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* conservation commission Friday. PLANUNG BOARDS 10 MEET IN CITY Burleigh County Projects Will Be Discussed Here at Session Oct. 20. Bismarck and Burleigh county hoards of commissioners and city and eounty board members will present an inventory of projects for Burleigh county at a regional plan- ning conference in Bismarck at 2:30 p. m., Oct, 20, _ All political subdivisions of the state hhave been asked by the state plan- ming board to prepare a second an- nual inventory of needed public works, in which water projects of every character are to be emphasized. Studies of the water resources in each basin within the siate have been prepared by the state planning board, and these will be submitted for ap- roval or correction at the local meet- ig. Involved is a list of projects, ‘and their estimated cost, by which complete and permanent control of the surface water resources of this} section can be accomplished. Also, public works needs of each) municipality are to be catalogued, and preferential ratings recorded at the meeting. Gopher State Deer | Season Recommended | St. Paul, Oct. 9—(#)—An eleven day open season for deer hunting from | ‘November 15 to November 25 inclusive with the killing of fawns barred and | a one buck restriction in Itasca coun- | ty. was recommended by the state) ‘The area where deer may be hunted | this fall if Gov. Petersen approves the resolution includes Northern Minne- sota from the eastern boundary west- ward to the Pembina trail, dividing Kittson and Marshall counties and north of the southern boundaries of Pine, Kanabec, the northern two- thirds of Mille Lacs, Crow Wing, Cass, Hubbard, Becker, Clearwater and ll counties, Other counties in which the season will be open are | Aitkin, Carlton, St. Louis, Lake, Cook, | Koochiching, Beltrami, Lake of the} Woods, Clearwater, and Roseau. Geneva, Switzerland, is the world | headquarters of the Young Women's | Christian Association. | Reporters’ Race Sho ws Globe-Girdling at Last Has Been Made Swift, Co 1 PAM AMERICAN AIRWAYS SYSTEM 2 WaPEMIAL AIRWAYS 9) AIR FRANCE 4 KUM ROYAL OUICH AIR LINCS, S DEUTSCHE ZEPPELIN-RECOEREL mioriable and Easy ive i a i i be Bere ae a | i 2g BE i i Es e° ty é Z se 2 BESe E ; nel Hi Eeas sees wes ne 4 a Es rH atti 6 CANADIAN alnwars, TINTER-ISLAND AIRWAYS, # MOILO-NEGROS AIR EXPRESS By NEA Service | ing in the wake of the little ships of Senor Ferdinand Magellan started | Magellan, : something back inJ519 when his five| Today's Magellans a la carte—H. R. little ships dropped down the Guad-| Ekins, Scripps-Howard; Leo Kieran, alquivir river from Seville, Spain, and| New York Times; and Dorothy Kil- stood out to see. gallen, New York Journal reporter— He was out to travel around the | should have a somewhat better time of globe, and he gave men an idea which| it than the original globe trotter. they have been pursuing ever since. Magellan lost his life in the Phil- The three New York newspaper) ippines, midway in the journey, and writers now racing to girdle the globe,| his party suffered incredible hard- using only commercial air schedules! ships, They were forced to eat ox- available to any traveler, are follow-| hides, sawdust, and rats before Juan Sebastian del Cano finally brought | many. voyages before 1872, but definite one ship, the Vittoria, home to Seville | records are scarce. In that year a after a journey of 1,063 days. Only 31 men of the expedition survived, Drake Broke Record Navigators in those days weren't thinking of breaking records—the idea was to get around the world in any way they could. But nevertheless Sir Francis Drake broke Magellan's rec- ord in. 1577-80 by circumnavigating the globe in 1,052 days, No doubt their time was broken by book appeared which turned men's minds again to sround-the-world travel. It was Jules Verne's “Around the World in 80 Days.” People in stuffy Victorian drawing rooms sniffed and avowed that it couldn’t be done, that it was just an- other pipe dream of the fantastic Frenchman. Nelile Bly Sets Mark In 1880, the New York World had a| alone, for Europe, And when she came girl reporter, Elizabeth Cochrane, who wrote feature stories under the name of Nellie Bly. She was only 21, “about as big as a minute and prettier than she should be.” One day her editor assigned her to try the impossible stunt which Verne had described in his fanciful book, and to “lop off four or five days if ated Press staff reporters and phisinpiughions news happens,‘and while tt happens. ced, they report what is going on in. the world, Y and-strict impartiality. - ee ; Ree: walked around the world in two days|crush the Social party. EREE at 4 Hy I i § 3 ne gE i i I fl ve a pe Ht He iL i}