Show I IZ z r. r t ct V Each in His Own VT h T vv a Way ay y Frances cel GrillS ead I u 1 A. A u uI I i T VERY family has its own way i EVERY r i of or celebrating Christmas Do Doi DOV i V J you have the tree on Christmas Christmas Christmas Christ Christ- mas eve or Christmas morning It ItI I seems all wrong to me to take off ocr 1 its gifts girts at any other time lime than ihan I the dark early morning of Christmas ChristI Christ- Christ I mas itself Yet I have a n friend who I considers that Santa Claus can only arrive in the lit candle twilight so soi i that visions of at sugar plums alI al- al I 1 ready seen as well as those to be beI I 1 found Cound in the stocking at dawn I may ay dance through the heads of the young ones I Among my Christmas memos memories s sI are years when our household could I not afford trimming a tree and there was no mantelpiece for Cor hangIng hang hang- Ing lag stockings Some people might think that a combination to lo knock merriment into inlo a cocked hat They V should ha have ve seen our excitement at hanging a stocking from Crom the back backof I of at each chair and the delighted squeals when we discovered in the morning that Santa had filled the I chairs as well as the dangling hosiery with apI appropriate gifts If It I they were cheap and md the tinsel and holly conspicuously lacking only the ups grown knew it There was always a box of ot dominoes dominoes dom dom- inoes macs in somebody's stocking since my father ath r liked to play We usually usually usually ally spent Christmas morning in a I II family game and I have just this moment suspected it wasn't the ther r I children who started it Ive I've anI another another an an- other friend whose father insists on I making popcorn balls Christmas morning and her mother must always always always al al- al- al ways fry sausage So Merry Christmas each in own way waylO O CD Western Newspaper Union I tx C |