Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 13 Jun 1935, p. 14

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and to attend the exposition. Dr. and Mrs. J. Frank Waugh., 812 AthIand 'avenue, motored to -Oberlin, Ohio l4st Tuesday to get their daugh- ter, Mildred, who bas been a -student ding the past year at, Obe rlin, col- lege.. They brought. home as, their gueÉt Miss Doýrothy MacFadden, ýa classmaté of Miss Waugh. Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Thomson, 25Sixteenth street', spent several days recently at Wiggens Bay, Wis. FURNACE *REPAlIRINC * PIPE 10 PARTS: -.0CLEANING 0 AIR. CONDITIONING MiII.. I4ardwoe C.. aie Wllmette ». WII. S$04 HOW ALMER COE GLASSES ARE MADE and cake t The four girls selling the largest number of cookies were: Sue Lyons 87 dozen, Cora Mac .Mersbach 83 dozen. Betty . geck 57* dozen and Mary Jane. McCue 53 dozen.' The rcst of theé thirtyý-igbit eligible to this party werc jean Ann Mould- ing,' Nancy Drake,_ Peggy Ebbcrt,' Jane' Hendierson,, Crystal Jackson, JeanneMoreau, Viviani Smith, Pcggy Brereton, Patty Crawford, Lucille Heerens,- Betty Anderson,, Elaine Çhittick,, Marjonie Johnston, M ary Kirkatrck.Suzanne Sthrad Mary thl il, Marcelline Snorf, Mantha Ferrcnz, Frances McCanda- lish, Frances Dolan, Carol McCue, Beatrice McDonalId, Marjorie Mould- ing. jean Scbulteis, Nancy Suther- land, Bevcrly Prussinig, Shirley Ring- holm At S~bn,,Patsy- Peterson, Barbara. ,*M~ry *E. Carpenter., Olive Dahncke, Phyllis Pratt ani Inene Terzakes. Troop 3 Bas Gkioria Time at Last Meeting At our last meeting, our troop had a grand tume. We opcned our last meeting with a game and song. Our game Was most unusual and I'in sure that we had a lot of fun playing it. We' then had patrol corners and a short discussion. We then invested one of nur most- efficient voung.girls Priday, May 31, eight girls Of Troop 9 with Mrs. Schifflin and Mrs. [Stineman, captain and lieutenant, left, bag and baggage, for Walton lodge. When we got there, up came the problem of .hô was to sleep where and 1 how. *We. finally decided that the four older girls would sleep together and the- four. younger ones li.kewise. ýMrs. Schiffiin gave us our instrutt.ions and then ýwe -dumped oui baggage and scrammed, as it were. T1he cooks and houseckeepers got, on. the job about .6 o'clock 'and scranibled up. dinner in -a jiffy. While tbey were cooking hin tramped Jean Clark,ý our second -lieutenant. witb ber. luggage, whereupon a big -cheer. went up. After much debate and discusz- sion as to. whether >she *ould sleep, downstairs or with the older girls, it wa s finally, decided« that, she would sleep upstairs. Dinner consisted of spaghetti. meatballs, peas, rolîs, milk, and. last, buft flt least, ice cream n-oUs-end 4oUkle5. Seream at Ghost Stories After dinner we went out and played "witch doctors'-~and "Jenkins saysý." When it got dark we came ini and toasted marshmallows while some of us told ghost stories. At, 9:45 we got ready for bcd. While we were waiting in, bed to sing9 "Taps" we found that Jean Clark is sonie ghost story teller. She got Recreational leaders of the Middle West wilI have an excellent opportu- nity this summer to stud1y for their profession in up-to-date training schools,, according to Mrs. William M. Chester, of Milwaukee, Wis., vice- president of the ýGirl Scouts.. '66n the Great Lakes region alone, and, this. includes -Illinois -Indiana,, Wisconsin anidMichigan," ýsaid Mr s. Chester, "the Girl Scouts will operate, this. summer five of the twenty-siix national training camps in which al women intere.sted in the coming pro- fession of recreational leadership will, be able to .study programs 'and dis. cuss. problems.' The schools in the Great Lgkes region will be open be- tween June. 9 and November 3! CaiMp on Historic, Site One of: the, camp sites at East Troy, Wis., which was. the gift of Mrs. Chester's parents arnd beatrs her> naine, is iiistoric ground -for the Girl Scouts, for on its gently sloping hilîs ~the Pottowattomie Indians once did their trading with John' Kinzie, grandfather of Juliette Low who founded the Girl « Scout organization i 1912. "Camp juniper Knoll at Elkhorn, Wis., so called from the trees that- guard its his, and Dellwood at In- dianapolis, with its 200year-old syca- ~P- 7W m Our own Icboralory, operaied by experienced crafismen, grinds pxpertly th.e1e1nses in -eour gicisses. Our precision methodla assure botter vision. one of the merriest of al.-Dorotbea new cooks got breakfast by 8:30, it--- }fartwig, scribe. the breakfast-being banatias, bacon, ________________scrambled cggs, rolîs. toast and rnilk. Sara jean Cosner of San Antonio, Soe Scarlet Tasager Texas, formerly of Kenilworth, ne- After breakfast wc went out on a. cently graduatcd from Thomas Jeffer- nature hunt. Some of the girls saw son High scbool in San Antonio and a scarlet tanager. (It's- a bird, in will spend the suxmcer with bier case yo u don't know.) Then we grandparents, Mr. and' Mrs. R. W. found that a treasure trail had been Murison of 339. Kenilwortb avenue, laid and was ail ready for us. We- olvIfr orls tnnlcthe hardest trail. so A founth school, College camp on Lake Geneva, Wis., will specialize this s umnier ini the Girl Scout Marin- er prograni, which Mrs. Chester had helped to organize during the ,past year. The ten miles of Lake Geneva's lake will give ample opportunity for. practice in seamansbip, and study of sea-lore, a form of Girl Scouting which is now being promoted by the national organization for its older membens. sure. she will be a very good Brownie.. ail wished that -it werén't our Iast Marion Wievnan. Ann Sabin, Doris mîeeting and were a bit sad at sayihg McKeighan and VPatsy Peterson re- good-bye, but we have smre graind ceived their goldeni bars. which tbey plans for next winter, which gimes. s0 well 'degerve.. Tawny Owl had us gomethinZ.to look forwardt. arnanged a Véry maglc pool, but un- awny Owl.

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