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Highland Park Press, 5 May 1932, p. 33

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leathercraft and naturecraft. Out of those crafts each boy may choose one. The camp leaders make it more interesting â€"since he & shows you how to build something all the _â€"____â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" â€"time.â€" This â€"yearâ€"we willâ€" workâ€"on â€"our crafts inâ€"our own villages. o mace At camp there is a doctor who takes care of you if you get hurt. This makes it im After one session of Camp Maâ€"Kaâ€"Jaâ€"Wan last summer try and keep me away! ~When I first went up I thought I wasn‘t going to like it, but after I was there a few ~â€"â€"days I soon changed my mind. You don‘t . â€"â€"get any time up there to think about not liking it, as the time is all filled up with ____._____fun. This is the fourth year of camp and there will be a bigger and better camp this m.â€"-bwfln Holmes, Troop 71, Libertyâ€" MAKE PLANS FOR CAMP ‘Troop 33‘s meeting was held on Saturday night instead of Friday on account of ‘Stuâ€" dent Stunts" at the high school. . The weather being suitable to the occasion we held the meeting outside on the playground. First we made plans about Camp Maâ€"Kaâ€"Jaâ€" ne?d NeRt ELTCSF+ Then six boys completed their second class requirements, and are intending to be first class by June. A board of review was wHY I WANT TO GO TO CAMP _ to pass. Meanwhile the other Scouts choose up sides and played baseball until too dark to see.â€"Kerwyn Smith, Troop 33, Lincoin PREPARE FOR Troop 36 of St. James school, Highwood, met on Friday, April 29 at St. James parâ€" and talk on the Campâ€"Oâ€"Ral was given by Mr:. Muzik, our district commissioner. Troop 36 will hold its fourth outdoor meeting next WINNETKA HIGHWOOD HUBBARD WOODS EVERETT GLENCOE LAKE FOREST week. The meeting closed with the Scoutâ€" master‘s benediction.â€"Ambrose Cantagallo, WILMETTE BRAESIDLE KENILWORTH RAVINIA INDIAN HILL â€" HIGHLAND PK. you want toâ€"fish you can, or you can go canoeing. You can have a good hike going through the woods and seeing the scenery. crafts inâ€"our own villages. pras At camp there is a doctor who takes care of you if you get hurt. This makes it ing in a wound.â€"Earl B. Smaill, Scribe, ing in a wound.â€"Earl Troop 77, Mundelein. . TROOP 34 HAS BOARD OF REVIEW Our weekly meeting was held Thursday instead of Friday because of Student Stunts at the Deerfleldâ€"Shields high school. After the board of review we played some games. Mr. and â€"we were to invite our parents. We are going to have patrol competition to see which patrol will have the most hobbies disâ€" played. He is going to show us movies from Camp Maâ€"Kaâ€"Jaâ€"Wan.â€"Troop Seribe Anders Hustvedt, Troop 34, Highland Park. SIOUX NEWS work on our bear tests and then we went outside and practiced for the basebaill game wm:oi#tohnwmnbcn!‘o.dnut Monday. e closed the meeting with the Zook‘s house. The meeting was opened with I want to for to continue preparing for the big At BRAESIDE in the camping and educational deplxtTonu will bring the latest developments and im provements to these men. ‘The scheme of the course will be ‘"Troop Camping in the Council Camp." It is expected that the North Shore Area council will later conduct LEADERS ATTEND CAMP SCHOOL Two Scout Leaders representing the North Shore Area council are this week attendâ€" ing a national camp training school conâ€" ducted by the national headquarters, Boy Scouts of America, through Region 7. The two men are assistant scoutmasters, George Bersch, Troop 4, Wilmette, and Scoutmaster John O‘Conmnor, Troop 35, Ravinia. The course is lasting six days, Monday through Saturday and the Natiqnal Scouting leaders a similar training course with the help of these two leaders in preparation for troop wWHAT IS A ' CAMPâ€"Oâ€"RAL? . . The Campâ€"Oâ€"Ral is a rally in camp, but a different kind of rally. It is a patrol event, where each patrol comes equipped to live "on its own" for at least two meals, camping out over night under its own shelâ€" ter and participating in several field proâ€" jects which will not be known to the comâ€" petitors until that part of the program beâ€" gins. From the inspection at the start until the Campâ€"Oâ€"Ral is officially closed, every action (or lack ‘of it) h‘_snhie‘gtnm‘ E;\;nt;- line and Green Bay road. . _ An entry is to be a patrol of eight boys thirty. daysâ€" priorâ€"to â€"theâ€"contest.â€"_Patrol leader must be exclusively in charge of the patrol on the field, as one of the eight members of such patrol. One or more ticipate a Scout must not have reached his eighteenth birthday. â€" Only such equipment and supplies as may beâ€"carriedâ€"by the participants or furnished on the field by the council may be used in the Campâ€"Oâ€"Ral All participating patrols must â€" present themselves equippedâ€" for inâ€" spection at headquarters tent on the field NEW SCOUTS8 _~~~ o C â€" AND SCQOUTERS f . The following new Scouts, and Cubs have joined the North Shore Area council during permissable. the last week : Kenilworthâ€"Troop 13, John Cunningham, Chas. Wright, Tom Keith, transferring from Pack 60. Pack 60, Jack MacLow. â€"Winnetkaâ€"Troop â€"17, â€"â€"Justus â€"Chancelior ; Troop 82, Denny Mason. Glencoeâ€"Vice chairman, Glencoe District committee, Lewis I. Birdsall. Libertyvilleâ€"James Madden. © Raviniaâ€"Pack 65, John Laurie, reâ€"regisâ€" tering. Diamond Lakeâ€"Troop 70, Emmett Bilinâ€" ski, Laverne Christensen, Wm. Clift, and James Ray. s Libertyvilleâ€"Troop 72, Ray Cooper, David Rennert, Louis Wehrenberger, reâ€"registering, Libertyvilleâ€"Pack 76, Rev. John DeLong, assistant cubmaster. §COUT BROADCAST CETS PUBLICITY Following is a copy of the announcement Ivanhoeâ€"Troop 81, Robert Lieber and Ray the expression of the paH competing teams are comp 1€ BAIMNE LEUUD, ERCECITIIE 05 ECMOCCC now existing, each Scout to have pvistered with that troop at least by the officials. The Campâ€"Oâ€"Ral BOY SCOUMWzzrDF AMERICA _ counmem TKE PRE8 YoU AND YOUR . GOVERNMENT On Tuesday, May 10, the regular weekly seriés of talks on "You and Your Governâ€" ment" will be conducted over station WLS from 7 to 7:30, daylight savings time. On that date theâ€"topic will be ‘The Campaign and economic planning" Stuart Chase, ecoâ€" nomist, will be the speaker. _ _ _ _ _ TROOP 35 HOLDS BOARD OF REVIEW 4 A troop board of review conducted by Treop 35‘s committee passed quite a number of boys in Scout advancement. Mr. O. S. McCorison, chairman of the committee was _‘These series of broadcasts ought to be of interest to every Scout, and of particular inâ€" terest to those working on Civics merit the following tests: Tenderfoot, Peter Wolff Article in Chicago Paper, Interesting Members of the Garden club of Deerfield, who are also ornithologicâ€" ally minded, found the following arâ€" ticle from a reécent issue of the Chiâ€" cago Daily News, of particular inâ€" Up the sheer walls of the Daily News building a brown creeper flutâ€" tered this morning catching a preâ€" carious foothold now and again with his sharp tail feathers and smail claws. f * * Office workers gathered at the window as each transparent square gave him new hope of escape. climb, circling up a tree consientiâ€" ously picking from the bark with its slender curved bill and curved, sharp pointed tongue every spider egg and insect he could find. His wings and feathers were soaked as if he had fallen into the river and his frightâ€" ened cheep was not the "wild sweet song"â€"described by thenaturalists. Obviously, the bird was tiring. The sympathetic spectators saw him strike a window, tailspin and flutter downward a dozen feet before he again caught a foothold. Some one would have to climb out along the window ledges to rescue the bird eight stories above the street. The brown creeper got a break and found a friend in the person of James C. Cronin, assistant manager of the building, who crawled to the rescue. The bird seemed to trust him; clung to his finger and later ate crumbs from his hand in its imâ€" basket. He was later taken to Linâ€" coln park and freed. The small lost bird is but one of an army now coming through Chiâ€" cago. Most of the warblers and wrens come in late Apfril and many are attracted to their deaths byâ€"the big beacons on the high buildings, naturalists say. Only a few lost in the maze of loop canyons find their way out to freedom and today‘s brown creeper was one of the lucky LEPHONEâ€"H.R 2431 *W.,* i ~~ 42w P S D40 Second class, Bud Loving, Chandler Kettâ€" ner and Art Hoffman. Merit badges, Steâ€" phen Buhrer, masonry; Calvin Defenbau, woodcarving ; Walter Metcalf, athleties and public health; John O‘Connor, printing and civies; Jack Venning, cooking and Orlando Vivirito, carpentry. PICK FRIDAY, 13TH FOR SOCIAL AFFAIR The members of the Order of the Arrow of the Maâ€"Kaâ€"Jaâ€"Wan chapter have planâ€" ned a sociglâ€" evening on Friday, May 13, to prove that there is no superstition in this group of honor members. Peter White, president of the Order of the Arrow, has appointed a committee, headed by John O‘Connor, to make all necessary arrangeâ€" ments. ‘The affair is to be held at the Raâ€" will bring his lady friend. An interesting, sociable program is awaiting them. GLENVIEW MUNDELEIN GoLFr LIBERTYVILLE NORTHBROOK DIAMOND LAKE NORTHFIELD HALF DAY DEERFIELD RONDOUT BANNOCKBURN IVANHOE Purnell at Rotary Club At the regular meeting of the Highland Park Rotary club, Monday noon, in the Moraine hotel, the guest Gorkom of the Evangelical Congreâ€" gational church, whose talk was Keard with interest." | â€"Dick â€"Purnell of the firm ofâ€"Purâ€" nell & Wilson gave a humerous acâ€" count of his recent visit to the Ford plant in Detroit to see a test of the new Ford Eight model.â€" He told of the thrills he got when "Wild Bill" performed without effort and with no appreciable vibration. Dick said his hair stood on end more than putting the car through some alâ€" most unbelievable stunts which it once when "Wild Bill" made the new car do some especially daring feat. He also explained that he owed his "hairâ€"raising" experience largely to Marshall Johnson who inâ€" troduced him to "Wild Bill." County street had a birthday party recently and on his birthday cake were 100 birthday candles. _ Mr. Whittleton was born April 21, 1832, at Horning, Norfolk, in England, just a century ago. _ Tells Experiences in Testing New Ford Car RELIABLE LAUNDRY Deerfield Greenhouse | â€" | ELM ST., 2 blocks south of Deerfieldâ€" av, & PHONE DEERFIELD 5â€" C % c Eon n agrce in e oi NP PnE‘ DRY CLEANING CO. Choice Pot Plants and _ Cut Flowers FOR MOTHER‘S DAY _ Phone H. P. 178 QUALITY LAUNDERERS and ‘_____DRY CLEANERS ________ Money Saving Prices amin ‘THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1932 Whittleton of 508 N. AND AT Saturday is the time Plans for 14 by the of the Higl are rapidl Comm THURSDAY, use of thei of Central convenient Members ing to con plants, whi low prices. disposed o taken. ped,

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