SCOUTING FOR GIRLS 
509 
DRUMMER 
SYMBOL— DRUM AND STICKS 
Be prepared to play all of the following: taps and steps and in order 
farther to show proficiency on the drum, perform any feat selected. 
1, “Roll off”; 2, Flam (right and left hand); 3, Five-stroke roll; 
4, Seven-stroke roll; 5, “Taps” step; 6, Six-eight step; 7, Two-four 
step; 8, Four-four step. 
REFERENCES; 
“Recollections of a Drummer Boy,” H. M. Kieffer, Houghton 
Mifflin. 
ECONOMIST 
SYMBOL— BEE 
A Girl Scout must qualify for 1, and 2, 3, or 4. 
1. Offer record of ten per cent savings from earnings or allowance 
for three months. 
Show card for Postal Savings, or a book of Thrift Stamps. 
2. Show record from parent or guardian that she has: 
a. Darned stockings. 
b. Keep shoes shined and repaired. 
c. Not used safety pins or other makeshift for buttons, hooks, 
hems of skirts, belts, etc. 
d. Kept clothes mended and cleansed from small spots. 
3. For girls who have the spending of their money, either in allow- 
ance or earnings, show by character of shoes, stockings and 
gloves, hair-ribbons, handkerchiefs and other accessories that 
they know how to select them for wearing qualities and how to 
keep them in repair. 
4. For girls who have marketing to do for family, show record of 
one week's buying and menus in which plans were carried out 
for using food economically, such as left-overs, cheap but nour- 
ishing cuts of meat, butter substitutes, thrifty use of milk such 
as sour, skimmed or powdered milk, and so forth. 
REFERENCES : 
“Scout Law in Practice,” A. A. Carey, Little. 
“Thrift and Conservation,” A. H. Chamberlain, Lippincott. 
