Julia Wiliiamson to Offer Training Duri.ng Next Week The New Trier Council, ofj Girl Scouts is fortunate in baving. Miss julia' Willianson witb it next week. Miss Williainson is the Great Brown Owl, who travels ail about, the states giv«ing training, and help to the Brownie, leaders. Brownies are tbe little Scouts, and, as1 others may not Icnow, are secret folks Who dotheir good deeds quietly'and> almost always at home so tbey do not earn menit badges Miss Williamùspn is goinig to help in, understanding the. Broiviie program and wil also givre definite training to al interestediin helping with the Brownie packs., Miss 'Williamson bhas been a Girl Scouitfor many years. -At.one tilme shé was local director in Philadelpbia, is stili a member of the PhiladepÉia ~coiincil . i .,a member of the Ber- utuda training sclhûol staff. Miss Wil- liamson is to give Brownie instruc- tion at tbe World camp ini Pôland next summer. It is hoped that all 'persous in atiy way interested i.n tbe younger. cbild wail avail tbemselves of this oppor- tunity of meeting and workinig ,wit1 the Great Brown Owl. Give ScheduIe of Meetinig& Meetings scheduled for 'Miss 1 \Vil- liamson are as follows: Training course, November 9,. 10, i1l, 12 and 13. 9:30 to Il p. m.. Christ Church Parishi Housé, 'open to the' public.> Tea-Monday, November 9-3:30, Wilmette Methodist cburch. For al council and troop conimittee members. Make reservations by telepboning Winnetka 3147., Leaders' meeting-Tuesdav, No- vember 10 at 8, Glencoe Union church. For ail girl scout leaders, and their friends. Browvnie party-Wednesday,, No- vember 11, f rom 4 to 5, M'ilmette Methodist cburch'. For al'Glencoe, Winnetka and Wilmçtte Browniies.1 Make reservations at Winnetka 3147. JGirl Scout's 0w, j Service i I AUl the Scouts in Wilmette beld, a Scout's" Own Service in the Girl Scout room of the Metbodist churcb on Suniday, November 1, wbicb ended Girl Scout. Week.' The service follois:ý Sonig--HaiI to the Scouts Song-The Swiss Chalet 1. Sunrise Prayer 2.Barter 3. The Coin Sông-.-Inanisfree 4.Wbo Loves the Ramn 5. .Leisure Song-Wind, Wind, Heat her Gypsy 6. Trees by Dalington 7. Trees by Kilmer 8. A Prayer by Markhain Song-The Tree Song 9. These Are the Gifts I Ask Song-Peace 10. The Girl Scout Leader to Her Girl Scout Il. Juliette Low's letter about The Great Recorder- 12. Juliette Low's last birthday day letter Song-Hymn of Sco ting-a Il standing 13. A word about renewing our promise to ourselves as. we start out on a .new Girl Scout Year-Mrs. Denoyer ..Taps" Girl Scout, 12, to Seek Story Lore in Lapland ýMary Remsen, North, 12-year-old Girl Scout daugbiter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W.,Nortb, of Walton, N. Y., ison ber way to Lapland with ber parents, -t b'elp tbemn gather materý- ial for abua interest story of the primitive inhabitants there.. At Oslo the Party will meet .Mary's 16-year-old brother, Robert C. North, and bis chum, Paul Reinhardt, a Cor- neil University student who wiIl go with them by ski. and reindeer sleighs on the three-month trip through Arc- tic Inniland. E A S E S SUFPERING Girl Scputing I. Be.,, to Physically .Handicapped, Work in England Now Reveais An experâmental -program of Girl Scouting for the physically bandi- capped girl, based on the results, of simi lar experiments in England,. is noW be ing developed. by the national Girl Scout' oirganization. Mrs. Ed- ward Fletcher Stevens, of B o s - ton, a member of tbe Girl Scout board of directors., has been directing a study of Girl Scouting amhong these girls, iduring the past- year. There are at present 59. Girl Scout troops and four Brownie packs 'of physically. handicapped girls in twenty- five 'states in this country, and in Hawaii., Sucb girls are also members of. regular Girl Scout troops in 76 communities. "England,' for màny years, bas made intensive efforts to. develop Guide companies and B r0W ni e packs in bospitals, sanatoria, in homes and in schoois for' tbe blind, the deaf and 'the crippled," said Mrs. Stevens. "The best educational thinking of the day, the experience of the ablest leaders.in England and in tbis country and the almost uni- versai desire of the girls themselves, aIl demand that the cbild wbo is blind, or deaf, or crippled or tubercu- Iar, shaîl be treated, just as far as possible, as if no physical limitations existei.' "Often Scouting gives to the girls in an institution 'their lWrst normal contact witb outside life. The Gir.l Scout promise and Iaws bring en- tirely new ideas of living thougbtful- ness for others, the joy of doing for others, instead of always receiving,, and gallant courage to, neet a 1n operation,ý or_ incessant -pain. These. are some of, the :tangible results which many institutions and bospitals report. "Moreover, membersbîp'in a wýorld organization widens the horizons .imited by bospital walls and institu- tion grounds." Fieldi Institutes Will Be Enjoyed as New Service A new.service for local Girl Scout council members, and the addition of three ýnew members tothe 'national. field staff, have been announced by national headquarters of ,tbe Girl Scouts, in New Yorkc City. Field institutes, or round table dis- cussion groups, for local members, to be. arranged. througbout the United, States, will be inaugurated in janu- aàry. - These meetings'* will include talks by experts on problems or sub- jects eslected by tbe local group; lat- est information and literature'on how local councils can most efficiently carry out tbeir programs -and open discussion of local problems, led by national staff members. .Miss Margaret Murray, Who re- cently joined the Girl Scout national staff, is the field institute secretary. The new staff inemrbers are: Miss 'Ruthi Stevens, of Wellesley Hilis, Mass. Miss Edith Sinnet of Boston, and Miss Kathryn Francis, of Lunen-, burg, Mass. Smith CU.g. Graduate Miss Stevens, who is a graduate of Smith college, bas been appointed di-- rector of the New Engtand region. For the past ten years Miss Stevens. has been director of the Massachu- setts Mandate Council in Boston. Miss Sinnet, who served as local Girl Scout director in Springfield, Mass., for. ten years, is a graduate. of the Massachusetts School of Art. She will be 'national -camp, advisor for the New England region. Miss Sinnet started Camp Bonnie Brae in the ,Berkshires, one of the first Girl Scout camps in this country, in 1917. Miss Francis, who bas been ap- pointed Brownie. tr amner for leaders of girls of pre-scout aÉe, is a gradu- ate of tbe University of Michigan. She was local director in Houston, Texas, from October 1928 tîntil Au-. gust 5 of. this year. cnurcn; i, 4 ooflp o, .v vinlhi.ii, ai i, Community House; Troop 9, Winnet- ka, at 10, Christ cburch; T roop '10, copal churcb; Troop 16, Glencoe, at 4, Winnetka, at 4, Christ Church Par- Union church; Troop 17, Glencoe, at ish House; Troop 11, Wilmette, at 4, 4, Union church: Troop 18, Winnetka, Episcopal church; Troop 13, Winnet- at 4, Skokie scboc4; Troop 19, 'Wil- ka, at 3:30, Christ Cburch Parish mette, at 4, Côngregational. church;ll House; Troop 14, Glencoe, at 7, Union Trroop, 20, Glencoe, at 4, Methodist church; Troop .15, Glencoe, at 4, IEpiW cburch. A Girl ing, to1 Hoover wife of orary p was reci enWs Nat diation- couiscniarsip n garden- îoop 15 311 and wi l obe able to DC kiiown as tbe Lou Henry at the meetings' for some time. It is lilarship in honor of the hoped Mrs.' Goodhue will soon be te President, wbo is hon- feeling well enough to continue with ident of the Girl 'Scouts, ber Scouting, and Troop 8 is con- ly approved by the Wom- sideted fortunate in baving Mrs. al Farm and Garden asso- Lowrey -'o carry, on. Mrs. Lowrey was Leader -of: Troop 13 «last year. i .