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Page 90 text:
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The I1!6l7ldK7'E'7',S Song THIRD PRIZE ,If jfff Z 1, 'I X ,f Mx I L'N ,--wv- ' -,,,NW,,,.mw 'mn.. rm, ,hh- W,,,nfI vn-..l V ,ff f fi .Za-Q .- f ,W . I , N 127' '- .', X 1 f'l 1 X 1 ' - R ,rift nj , I Cx I 'Ulf 'dv w : A- ' it z Q I M Lx-ll If - -in It . ' 'J' ' f 1 '..' QV, 1- IA. 7 ', '- -v-'L I. ' .' I I. W, v, - T.. A JV! .1-g-..-,.I In 6: , mv' 'P'-. - 1-.. ,1 ' Give me the friendly winding road That goes I know not where, A joyful word and a happy smile A heart that's free from care. For the countryside has a haunting call That cannot be denied To meet Life's flowing Tide. Give me a dancing morn in Spring With bluebells all the way, Or the drowsy, drowsy drone of bees That crown a summer's dayg For the countryside has a lasting charm That never will grow old That holds the sweetest memories More precious still than gold. Give me a true and thankful heart For all these joys and more. Give me the lips to praise the Name Of Him whom worlds adore. For the countryside proclaims His worth In bird and Hower and tree And as I love the countryside I can but thankful be. GRACE BI.-XRSHALL, III A Acad. THE ECHOE5
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Page 89 text:
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THE EcHoEs 39 Girl Gu z'dlz'1z g FIRST PRIZE, ACAD. FIRST FORMS GUIDING is really just a wonderful game in which all the members are sisters, working and playing to- gether. The Brownies are our little sisters, and the Rangers and Leaders, bigger sisters. This idea comes first from the fourth law - A Guide is a Friend to all and a sister to every other Guide, and secondly from the fact that when we are all dressed alike, working towards the same end, play- ing the same games, and singing the same songs, it makes us feel closer together than we feel ordinarily. Guiding is not all work nor yet all play. They are blended together so tastefully that even the hardest work seems jolly. Some of our work is very hard and takes much time and study. However, when you realize that We can get badges for doing our work well, then you do not wonder that we go at it so zealously. After a Guide gets her Second Class Badge, she may try for some Profi- ciency Badges. There is no excuse for a girl who has progressed this far not earning at least five of these sixty-four badges. For those who excel at Music there are Singer's, Music Lover's, and Minstrel's Badges, for those who like housework, Cook's and Domestic Ser- vice Badgesg for those who sew, Need1ewoman's, Embroideress' and Decorative Needlecraft Badges, and so on. Almost every girl has a hobby, and badges can be easily won by the girl who develops her hobby or her natural talents. Some of the badges that can be won for hobbies are: Pho- tographer, Book Lover, Bird Lover, Friend to Animals, Flower Lover, Astronomer, Airwoman, Cyclist, Writ- er, Knitter, Hiker, Swimmer, Canoe- ist, Athlete, Horsewoman, Gardener, Dancer, Gymnast, Artist, Entertainer, and many more. No one need think that as soon as a girl wins a badge she forgets what she has learned. She is called upon to use her knowledge almost every day, at Guides, at home, at school or in case of an emergency. Girls who qualify for their Lifesaver, Ambu- lance, Sick Nurse and Child Nurse Badges are following their motto to Be Prepared. There are summer camps at which the Guides are taught many useful things about camping, pitching tents, cooking, hiking, building fires, swim- ming and boating. For a Guide who has been taught to observe things around her, there is no such thing as a dull hike. Did you never see a group of happy, care-free Guides or Scouts, with knapsacks over their shoulders and note-books in their pockets, set off on a hike, singing so whole-heartedly that you longed to join them? A There are Guide songs for every occasion-funny and happy songs, rounds, marching, hiking, camping, rally and patriotic songs and Guide hymns. As a Guide Smiles and Sings Under All DiHiculties, these songs are often in use. The Ranger Branch is for the more advanced Guides who wish to go on after the age of sixteen, and learn how to become good citizens, how to take care of homes, how to think and act quickly in emergencies, how to teach younger Guides and many other things. There are also Extension Guides. These are girls who are blind, deaf, crippled, mentally deficient or inva- lids. These handicapped girls some- times live in an institution, a hospital or a home. Often the captain is in the same condition as her companv. In such a company there must be one normal person to help the others. Lone Guides are those who live too far from an active company to attend their meetings. These do most of their work through correspondence with the Lone Captain. F No matter what branch of Guiding a girl belongs to, if she is reallv in earnest and works hard to do heribest she cannot help growing into a useful, healthy and able citizen of her countrv. Every girl who has the opportunity should become a Guide, and every boy Continuzd on pagr 133
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Page 91 text:
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THE EcHoEs 41 Alone' FIRST PRIZE Give me an old log cabin, Under the tree I love, And there let me dream in the moon- light, 'Neath the bright, White stars above. Give me a couch made of scented boughs, W'ith a pillow at my head. And there when the lonely darkness comes, I'll creep snugly into bed. Give me as my alarm clock, The bright red sun of dawn, ' With the sweet fresh air of morning, And love-birds singing their song. Give me as my companion, An Indian bark canoe, And I'll clear the silver waters Till they melt in Heaven's blue. I love those great tall tossing pines, I love those silvery streams, And whenever I need solitude, I'll go there to dream my dreams. l JEAN IXIETCALFE, II Commercial
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