Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 25 Apr 1929, p. 35

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n Arbor on her return. rode in a bus to Kanâ€" and back. Is spent some time at > and plans to make in Highland Park.. e teachers and prinâ€" ‘rrace school, a tea rom Friday, April 12 to I 28, the spring vacaâ€" ‘lace has ended. _ mbers o{ the faculty ody visitsd other cities ring this time. Miss to Buffalo and back, cher Here ried in Chicago ~the Makio club of irl. Reserves Friday 20. : ~ 4 Pn een Bay Rd. 354 s t.. L. Strong, of Los aâ€"former teacher at n;ar school, was. marâ€" March 27, to a Chiâ€" couple plan~to reside r Beach hotel. cation Ends Elmâ€" Place School TCHING f Muaste : â€" " /isits Elm Place _ irl Reserves ‘ea for Faculty Thursday, April 25, 1929 Place last Tuesday inspected the school e has moved his busiâ€" BUTTONS, nd OTHER IMMINGS lisher of school muâ€" Service near 'SaWyer, M ichâ€" HNLE “.g“: Sign Articles With Indian Names 3?3 Every week the news and feature _ _ articles that will appear in this paper > willâ€" be â€" signed by the girl writing _ them. She will use her Indian Camp S FiT: name. This week the names are _ as follows: Ayâ€"An, Marjorie Kendall; _ Waâ€"Wa, Jean Barnet, Akâ€"L&@â€"Ti, Jesâ€" _ sie Barnet, Tanâ€"Da, Mrs. Carl Mcâ€" _ Manus, guardian. .. .S 0} Nve‘ itN â€"nceks" our poem.} ‘ _ corner will be filled with original _ _poems of the Camp Fire Girls of the . fif;;gg'.éwa'-Wa_-Ahahan,'.group. This Weeks( ~â€"_ poem follows. s f | _ After looking at the room, we.made _ plans. for a . hike for our group on ___ Monday, April 22nd. We also talked ____of having another Bake Sale in Highâ€" _= Wland.Park soon, the exact date has : not beén set. By the.time we got _ through our little meeting it was time _/ for the ceremonial to start: f s Visit Winnetka Ceremonials â€" _ Sunday, April 14th, eight Camp â€"_â€" Fire Girlsâ€" and their guardian, Mrs. o MceManus, went to the Canip Fire â€" _ Vesper ceremony held in Winnetka. _ We drove â€" down leaving Highland _ Park about four o‘clock in the afterâ€" _ noon. The paper advertised the proâ€" = â€" gram for 4:30, but when we got there _ we found that it did not start until ©105:30. Having an hour to wait we & asked theâ€"guardian of the "Winnetka _ Egroup if we could see their camp. __‘fire room. She had two girls show _ us around. ~Theyâ€"have a lovely large * room with afire place at one end. + â€" The names of all the girls are on _ the fire place in their, symbols mouldâ€" _ *ed in clay blocks and colored.. When *__ a girl enters the Camp Fire Girls, she -‘:j'picks_an Indian name and symbol _ _ "to decorate her things with. They _ had flowered curtains: hanging . on i. wooden poles and rings decorated in & P orange. Many of the chairs were .. painted different: colors to represent ___ _ the different craftsâ€"orange for home _ craft, yellow for business, red for _ _health, blue for nature, green for _ _handwork, and brown for camp. The _ bookâ€"shelves were decorated with .va.r-’ _ ious colored symbols on a background _ _ When we reached the church, which ;Z%gwas near to the Camp Fire room, we § found a large crowd already gathered, _ but we were early enough to get good _ seats.. Every one enjoyed the interâ€" _ esting program, which included well _ planned Camp Fire ceremonies and \ talks.> 2 Camp Fire Dogs in the sunlit gl Some sitting, some standing, all in a row. ¢ Some on cushions and some on cha Long legs, stubby tails, button e were theirs; Camp Fire Dogs all in a row. ~ _ laughing mouths, ,\,;g‘);x"hknow, All setting up in a row. â€" Camp Fire Dogs sat all in All different colors of the ra Big ears, long legs, : ;Brutton eyes, stubby tails, and â€"On our way home we all had a good time as every one tried to outâ€"sing the other. We arrived in Highland Park about seven o‘clock.. _ , or the next few weeks our ursday, April 25, 1929 Camp Fire Dogs some on chairs, Is, button eyes Camp Fire Flames â€"Akâ€"â€"Laâ€"Ti. allâ€" in a row, the rainbow. sunlit glow, in The first thing a Camp Fire Girl does after she is registered at headâ€" quarters is to begin working for honâ€" ors, which are the framework or skelâ€" eton ‘of ‘all the Camp Fire program â€"«"Honors" â€" are ~things "to be ‘done, sometimes big, sometimes small. These have been grouped under seven. Camp Fire brings good and hdppy things out of life to every Camp Fire sister. " The Camp Fire ideals of work, health, and _ love beginâ€" with the. girl, but they are not complete if they stop with a girl, a girl‘s group, her community, hqr state, her nation or even her continent. â€"They must be possible for every girl. Camp Fire is bigger than a community or state group. It is international, because its program enfolds girls al} over the globe. a â€" Program â€" Reaches® 22 Nations In 22 different countries throughâ€" out the‘ world, there are Camp Fire Girls carrying on the program . and ideals of the organization. The b‘ooct way to keep it is, work, love and sleep. â€" : Love when you work, love when you play, * Not only at morning but all through ‘the day. â€". s " The Woâ€"Heâ€"Lo Work with a song is the thing to do, For work with a frown makes others blue. 3 Health is a thing which we all want to keep, * Beautiful Udell Building Act Now if You Want .One of Them Mary Morris. ‘Selected examples of birds of paraâ€" dise,â€"the most cutiously and gorgeâ€" ously plumaged group of birds from. the islands of New Guinea, are to. be seen at Field Museum. §3 tuaiiyâ€"beâ€"done,â€"and that dving thereâ€" fore includes knowing. ® payr Patriotism and Citizenshipâ€"(Red, White, and Biue honor beads, the naâ€" tional colors, symbolic of patriotism}. â€" It will be noticed that most of the honors are "doing" honors and that very few are just knowing~ honors. That is because it is the spirit and ideals of. Canip Fire that:thereâ€" is really very little value in knowing how to do things if they cannot acâ€" Hand ecraftâ€"(Green â€" honor beads, green being symbolic of creation and growing things). . Business craft " â€" beads, yellow for gold) Natureâ€"craftâ€"(Blue }:onor beads, blue being symboli¢ of the sky which is the cover of all nature). Camp craftâ€"(Brown honor brown being symbolie of the of _ the earth and the trunks trees and the woods). ' headings called "Crafts" and each craft has a symbolic eclor. â€" When the winning of this honor has been recâ€" ognized the girl receives a wooden bead, the honor beads are â€"records of attainment, and are used as decorâ€" ations on the ceremonial gown. * These crafts are; home craft . (Flame honor beads, the flame being symbolic of the flame of the hearth). _ Health craftâ€"(Red honor beads, the read being symbolic of the red blood of health). € n (YÂ¥ellow honor honor beads, of the brown trunks of the â€"Tanâ€"Da. ! 5 ® .i------------------'------. & I _ INSTRUCTIONS FOR USMNG MaActc 1 : c&:m: Cnt..(;:t e!r:‘l:, lay on mw. p paper with carbon paper be E fasten to table with pin â€" through 0â€"&.: E spot. Mark short perpendicular line on i E nlainâ€"paper close to bottom edge of cirele 1A I as starting point. Turn cirele around until ; : No. 1 is at starting point, then trace over 4 a lineâ€" marked No. 1 inside the circle. â€"Turp [4 £ cirele around to No. 2 at starting point y ; line line No. 2 inside cirele ana *. "OU* 1 ..-------.-.-.--~.---.--.- & s Reproductons of notable Irish tiquities, including both secular ecelesiastic art, are shown in Eqy E. Ayer hall at Field Museum. Steffen Auto Supply Authorized MAJESTIC Dealer 17 North Second Street Phone Highland Park 350 Apartments Unrented "Left_ T wo ‘The â€" Only 1n nvradie Irish anâ€" both secular and shown in Edward 33

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