rerne Harrison, Ann Bradley, Georâ€" gia Ann Glader, Joan St. Gyr, Ruth St. Cyr, Ann Templeton, Grace Van Ornum, Theodora Zaeske, Ann Parâ€" sons, Nancy Zipoy, Patsy Barton and Marian Clark. Delores LeGoff was invited into the troop. The following women are members of the Girl Scout council and have served for the past year or more: Mrs. Roy O. Nereim, commissioner; Mrs. C. Eugene Pfister, deputy comâ€" missioner; Mrs. Jesse Ham, treasâ€" urer; Mrs. Robert Thompson, secreâ€" tary; camp chairman, Mrs. Edgar Carter;. finance chairman, Mrs. Edgar Carter; finance chairman, Mrs. Benedict K. Goodman; viceâ€" chairman of organization, Mrs. Leo Sheridan; program chairman, Mrs. Herman Zischke; : coâ€"ordinating chairman, Mrs, Barton Pope; pubâ€" licity chairman, Mrs. Philip Johnâ€" son; Juliette Low chairman, Mrs, J. M. Watkins Jr.;.training chairman, Mrs. Julius Laegeler; vice chairâ€" man of training, Mrs. Carroll Bartâ€" lett; community relations, Mrs. Claâ€" burn Jones; membership, Mrs. John Van Bergen; registrar, Mrs. John F. Priddat. . Girl Scout Gift at Garnett‘s Every registered Girl Scout should present her Certificate of Memberâ€" ship card at Garnett‘s Department store during the Girl Scout birthâ€" day week of March 12â€"18 for this year‘s anniversary gift. It is a pin consisting of the American flag and the Giri Scout troop flag. Garnett‘s have a window display of Girl Scout equipment carried regularly in their store in their window in honor of Girl Scout birthday week. Be sure to see it everyone. Girl Scouts get your pin. Girl Scouts on National Network News with Jackson Wheeler, Satâ€" urday, Sunday, 15 and 16, CBS, 11 to 11:05 a.m. t The Human Side of the News. During Girl Scout week, 6:05 to 6:15 p.m., CBS. Highland Park Girl Scout Troop 7 of Lincoln school held their first birthday party Tuesday afternoon, March 4, with an entertainment folâ€" lowed by refreshments. A Call to Grownâ€"Ups Girls can become Girl Scouts only when each unit has proper adult sponsorship â€" which means there is a definite place in Girl Scouting for grownâ€"ups. Adults in Girl Scouting More than 100,000 adults â€" men and womenâ€"are actively engaged in Girl Scout work in this country. Girl Scout Uniforms The Girl. Scout uniform has Thursday, March 13, 1941 Bob Becker‘s Chats About Dogs, Sunday, March 16 and 23, 3:45 to 4 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The following were presented second class badges: Mary Adler, Porr.ia_ Allen, Margery Baker, Noâ€" Tony Won‘s Scrapbook, Sunday NBC Red,; 4:15 to 4:30 p.m. C a m p bellâ€" Playhouse, Friday, March 14, 9:30 to 10, CBS p.m, Bob Hope, Tuesday, March 18, 10 Kate Smith, Friday, CBS, 12 to 12:15 p.m. GIRL SCOUTS Sunday evening the alleys will be open to the public for open bowling at 6 p.m. changed color three times since the organization was founded on March 12, 1912. The first troops wore dark blue. Later khaki was the approved color. Tt was not until 1927 that the green uniform now worn by the orâ€" ganization‘s half million members became the official Girl Scout dress. Scouts Are Homemakers Conservative people looked askâ€" ance at the first Girl Scout troops, fearing a cult of tomboyism. Girl Scout records show, however, that since the movement was founded in 1912, homemaking activities, inâ€" cluding cooking, sewing and child care, are the most popular of Girl Scout activities. In 1940, more than 100,000 merit badges for proficiency in homemaking were awarded. Historic Phone Call Deerfield Bowling Academy Four girl teams from O‘Farrell‘s Recreation in Waukegan will meet four girls teams from the Deerfield Bowling Academy in a match game at the Deerfield Academy at 3:30 Sunday afternoon. "The call that helped a million girls" was the phone call made March 12, 1912, in Savannah, Georâ€" gia, by Mrs. Juliette Low, inviting school girls to the first Girl Scout meeting in the United States, Growth of Girl Scouting The first Girl Scout troop in the United States was organized March 12, 1912, and had fewer than 20 members. Today there are more than 633,000 members and an "alâ€" umnae" group of more than a milâ€" lion. Men Aid Girl Scouting The number of men taking an acâ€" tive interest in Girl Scouting is inâ€" creasing every day. They serve on local councils and meet with troops as hobby experts. You Can, Too Mrs. Chester G. Marsh, national arts and crafts adviser for the Girl Scouts, believes that anyone can drawâ€"and can prove it! Historic Meeting The first Girl Scout troop met on March 12, 1912, in Savannah, Georâ€" gia, home of the founder of the movement in the United States, Juâ€" liette Low. The Village of Bannockburn will have a quiet election with no oppoâ€" sition on April 15. The following ticket has been filed with the vilâ€" lage clerk, Thomas Alder: Holdâ€"over trustees who remain on the board for another two years are Anthony F,. Nosek, Albert W. Torbet and Kenneth F. Towler. Harâ€" old Norman is the attorney for the board. Retiring trustees are R. W. Farmer, Harry T. Wright and Paul A. Potter. Fer Trustees four year termsâ€" George Stanwood, Edwin M. White and Laurence V. Meyering. Bannockburn Village Ticket Not Contested For Village President â€"Edward R. Seese. For Village Clerkâ€"G. M. (Bucky) Harris. THE PRESS Three persons were slightly inâ€" jured Monday evening, in a car crash at Skokie Blyvd. and Prairie avenue. A car driven by George W. Beauâ€" doin, 43, of Stephenson, Mich,, crashed into the rear of a car driven by Arthur J. Carlson, 48, of 8239 Damen avenue, Chicago, who had stopped for the Prairie avenue trafâ€" fic signal. Both cars were headed north, Beaudoin suffered face lacerations; Three Hurt In Crash On Skokie, Monday e? * If I had my way, d t‘%«? I‘d sprinkle a L. e few homemakâ€" ers among those S spending Uncle Sam‘s billions, to make sure of extraâ€"economical buying. For few men shop as carefully as their wives. I was impressed by this recently when a group of club women told me they alâ€" ways bought Wilson‘s Tender Made Ham because it requires but 5 minutes per pound in the oven and so with no wasteful oven shrinkage they get about 25% more ham servings from ‘Tender Made than from ordiâ€" =**" _ BROILED TENDER MADE HAM AND ORANGES Cut oranges in halt. Loosen the segâ€" ments. Flavor with sugar, butter and cinnamon. Butter both gides of an inchâ€"thick Tender Made Ham steak with Clear Brook Butter. Broil, together with orange halves, in a 400° F. oven. Remove oranges when brown. Broil ham 7 minutes on each side. Serve ham on platter surrounded by broiled oranges. Ahia Wikeon Labe priotitts your tible nary hams. veew That blitz rampage of two modern "Carrie Nations." They decided slotâ€"machines and dice were making too many homes unhappy, so they cracked down with hatchet and hamâ€" mer, and bang! Down went the town‘s lid. Read why they did it, and how, in The American Weekly, the magazine distributed with next week‘s Sunday Chicago Heraldâ€" American. Mervin L. Wetton, 54, 823 Case street, Higunce, Mich., leg bruises, and Tom Beaton, Jr., 44, Escanaba, Mich., leg bruises. RECTOR RECOMMENDS that spring delicacy, Boned Shoulder of Lamb, roasted. See you naut Looking over my recipe files at Wilson‘s yesterday I came across a favorite recipe, SAUSAGE PUFF. Fry 1 pound Wilson‘s Certiied Pure Pork Sausage Links. Dice 14 pound, reserve the rest, Arrange 6 slices of bread (crusts removed) in a greased casserole, sprinkling the diced sausages and some of the sauâ€" sage fat over each layer. Combine 2 cups warm milk, 6 Clear Brook Egge (beaten slightly), and ${ teaâ€" spoon salt. Pour this over the bread. Lay remaining sausages on top. Bake in a slow oven (325° F.) for 1 hour. Serves 6 to 8 people. For the "wearin‘ of the green" serve a cream of spinach soup on March 17. sages that tugs at your memory like the old swimmin‘ hole. And when I say "perfect pork sausages" I mean Wilson‘s Certiâ€" fied Pure Pork Sausage Links, ‘They‘re juicy, tender, perfectly ST. PATRICK®S SUGGESTION RECIPES Ask a hundred people to recall 'themau delicious breakfast of their childhood. 77 will say, *‘Griddle cakes and sauâ€" sages." For there‘s something about perfect pork sauâ€" 19