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2 GLEN ULLN 10 BE SCENE OF COUNCIL SOOUTERS HEETING Large Bismarck Delegation Plans to Attend Annual Sessions Tuesday Accommodations have been made to entertain over 100 Boy Scout lead- ers at the annual Missouri Valley Area council meeting which convenes at Glen Ullin Tuesday. Heading the large Bismarck dele- gation which plans to attend the an- nual event will be Gov. Ole H. Olson, George Shafer, R. A. Nestos, Judge A. M. Christianson, council president, and Paul O. Netland, area scout ex- ecutive. Sessions will be divided into the annual council meeting at 5 p. m. (MST) and the annual council ban- quet at 6:30 p.m. (MST), Programs for both were announced Monday by Netland. Judge Christianson will preside at the council meeting and deliver the address of welcome. Standing com- mittee reports for the last year will be made by J. N. Roherty, Dr. J. O. Arnson, Dr. George Constans, Wil- Mam Payne, H. O. Saxvik and Net- land, all of Bismarck. George Bird of Bismarck will make the treasurer's report which will be followed by reports by each district chairman or commissioner. The pro- gram and objectives for 1935 will be approved, the scout executives’ report will be given and the budget com- mittee will submit the financial pro- gtam for the coming year. Officers will be elected. Sal Halpern of Glen Ullin will act as toastmaster at the council banquet. Dr. O. T. Benson of Glen Ullin, chair- man of the Christianson district, will deliver the address of welcome and the response will be made by Dr. Arn- on. One of the main features of the banquet will be the presentation of the Boy Scouts of America life-sav- ing award to Roy Greisen of Dickin- son. Governor Olson will present the gold medal for heroism. Two Silver Beaver national ‘honor awards will’ be made to scout leaders who have done most to advance the Boy Scout movement during the last year. Former Governor Nestos will de- liver the main address of the ban- quet program. He will talk on the “Spirit of Scouting.” The general! meeting will be held at the high school auditorium and the banquet in the Catholic church basement. The Missourl Valley Area council comprises 22 counties in southwestern’ North Dakota and northern South Dakota. There are 1,260 boys regis- tered in scout activities and 350 active adult leaders. ‘TIBER ON RAMPAGE Rome, Dec. 17.—(7)—One .thousand Persons, it was estimated Monday, were forced to leave their homes in -Rome during the night as the flooded river Tiber continued on a rampage. Property damage in the city was large. Three houses cr.ved in but their occupants escaped. PACIFIC SHIP SAFE 80s the coast, reported it was limping bark to Puget Sound Monda: ‘rhe ship apparently. was safe, de- spite a bad list caused by a shifting MENTHOLATUM COMFORE Daily Come to the Patterson Hotel for your fresh live lobster and other fresh seafood just received, Try the wonderful meals Saad by 2 Kuh ob” OR SALE! F bronze turkey toms and hens. Grade A and AA. E. W. Gilbertson Devils Lake, N. Dak. DR. R. 8S. ENGE Graduate Drugless Physician ‘Laoas Block Bismarck, N. D. Phone 260 50% MORE The house that stamp collectors . . at top, the postoffice at Santa Claus, Ind., with “Santa Claus’ Headquarters.” B | Stamp Collectors Help Santa Claus | STEEL INDUSTRY TO SPEND 100 MILLION Heavy Modernization Program Is Answer to Old Conten- tention of Over-Expansion Cleveland, Dec. 17.—(P}—A $100,- 000,000 program of new equipment is Monday’s answer of the steel indus- try to the contention five years ago fa was then already far over- The biggest item in the ing year. Another $19,000,000 is involved in construction of new steel production equipment for the Ford Motor com- Pany, now in progress. National Steel ‘corporation has announced a $12,- 000,000 expansion for its subsidiary, the Great:Lakes Steel corporation. Carnegie Steel is building a 42-inch Bethlehem is planning a 60-inch hot, at Buffalo, ‘Youngstown Sheet and Tube com- pany is completing a $7,000,000 mill at its Campbell, O., works, and nearby the Republic Steel corporation is spending $500,000 for a new electric weld tube mill building. ‘Yet back in 1929 and 1930, the opin- fon was expressed widely that the steel giant had overgrown himself. MUSSOLIN BLAMES ETHIOPIA IN CLASH Demands Apology, Indemnities in Protesting Border Fight to League helped to build for Santa Claus its sign jelow, Postmaster James Martin before his famous office, and one of the coveted Santa Claus cancellations, ee * * Santa Claus, Set for Christmas Boom Stamp Collectors’ Demand for Unique Postmark Gives Village Big Business By NEA Service Santa Claus must be all things to all people. To the kids, Santa Claus is, the folly saint who brings them secretly everything their little hearts desire. To mother, Santa Claus is just a big dinner to be prepared for the whole family. To pa, sometimes Santa Claus is a pain in the neck. To 1200 Hoosiers, Santa Claus is home. But to the growing number of dyed-in-the-wool philatelists (stamp pope to you), Santa Claus is an item, You've heard of Santa Claus, Ind., the little crossroads hamlet that rises each year to a peak of temporary fame and rushing postal business at the holiday season and then slumps off for the remainder of a humdrum year. But did you know that if it weren't for stamp collectors, perhaps there wouldn't be any Santa Claus? Name Happy Idea Santa Claus, situated deep in rural southern Indiana, was founded long before the Civil War under the name of Santa Fe. In 1858, the residents began to think it vould be nice to have mail delivery, and they applied for establishment of a postoffice. The application was rejected, how- ever, because there already was another office named Santa Fe in northern Indiana. This rejection was Teceived only a few weeks before Christmas. They had to think fast—Christmas, Santa Claus, Santa Fe—so they drop- Ped> the substituted Claus, and submitted a new application under the name of Santaclaus (one word). inconspicuously along as Santaclaus. In 1926 an enterprising Los Angeles stamp collector changed all that. He got an idea, Stamp Fan Starts It He wrote to Dr. Dafoe Turns Santa Claus in Return from U. (Copyright, 1984 by The Associated Press) Callander, Ont., Dec. 17.—(7)— A Santa Claus without whiskers but @ real Santa Claus, just the same came, Monday, through the snow dressed northland, to the Dionne quintuplets. Dr. Allan Roy DaFoe, though he has brought 1,400 children into the world—the cold bleak world that settles down upon Callan- Ger’s countryside at Christmas time—has never had as happy a le-season chor> ,as that upon yul which he entered ‘Monday. it TUBES THAN LAST YEAR Rome, Dec. 17.—(#)—Benito Musso- Uni took an aggressive stride in Italy's quarrel with Ethiopia Monday by de- x” “ee Ind., Gets ee sending @ letter to = —_ kei 150 men Scala awias! ack to him from Santaclaus ai message answer thus canceled with the Yule post-|Ethiopian protest to the League, which mark. It was the first such request |Called attention to the gravity of the Martin had had. situation. Mussolini said the African But the Californian went farther.|government’s claim that Italy was He suggested that if the name of the|responsible for the bloodshed was town could be changed to two words, | false. Santa Claus, that would raise the temperature of all good stamp col- lectors, and might mean business for he town, Postmaster Martin, being a stamp collector himself, saw the point, and| Washington, Dec. 17.—(P)—A de- wrote to Postmaster General New,/mand for more teeth in the new an Indianan, asking the change.|empowering it to New also saw th: point, and Santa-|dustries into line in s claus became Santa Claus, Ind. omic democracy,” When the next edition of the Postal|voiced by the recovery unit’s labor Gulde carried the change, @ flood of jadvisory board, headed b; mail designed to secure samples of |Green. this unique postal marking began to] Declaring there rise, and it has never subsided. Ever|ing fatiures” under since 1931 it has been necessary to|such democracy, the put on a large extra force of clerks |administrative board headed to handle the hundreds of thousands | Williams that it is not of letters. on “voluntary” action —_——____ ae experience so £1 i & memorandum Bulgarian Chauffeurs at aah, “that thi Elect King President)! stalemstes or deliberate in Sofia, Bulgaria, Dec. 17.—(#)—The Bulgarian Association of Chauffeurs Poke plea og DROPS has a new Daag eeqaree sie 4 The position was given spokes- ‘men for the chauffeurs said, not mere- — was gion in an Nemesers ne \iy to flatter or to honor the sovereign, | qocu, secon Pepeiya = reopen ve but because he is a “practical” chauf- of $213,590,771 ri ep oo at pews feur and mechanic, g 1. -time More than that, he is an expert neers. It was during the World W: the Bulgarian ermy was short motive engineers, that Boris, army major, qualified as an a ii and run it through Bulgaria. ‘passengers never realized they being driven by a king. Always ing, Boris has broken a number records for speed for locomotives. ‘When night falls, the fragrance flowers increases Fad Fe 2 Overcoats Melten-Boucle-Caracul $12.50 to $30.00 Sheep and Lamb-Lined $14.95 to $32.00 Ties 35c to $1.00 Riding Boots and Breeches S. to Quintuplets club—he drove to the hospital. There were dolls and rattles, toy rabbits, dogs (not real, of course, but amazingly lifelike), teething rings, and @ man on a flying trapeze. There were eleph- ants and bonnets, a toy grand Piano, booties, and just lots of sweaters to keep five tiny bables bys in the cold northern win- Dolls predominated: “ let” dolls, five in a Baa A “cuddly” dolls that are to hold; and there were dolls that sey “Mama” when you squeeze them—but none that say “doc- tor.” Some dolls were as big as Yvonne, who is the largest of, the five girls. Others were so small that even the smallest quine tuplet, Marie, could hold them. The arrival of Dr. DaFoo brought excitement to the hos- pital which for more than a month now has been surrounded by snow. On New Year's day, which the - French Canadicns observe with aieiererereieieierere hot strip mill at Youngstown, O., and| (Medicine manding an apology and indemnities. | J; responsible for a border clash in which | 4; {” Weather Report FORECAST For Bismarck and _vicini ably snow tonight or what Local snows tonight or Tues- Te “Foe Montana: For Minnesota: ably; slight . in et Mg hg ‘Tuesday in extreme northwest. GENERAL CONDITIONS h ure strip mill for its Leckawanna works | 00 North- to he ‘warmer ‘pis, wanted for the kidnaping of Ed- and Ne-/ward G. Bremer, St. Paul banker. western Stat from the Plains Sta' ed Lakes but vada, horthenstwarg to Binks Bismarck station ter, 28.28, Reduced to sea level, 30.13. f rooming N. D., cldy. SPRVSLLESEGNEERECSUBRTESERSRERSSSRETaaSSSRENSSRe | SRATVSSLLSSLSSSSLHSTSSSLSSSRLSSSSRSSSRRLSERLS SLES, CONTINUE -from page one’ Conservation and Submarginal Land Reports § Submitted Dec, 17—(P)—Net| creat in Minnesota for (Men and Women) Exceptional Garments $4.50 to $12.50 Sweaters 98c:to $5.00 Gloves and Mittens Bit Cone Eien Demree $1 to $2.95 Mufflers Capitol Army and Navy Store 410 Broadway Avenue 3 some ler Tues- Da; | should continue in agriculture.” : | Unsettled Mon it and Tuesday, local snows a Burns, one of the ten convicts who it colder City The weath Topeka, ‘all sections highway patrolmen searched the and sub-marginal lands in Minnesota |of right, the supreme court qu and the Dakotas be ultimately with-|Cooley on the law of domicile to the drawn from cultivation, mainly be-jeffect that “It is manifest that very the report said, “continues only by|facts tending to establish the domi- grace of continual public subsidy orjcile in one place would be entirely relief. Many of them are very sparse-|conclusive were it not for the ex- ly settled and require public aid tolistence of facts help bear the high per capita expend-/@ still more conclusive and decisive iture for roads and schools. Many of |character which fix it beyond ques- them also have some land which |tion in another. “So, on the contrary, very slight circumstances may fix one’s domi- Cile if not controlled by clusive facts fixing place.” exe IC ONTINUE from _page one ‘a cago. Jacobs’ ha! oa also is quot- Linked With Crime|min doe to conicmoi poy is ns wh itentiary ~ , guns smuggled to them by John Dil: linger, was captured by police and inspectors without a shot be- HUNT KARPIS, HAMILTON ~ HIDEOUT IN KANSAS HILLS Kas., Dec. 17.—(?)—State Flint hills of east central Kansas Monday for two men they believe are John Hamilton, leutenant of the late John Dillinger, and Alvin (Doc) Kar- Wint Smith, head of the highway patrol, blamed the two men for three labductions in the state last week. Believing the fugitives might still be hiding in the vicinity, Smith led MT}a detail of patrolmen over the hills P five years immediately and that the whole ar- gument, if it actually comes to issue, will be centered around what con- stitutes residence, Faced with the prospect of prov-' ing that Moodie intended to become a tesident of Minnesota, a good many lawyers contend, the anti-Moodie at- torneys face rather a hopeless tant, ROBINSON, JR, SEEN AT DAVENPORT, 1A. Two Identify Police Photo- graphs of Stoll Kidnaper; Dressed as Woman Davenport, Ia. Dec. 17.—(7)—An identification by two persons of po- lice photographs of Thomas Robin- aon, Jr., Stoll kidnaping suspect, was ground for an intensive search being conducted Monday for s missing rent- ed automobile and a driver said to be &@ man disguised in feminine clothing. The Robinson photos were pointed out by Fred H. Willey, manager, and Walter Snyder, employe, of the Dav- enport office of the Tri-City Drivur- self System, as the same person who came to their establishment Saturday seeking an auto. Willey said a phone call from a masculine voice with a southern ac- cent inquired the rates for rented cars. A half hour later he was sur- prised, he said, to have a caller in women’s clothes arrive for the auto, and refused the car when the party had no driver's license. . Robinson has been a fugitive since the return home of Mrs. Henry Stoll of Louisville, Ky., following payment of $50,000 to her abductor in October. He is believed to have resorted to feminine disguise to elude capture. - A white Angora cat owned by Mrs. George Kammermeyer of Joplin, Mo., died at the age of 18 years. 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