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Show I 1 - Is V" VV v.VXKAf ? Jul s N5c V 6 r t M V 1 h Kx vi f lf iwBf f f-V IIOMK KOR SANTA CLATW n ... . even those which do 1 m," " ' y ('",S '" the United States-symbols, States-symbols, ere" s M !, name,s 'iated with Christmas r.(t hnnt.x aus vlnaB.Ps (llirill& the llo!i(la seasons kach year, thousands of letters h-m' Md-I Bethlehem, Conn., and in the U. S. are mailed from BethlehemBethlehem, Beth-lehemBethlehem, Pa.; Bethle-Eethlehem, Bethle-Eethlehem, N. H. These towns were named many, many years they gave their community the name of Santa Claus to commemorate commemo-rate Chritmas. ago, and imaginative Americans the country over send in letters to be remailed bearing the symbolic postmark of Bethlehem. The story associated with the naming of Bethlehem, Pa., is especially espe-cially .moving. On Christmas eve in 1741, it is said, Moravian pioneers pio-neers who had come to the new world in search of religious freedom free-dom gathered in a log cabin in the snow-swept Pennsylvania countryside. country-side. Thankful for their new refuge, re-fuge, they sang carols joyfully; then Nicholas Louis, Count Zin-zendorf, Zin-zendorf, took up a taper and led the gathering into the stables where a few cows and horses stirred. stir-red. "Let us call our village also Bethlehem," he said, and all agreed. From a humble beginning over 200 years ago, Bethlehem, Pa., is now a thriving industrial city of 62,000. Santa Claus also has been honored hon-ored in the naming of American cities. The story of the christening of Santa Claus, Ind., contains an awesome note in keeping with I Christmas eve. I The government had turned down the request of a little settlement settle-ment in southern Indiana 100 years ago because an older town in the state bore the same name of Santa Fe. As the villagers gathered in celebration of Christmas eve, they pondered a new name, finding each suggestion unsuitable as they turned it over in their minds in order to select the right one. In the midst of their deliberations, delibera-tions, a blinding light was seen outside. Rushing to the window, they saw a flaming star crash against a distant hill, leaving a crater that still can be seen today. Awed by the spectacle, the residents resi-dents of the settlement considered the event as a special omen, and |