SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1949 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NMN ~U141AY, ~EGEI~tR4, 199 TH .ICGANDAIL __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ Xmas Trees' Big Business For Dealers City Sellers Look For Record Year By DON KO'UTE Little do Christmas tree buyers ever realize-or care-that their observance of a long-standing holiday tradition means an annual $2,000,000 fortune for American farmers and foresters. To John Q. Public the Christmas tree is a must at any price. An empty living room corner on Dec. 25 is like bread without butter. IN ANN ARBOR, dealers are digging in for what appears to be a record season, a check of local tree merchants has indicated. The bulk of sprice and balsam shipments, some of which have already been received here, are due to arrive by Friday or Sat- urday. Most of the dealers contacted have ordered their trees from east- ern or Rocky Mountain firms. Not one-sixth of merchants queried are depending on state supplies, the survey found. * * * APPARENT CAUSE is an Asso- ciated Press report that down- state Michigan will get only half last year's total tree supply from northern Michigan. An Ann St. grocery manager explained he was advised by a Pittsburgh wholesaler last July to purchase 15 to 20 per cent more evergreens this season than he did in 1948. "I followed his suggestion and ordered eight dozen instead of my usual six," he explained and added that the price should be the "same or less" than last Christmas. OTHER ANN ABOR merchants were discovered following his ex- ample, in anticipation of a bumper season. More than half the dealers surveyed have upped their 1948 spruce and balsam orders by two to three dozens. Throughout the United States, grocery stores, gardening cen- ters and independent merchants are beginning to stock all avail- able space with the more than 12,000,000 boughed beauties ob- tained from the nation's four corners. The stately spruces, firs and bal- sa, have come a long way since devout Grecian worshippers, just before 1,000 A.D., initiated the cus- tom by honoring sacred trees as the wood of Christ's cross. Today's typical last - minute opper, eager to please his brood with a ceiling-high evergreen, hasn't half the worries of a 17th century Pilgrim father. HISTORY MAKING? Teacher Gains 'Fame'; Names Lake for Himself By DAVIS CRIPPEN If you want your name immor- talized (after a fashion), you should go not west, but north, James Woodruff of the geography department advises. It's up in the far northern re- gions of Canada that Woodruff has made his mark-he has a lake named after him. He named it himself. * * * WOODRUFF, an AAF first lieu- tenant, spent about a year in 1944-45 flying C-37's to supply outlying weather stations in north- eastern Canada. One of his most frequently traveled routes was between Goose Bay and Fort Chime. "The Army Airways Communi- cations System always wanted to know, or wanted to at least appear as if they knew, where I was when I was flying between these bases." This was hard to tell, Woodruff explained, because the region hadn't been explored thoroughly enough for mapping. * * * - HE PICKED out the lake as a check point. It appealed to him mainly because it had the shape of a doughnut being about ten miles across with a mile wide round island set squarely in the middle. "Everything was fine then," Woodruff continued. "I'd radio in that I was such and such a distance from Lake Woodruff and that was that. "They couldn't have known where I was, because even I didn't know exactly. But they had a position. That was enough." The former pilot isn't so sure that Lake Woodruff will keep that name in the future. He never turned the lake's position or its name into the Army for confirma- tion. THE REGION will ultimately be mapped, he feels ,and when that happens his lake will probably be stuck with some long Eskimo name, like many of the other fea- tures of the region. "So don't look on the map for the lake," Woodruff warned, "because it isn't there." As for returning, Woodruff said that he would like to go back some day, perhaps stay there and write his doctor's dissertation on the area. BUT THIS project is on the doubtful list because of, first, the lake's inaccessibility and, second, the expense involved in getting there. With an eye to killing both these birds with one stone, Woodruff asked, "You don't happen to know of anyone who wants to finance an expedition, do you?" Santa Soared To Fame as Agent of Love Gave Lonely Maidens Dowry forWedding Millions of youngsters, the world round, will be waiting for Santa Claus this Christmas Eve as a bearer of gifts, yet oddly enough, the merry old fellow first became famous as an agent of love. In Asia Minor, some 1600 years ago, there lived a nobleman with three daughters of marriage age and no money for a dowry. * * * DAN CUPID, or rather St. Nick came to the rescue, mysteriously tossing a bag of gold through the window of the noble household. There was enough money to bag a husband for the oldest daughter. He repeated the process later for the two younger daughters. In a few centuries, his legend had entered Europe and the name St. Nick became synono- mous with anonymous philan- thropy. People gave gifts on the anni- versary of his death and gradual- ly his name was affectionately changed in some countries to the Santa Claus and Kris Kringle of today. Uv J !i/A1'f I' IN 1-11,19 1 1 11 I-. 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