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11 MTBOL BNIT tt SCOUTIltt
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act have Boy scoot troops, that many
I of the churches are too snail to base
a troop, sprites John J? Gore, Scoet
? Executive, Knoacvilte, Tenn. ThST'1
haven "t enough boys of scoot age. Is
not soch a reply based spoa the con
ception of a troop of front'24 to 82
beys? Tree, there are many of tha
I smaller' churches which find It hafti
to master that nuuty boys above
twelve years of age, and becadse of
tola some scoot leaders consider soch
a church as lacking the opportunity
I fir troop organisation, many suggest
ing that several such churches combine
'and form a troop. The latter plan,
Emmi I.? ' vsMitofen Anf BoHo
| jSJBJPNjtof' fMOB WOrKS QUt I8u9*
factoriiy because the troop lacks the
identity it should have in the church
I' of which the boy la a member or with
?MA to I, Utattltod.
The error in assuming that the
church which cannot supply a suf
ficient number of boys to make up a
foil troop cannot organise for scout
lag is due in part at least to a failure
to emphasise the patrol as the real
salt of organisation. A patrol of eight
constitutes a large enough group to
provide excellent opportunity for good j
seating. In fact, the smaller number
has particular advantages. There is
mere likelihood of soccer'. In securing |
a leader and more chances ot an effl- j
dent program, There are men will- i
lag and competent to lead eight boys I
who are not willing and who are aot I
competent to handle a larger number.
With : his point of view can there not !
he organised groups of-boys in many !
churches where they are not now ar?; I
gaoised and where it-has been thought
imMMiMa tn ornnlze them? -AV I
I This leads us to declare that Is
other ways the patrol has not been
adequately emphasized. A troop is
no Stronger thin the patrols which ,
compose It. The patrols offer excel
lent opportunities for grading within the
trodps. .They afford die maximum op
portunity for developing older boy
leadership. The patrol leader I* a
vary important factor In the manage
ment at a troop. We sbotrid be more
concerned with his selection and pi*
fke special opportunities for. his. train
j?f?
alder boy is not along the line of sel
fishness through the proffer of priv
fieges, but through the appeal to serv
er. Patrol leaders' conferences, patrol
has h tteotieo
to am ^basise^^fir. pre
mfro to its to
? - trutiw -
VARIOUS GOODS TURNS
own (DBirait SMiU'w til over toe
country: "Shovelled scow from the
I fd*?l boo*e took ***
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I i*Tif IJIM/IX tiArf/ton c?nT Vi m n I ?
?*v8SH?0" CrF^uK ?l^lDhBCBS- - 3ft in I1rLr^^j".
i^pwred itebris after ftre. dug ditches
again, I've got vim know"
Bimvm
Boy of the North
Is Santa's pet dog.
g ^vwow, m
understand." said
Boy of the North.
So off went
Santa daw to
visit the shops as
he had many
to twice to thOTfti '*>
IflSoioetlnies he
got letters later on
asking -for *he|
things that boys
and g&jjBf*saw in
the shops, but
that was all right,!
-- V- >??! in or.
I -------- w?th iijr J&r la
rangement with ev^ry store where Be
took toys that iiftiuift of these things
tn the shops he was to take oo Christ
m? ere to the children. 1'
For many of thte toys he left ln:??
Shops just to show the children what
toe toys were like and so they* know
which ones .to ask for, if they hadnt
already maue up their minds.
Some of the toys he left for this
purpose and some he left for decora
What packs be had to unload this
evening:! **e had some more grocfery
stores to leave and some little toy
grocery men-to p^oull'.de of these
toy stores. :
5e left ait kinds of, sets of. fur
niture, chairs, couches, brass beds.
He left dolls' houses with elevators
going up and down In them. He left
some toy reindeer. p&Ji
c 7pe undid any .number of bundles
filled with trains and tracks and tu?r l
nda and stations, and these be at*
TWd
I He made a great shelf all around
I one store and fee pot wooden animals
I en It la 4 row. ' 3 W
I I nJ'jZ Wfi-*yV#tJk ;?7*? r?Vj"f L>iY '4m}
Kg Then lie fired some machJnpty so
? /hese animals would 'pande around
II and around this shelf, one right after
i Sh^M't^Way ar0U^- vS' -lt
? : ^ He left some circus toys and many
so they looked asthoug^ t^ey were
H I "> ?? V4* v*W#
| children look in oaf of the mirrors
tbeyni^look and fat, Jrad
J Tve been ^ked, too, to leave three
toy bears, of three different sizes, to
Kkreet the children in one of the other I
J bears In the old, old story.
|v "Then I've been especially aake^ to
build a great big shoe so It wlfl look
Mother Goose story the children all
[gfl every child1
I vlivijf .* rJHli^vJ
I bftbtos do jprow
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11 fa'^Pay 9>tA J'": *j?fl " '.'- ^*$?TS5B ^JSn?*; ' "SV''>^lKKi-f T I
|- rl.i^Ti. .J-blB L> I Mil' &*h'jli '^niwi i
-JihQTth'i ChtinploB Suited '* I
YOUNG PBOPLB AND ADULT '1GFICL
. Knowing that the time of hlifrnme
\as<aear, he did not change his {
manner or method of life, but thought
(w. 2-8). At the Lord's dlrattonhe
went to give his farewell counsels^ ?
the young students whom he had been' ?
training and npon whom the future
of the nation politically and reli
giously ao largely depended.- He made
regular rounds In visitation and, In
struct! bn.' Schools were located at
GUgal. Bethel and Jericho. His <H. I
oetioosl work shows him to hare been
not merely an iconoclasft'but a ftatea-l ?
man <rf a high order.
- ? wi-h.?tn h? hi* successor
II ?w.sns??
ahip between Elijah and EUaha,
I though the one was old and the other
yonng, Blisha came Into the ^Ilfe of
test^^^a^ee soinflffljflt lil^e thos^ of the
T^hii vrppnt nhlA^*1 nine tA tr&t him
Held, "the experience of*'efery cMlfc
IS*
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jrt^dfMtn?r and jr. |
pobllc ministry - I
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' OTftrtot of are 6nYol0D$d PT tnft Yrh)???? i
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Patience cures many an old com-j
KjS&S s* '.- ...?;- . - J?'"*
^?Pl
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ample of palmistry. I happened to
glance at the hand of a friend, and
I Immediately predicted he would pres
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enUy ^ ^ of^a con
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h asJeep. For the most fevorabie- trans- j