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o_o | GIRL SCOUTS WILL » MAKE CAMP PLANS Mass Meeting Is Called for 3 o’Clock Friday Afternoon at Memorial Building Bismarck Girl Scout troops have een summoned to a mass meeting which will be held at 3 o'clock Fri- day afternoon at the World War Mem- orial building lower gymnasium to meet Miss Mildred Downs, who ar- rived here Tuesday to take charge of the day camp activities which begin next Monday. ‘The girls will talk over plans for the day camp and also for overnight hikes to be taken during the sum- mer. Miss Downs, herself a Girl Scout for five years and an active Girl Scout Jeader for the last five years, has a wealth of background for the position which shé will occupy here. Members of her group laid the cornerstone for the Minneapolis Girl Scout camp. In 1930, her pioneer unit of 12 members took the first gypsy tour, which was a trip through the South Dakota Black Hills. Upon their return they set about making gypsy tours a part of the national program, an object which now has been ac- complished. For the last five years Miss Downs has had a troop in Min- neapolis and this year she launched the first. mariner ship there under a be new scout project. She has affiliation with the American Red Cross as a life saving and first aid expert. Besides leading a troop for five years, she has headed pioneer, dra- matic and waterfront work at the Minneapolis Girl Scout camp, Green- wood at Buffalo, Minn., for four sea- sons. For five years she has served as Minneapolis city examiner for all aquatic activities. Miss Downs is not a newcomer to North Dakota. In 1933 and 1934, she directed the LaMoure scout camp at the site which now is being equipped swith permanent buildings under a CCC project. Last summer after her work at LaMoure, she spent July and Au- Minneapolis, June 27.—(?)—Dr. Charles E. Merriam, of the Uni- versity of Chicago, one of the foremost economists, looks for big changes in the social world. “I do not,” he said Thursday at a conservation symposium of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, “share the complaisance of those who look forward to a world with but little change.” Planning, officially directed, was his proposal to guide the na- tion out of present and future pitfalls. “It is an error to conclude,” he said, “that all planning involves regimentation of a deadening na- ture, “I am not now referring to the objections of those who think of regimentation as an interference with their cobber-baron privilege of private exploitation and op- pression, but to those who sin- cerely believe that there is dan- ger of sacrificing something that is valuable in civilization.” Agriculture was brought to the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1935 Economist Tells Scientists Of Changes Facing Society Dakotas by a people now extinct about the time the Normans con- quered England. The story of the rise and de- cline of this agricultural people was reported by Alfred W. Bow- ers, of the U. S. department of agriculture, Stanley, N. D, He found the records in the evidence of pottery, corn and tools of nearly 100 of these early peoples’ villages. They were the, earthlodge peo» ple, known as the Mandans, an Indian race. They arrived in the Dakotas trom the South by the beginning of 1200 A. D. with agriculture, villages, bastions, walls and ditch- es for defense, less massive, but in principle much like the de- fenses then current in Europe. They conquered nomads who lived by hunting buffalo. Their end, many centuries later, was sudden. They had become a secondary people, unable to win their battles against horse-riding, knife and gun armed Indians who attacked them. gust with the pioneer unit at Cedar Crest, New London, Conn. Two national courses in which Miss Downs has received credit are tramp- ing and trailing under Amelia Thor- sell and troop progress under Ann Roos. Both are national staff mem- Ts. While in Bismarck, Miss Downs will reside at the home of Mrs. L. M. Parsons, 514 Sixth St. Until camp opens she will be occupied with lin- ing up the camp leadership person- nel, getting the camp site into proper condition and meeting with commit- tees, Carson Boy Scouts Tour Through Parks Carson, N. D., June 27—Eleven Carson Boy Scouts, their Scoutmaster and truck driver are en route to Yellowstone Park and the Black Hills of South Dakota on a week's camping trip. In the party are Scoutmaster D. M. Wright, Driver Hugh Carter, Scouts James Lee, Henry Haisch, Edwin Halsch, Gott- eb Bauer, Winton Lackey, James Botten, Hugh Owen, Bobby Hart, Leo Muggli, Morton Landgrebe and Hen- ry Elvik. Pfliiger Is President Of Carson Loan Group Carson, N. D., June 27.—Charles | Pfiliger has been elected president of the Carson National Farm Land as- sociation. Chris Springer is vice president and F. J. Ruemmele, secre- tary-treasurer. Directors named are Henry Huber, Bernard Twite, A. O. Weeks, Pfiliger and Springer. The population of the world has been estimated at two billions by the the Statistical Institute of League of Nations. Invite Public to See Producing vegetables, the same to be used by the individual for his per- State Fur Co. Vault/sonat use, will be subject to the tax.” A general invitation to the public to visit their new and enlarged fur stor- age vault was issued Thursday by Phillip Edelman and Ben Buman, pro- prietors of the State Fur Co, 202 Fourth St. The vault, large enough to store 1,000 coats, was brought up-to-date in all respects when it was enlarged, the two furriers said. The company also has installed sky- lights to make its shop a “daylight” shop for its work of remodeling and repairing garments as well as manu- facturing new fur garments. New Ruling Exempts Seeds From Sales Tax All purchases of Nate seeds, used for creating a crop fot » WETe CX- empted from payment of the two per cent retail sales tax, by a new rule issued Thursday by State Tax Com- missioner Lee Nichols. The new rule, which was expected to be of great aid to the farmers of the state, was formulated following conferences between Governor Wal- ter Welford and Nichols, and at the Suggestion of the governor. Under the new regulation, an amendment of rule No. 54, “all farm seeds when sold for the express pur- pose of producing a crop, such crop to be placed upon the market for sale, are considered processed and therefore not taxable under the sales tax act. “However, seeds sold for use in FREE SALE ends this week at Gamble Stores. 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Ya 007 43% See our ‘footprint evidence” taken right here off cars of ‘‘G-3’’ users who drive over the same roads you do—proof that the ‘‘G-3” is actu- t ally delivering in many cases BETTER THAN At No Extra Cost SURE! Goodyears are Guaranteed in writing against road hazards. Also guaranteed against defects without limit as to time or mileage and backed by our service. Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. -Chrysler-Plymouth Distributors—W estern Dakota and Eastern Montana Nichols declared the rule to Tetroactive to May 1, and that all collections of sales tax from farmers by elevators, or other seed dealers, would have to be refunded, provided sales were of the type coming under the new rule. Mining Corporation Is Organized at Zap Organization of the Dakota Mines Corporation at Zap, N. D., was dis- closed Thursday by articles of in- corporation in the office of Secretary of State James D. Gronna. Capital stock of $90,000 was listed in the incorporation papers; the company was formed to purchase.and. operate coal mines, sell natural gas, gasoline and similar products. Ralph Richardson of Zap, and B. A. and W. B. Pratt, 2508 Henne- Pin avenue, Minneapolis, are listed ‘as the incorporators, Manchukuo Protests Mongolian Activites Tokyo, June 27—(#)—Rengo (Jap- nese) news agency dispatches from Hsinking said Thursday that a.Man- chukuo delegation’ handed Mon- golian officials a strong protest against an alleged violation of the Manchukuan border Tuesday by four other Mongolian cavalrymen. The Manchukuans were - reported to have demanded immediate return of the cavalrymen, who were said to have kidnaped a Japanese army en- gineer, and gilarantees of non-recur- rence of such incidents. A Chinese retreat from the border area of Jehol and Chahar provinces, reported in dispatches to vernacular newspapers, appeared to have ended a conflict in that region between Chinese troops and a Manchukuan frofitier patrol. ‘The dispatches, coming also from sinking, capital of the Japanese- advised state of Manchukuo, men- tioned only vaguely any outcome to the battle which was reported raging Wednesday but agreed the fighting had ended, Simultaneously, Rengo dispatches from Peiping reported conclusion of @ settlement of the Chahar crisis. State Secretaries to Convene at Jamestown Jamestown, N. D., June 27.—(P)— Officials in charge of various im- provement activities in the Dakotas are scheduled to address the two- day convention of the North and South Dakota Secretaries’ associa- tion opening here Friday. A tentative program announced by John W. Griest, secretary of the South Dakota association, and H. C. Pulton, Jamestown, secretary of the North Dakota organization, lists W. P. Chesnut of Fargo, as principal speaker at the opening session. Other speakers Friday afternoon are F. E. Cobb of Bottineau, on the plains shelterbelt program; Oscar Johnson, Brookings, S. D., on the water conservation program; A. D. McKinnon of Bismarck, on water ae eee camps. an ion of officers will be held at the conclusion of the afternoon program with the two state groups meeting separately. Missouri Valley . Area Has First Farm Scouts Mott, N. D., June 27.—The Missouri Valley area’s first farm scout patrol was recently organized at the John Gilbert home south of Watrous. Members of the Flying Eagle patrol are six boys. Art Espeland is scout- master. George Corey, Mott, scout commissioner, attended. ss For Rent Two-room apartment With bath. Phone 1060. Just in! Hundreds of Pairs of COOL WASHABLE SLACKS Buy at least two pairs today! They’re knock-out values at $449 and $496 . . the most practical summer slacks you can buy! 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