CHIEF WASH CO. OLD GOLD W. Wfll Pay Cash for Your, Sye Jewelry and Silver. %erExtra -. Vacation modey Dring ui your, ce De' PIACOCK JEWELERS SINCE 1837 STATE AND MONROE Read the Want-Ads zne j3sr %ampt.4 *-' i t* i i Jà Leaguers, mothers (sometimes memr division. This week, Mrs. Woolson bers of cbild study groups at home), of tbe sessions ending the been att bas Two-girls who once earned elec-, annual.convention of the Chicago as- tricians* badgesare bome-l1ightinig business ,women, university girls sociation of Dancing Masters, being, experts for a ligbt and poWer. com-, seeking professional training; counicil members wishing to do. their jobs hedin .the -Gold room of the Con- pany. gress hotl A girl who discovered her talent ini as well as though th.ey were being Many north,,shore girls were ut local Girl, Scout radio' programs -is paid; local directors and camp direc-, Idyle'Wyld with Mr. and Mrs. Wool- starting on professional engagements. tors on tbe lookout for freshenling, ex-pçriences. son this suminer. They came home Black Widews early last week. Among. tbem, were Iiiteresting Students Girl ScotI naturalists hold jobs Connie 'Wallace,. Hope Har.sbaw, of the interesting students Somne counselorsý or science Doriothea Hinnian, Jean Wooden. and as ntr girls from rural coinquiet ivere (One. is raising ý black June Woolson, of Winnetka;. Betty teachers. smfall town1 s, some of and ffinnities laborator)y medical and Jane Young of. Oxford,. Ohio, widow spider.s for tested. Girl Scout whorn had ,first formerly *of.Wininetka; Joan Porter purposès), *Girl Scout leadership tr»ainiing, tbrough 4hé correspondence of Kenilworth; Nancy. and Peggy ,may. be an asset to would-be, teach- *ourse for Lone Troop leaders which Pierson,., Betty jean. Moulding, ande ers. The girl on the cover of th*sr- costs only ý one. dollar, Seventy-six Audrey Lawrence, of Wilmette; and student.s completed the corresponRutb and, Mary Elizabeth. Lange, of port i.s looking at a planetaritim. "I deniece -course in 1935. told you so," cries Mr. Doubting Evaniston. More than 204,525 volunteer and Thomas. "Star-gazing! A mere hobprofessiotial leaders bave been trainby!" But we cani quote executives ed in Girl Scout schools and courses VI#JT YELLOWSTONE Whto imow thatr avocâtions are-stabilF silice 1924. Mr' and Mrs. joseph B. Pierson, their iMers. These ýcourses are often valuable daughter, Mary Jane, and their two You'll find every line of the Girl sons,1 Thomias and H1orner, of 139 Laurel Scout handbook pointing toward the ôtitside- Girl Scouting. Forty private avenue returned last week from a fort- day when the Girl Scout must ask: camps and many organization camps night's vacation in the west. They visited "What sort of work can 1 do best? (such as churches and boys' clubs) asked the Girl Scouts last year for Yellowstone. park, spent several days on How can I get a job?" a dude ranch in Wyomning, and did some When she is older, the Girl Scouts, salaried workers trained in Girl mountain-climbing in the Medicine through their nation-wide system of1 Scout courses and schools. Bowl mountaiPý where tbey enjoyed a training courses and schools, rnay Scouts Wonder snowball figlit. help her to find a foothold as a proSuggestions were made and suitable people placed. Later the Girl m's WardrobeCases. r LW W Ave Lock &TrunkShop' .vasstom à il m.UÈ&nR of University 5637 trauum an mmlm Mt year. Seventeen courses were r professional workers, but th e rgest numbers. were for volunteers ,ho came at their.own expense, excting no other advantage tban the tisfaction of learning to work ably wcv' we'r ivenin "t 'pla.ces of woricers Who have been sent 10 I non-Girl Scout jobs. Satisfactory on the whole, including a university girl with Girl Scout training wbo bad been employed as a teacher-companion to five daugbters. Two hundred seventy-live workers, were .placed hast year in camps ini the Girl Scout fiehd or outside of it by the Campers Exchange at Girl Scout headquarters. Evanston Greeneaf 2450 of 1209 ined from vhere she of ICenil- k