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at cieemammrecntrtee ist ht RIDAY. DECEMBER 2 22, 1922. RE GROWING Cleo Mayf: ield an Expert Three Gars: of Christmas| Trees Shipped Exportktion of Christma with theif holly and evergreen em- dellishments, is destined to grow into @ substantial Northwest enterprise, according to leading Seattle dealers “Altho We regard the game as Bunt in its infaney, three full carloads of trees were shipped from Seattle east a] plant} to cities this season,” EN Sandal, manager of The Burdett! company, said Friday, “One carload | was routed direct to St. Louis, while the others were divided up among | New York, Pittsburg, Kansas City | and other widely scattered points.” Other small lot shipments have gone to California cities, Sandahd sald Shipments to dealers outside of the state, from dealers in Seattle proper, | proximate between $16,000 and | $20,000, while the local trade, which | fannot be estimated with accuracy because of the large number of amall dealers in every part of the city runs much larger. } While most shipments are made in| the two or three weeks preceding the holidays, the business is gradually becoming a yeararound one Many salesmen who work the territory west of the Mississippi river send ad vance, orders to Seattle and other | Northwest shippers during the sum mer months. Representatives — of Fern & Moss Co. We Lenora st. and the BR. EK. Hammond ©o,, 1010 Post st concur with Ban @aht in repudiating charges that the industry & a mens to foresta. “Only second-growth, stunted trees that spring up on logeed-off land and mn ave. and are utterly unfit to develop into mar ketable timber, are suitable for hristmas trees and decorations, Sandal said. “We get most of our trees from logged-off land owners who are glad to have us clear their property of the troublesome, use leas, second-growth stuff. ‘While a major portion of the ever. green export is in wreaths of cedar, fir, huckleberry and solal, Eastern onders for trees will increase annual ly at a rapid rate, dealers believe, due jor French kid—ets out her last and | the very beat to the disappearance of wooded lands im the more heavily populated sec tons of the country. CARNIVAL ROW BRINGS DENIAL Pair Cleo Mayfield BY MARIAN HALE | Many of us can be our own milliners or dressmakers if the | occasion demands, but Cleo May- | field is the only woman IT know | who can be her own shoemaker as well, When she needs new pumps «he! buys the raw material—satin, suede | * to work and makes them. | “| learned to make my own shoes in order to get what 1 wanted,” she explained, “I fo tired of trying | to tell the snilenaiaites most of wham did not speak my language and I couldn't speak theirs, what I wanted, so finally in desperation I got an Italian cobbler to teach me how to are them myself. put in about @ year of honest | Naha Br before I learned how * sticking to her last slippers tor any amount of money, but long before I really tearned to make shoes I used to make leather baby boots out of the topx of my old white kid gloves “Aven now I frequently make a | pair of slippers out of the good ma jterial In an old brocade evening frock or part of a discarded matin frock. By making my shoes out of materials they wear splendidly “It usually takes me about 10 days or more to make a pair, and during the year | make about « dozen pairs for myself and sev eral for my friends. Shoes that would cost me $15 In the shops 1 can make for about half that amount... And they give me dou. ble the service.” Mine Mayfield has another unusual fad. She ts papering the billiard Vets Claim ‘Ralph Horr Did |to turn out the finished product, but room of her summer home with can Not Manage Show Emphatic denial that Capt. Ralph Horr was chairman of the carnival which was to have been staged here last August to assist in raising funds for the cofivention of Veterans of Foreign Wars was made Friday by ‘The denial was made fn answer to Previous reports that Horr was in charge of the carnival, which was staged by 8. B. Asta and J. T. Mo Vay, Who were erroneousty oe Asia and McVay have with wrongfully obtaining car- money for his own use and has instituted a $10,000 dam- against the two men. TWO INJURED IN ACCIDENTS it was worth it. Now L not onfy can copy any shoes I nee, but I can carry out a original designe.” iss Mayfield has originated | Pw = styles in shoes. She made | the first pair of Russian boots te be shown in this country, and she designed the shoe which is, and during the war | knitting, “ ghe confessed. ‘t knit a pair of bedroom |which she tacks to the wall coled postage stampa During the year she saves all the | stamps she gets on letters, and peo. ple who know of her fad send her large supplies of them. She mounts these on large squares of cardboard, This gives a queer monaic effect that realty is much more decorative than ft sounds. She expects to complete the wall in the billiard room this year. “I have to keep myself occupied when I'm not on the stage, and shoe. making and paperhanging seem best suited to my talents.” she con. cluded Boy Ruler’s Typewriter Sign of Hope in Orient BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS | WASHINGTON, Dec. 22.—Heuan | take 406,000,000 men and women out of the “Arabian Nights” and turn ‘Two men were recovering at their|Tung, 17-year-old Son of Heaven, them into a modern, voting republic homes Friday from severe injuries|Lord of Ten Thousand Years and | over night. @ustained in different auto crashes, iy afternoon. F. Gillis, of the New Troy hotel, a thro a windshield and landed on his Emperor of China, deposed, i# learn- ing to write on « portablé American | typewriter while waiting for the day | -|when he may be celled to rule again. | In Tung and his typewriter even American in the Far East more and It can't be done. So it is that eyes are more and more turning In the direction of the | boy with the typewriter. The two to- gether are regarded an pointing the way—as symbolical of the Old Order. by easy steps, struggling towards head against a pole when Lehner's|more think they see the only hope | the New. ear was struck by « stage driven by John Foragreen, near the Union Pa- cific docks. Gillis was cut about the head. W. E. Humphreys, riding with his H. M. Wells, 4222 Stone way, was injured when Wells’ car was struck head on by a truck driv- en by W. W. McGuern, Biuff apart- = at Garfield st. and Dexter Pbcmitinege Was thrown against the windstield, receiving cuts about the head and a fractured hip, His| condition is serious. Pardon! | ‘Thru a misprint, The Star errone- ously reported Thursday that Wayne Hall had been suspended from the! University of Washington because of | his connection with the student | prank which resulted in the shoot-| ing of Richard Holbrook last month The name should have been Wayne! Allen. Wayne Hall had no connec tion whatever with the escapade, and is in entirely good standing at the University. HOLLAND BULBS MAKE IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFTS BERRIED HOLL Flowering Plants and Ferns A large stock of well made HOLLY WREATHS with genuine holly berries. Wholesale and Retail IMALMO & Co! NUH SER YMEN SFEDSMEN | lever since, for dying China. Almost without ex | ception foreigners out there hold one of two things indispensable if the most populous nation tn the world | ia to survive First, the great powers which signed the pact at Washington about @ year ago must drop their attitude | of passive benevolence and do some- thing actively friendly; or, second, China must unite under the one ban- ner which has any meaning for the rank and file of Chinese--the dragon flag of the empire | It is recognized that there has not} been time enough since the Wash-| [ington conference, when meddling | powers agreed to “hands off” for China to clean house. But confi- dentin! advices indicate conditions |are growing worse, instead of better, land the hope to which Washington gave rise has gone glimmering Peking i still capital of China tn name only. Graft lo e ‘where | jrampant. Politicians are throat-cut-| ting for leadership. Finances are in| a hopeless mess. Bankruptcy stares the country In the face What folk« call China is today just an agglomeration of 400,000,000 pro ple milling around like so many sheep, with numerous packs of wolves preying upon them General Wu Pei-fu, iatest “strong man” and “hope of China,” who} licked the Manchurian war lord and ex-bandit, Marshal Chang Tso-lin, | proved a@ flivver. After his victory| at Peking, when people hoped he might unite China under a needful) dictatorship, he scurried back to bis; headquarters, where he has remained | He can't even keep the| bandits down, or punish them after | ‘they kidnap foreigners and hold nate for ransom. Unity ts China's greatest need to) day, and many are coming to believe | jwhe will never get ft under a repub-| lie. The mass of Chinese cannot) visualize a president, The idea of a| man like themselves, and of them-/| selves, ruling over them simply! ,doesn't penetrate, Imagine our Christian church be- ing suddenly deprived of God and one of u@ elected to fill His wine. | | ‘1 use this illustration in all rever- ence for it is the only way you can| Picture the state of mind of the aver: | age Chinese when he tries to think of his government Peking has always been as far) away from him as heaven seems to! you; and his ruler, who sat on the! (dragon throne there, for thousands of years, to him has been the Son of Heaven, Now, he just can't get ex- cited over a common, two-legged Chi nese, a mortal like himself, who eats \rice and wears a foreign devil's plug | issuance of Mayor hat, trying to be ruler, Say what you will, you cannot) BERNHARDT TO DIE ON STAGE \Determined to End Her Days in Theater BY WEBB MILLER (Copyright, 1923, by United Press) PARIB, Dec. 22.—Sarah Bernhardt has determined to die while actually on the stage That determination, her friends re- vealed today, may shorten the life) of the divine tragedienne. Pitting her tremendous will against those of leading physicians of France, Mme, Bernhardt insisted upon resuming at onee her role in| Guitry’s new play. It was while at tempting this role that the “Divine Sarah” fainted and was confined by her present illness. Doctors say that Bernhardt must | take a long rest. “That would mean the end for| me,” the actress replied. Friends say ahe feele the end is near, She does not want it to come when she is resting. She wants to be playing a leading role and “let death ring down the curtain.’ Bernhardt has worked out every detail of her death as she hopes it} will come to her, Going further, she has personally arranged elaborate plans for her funeral, her friends revealed The “Divine Sarah's" steadfast ¢ termination to play that final scene upon the actual boards of a Paris) theater, clad In the costume she loves, mouthing the passages from tragedy and comedy she has made famous because she played them. may cost her both her life and her ambitions, friends fear, for if she overexerts herself she may never leave her present sick bed. ‘HUGE COPPER STILL SEIZED John Louis Hancock, 1612 46th ave. 8. W., was arrested late Thurs. day night, when federal prohibition agents seized a 50-gallon copper st!" two barrels of mash and two gallons of finished moonshine in a raid on his home. Hancock is now in custody at the United Statex immigration station, where all federal prohibition pris. oners have been detailed since the Brown's order that such prisoners housed in the county jail. THE SEATT Vetvet 0 Sanitary Market, Sugar 8 Everything for ch Kage Ste $1.95 ANITARY PUBLIC MARKET HIBLER’S WHITE SOAP, 6 Bars for 200 .»s2 HOLIDAY GREETINGS «x —From Anderson's Grocery- We thank you for your patronage during the past year and OF 8 Bars 28c will «7 vor to merit a continuance of same, Limit 5 Bare ANDERSON’S CELEBRATED LUTEFISK, Ib. 106 tere Sugar, 8 lbs. 62c Flour fi $1.65 , Garmation. Mush J} 2 s.2:, "sauce 9s ANDERSON GROCERY COMPANY LE STAR TREY EXPORTS M a ki ng C wn S hoes I 8 gO ee eee ee SL CORNER PUBLIC MARKET MERRY XMAS All and # Happy NEUPERT & CO. “Grocerten tor ioe. ust OC ie Somer rows Sugar, lite, New Year rv, Har Sumer, tall, 109 Wirst Av nue Fe GREEN’S Holiday Specials LUNA SOAP 2 De, MIX Mush nation ate Albers’ Oats Maid Seediess MAIL ‘the SINS Sun Maid Seeded MAI- Flapjack nIN® a8e Flour ., 38e Stuffed OLIVE the Holidays at ir Lender Coffee 460 Santary_ ware TWO yom, ee ww SPECI AL! STORES 1 Bixewtt ¢ Fresh Churned sa Fruit Cake 63c Ib. BUTTER 52c ii5s" Yeu, We Orenmery, 48, 2 Tha, O50 VLEASE SHOP HARLY GREEN’S SHINTS, a dee ee BUTTER AND OOCRRY — ate #rTo! = Fancy Swiss Cheese ie 102-103-105-110 Corner Mkt. = Quality a tt Sto > Si r Alse 102 Sanitary Mark: utter r iegel’s SS Oo are Bargain Count = ag aston rei nerfs stg wa PINE STREET POULTRY CO. = ST Pine Sireet ‘aed S U PPLY M EAT C 0 s Hetween Pike Pi, and First Ave. = STALL 26 ones ee STALL 26 A paiey FANCY FRESH KILLED % STEER— POULTRY = aan T U Rg K E Y S ! OF ALL KINDS = pracy Geese, Ducks, Chickens, Ete. Se ae i?) We wish you a Merry Cheistmas and «a Happy and Prosperous iS New Year Hughes Butter St 9 . _Horhes our Store /BEGINN'S XMAS | fB_ ich Grmce iam SATURDAY |AKED Pat Butter 52c Ib. ea tones moee_,| SPECIALTIES O) rea Garden Mince Meat, LOOK OVER THESE 2 Ds © Rar decry Breser rves, te = Fancy Decorated Cakes YOUR PLUMS 19) 7 Fresh, Wholesome, Strict- ly a Vegetable Product 2) Price Today = 25c lb.; 3 Ibs. 70c ry \?) ry Our Own Home-Made lo) MINCE MEAT 23c Ib.; 2 Ibs. 45c Kags From Our Own Farm DIAMOND D COFFEE 40c Hest tor Xmas and Every Dey STALL 157 Sanitary Mkt Int Ave. io Mc Muc Mm ommcnm onal cm ml cln ‘RADIUM FIND | SLASHES COST | DENVER, 22.—-Radium has | dropped $50 milligram, th jcompany of Colorado announced to- day. | That would be $49,600,000,000 a} if radium eame in tons Dee. Radium ton But it doesn’t 6 The output of the com-| pany’s he ive story laboratory could be heaped on a nickel That much would be worth about) £000,000. ‘The drop follows discovery of rich | | deposits in the Belgian Congo. The| jcompany has closed Its Paradox val- | jle pines and will buy from Belgium | |after January 1. Physicians have been paying $600 | tor half-inch therapeutic needles con: | taining a few specks of radium sul phate, The new price ts $350. | Before the Congo Alscovery Colo: | rado was the world’s greatest radium | producer. When the African supply | jis exhausted the Paradox mines will | ie reopened annual here hae ‘Old Peanuts Are Cause of Wrangle, restraining order was faaued | mpursaay by Presiding Judge Austin | B. Griffiths, requiring the Jordon Ter. | lina} company, A. V. Pinkham &| Co., the Pacific Mail Steamship com: | any and W. R. Grace & Co, to ap-| pear in court January 6 to explain! why 200 sacks of peanuts, said to be) overripe, should not be dectar yong the old age limit,” and be con fiseated by the state agricultural di: | rector, | Malcolm Douglas, prosecuting at tofney, made application for. the re straining order, (WARRANTS OUT, |Port which was rendered to Judge) the layers of paper, which 1s soft and | Honey Cakes, Marzipan, Anise Boys’ Brown Dress Shoes Cookies, Pieffernucese, ete. BEGINN’S BAKE SHOP 1823% First Ave. Senttary Mkt. LUTEFISK HEADQUARTERS Oysters, Crabs, Ete. Philadelphia Fish Co. STALL 10; Green’s Butter Store 102 Sanitary Market Hest Frew Butter 50c lb. and Girls’ ‘School, to $3.00, at $1.89 patent leather, Dress Shoes 82.46 Boys valu Misses’ fancy top Men's Dri Sox Shoes 98.48 Amongst this lot of Wom- en's Shoes are values to $6.00 a pair, at. .98e Women's High Lace Shoes, strong calf uppers, val- pair, at suse Ne rade Dreas and Cuban hee Fine high top Lace Shoes Bouffer or Semi- sizes to 18%, : 1.38 Pee Fancy Colored Christmas lippers .. Noe Women's Japanese House Slippers, pal 100 Women's Rubbers, pr. 200 FAMILY Libby's Mince Meni 236 SHOE MARKET Margarine, Fresh Nut .. 38 1600 Pike Place New Cluster Haisins, 1. ate Foot of Pine Choice Mixed Nuts, ™. .....236 pid Store the 7 od 230 pkg, Whent-o 1 ‘Sia PIKE PLACE an ECONOMY PUBLIC MARKETS S U GA BEST CANE 8ibs.64c CRYSTAL. WHITE SOAP 6 Bars 25c 100 Ths. $4.00 Stalle—Pike my omy and Mante Markets Municipal Market a Sweet's Butter Store’ Stal 26 Keonomy Market Sound Meat Market VEGETABLES a= CUT PRICES N o Stall 12 Fike PL Mut, Lower Pt. Pabst Malt 55¢ Ver quart BALLANTINE’S MALT, STALL 27 @conomy, met Upper Floor XMAS CANDIES Candy Canes, each ...... .- aS 8 Tons tig Mixed Candies To be sold at BO¢ Ib; 2 Ibs. 55¢; and 25¢ Ib. 2 Ibs. 45¢ S00 ron A SENSIBLE GIFT srenpy, per Delicious Fruit Chocolates In large, fancy boxes, regular price §2.00, at .. $1.25 Don't fall to try our Home Made Bread—1}4-lb loaves, 2 for 25¢ ATHENIAN BAKERY 1517 Pike Place Market SHOETERIA Lower Filevr, Next te rents OPTICIAN > Lowest Prices in Beattle EXAMINATION Broken lenses Gupiicated for less tm our 40c COFFEE 3 Ibs. 98c GEIGEW’S TEA AND COFFEE Stati 18 Heonomy Mkt, Mate FI, Bertell Drug STONG’ , Good Creamery Butter, Ib. 47¢@ | 6 Ibs. Guatemala Honey. .7O¢ Ex. Good Sharp Cheese, lb. 35¢ | New Comb Honey +10 Strictly Fresh Small Eggs, 38c doz.; 2 doz. 75c } MERRY XMAS | 27333 p HuneeRUE tin e rf ager Po ECONOMY pay Soy GROCERY, theft and a greater number of nar-) | cotic and prohibition law violation were reported Andrew Ballew, Indian, must face | a charge of murder for the killing FOR FOURTEE Fourteen persons named in the se- « indictments returned late Thurs-| of Catherine Brown on the Lummi| lay, night by the federal grand jury | Indian reservation in November, His were being sought Friday by depu-/triai will be held by federal court in) S of the United States marshal's| | Bellingham next month. office Eight no true bills and 23 open Japanese water bags of rice paper indictments were also included in|are more durable than similar arti- the last installment of the jury re-| cles of rubber. Resin is used between | Jeremiah > One pterer, flexible, murder charge, several of lacquer. TOMORROW | YOUR LAST DAY! GET THE BOY A BICYCLE The outside is covered with | Columbia-Extelsior Bicycles || $35 to $43.50 | Terms to Suit Excelsior Motorcycle & Bicycle Co. 301 EAST PINE ST. Round Trip Excursion Fares GREAT NORTHERN RY. Vancouver, B.C. - $ 8.69 Portland----- 9.87 Spokane - - - - - 17.09 Similar reductions to all points in Washi ton, Idaho, Montana, Oregon Bri Columbia. Fare and one-half for round trip. Tickets:on sale December 22, 28, 24, 25, 29, 30, 31, January 1, Return limit January 3 For Detailed Information Apply to: Consolidated Ticket Office King Street Station r} F 1010 Second Avenue South Third and King 8: . Leary Building Phone Eliott 5830 Phone Main 6601