Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 305, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 December 1915 — Page 3

ENTERTAINING ON CHRISTMAS

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HE Christmas season brings to mind H the many Christmas days gone by, fS with their four great features —turkey, cranberry sauce, plum pudding and mince pie. It was a good old English custom, not to be rejected by the American colonists, although modifications were necessary to suit the religion md conditions of living in the colonies, the Christ : spirit being substituted for the pagan yuletide, the famous “boar’s head" was omitted, and the Christmas pie became known as mince pie. However, many old observances were kept, including the mistletoeand holly, and Christmas was a day for family gatherings, with a feast prepared by the women of the house. It is quite possible that we would not like their flavorings today. They used a variety of Bpices, wines and seasonings in even their plainest dishes; but as everything was prepared in the home, either under the supervision ok the mistress or by her own hands, the mixtures were wholesome. Everything was turned to account in the seaBon with a view to future use, so in this way preparations for the holiday were going on long before the day. • In cherry time, a supply was carefully packed in hay and kept for Christmas. The Christmas cookies, with coriander seed in them, were baked six months before and kept in an earthenware jar in the cellar. Mince Meat Recipe. The rich plum pudding and cakes were made early in the fall and put away to mellow and ripen. The mincemeat was then made, the recipe for which was recently found in an old Philadelphia cookbook. We copy all but the spelling: “Four pounds veal, four pounds suet, two pounds raisins, one pound currants, six apples, some rose water and sack half a pound, no more of sugar, three-fourths pound cloves, mace, nutmeg and cinnamon, some candied orange peel, lemon peel, citron and blanched almonds.’’ They made a puff paste for their pies different from ours. One recipe called for flour, one pound butter, ten eggs and some milk or water. Some housewives made their winter supply of mince pies before Thanksgiving and reheated them before using. For the lemon tarts, the lemons had to be first Boaked in salt water for two days. Then every day for fourteen days they were put into fresh cold water. When they were made, apples, oranges and sugar were added. A few days before Christmas the mistress went to market, the maid carrying the basket. She would get her turkey, cranberries, celery, oysters, and a little pig for roasting whole. The day before Christmas the real excitement began. The stuffing was made, and such stuffing! Bread crumbs, beef suet, liver, lemon peels, nutmeg, savory, pepper, salt, cream and eggs. The little pig, only four or five weeks old, was filled to his utmost capacity with mashed potatoes or apples. Not the least to be considered were the green decorations. Ground pine for festoons and wreaths, mistletoe to hang, and holly everywhere were the necessities. When Christmas morning came the excitement was at the highest pitch. The housewife, her daughters and her maids were up early. The brick oven was heated and the mince pies put in. The turkey was dredged with flour'and put on the spit, with a small unwilling child to watch and turn it as it browned. Another child was set to cracking nuts and polishing apples.* / Roasting the Little Pig. The little pig was put before the fire to roast in the dripping pan, in which were three bottles of red wine for basting. While the things were cooking a long table, the length of the room, was spread with the white linen cloth, napkin, china and silver or pewter. In the middle of the table was the famed Christmas bowl. Here are the quaint directions for making it: “Break nine sponge cakes and half a pound of macaroons in a deep dish; pour over one pint raisin wine, half pint sherry. Leave them to soak. Sweeten with two ounces of powdered sugar candy and pour over one pint and a half of custard. Stick with two ounces sliced almonds. jt*lace on a stand and ornament with Christmas evergreens.” The tankard with the Christmas brew was put on the table, and all the sillabubs, jellies, pickles, lemon tarts, red apples, nuts, the cookies and the cherries fresh from the hay. The fireplaces were now blazing, and the red berries and green leaves of the holly were shining in the light. The mistletoe was waiting for the unwary, and the good smell of the brown turkey, savory stuffing and applesauce was everywhere. Don Their Best Frocks. After the housewife and her daughters had seen to everything they hurried to put on their best flowered silks, with white whims around their necks and the most secret beautiflers on their faces. Then the dinner being nearly cooked, they took the little browned pig, raised him gently and put two ffrnnil loaves of bread under him. and added more wine; an anchovy, a bundle of sweet herbs ■mi a a lemon was put into the £auce, which was poured over him hot They had him sitting on his haunches looking lifelike. Then they put

a red apple in his mouth, which, alas! he could never eat, and garnished him with holly. At last the company came, the mistress preserving a calm exterior, but with an inward anxiety lest something be burned or spilled at tho last moment. When all is ready the beaming host says, “Friends, will thee join us in the Christmas feast?” And with great dignity he leads them, with the guest of honor on his arm, followed by the older people and the children. The Table Decorated. The table is a picture to cheer the hungry. The large turkey is at cne end and the pig at the other end of the long table, with everything they are to eat between, excepting the plum pudding. After the silent grace, which stills the noise for a moment, the carver takes his knife, and with a deliberation born of steady nerves carves under the fire of twenty pairs of eyes. The directions in “Gentlewoman’s Housewifery” says: “Raise the leg fairly of the* turkey and open the joint with the point of the knife, but do not take off the leg. “Then lace down both sides of the breat bone and open the breast pinion, but do not take it off. Then raise the Merry Thought between the breast bone and the top of it," and so on till the turkey is boned. While this is being done the “Christmas bowl” is passed. After they are helped to turkey and pig they pass the vegetables and delicacies, and even the mince pie is eaten when they have the desire for it. The Correct Manners. The proper conventions are strictly adhered to. The book of etiquette says: “A gentlewom an must not lean her elbows on the table, nor by a ravenous gesture discover a voracious appetite, nor talk with her mouth full, nor smack her lips like a pig.” The children were kept in order. Id all the 1 least was decorous, but merry for all that. At last, when they have eaten to the extent of their capacity, the plum pudding, blazing and with a piece of holly stuck in the top, is brought in and eaten with brandy sauce. Then the toasts are drunk with the good home-brewed wine, and the feast is done.

HISTORY OF CHRISTMAS

Christmas, originally Cristes masse (“the mass or church festival of Christ”), is - the English name for the season in which the birth of Christ is commemorated. It .is apparent, however, that a festival was celebrated at this season long before it was held sacred as the birthday of Jesus of Nazareth. The Saturnalia of the Romans and the winter festival of the heathen Britons were both celebrated about December 25; and later, the Roman festival in honor of the sun god, Mithra* (instituted 273 A. D.) From the latter the day became to be known as the “Birthday of the Unconquered Sun;” and after its adoption by the Christian church in the fourth century as the anniversary of Christ’s birth, this name was given a symbolic interpretation. A study of the customs associated with this period also reveals a heathen, if not invariably a solar, origin. The lighting of the Yulte log (la buche de Noel) on Christmas eve, once a widespread European custom, is or was a function of such predominant importance among the Lithuanians and Letts that their words for Christmas eve literally signify "Log evening.” The sports of the “Lords of Misrule" in England are thought to be an inheritance from the Saturnalia. The decoration of churches with the once sacred mistletoe and holly is a pagan survival

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN* RENSSELAER, IND.

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fLL gifts, carefully marked, should be - consigned the day before to the ohe in charge, and she must purchase a quanity of clothesline and clothespins. The line should be stretched back and forth across the living room, and each gift, wrapped in tissue paper and tied with red ribbons, should be fastened to the line by a clothespin, decorated with wings of red and green paper. In the bay window a table should be arranged on which is placed a "Jack Horner” pie, containing a Christmas souvenir for each member of the family. The ribbons attached to the packages in the pie should be carried up to a hollydecorated hoop suspended over the table, each ribbon tagged with the name of the one for whom it is intended. When the "family wash” has been taken down —each person seeking his or her own gift—they gather around the pie, and at a signal “pull out their plums.” Hidden in Egg Shells. When the family is all present at breakfast start to serve the meal of coffee, bread and butter, ham and soft-cooked eggs without any mention of gifts. At each place have an eggcup or saucer, on which you put an egg, the contents having been removed previously through a small hole in the end; partly fill with sand, and let each contain a small paper with a suggestion in poetry of where or how to find their gifts. As each person thinks he is cracking his egg he finds the puzzle inside. Much merriment and good cheer will be the result. Serve original content 0 of eggshells in omelet with the ham. Hide one person’s gifts in bookcase, paper in egg to read: If you are either wise or smart You’ll find me in a hurry. Among gifted people Lnow dwell; So hunt, don’t sit and worry. Frost King and Snowballs. As this is the time for Jhe clever woman of the family to devise some unique way of distributing Christmas gifts, she may decorate the living room with evergreens, holly and mistletoe, and then place in one corner a table covered with a white cloth, hidden from view by a screen of generous size. On this table is placed snowballs. These snowballs, made of white cotton batting and tied with white robbon, contain each designated present, and are heaped in a pyramid, thus obtaining a mass of snowballs of varied size. The pile is scattered freely with diamond dust, in order to give it an attractive sparkle. If there is a small boy in the house he may be dressed as a Frost King, in a costume of white warding, sprinkled with diamond dust; leaves and holly berries can be sewed here and there upon the robe. At a given signal the screen is removed, disclosing the tiny Frost King, who, with a few words of Christmas greeting, gathers the snowballs into a pretty basket, and as each ball bears a small tag he finds no difficulty in distributing the gifts to those assembled. A Holly Pie. A novel way of distributing Christmas gifts on Christmas morning is to make a big pie in the center of the table of holly branches, and arrange it so the gifts can be easily drawn from under it. Each gift must be tied with a narrow red ribbon and one end lead to each place at the table. This is great fun, and of course everyone is anxious to see who gets the most ribbons, the lucky one being declared the most popular. The pie is not “opened” until end of breakfast. A Christmas Trail. One member of the family should take charge of the gifts, and when the coast is clear should lay the “trail” with them in all of the available downstairs rooms. Start from a tiny Christmas tree on the living room table by fastening to it a card for each person, marked, for example, thus: “Card No. 1, father. Look for card No. 2 in umbrella stand in hall.” In the stand he will find a package tagged in this manner; “Card No. 2, father. Look for card No. 3 in your hat in hall closet.” The third card will be found on a gift in the spot designated, with further instructions, which are followed on to the next, until all his presents come to light. Everyone pursues his or her trail at once, and a merry scene of confusion is the result. These cards may be prepared beforehand. and no difficulty will be experienced If, in placing the gifts, each trail is finished before starting to lay another. The last cards should direct the family to their places at the dining room table, where they will find amusing souvenirs of the occasion. Cobweb Method. A rather novel and entirely Inexpensive way of distributing Christmas gifts is to employ the "cobweb" method. Suspend a rope diagonally across the room, over which the stringß may cross, each string to be labeled at its source with the name of the member of the family or the friend for whom it is intended. A sheet can be hung across one end of the room, hiding the gifts from view until time for winding the strings. Let all begin the quest at once, it being necessary to find the beginnings of the strings where the names are attached. This will afford considerable amusement, as the strings should be run through keyholes, under beds, over transoms and even out of doors, if possible. Aside from the element of mystery contained in this method, there is the added value which attaches to those things which have been really earned through one’s own efforts.

Kin Hubbard Essays

TH’ ELEMENT O’ BOLDNESS AN’ ITS RELATION V SUCCESS

Hon. Ex-Editor Cale Fluhart addressed th’ Commercial dob last night at Melodeon hall. After congratulatin’ th' club on th* town’s low death rate an’ th’ new hitchlh’ rack In front o' th’ courthouse th’ speaker paid an eloquent tribute t’ boldness an’ its relation t' success. "We’re livin’ in an age o’ sharp competition,” said th’ veteran editor, “when no element Is so indispensable as boldness in th’ attainment of all that is desirable in life. A finished education, purty hair, an automobile, an unimpeachable character, finely chiseled features, unlimited credit, th’ form of an Apollo, a keen inslgbt, a fine tenor voice, a magnetic

«Th’ Venerable Example o’ Penniless Ole Age Who Loves t' Chaw T’backer an' View With Alarm an' Refer t’ th' Time When He Could Have Bought th’ Ground Where th’ Pust Office Stands fer Two Dollars."

personality, fashionable raiment an’ good folks avail but little in th’ battle o' life when unaccompanied by th’ element o’ boldness —or nerve. “Biography records many instances where nerve, in th’ absence o’ both ability an' personal charm, has lifted Its possessor out o’ th’ background an’ ont' th’ hights o’ honor an’ affluence. “Boldness is a positive characteristic o’ th’ spirit. A feller may be bold thro’ fearlessness, but he may be fearless without bein’ bold. He may be fearless where there is no apprehension o’ danger or no cause fer apprehension, but he is bold only when he is conscious or apprehensive o’ danger an’ has th’ nerve t’ encounter it. “Th’ venerable example o’ penniless ole age who loves t’ chaw t’backer an’ view with alarm an' refer t’ th’ time

If we kin believe everTraddy we talk to ther hain’t nothin’ that’s as equally distributed in this life as trouble. Ev•r'buddy’s got it. If it hain’t thrust on ’em they go out an’ hunt fer it till they find it. Sometimes a feller’ll worry along fer weeks without any an’ then he’ll git in a whole batch. Trouble finds its way int’ th’ tall, stately mansion among th' elms an’ th’ humble cot in th’ dumps. Th’ smilin’ grafter, th’ well-groomed man o’ wealth, th’ fat, glossy loafer that stands in th’ pool room door an’ th’

"People Who Act th' Happiest May Have th’ Moat Troubles. A Feller May Be All Life an’ Bunshine In th’ Presence o’ His Associates, an’ Brood When Alone Because He Looks Like th’ Devil— in a Dress Suit."

tired shoveler with ten children all have ther troubles. We see a prosperous lookin’ feller whlzzin’ by 1 in a luxurious tourin’ car an’ we think how happy he must be. It never occurs t' us that he may be goin’t’ th’ depot t' meet a lot o’ relatives, er has list paid two dollars t’ have a valve ground. People who act th’ happiest may have th’ most troubles. A feller may be all life an’ sunshine in th’ presence o’ his associates an' brood when alone because he looks like th' devil —in a dress sulL A gushin’ society belle may be th’ queen o’ her Bet an’ still weep bitter tears because she's got a mole in th’ wrong place. A husband may eat a hearty supper an’ chat

Make Better Time Now.

When it came to traveling, the folks back in 1700 tried to burn up the road, just like the speed fiends of the present day. A newspaper dated March 10, 1787, in the library at New York, tells about a flying trip made in 14 hours between New York and Philadelphia. Eighty miles in 14 hours does not seem to us such breathless speed, but the same paper says that in order to accomplish this feat, “John Butler, with his wagon, must needs set out from the sign of the ‘Death of the Fox’ at daybreak and drive at top speed (the horses being changed at ayrh stage ere the coach stops rocking), to meet the ferry of Rubin Fitsrandolph, which delivers passengers in New York by night." For those leisure this was indeed “going

By KIN HUBBARD.

when be could have bought th’ ground where th’ pust office stands fer' two dollars, an’ th’ spinster who could have married th’ best man In town, both Illustrate t’ us how a whole Ufa may be changed an’ soured thro’ th' lack o’ a little nerve. * "T’day th’ curbs are lined with shiv* erin’ humanity who have dropped out o’ th’ procession on account o’ cold feet. “Th’ best maxims o’ t’day were written almost a century ago, an’ if they fitted conditions as they existed then how much truer are they t’day when th’ minds an’ energies o’ th’ most resourceful amongst us are often exhausted in an effort t' even rise above

mediocrity. If ‘Strike when th’ iron is hot’ meant anything in 1836 bow much more must it mean t’day when ther’s twenty slip horn players on th' waitin’ list o’ every county band? If he who hesitated fifty years ago wus lost what chance is ther t’day fer th' feller who says, ‘l'll think about it?' ’Nothin' ventured nothin’ won’ wuz a pop’lar sayin’ long before th’ death o’ Cornwallis, an’ yet t’day ther's folks tryin’ t' succeed without advertisin’. “So in our modern system o* reachin* th’ front boldness is th’ all important, overshadowin', pre-eminent an’ dominant requisite. If we’re t’ git a seat on th’ end o’ th’ aisle in th’ third row we’ll have t’ beat somebody t’ It. “As Tell Binkley says, ‘Faint heart never won fair lady or sold any life insurance.’ "

TROUBLE

By KIN HUBBARD.

pleasantly with members o’ his house* hold an’ then jump in th’ river t’ keep from meetin’ a note. A wife may be. surrounded by every luxury t’day an' leave a note in th’ mornin' sayin’, . "I’ve gone t’ Seattle.” Trouble is Jist a part o’ th’ scheme o’ life an’ no home seems t’ be complete without its errin’ son er daughter, its mortgage, its poverty, er a calamity o’ sqme sort. Trouble softens us. It disturbs that feelin' o' selfish security that’s all too likely t’ develop with a fairly good job er a little easf

money. Trouble is a great leveler an* a wonderful conceit diminisher an’ ft seems t’ make a specialty o' hittin’ th’ high places. Fer how often we see folks readin’ th’ help wanted ads t’day that were frownin’ down on us from th’ dizzy peaks o’ prosperity yisterday. So th’ fact that everTraddy has ther troubles should make us all th’ more reconciled t' our own. Lqt us study well th’ beautiful optimism o’ pom* Robert, th’ laborer, in th’ ole, undyin* third reader story, when he says: “Well, then I must sup t’night on an onion. Last night I had nothin’* It will make no difference with me t’morrow what I have had t’day,” So sayip’, he trudged on, sin gin’ as before. (Protected by Adam* Newspaper Service.*

Greeks Treasured Alyssum.

Ancient Greeks thought the aneeetors of sweet alyssum had some power to atop hiccoughs; also to cure mad dogs. If the Greeks were right, the flower has changed somewhat. About the only thing it Is used for now is to decorate a garden border, a window box or a hanging basket It does more than decorate, too. Its fragrance has made it a favorite at the bees, and also given it its name. The flower has another name—mad wort; so called, probably, from the Greek belief that it enured dogs of their madness. It grows low, with tiny white blossoms in spikes at the tops of the stems. Flowers of the alyssum are not aO white. There is one variety with bright yellow flowers which blossoms early in the spring.