SCOUTING FOR GIRLS 
545 
come, the more vital and enduring will be the work of the Girl 
Scouts, and this breadth of view cannot be obtained from the knowl- 
edge and practice of what might be called the “technique of Scouting'* 
alone. 
LEADERS* HANDBOOKS OF ALLIED ORGANIZATIONS 
The Boy Scout Movement Applied by the Church.^ Richardson- 
Loomis, Scribners. 
The Camp Eire Guides. National Headquarters of Girl Guides, 76 
Victoria Street, London, S. W. 1. Handbook for a special group of 
older Guides with a combination program of Girl Guides and Camp 
Eire Girls. 
Girls Clubs, Helen Ferris. E. P. Dutton and Co., 1919. Suggestions 
for programs, community cooperation, practical methods and helps 
in organization. Bibliography. 
The Girl Guides. Rules, Policy and Organization, 1918. 
Senior Guides, Rules, Policy and Organization, 1918. Both official 
manuals for Guiders. Nat. Hdqrs. Girl Guides, 76 Victoria Street, 
London, S. W. 1. 
Handbook for Scoutmasters. Nat. Council of the Boy Scouts, 200 
Fifth Avenue, New York City. 
Model Treasurer’s Book for Girls’ Clubs. National League of 
Women Workers, 25 cents. 
The Pine Tree Patrol, James Austin Wilder. Boy Scouts of 
America. 
PRACTICAL AND GENERAL READING 
Abbott, Edith; Women in Industry. Appleton, $2.00. 
Addams, Jane; Twenty Years at Hull House, Spirit of Youth in 
the City Streets, A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil, Macmillan. 
♦Angell, Emmett D.; Play. 
♦Bancroft, Jessie H.; Games for the Playground, Home, School and 
Gymnasium. Macmillan, $1.50. 
♦Burchenal, Elizabeth; Dances of the People... Shirmer. 
♦Byington, Margaret; What Social Workers Should Know About 
Their Own Communities. Russell Sage Foundation, N. Y. 
Cleveland, Frederick and Schaefer, Joseph; Democracy in Recon- 
struction, Houghton Mifflin, $2.50. Discussion by recognized leaders 
of the great social movements of to-day. Recommended as a back- 
ground for placing the Girl Scout movement. 
Daggett, Mabel Potter; Women Wanted. George H. Doran. A book 
about women in all walks of life, as affected by the war. 
♦Dewey, John; Schools of Tomorrow, School and Society. Showing 
the growth of the “Scout Idea’’ in our modern educational methods. 
Practical and stimulating. 
♦Douglass, H. Paul; The Little Town, Macmillan. The latest and- 
best treatment of rural social conditions. Especially recommended/ 
for Scout leaders in localities outside the great cities. 
♦Hoerle, Helen, and Salzberg, Florence B., The Girl and the Job, 
Henry Holt, $1.50. 
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins; Women in Economics, In This Our 
World, A Man Made World, Concerning Children... All: Small and 
Maynard. The most brilliant American writer on the woman move- 
ment. Sound economics and good psychology cleverly presented. 
James, William; Principles of Psychology, 2 vols. The psychologist 
who wrote like a novelist. Chapters of special interest: Habit, 
Instinct, Will, Emotions and The Stream of Consciousness. Talks 
to Teachers on Psychology, and to Students on Some of Life’s Ideals. 
Memories and Studies, especially essay on the Moral Equivalents of 
War... All: Henry Holt and Co. 
Key, Ellen; The Century of the Child. 
♦Lovejoy, Esther; The House of the Good Neighbor, Macmillan, 1919. 
Social and Medical work in France during the war by the President 
of the Women’s International Medical Association. 
