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     In 
    May of 1917 the Minneapolis Scouts received a telegram from Charles E. West, 
    Chief Scout Executive in New Jersey, requesting cooperation of the Scouts in 
    promoting the sale of World War I Liberty Bonds and Stamps.  They 
    readily accepted the challenge. 
    The Scouts opened an office in the Metropolitan Building at Second Avenue 
    and Third Street during 1917 
     which rented for $55 per month.  The movement continued to expand in 
    Minneapolis and many more Troops were added. 
    The corporate name was changed in 1918 to the Minneapolis Boy Scouts of 
    America.  Dayton's Department Store voluntarily published a bulletin 
    called Boy Scout Tests and How to Pass Them, and the Minneapolis 
    Scouts became messengers for the Local Liberty Bond Drive Committee.  
    In 1919, during Scout Week - February 9th-14th, the Minneapolis Scouts 
    celebrated the 9th anniversary of Scouting and held a memorial service for 
    former President Theodore Roosevelt, who died on January 6th that year.   
    
     The 
    Scouts undertook a "Bird Protection Plan" in 1919 following a report by 
    Captain Frank S. Beach in charge of the Minneapolis Police.  He called 
    attention to the year 1918 as being the worst in history for the destruction 
    of park property.  In his report he said, "This increase in lawlessness 
    is due to the flu epidemic ban against school attendance giving boys more 
    leisure time to practice deviltry."  The Scouts took over 44 feeding 
    stations in the public parks that winter and diligently provided feed for 
    the birds. 
    On December 5th the Minneapolis Tribune printed an editorial containing this 
    statement:  "It has taken sometime to convince the public of the 
    importance of the Boy Scout movement but, to use the current business 
    phrase, Scouting has been sold to the American public.  It is no longer 
    an experiment or fad, or a trifling thing in the mind of anyone who knows 
    anything about it.  It is a course of training in which it would be of 
    infinite value to the country if every boy could have a part." 
      
    
    
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