold night
winds could not deter him from carrying
it out.
1 he next morning Mrs. Ben* •n was up
early, for was the day o e Christ
Inns, and had a great SL of sewing
• o do for people who were going to the
Christmas ball down at the Cross Road!
When breakfast was over, she said
“After you feed the horse and the
cal ve«, Bennie, vou inu run over to Jer
ry Cobb's and see if he will haul us a
load of wood.”
Bennie hastened out to feed the stock,
and in a short time returned out of
breath with running and excitement.
“Oli! mother, mother,” he cried,
springing into the middle of ti Uk room,
“look out there in our woofl*‘a£ ™ raeu
and teams They'r going to haul wood
for us, for I heard *tie of em say so as
he passed the stable.”
l-J
*s|IS *ei lu i
And Bennie was right, for they had
come, a dozen farmers, with their teams,
and sleds, and axes, to chop and haul
wood for the Widow Benton, and when
at noon time they went home, the wbod
was piled high at her gate, and there was
]>'<mt.y to do her all the winter, In the
afternoon the men came with their axes
um , cut the , wood all up into . the , proper
“'iigths for burning, and poor Mrs. Ben
ton was so overcome with gratitude that
she cried Bqt. that was not ail.
Lat in the afternoon a farm-wagon
Irove up to the gate, loaded with flour,
si (i > l moat, :iu(l potatoes, and apple: -some
of those same red apples that Ben had
seen at Deacon Gooden’s—and a big bas¬
ket Ailed with Cake, find pies, ahd thit k
CHS. and one big turkey, all nicely
baked.
“Who has done all this,” Mrs. Benton
asked of Mrs. Gooden who came with the
wagon, and who had been busy giving
orders to the men about unloading.
“Will,” Mrs. Gooden said, “they’ssev
crul us lies lied a ban’ in it, but l reckon
Doctor Custer is mostly responsible fer it,
sense he rode about last night, putting
us up to it. Thct ere old doctor lies got
a monstrous big heart in ’im, if he is as
cross an’ crabbed as a bear. Don’t never
nobody want for nothin’ ef he knows of it,
an’ ef anybody is liable to be needy, lie
generally finds it out, lemmetell you It’s
a perfect caution the amount of money
thct. ole doctor hes given away, an’ a body
who sees . him the fust time ud never
’spent he’d give a hungry mortal a bite to
cat. But it’s like 1 tell the deacon some
times. You can’t tell what’s in a person's
heart by the way they talk. When lie
come to our house last night, an’ sed as
how he heard you an’ Ben a telkin' erbout
Christmas ail’ things, au’ a savin’ tliet you
was outen o’ wood an’ lied been havin’ a
power o’ sickness, au all that, I felt right
down ashamed that I never thought of it
afore, au’ so did ’Zekiel, I know, an’
when the doctor went on to say es how
we ort to help you a leetle over the rough
places, 1 wus determined to help him out
in his projict Twau't nothin' fer us to
do when they wus so many uv us into it
but all put together sort o’ docs some
good
“ I feel all the gratitude that anyone
■ould feel,” Mrs. Benton said, “but I
c au not find language to express it.”
Well, yer needn’t mind erbout thru
now. 1 reckon nobody don't waut no
thanks, au’ if you feel as if vou must
thank somebody, jest wait till vou see
l)i or Custer, an’ give ’em to hint I’m
ujouty glad the little one’s a gittin’ well
an'll be able to git. erbout.”
It's ,i great comfort to me, fer I had
despaired of her ever recovering.”
“1 know it must be. But I must be i
goin’, fer I sec Zekiel is ready to drive
an’ it’s gittin' late. I hope you’ll bi com
fort able, an’ cf you need any assistance,
1 hope you won’t be backward about
txin us, ter though we’re plain sort o
folks, an’ don’t make no pretenshuns u 1
hein extry good, we’re readv to len’ :
helpin’ hau’.”
When the door closed after Mrs
Gooden, the poor widow sank down
completely prostrated with joy. Her
pie isure was not so much on account of
the things received, though it was a great
boon, but because of the knowledge that
the people among whom she lived were
kind and generous All her life she had
lived in the citv. and it was little she
kucw of the open-hearted generosity of
the country people,
Bennie was wild with delight, and
danced about iu a state of ecstasy As
for poor little Sis, she felt that such a
time never did exist before, and, in her
great happiness, she”completely lost sigu
of the man^ long, weary months of
suffering and paiu that she had passed
through.
That night, as they sat around the
wide pen fireplace wherein the great
logs cracked and blazed, throwing out
warmth and light, t ey presented a pic
ture of perfect co ientment, and it is
doubtful if there was a happier family
anywhere on irth
Then there came the sound of footsteps
runehing the snow, and a moment later
the dot r entered. Although he affected
not to ic what had taken place, and
trG to retain bis gruff manner, Mrs.
Renton saw the smile of satistaetion that
ume to his face, and knew what was in
his heart
“Doctor. she said, “I cannot thank
you enough for what you have done
“Hey! What that? Come, come,
let's have no foolishness, he cried
“Here, take thi: That's the last
^prescription the child will need Good
evening,” and out he bustled
“More medicine mother Bennie
ask
•s, one more prescription and she
opened the paper to see. ‘ Bless mv
heart she cried if it ain’t his bill, all
jeceipted and marked paid.”
Yule-Log and Mistletoe.
The Yule-Log and the Mistletoe are
traditional garnishments, so to speak, of
the English, and largely of our own
Christmas liolidav From Scandinavians,
who in winter built immense fires ou the
hilltops in honor of the sun’s return, we
borrowed the yule-log. And it became
an English custom to preserve a bit of
one year’s yule-log to light the fires on
the great hearth at the following Christ¬
mas-tide, in tokeu of warmth and plenty
to abide in the household throughout the
year When the log was ready to be
brought in, the youngest child of the
family was seated upon it, and all the
rest assembled to witness its entrance,
drawn by the merry retainers, and to
prepare it for the lighting.
An English superstition is that the
bees sing in their hives between the 24th
and 25th of December, while mysterious
bells can be heard echoing underground.
From the Druids come our Christmas
decorations Of evergreen garlands and
the mistletoe The latter was sacred to
them, particularly that which grew upon
oak tree. It was considered medi¬
eiual, . , and , especially believed, , until ,.. , late .
a
^ ay, to be :i certain cure for epilepsy.
With great pomp,at the winter solstice,
the priests and people surrounded, the
oak upon which the sacred vine grew,
and the chief priest, in his white robes
ascended into the branches to ciit down
the twisted stems and waxen berries df
the blystic plant, with a golden knife.
There must have been steel in the yellow
blade, however, for the mistletoe bough
is tough. Then followed the slaying of
“two snow-white bullocks,” as one
chronicle has it, while another saith just
as positively, “two milk-white heifers.”
Then in both accounts arc given ghastiy
details of human sacrifice
But this is past, and to-day the mistle¬
toe remains to us a joyous harbinger of
merriment and harmless cheer.
It maketh spring in winter—
Our merry Christmas Day;
May it chase frost and snow
Forever far away.
The Christmas Carol.
Christmas carols are not by any meani
of recent origin, for they were used by
devout Christians long ago when every
country was ruled by brtfbarians and tlit
life of the people very primitive. As
early as the second century they were
sung and have been in vogue ever since.
The early Christinas carols were deeply
religious. They showed pious feelings
and sentiments, but in a few years de
veloped into wild bacchanalian songs
which the clergy promptly forbade to be
used The reaction which followed
caused the carols to be more religions
again, but all during the Dark Ages they
were decidedly frivolous in character.
in England under the Anglo-Saxon
Kings, they were very merry songs, but
occasionally grew to be more than in
decent Thc earlv Puritans abolished
the use of Christmas carols altogether,
and never allowed anything but the
psalms tobe sung. Since that time they
have been about the same in style as at
present—some religious and others light
and gay.
The first regular collection of Christ
mas carols known to have beeu made,
was one published in the year 1521. The
custom of singing carols on Christmas
Eve is an old one, and though not much
indulged in throughout this country, is a
time-honored practice in England.
Said the Turkey to the Pumpkin.
C2
Mg
Sg- \ t
v
••They’re keeping us for Christmas.
Let’s travel."
The Mean Man.
The stocking of his little girl he filled with
sweets and toys.
And with a pair of bran new skates he
stuffed his little boys:
44 ithin the stocking of his wife he placed a
handsome pin.
And in his mother-iu law's a wrap for muf¬
fling up her chin.
I will insert one more Claus, says Santa,
smiling
KILLING A WHALE.
HOW THE PACIFIC COAST RED
>1EX ACCOMPLISHED IT.
They I'se<l Very Rude Implements—
The Harpoon is Made of Elk
Horn—Conquering the
Utviathan.
Un Sunday, says the Portland Oregon
iau of recent date, the Indians
of the Noah Bay Reservation
near Cape Flattery, in Washing¬
ton Territory, discovered an immense
whale spouting in the Pacific opposite
and about three miles off shore. Fol¬
lowing the custom of the Indians, a re¬
port of the fact was made to the medi¬
cine man or dreamer of the tribe, whe
called a hurried council and allotted :
number of picked men to the different
available canoes* Incantations were
then held, wherein a certain harpoon was
blessed by the dreamer and handed to
the hiM-chin-i-ca-ha or thrower, with the
warning not to let it go from his hands
except >o ordered by the dreamer him
self, lest their efforts in the chase should
prove abortive.
The harpoon on this occasion was con¬
ducted of two pieces of elk Horn, each
about four inches long, a half inch it:
thickness one way and three-quarters of
an inch the other, elaborately carved,
beveled at one end, and the two joined
together in the shape of a “V." with a
sharp piece of steel fastened between
them at the apex. To the angle of the
harpoon was woven oae end of a rope
about three-quarters of an ineli in diame¬
ter and from sixty to eighty feet in
length, made from tile sinews of a whale.
The harpoon, when hurled, is fastened
into a slot cut in the end of a yew-wood
shaft from an inch to an inch and a quar¬
ter in diameter and nine or ten feet in
length. When the harpoon enters the
body of the whale the two other points,
which are sharpened, act as barbs ain’t
spread, securely imbedding itself in the
flesh, with the sinew rope attached, the
shaft having dropped out from it own
weight. All the harpoons used by the
Indians are similar in construction to the
one described, but only the enchanted
ones are embellished or engraved.
The incantation ceremonies over, the
dreamer seated himself in the stern of a
canoe, and the hoa-chin-i-ca-ha, or
thrower, armed with the prophetic har¬
poon, which must be the first. One hurled,
took his position in the bow of the santc
boat. They were then run through the
surf by the members of the tribe who
were to accompany them, closely fol¬
lowed by two other canoes fully manned,
which, according to their instructions,
kept astern of flic first,but close at hand.
About 5 o’clock in the afternoon their
game was overhauled, and, liis heading
being carefully discerned, the approach
was made directly from behind. It is
the habit of the whale, when he comes
to the surface to blow, to skim along the
top of the water, appearing three or four
times in a few seconds. Oil hi? last ap¬
pearance he throws himself high in the
air, turns his tail to the clouds, dives
deep, and remains down several min¬
utes. This habit is well known to
the Indians, and they can calculate to a
nicety when he divy;, how soon and
where lie will again appear, and when lie
does so the leading boat is generally not
far away. In a short time the first boat
had approached within thirty or forty
feet of the proposed game, and the
“dreamer;” who, upon such occasions, is
anything but asleep, fixed his practiced
eye upon if to discover the auspicious mo
meat to give command, for only when
the animal humps its back to make tin
dive is it even comparatively safe to give
him the harpoon; The thrower, bared
to the waist, stood, statue like, with shaft
high in air, his ears alert for the com¬
mand. “Latah,” or throw, for well he
knew if his instrument failed of its mark
he would be deposed and some other ap¬
pointed killed to his honored whale,- position. lie had
his eighth and hoped to
hold his position for the remainder of his.
da vs.
Presently the word came, and the
blessed harpoon was thrown with un¬
erring aim, and others follq^.ed in quick
succession Vt the same time the oars¬
men backed water with all their strength
to escape the great danger of being
swamped by the animal’s tail Six
harpoons, with lines attached, were suc¬
cessfully thrown into him,and the whale,
goaded to madness, lashed the water into
loam with his huge tail, not preventing,
however, the eanoemen from binding
one float-line after another together, and
soon the three canoes, tied to the line at
intervals of two or three hundred yards
and drawn by the monster of the sea,
were sailing through the water oceanward
at a fearful rate The float-line is made
cf cedar bark, twisted like “factory
work” into a rope about an inch and a
half in diameter. To this line, at spaces
of twenty or thirty feet, are attached air
floats made from the stomach of a com¬
mon hair seal, and much resembling
the bladder football of “ye olden times.”
All the openings of the stomach are
sewed up, with the exception of one, and
at this is ingeniously constructed a valve
which opens ou the iuside. and is kept
closed when the float is “blown up” by
the pressure of the air. Each float holds
down about forty gallons of air, so one
can readily imagine the little chance a
whale with a half-mile of float-line at¬
tached has to escape.
At sundown it commenced to blow a
regular nor*wester, and the sea became so
heavy that the canoes were obliged to
disconnect and leave their victim to tire
himself out hattling with the air floats
secured to him. That night the wind
increased in velocity and the sea ran
mountains high, and on the third day
two of the canoes were discovered, but
the whave soon hove in sight, returning
from a tour of many miles he must have
journeyed during the night. chase The two
remaining canoes gave and were
soon again attached to the float line and
enjoying the excitement of traveling
through the water over the swells of the
ocean at a railroad rate, drawn by a
monster inhabitant of the deep.
The procession moved in a circle of
about fifteen miles in diameter, and it was
well in the afternoon of Monday, before
the leader commenced to fag. However,
before darkness set in. the monster of the
sea had suc-cumbered to the inevitable,
and lay floating on the bosom of the
Dceau.
Members of the Iowa tribe of Indian:
are very well off. They have beeu re
duced in number to eighty-three r»er.-ons
:.nd have 200,000 acres of rich fariniuy
laud, which they are to sell to the Gov¬
ernment—au average of over 2400 acres
each.
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** for
Aprs lea trial ^iStM^^UAC
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Engines if Mill Machinery
Boilers and Piping and ai! kinds of Fittings.
Shafting. Pulleys, Hangers. Boxes, elc.. in Stock for prompt delivery. We buy, sell, repair, exchanqe
ano rent Engi.ies on best terms. We have the most extensive shops in the South—Telephone No. 27
GEO. R. LOMBARD & CO.
Foundry, Machine and !5oil<or Works,
4014 13 1026 Ferwick St., above Pass'r Depot Agt. in Georgia, S. Carolina and Florida, for
ACtilSTA, <JA. Korting Injectors and Vanduzen Jet Pump*.
GEO. W. CASE,
MARBLE
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ti GRANITE WORKS!
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MACON, GEORGIA
SMITH & MALLARY 1
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MACHINERY OF EVERY KIND.
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Seed Grindow?, Belting. Lu
brieatiDg Oils, Iron Pipe and Fittings, etc.
SMITH & MALLARY, Macon, ©a.
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