link 1 ('nhin In (‘nbin my time it is being used and hrlpx keep the pine in order. Mr. John Kmllinx. I drpuly forest pre- servo warden living an! the camp. watches the property during the week. Arr-unmet.“ for, use of the Cabin an mule thnmah the North Shore Are. Council in Highland Park, phone llilhluml Purk 629 " Winn"- shin In Woods ls Week-End Camp Site The trouble with an price: is that few people wealthy. have the money antm of ting low when and 'ulrte price.- I'le! tutti". Pow If 'rnrhl MaeN pawn unnoum ide What Smut: Have Dune H the cyclu southern Boy Scouts were on continuous duty immediately following the Pueblo Fluid. also the more re- rent Mianiuippi uml New Enl- luml “out“. . Boy Be hundred ttnrtiantion in bttrtt an" ntr the , Scout: were am to “rive the u'em- with the Red Croats the lt‘orialu than" in 1926. Smut ll " ytwlrnhy minimum-rd the fol- Imtial donation-z Albert P. Highland Park, 8500: Henry . Wilmette. 'hott; R. E. Wood, ml Park, 3500; Chrome T, H: tion Stunts were hut on the to relieve distress when yeIone struck nannies in urn Illinois in 1925. wk! Smuts rendered service M. hazard in the Santa Bur- rnrthnuake din-Mn and in hurricanes and tornadoes. Scum: have rescued men, m and ehihtren who other. Smut training made it POB- for Scouts to heroine actin- roablo members of the Mar. 2ohn African Expedition, mlquurtorx trout MM Id Se. Expeditions an" Rule Sam! ot Mow to be It!!! Byrd’s aide xpeditiun. H Wood am n have 1 thousand» by thy sill have n childn-n have cln ood, rhuirman of the tee of the Scout am- y unnamed the tol. donation-z Albert P rhmwn for I908 mom hl lluhn is at the a being used and re in order. Mr. "laud be wording sine. the on " this grant- in the world WIN mill Mt performed [ of "Good Prosperity "on to lo outside thi to take " the I as (tom the Ant At Further Mor- Ind dis- cam l0 ll 9. Tn tNit SIT" "OI'RS "TWENTY-NH] IlOl'RS" fully wihcl who "nu ionabre people" aginml. Old "1 and putty and rt dinner party I others: Sabina firtorwier to keep him away Irom me tttlvettturrss Mrs. Winthrinttham, but not noticing her husband who is com- pletely drank, and lastly Phillip. Mee- tnr's nephew. who might be dismissed " "beautiful but dumb." We have, fortunately. only twenty-four hours of their lives to tto through. yet this so popular literary device causes us to have to listen to a good deal of [Ind their history told by themselves to each other. _ On this particular night math hap. pen:- in the way of people going home with other people's wives and it ends in Towner twin: implicated in a mur- der mystery. It only one of them would become ttttttttttt for tt moment. make us cure a whit that happens to them, but since they are only chinl. wtutt's the odds? Perhaps old Snbinu has " the end n human tremor, but it tlleot It provides a code of tunes which n boy can understand and master, namely the Scout Oath and Law. It eonstruetively employs the boy's leisure time. -lt mangle“, wholesome “so- cintion with other boys ttnd men. M. in highly relixioua. Iltllough non-sectarian. -It is truly patriotic, although non-militaristic. _ -It teaches service through the "dttily good turn." -It teaches good citlumhip thru practice. It ' themselvvs t puma of the A drmwier rn ted worn-n II petty i er David N " the Twelve Reasons By Louis nromtuld Frrqirriek A. Stokes t vrowd of so-culled "tash. l1-" rould suureely be im. Ih-stur Champion, white vi repulsive who Rives the r at which we meet the inn, the nun-ht. fruso n: Fanny Towner, jealous joulously wuchinz her Molhourn. the hnrd.bitten keep him â€My from the Mrs. Winthrinttham, but her husband who is com. k, and lastly Phillip. Mee- r, who might be dismined al but dumb." We have, 7,, ESTHER "t"RRirin" QTRAVEL " co RNER, code of ethies understand and the Scout Oath otpensive shop THE PRESS SCOUT CAMPING When a boy first goes to summer scout camp he is what atheltie coach- es call “green material." In (not, he is new to every phase of camp life and is consequently dubbed a “green- horn" by his more experienced camp- and is horn" mules. Ag the days an by and he gets used tn the routine hi the camp and begins to realize the good that he is going to get .out of his clmping life, he shares in the other boys' utivities and begins to have I sort of brotherly companionship with them. Two weeks of camping always, brings out just what type of scout you really are. The sort of "back ttr; nature" routing shows his character“ up clearly. A boy soon realizes that he therefore tries to favorably im-I press his companions by doing the, finer, more mlnly things. After ttl boy goes home from camp he knows that he carries away with him some- thing that other boys do not have, mainly, a new outlook on his future life, new companions and friends, new knowledge in crafts and also a knowl- edge that he can say that he has been to scout camp and is now a veteran. -Seout Jack Osborn, troop 71, Liber- i lyville. Ill. enough THE NEAR EAST _ "ORIENTAL MEMOISIIFS or' A is not soon enough or convincing his own. My ambition my beyond the desire to rm understood." Dr. Reason f in his preface, eaneernimt for writing the hook: “I t tonded to write an autohio have merely tried to aim of those countries as l s: a time when the influx 0 ways and ideas had not yet much ortheir original ch: in his preface, euneerrtintt the ‘reason‘ for writing the book: "I hive not in, tended to write an autobiography, but l have merely tried to give a picture of those countries as I saw them at a time when the influx of European) ways and ideas had not yet obliterated i much ortheir original character . . .1 If I succeed in giving a true and un-: biased picture of bygone years. IL hope to have made a step on the[ road which may lead to the removal) of the evil effects of the War and a†propaganda which has poisoned the) relationship of two nations between whom an armed eoMiet ought never have been considered possible." Whether or not Dr. Rosen's book will do anything toward this latter purpose it is diff1eult to any, but as to the former, giving n picture of those years before European infiuenee came to the Near East, he he: done much. The picture of his boyhood home in Jerusalem, from the terrace lot which could be seen the Mount of “Olives. and only one street removed "aiiiiis DII’LOMAT" My Frederick Rogen E. P. Dtttton from the Via Dolorostt, gives strange blendin ttof old and new. In Dr. Rosen’s late! life he (a up the diplomatic profession and one time returned to Jerusalem to be con- sul as his father had been before him. There are interesting stories of di- plomacy. and still more are there in- teresting bits of far " countries, old doorways, strange customs. queer streets, teeming with people. It you like such things you will like this simply told story. At E ' Prrurm you feel that you must find I new way to Europe . ' . one that wilt really add none-thing to your trip abroad. Soil on June 30 on our eleventh annual North (Lupe Cruile. Visit lrelend.|he Lend of the Midnight Sun, the Fjords of Norway. Trondhjem, Bergen. and Oslo, Vilby end Stock- hoim.r.opeahtwrm Dennis and above nil Leningrad and Momw. On the newest of the tpeat Cunard- - S. E"ortrsthuf'. 'Thirty-tive restful days to “am or soo-on-thers tonlilule your plenum when you will. Sailing after school. and college. iiia"GiTi'i,uu cruise In! uny- been extremely popular with you; peoples 176 N. memo: Ave. - State 8615 CHICAGO RAYM 0 N D- WHITCOMB iiriiiaira3mrcoto co, IN N. Miehiayt AVON" _ or your loo-I Swan-hip "mst H 'Plnu all no 0 North Ca Booth! T,'S.'thh1' to Tn"! the, Eiracii .7 Thursday, February 6, 1981 To Paris via Iceland - . . he took