duoks. £9¢> State Garden Club The Garden club of I!ilinois, a fedâ€" eration of the 72 garden clubs in the northern part of the state, met at the Palmer House last week and apâ€" cial meeting was called for Oct. 30 to discuss plans for the Central States Garden and Flower show to be held by the club at the Chicago staâ€" dium April 5 to 13. y Highland Park 1051 No Finer Memorial the World Over! for Annual â€"Exhibit ROSEHILLâ€"MAUSOLEUM Perhaps you‘ve visited the great memorials of Europe, such as Westminster Abbeyâ€" certainly their ageless beauty is familiar to you. But have you overlooked Chicago‘s own famous mausoleum? Rosehill offers you for your family memorial a structure of a beauty comparable to that of oldâ€"world sanctuaries, and of even greater. security. Kings of past ages had not the same assurance that their private memorials would last unchanged through time that an irrevocable State Charter and two mighty trust funds guarantée for your memorial. s - ; Inspect Rosehill Mausoleum some day this weekâ€"a warm, quiet, Ioftly, lighted sancâ€" tuary of finest marble and bronze, dedicated to the living in memory of dear ones. for, or receive in person, the free booklet, "Rosehill the Beautiful." This in no way obligates you. _ C Cont ... oA f Famy ZAUNDR)’ ROSEHILL CEMETERY COMPANY For those who prefer ground burial we have a very large selection of family lots for two graves or more at most reasonable prices, 38. on ee en es O ainder Perpetual.Care......___â€"_. _‘ _:( Telephones 5800 Ravenswood Avenue â€" LONgbeach 5940 City Office:=83 South Clark Street â€"â€"FRAnklin 1287 deaesr. _ _ Trial ALL LAUNDRY SERVICES ... . nmembership, bringing the total of acâ€" Deerfield 379 W. L. Puterbaugh heads the Milledgeâ€" ville Garden club, Mrs. H. G. Miller the Garden club of Union, Miss Greta Allen the second unit of the Wheaâ€" ton Garden club and Mrs. W. H. Derâ€" nehl the Garden Lovers club of Riverâ€" side. men appointed are: membership, Mrs, Jos. E. Collender, St. Charles; proâ€" gram, â€" Mrs. William . L. Karcher, Freeport;. publicity, Mrs. Frank W. Kingsley, Evanston; revisions, Mrs. Edw, Dwight Pomeroy, Crystal Lake Four new clubs were admitted to Wilmette 1105 Give Us m o M L...ZLZAXAK L . A. Nive »a antined.areas _and..Congress. appropâ€" riated four million dollars for the flight.â€"Woman‘s Home Companion. _ Bayonets for Bugs _ When the fruit fiy was first found in Florida, four companies of militia were called out to police the quarâ€" ©BJ LOB D LA ILL Y 4 1. LmCO.... 4 C148 D AMieg: â€" 1 EMAE LCeL LA hk 4 .â€"â€"AT LR Ate M io Me : d e oc ME kE ondo heator unior clubgarder ing, Mrs. E.~G;: Clark, DeKalb; legâ€" islation, Mrs. J. Harris Bliss, Aurora; library, H. T. Alexander, Windsor Park, Chicago; seeds and plants, Miss Marcia Sperry, Batavia; social comâ€" mittee, Mrs. W. H. Colvin, Evanston; speakers bureau, Mrs., Chas, D, Ewer, Wilmette; flower show, Mrs. Jereome L. Deimel, highway weed exterminaâ€" tion, Mrs. Ernest C. Hoefer, Riverâ€" side. j Wynes, Mrs. Euclid© Snow, Hinsdale; conservation, Mrs. Carl Cropp, Hinsâ€" dale; education, Mrs. W. W. Geary, Deerfield; flower gifts, Mrs, Theo, E. Moritz, Kenilworth; finance, Mrs. Geo, M. Kendall, Glen Ellyn; garden locator, Mrs. John T. Pirie, Lake Forâ€" Batty, Glencoe; editors of.,ig bap and Chicago; rooms, Mrs. Paul L. TO)R.:0.Co rery * ;-â€"-râ€"r-‘ reeemmenon s é#‘m ive i; "n""“"â€™ï¬ C †_and I followed the elephant to_ what he would do with the rag, bagpipes, _and fifty thousand F Scouts beginâ€"to=â€"move;Firstâ€"con Americaâ€"fifteen hundred strong, ( Glory leading.. Everybody‘ in sho â€"â€"perfectly uniformed. As they p: the reviewing . stand _ each. sc breaks out a tiny American flag salute, and the Duke of Connau; raises his hand in acknowledgme As the nations follow there is eatch in every throat. Scouting come ~of ageâ€"theâ€"Knights of Pe: have become an army two mill strong. j ia half a houndred tongues. Never fore was it borne on me so stron,; how important a trust our own sc uniform should be to us, how carefu we should be in wearing it correc In our uniforms we become not j vast movement, of a great nati Carelessness of one reflects on â€" Let the world know us at â€"our bi in the official uniform correctly wo â€"James E. West, chief scout exe tive. e w.." . No one who was present at : opening <of the World~ Jamboree : the two weeks that followed will e lose that great inspiration. The ga of scouting as it is played around world has a hundred faces, but â€""By Their Uniforms Shall Ye Kn Them." . That was practically : only way in which we could tell wh "Back at the picket line in menagerie, the elephant â€" caref wadded up the flag and with trunk stuffed it into his mouth. T there was much more stuffing: rolling of eyes. FinaHy, afters single heart and motiveâ€"they â€" written in the scout oath and 1 We were proud of the world‘s sco‘ We â€"were ‘especially _ proud _ of â€" American boys. um "The rag was found stuffed i a tooth which had developed a la <«avity, evidentlyâ€"to ‘halt the pass thousands and thousands of spec tors. The chief sceout lifts a crool African horn to. his lips and blo Tellsâ€" How Elephant â€"Filledâ€"Hisâ€"Own Teeth With Circus Bunti How an elephant developed _ idea of filling his.own tooth is t by Courtneyâ€"Ryley Cooper, writer animal stories, in the October num of ~Theâ€" American> Magazine. : "The elephant stole one of the 1 ing out flags as he was brought fr the menagerie to push a wagon ab the grounds," says Cooper. * kept â€" itâ€" carefully concealed in trunkâ€"a red flag, torn from a s pin and used by the boss canvasn in the mornings to show where tents would rise. The boss bullâ€"n Yet human dentists are supposec be theâ€"only ones who know the r ons for filling a tooth."â€" rolling of eyes. FinaNy, after s dered him to open his mouth. _ Boy Scout_ (Continued from Page 31)