wuuvu wwwu--.- -S. I .Milton BallÔck bas been con- DVSFURNITURIE fined to, bis- home> at 121 Fourth I721 Main St.. vntn Uni. 72W0 street for tbe last fifteen months with I iheart trouble. inilm ir Advertisemeflts!b "Shop the Ada" each ireek ini WILMETTE LIFE mil...- ,r rqltfI liI UL reGeraL'.u t -- - - ,- chairInaln of the women's division of the 1937 Mobilization for Human Needs. SPRING The first day of spring las corne and 'witb it the first robin, the. first flower, the 25th anniversarY- of the founding of the first,troop of Girl Scouts, and the pflans already in the making for the first hikes and the. gloriois campinig seasoli, swlmmilif' tets and ever' thing." -%nd springi finds the Scouts eager to enter onl the new era. of: scouting. with enthu- siasm. 1936 was a nonentous year for the, girl Scouts. because it sawv them ouý their way% to a miilestone, the coin- oeinof their first quarter of a ire.t spirit 1016 pendable girls in green ,\,o are s on baud when ne eded or wben is, fun in the offing-tbe girls to the woods for the first rs, tbe sturdv girls you see ig their steak over the camp the girls witb the. neighborly and tbe zest for life. 6 saw that over 2,000,000 girls -1nfitted from their. program; -1î )blsbe b hadquarters,. ran articles on how to be a sciefltist 0o dress design .anàd Politics. Others w,ýanted parties. How did oie get to partie s? A, leader, paraphrasifg Pas- teur, sugg ested that chance favored girls Who had the clothes. They stud- ied diressimakiflg, dancing, the eti- quette of ënterta.iniflg. Trhe leader gave Chance, a push, .aind là! there was a dance 1 And the sociologists said GCirl jScoutting, as théy saw it, 1 vas an aid lin seli-develOPIniCi1t andý social. ail-. justme.nt. Inu 1936, a group of sPecialistsi socioblogy and allied 'isins finiished an, 18 niontb study of the Girl: Scout program. Girl Scout headquarters hâd asked thern to e whetlwz ..the principles andl prograrnswbicb had sruited the girls of '12 and the '20's were equally good for the girls of '36. .The specialists said the principles were uninmpeachabie : that the pro- gramn could be likewvise, if kept elas- tic; that. wbile rnost organizatiofls aged faster than individuals and ilat- urallv grewv rigid ini the process, the fact that» the Girl: Scouts could stop, nane ot the iuuiqnvm "TO~~ LV. is is directly associated with nature's 6"re- birth." Barth unfolds ber witn là,62o 4warus, kmu t* - ... t jolnvIo to , 14. wno Nverc %j, popularity was the hornemakiiig the total. Tbev suggested that both grop wth 1,38 wars.Nature and argroup with !3387 awards. jno end-groups, the Brownies of 7 to 10- artsgrop wth 3,87 awrds juiorand the older girls of 14 through 1, citizenship with 5,370 awards, and shouîd get more consideration and 14,203 hostess badges. 1936 saw an that the programn emphasis should be. increase of 12,000 in membership. altered on tbé basis of the studv find- - ASings. Fun hwida aotArngS The specialists said Girl Scouting- upgirls bad changed l Once women enmav-hgsalhi-oud Up - i.. ..:,1-it t be"t)o-ing and sociologically sound. anu 01 lupos-ter, and Dil lu,