Newspapers / The New Bernian (New … / Nov. 17, 1922, edition 1 / Page 2
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" FRIDAY AFTERNOON,-NOVEMBER 17-1S22. Davidson In The Best of Form oy -Scout Organization 1 American Speed In Boxing HUCK FINN AND TOM SAWYER By DWIG Plans Training Centre Dismays Foreign Fig tHE NEW BERN UN-JOURNAL MEW ' TftUK,1 NOV. ! 17. The Na tional Council "Of;' the -Boy- Scouts:, of America, carrying out its prograrrt" of exuansion. ; has - announced ' Its pur pose of opening four big national cen ters, probably ' one ;. in" the middle west, one .. in , the, far - west and one in the. south.-' This "headquarters ? in the field" will furnish, an opportun ity to concentrate experimental work as well as furnish an excellent train ing center, especially for . courses in ?Howtoj Train . Scoutmasters." If it is not practicable , to : bring the -exe. cutives to ' the centers . for training alojig these lines, it'Willbe -possible to' move the head faculty-to. different parts 04 the country. The scout executive- jjs the salaried official in a bis city, : or "community, ' , who makes scouting his : businessc and directs- the volunteer Readership of the move ment, For many year there have Jeen available in different parts of the country, varouis training courses ior scoutmasters. The scoutmaster .is tiie volunteer leader who takes charge of a unit tailed a troop. . -, - ' . Mortimer,:. I..-SchhT,- who has serv td as Vioe-President of the National .Council,1 lias recently- been1;, appoint ed International Oonmissioner'Of. the Manizatioh. wilT. devote his time to the iruern.tlonal'- uffaira ot the Eoy S -oats . . ' , " ,. k Since tjje, beciamng of .scouting - m this courcfry -ver t-xCe years. ago, a total of 4,777 eagle badges, the high est rang in 'scouting' have hein is sued?. Of this number 1.477 have been alloted since the first of the present year. , It is c6nsidered remarkable "that such a large proportion . of , thes3 marks of distinction should have been given out in the past .J. 0 months. In order' 'to attain .this much coveted eagle badge, the scout begins as a . . . . . . t-; . tenderfoot nad . climbs up the ladder one! rung, at a time -until he becomes a second class, and, then a first class scout. It is at this point that the hoy begins to do his real .climbing, , which calls for training along special lines. After he is a first class scout, , he-may become a life scout, and them-a star scout, and then comes the i highest rank,, which is Eagle. Eleven of the merit badges the scout must obtain to become ;an Eagle are specifically in the 'fields of , first- aid, life saving, personal health, public health, topp ing? camping, civis, bird study, path finding, pioneering- and athletics or physical development. .' A . : tVom now "unil next February the scout organization will - conduct a campaign v for more members. :. It is hoped to increase the enrollment by 100,000 scouts, . or twenty-fivfe. per cent, of the present membership!'. U. L'. g. leaves volley mm Carolina Squad, . Confident and Chipper, ,Go? To. Continue : r Victories . CHAPEL.1 HILL, Nov. 17.The Car olina football . squad "will leave, here tonight-for. Charlotte to meet, David son tomorrow.- - . r ' Fetzer's men-are in good condition. There were some hurta recevied in the "V. M, I. game last Saturday, but they turned oufc not to be serious. The Fetzers and Drr Roberts S. Lawson, 1 he team's physician and - trainer, have been mighty careful not to run any unnecessary risks since the team came. . back . from' Richmond' -They don't believe in working players too hard as the season nears its close.. , It is possible that Fred M orris , will stay out j of " the . DaviSan match, but this is hof-' tnOwn" for certain: : ? :;. Merritt, i the - Chapel Hill battering , ran wn was put -nlto- tne V. At; I. jgame to jniakeJthe final ine-bucks fpr Carolina, toward the end of the 94 yard march fpr a touchdown in the last quarter,, is 'almost certain to per m form. in Charlotte. Some ot the. close . 'followers of -; the .practice these last few days think ( he 'may go in ' at- the very, beginning. .. .. , -; ' ; An advertisement T In - a Richmond . evening paper received here today has treated Considerable interest among "those: Who -'haver seen it in ..Graduate ,Mar.agerr Woolen's office. This adver tisement of ; T)irik takes the Caro lina V.;M.. game f or ta text It tells hat V. ii:' 1. sc6red on' a ftuke, atid icame. yery .jaear " winning, . but . thett Oaraiifta, by steadiness and persis tence, Wori'.out.VThe moral .is that you must be a steady and . persistent sav- r if you want . t:o wiA' out financially - . and the . best place to deposit your . savings is-? the Suck and Suck b"ank The big feature of the advertisement ' is a photograph" of the Carolina and 'V. M. I., - teams in action. . . ;The ;most probable vline-up in he i Invlritnn cr 1 Tr tk fa. - . ..:-. . Left: end-R.; Morris. . . i ; H , Left , tackle 1Matthew.s.' : LeftJuard Pritchard (capt.) ' T T T Fast Team; To Be Organized -' And Daiiy Practices Held . At the Y. MC. A. Wjimk J wwcep entwine Me yw toy- 1 sifM i G tee eH v0 ' ' R'ti ! YFWM ' 9 ; a' rJtev-te contuse5 W'. ' -n ff i Wh vtW&ne '; : ' i . ' :. - BERLIN, Nov. 17. -Boxing has be-, ringside, immeditaely - Issued cHk4l- . come so popular In Germany that thef length to; the winner and.' It Was alj-! - American system of matinee programs .cepted. V - :J -X: :''r' Vina hopn nrtonted. Some 10.000 "fans' Americans who aitnAiif. ViS tiAv-:. "'-.'. LTUWUCU l.H-5 Ut-"' hav. w c. vwvm vs. AWu iUAHJV .BEZUUSMilia- Wtt IH.IVAP two recent bills, and it was stated the bouts on the bill. I oae ot tbese flpmand wnnlrl have been even, ereat- flabhv; '159-iififi(l' hnTBii. vk'tiui ; er had it not been for the fact that CQrae somewhat vp? A 5foca faVorit.v the bouts were staged 'in. the. evening as Glerman' pugilistic stasdrads go. anil manv suburbanites were keDt . nut un a comk--nner.i ' nnhnolHAfi v . away by the difficulty of getting mid- a lighter man, enraging , many en.. nignt trams nome. t - . musiasis wno naa Deen exnectln a- Americans here are interested in ptiff bate. letter stolidly ; CJng ' Hans Breitenstraeter, . C?ermany's little or no guard, to ward off raiii' with an: American boxer. Samson, who effectiveness. the favorite : hltrnthr. T( J A L. A l ' " . 41 -. .. . 1 1 Y i ... ''.V . -.f.'.1'- jjiuyiucu jc ooiKauuu oi iiio eve- waiitea over- to nis corner, gnrtngj- Up ?: ning in his Berlin debut1 recently, the fight.' He. was .greeted with a.' . sparring partner of Jack B-empsey, : A Dutch boxen understood to have. . and toV have made good showings a fair reputation behind him, ftsurei n'frfiiTiaf filllK -fiffltTi o a Trim fliKhnn. in tho winTun a, a iiva4-.t.A. 'n. : anA "114" NToiPnlU 'i V T Alton UX-.- n..4x: r Samson surprised; the spectator by trom. appearing because , ofr illneS)." showing a- speed and an aererressive- After , keenine the1 - andienr.e -: anil :.a- iua gioaiijr uuuua.ung wuu iiic Bins-, nuge. tiermiiir opponent nQpanwciy gisn maneuvers, or ine nauve taienu - waiting, ten minutes- for Jiin tc enrtr j -,i Although, twenty : pouds lighter than; the ring, the HoIlinde.i;';appeaifdvi Hugo Podzuhri (175),, a Bavarian of tended by an imposing) reUnaie ot a- jiia-iijr, - yc, aiiici iuau miuuncu up- nun uiuwa euiy. in me llglll, : autl,. ponent downo often in the two- open, thereafter the visitor fled- in panicv . -pins i uujium, iuai ui laiicr s seconds irum- one, nun lung enougij to secure ' saved their, fighter- from the.' other 8 aY knock-out in the first--, round. The Tounas dv- xnrowing , in ; me towei. crowa sympainieea, . m-ugnea. ,. ana ' Brleitenstraeter, The; Men's Volley Ball Class . will start up in big numbers this after noon at 6 o clock. All. business . men are cordially Invited and urged to at tend these exercises each: afternoon. They will be so' beneficial and a match team will be'ovganlze'd fo play Wash ington at an early -date, r - The boys from over Pamlico river way are rearing to go and now that Carl Goerch . is back from -' his boll weevil expedition in Texas, and John T61son- has got, his business lined, up, and Batson has placed -alt the sew ing machines needed for this year, and Rouse is not worrying about anything and Henri', Jowdyand the rest are restless, for something to! do, so look- out . from this . afternoon ; on. there will ( be something doing: ' FIGHT ON THE DRAFT BY MINOR LOOPS BRINGS TROUBLE MUSTAPIIA KEMAfc SENDS NOTE I CONGKATCTxATlXG RUSSIANS Angora, Nov. 17.--Mustapha Kemal Paha, Nationalist leader, has tele graphed the Jioscow government his felicitations upon ' the fifth anniver sary of .the Soviet revolution in ( Rus sia. x - . "The soviet , revolution," says the message, "'pverturned the old regime and inaugurated a new era, one of the ; principal features of which has been the establishment- of a Russo- Turkish friendship which I am coii vincedwiU, grow stronger and,strong- er." , , .' Thieves i who . robbed a Newark church didn't know much about -what they were getting intol ' - Centei' Blbunt. . Right guard Poindexter. Right tackle Mclver, High . end Cochran. Quartern-McDonald.' ' - ' Left ; half F.. Morris or. Merrit Righit, half Johnston. Fullback McGee. NEW YORK,, Nov. 17. A proposal that the'' American' -League boycott the minor leagues which i have held out against the draft will be made by .Ban, Johnson,,- at : the.; Iecember meeting of the "junior circuit ;in New York, according to reports here .to--day. This; it is said, . is the bomb which Mr. Johnson said recently he intended . to""TtPSS into the meeting. , The draft question has been agitat ing baseball for the last two years. Vp4ciflflc Coast League,-Tnternational Wnpn rntnmiQfifftnpr T.iinrTia tirfici in-1 T ? .. .. . . .. -;' ducted. into office five of the-minor league 'tlubs obtained exemption from the provisions of the. draft progjg.m'. Last year a proposal that the minor league clubs he boycotted failed.. ' ' :tNow it is proposed,, according' ; to reports, to place the proposition be fore the American League'. The five mfcor-leagues that are not bound by the draft agreement are: The4. Amer ican i Association, International., Lea gue, Pacific, Coast League, S6utherh Association, and Western League.' 1 TROUBLE BREWING New York, Nov. 17. -Another of those political flare-ups for which major league baseball has become famous long "since, is- in. prospect when Jhe joint meeting of the Amer ican and National Leagues, is held here in December. This one,- so we are informed, is to be an issue be tween Ban Johnson and Judge Lan dis, baseball autocrats, past and present, and while the draft ostensi bly will he used as a basis of argu ment, i St will be nothing else than a fight to swing the balance of power to the man who has become some thing" of a baseball figurehead. (Johnson . has promised to - drop a b4mb-shell ; into t the i major ' league meeting. ' This, it seems, is to take the form ot a demand- that the Amer ican League either- force the large fif m i n or Orgahiiza t Kins - to - swall o w the draft, in tot p,v or suffer a boy cott. ' , ' '', Such action wduld break the major-minor' agreement, by the terms of which the American Association, '- f." if St -f : th miltBij aspecial for gou iodofherest ! 11 - 11,1, M -' ' : PACKED li.A0Z.NET. 4". - mm I ir ir vv u lint t ;THEHECKERCEREALG)rtPANV DISTRIBUTORS; I HEW YORK J.V. v -4'v- 5 wni i , in i in I i nimii lit League, Southern Association and the Western League were ydecla'red' im mjune 'from the draft and automati cally 'would ''line.p.' Johnson t and Landis on opposite sides of the fence. .; t :' To be ; consistent, the National League would, of . necessity, line up With the commissioner, since' it Went on record as lite as last year'. as op posing; a similar play, introduced" by Charley Ebbets. And there you have the ingredients' of another , diverting ! little; family-, brawl. ! i .-;.;;.' Some go as far as to intimate that ap ihter-league war is brewing. That ( we believe, is stretching the poise to ah elastic limit. ' JOhhsori stilf Vis a - power in the American League f and if a show down" came, ho doubt .would have . the St. Louis, Cleveland, " Philadelphia, Washington and Detroit , clubs with him, but show-downs' are often un pleasant and expensive'. Bashful Ban might wish to make a further test of his authority and control .at this tfme but with three cluhs in his own organization ready, to take issue wi.th him at the drop' of the hat he must realize that he caJinot hope to gain a decision over a rival league, stand ing in a body 'behind, baseball's su preme head. , '.- The weak spot inohhsn's armor is the adverse attitude of the New York, Chicago and , Bpston clubs to ward him. It Was this trio that, forc ed his abdication in fa vor, of Landis some three years ago in the famous Mays controversy, and although re lations are harmonious on the sur face and Til Huston may link arms with the deposed sovereign for the benefit of the general public, old wounds still smart and twinge. Inside, they have been very re opened as a result of the recent at tempt to waive the same Mays out of the major leagues. Mays is. not through as a pitcher, but every A merican League club waived on him as the result of a ticit agreement to send the disturber to the American Association for a year as a discipli nary measure. The Cincinnati Reds, however, need pitchers and declined to become a party to the proceedings. Whereupon the Yankees hurriedly withdrew their request for waivers and fully expected -to keep the entire business under cover. However, news of the attempted transaction became known somehow and the Yankees were "not altogether pleased when they traced the leak to its alleged source, siz., and to wit: Mr. B. B. Johnson. r. O. DEPARTMENT URGES PEOPLEv TO MAIL EARLY Washington, Nov, 17, Wrap well, mail early!" .This now familiar Christmas slogan of the post ' office department , has started across Ex.- pecting an extra heavy Christmas business this season, department ofr ficials are warning postmasters to; lay their plans early. - So well has thei post office service been organized of late, years that no new methods will be tried tihs year. Postmasters, whose "patrona'gej" is o large inai greauy augmented working staffs are neededhayeibeen directed to give; preference in em ployment to men with families, and those long out. of a job.. .- V Christmas always' costs Uncle - Sam between four, and five million , dollars for extra clerks, carriers, transpor -tation facilities and renting of extra Quarters. . Some towns are so lucky. In Seattle, a dog really bit a collector. Former' Kaise'r could- actnice and send his wife on. their honeymoon. who - was at . the protested in : turn. 1 ' ' ' ' 1 -! ; Yedcees; Wi DtifM mi ne mmt n ays: r - uraoi " NEW YORK, Nov, 17. SinCe, the defeat of- the'. Yankees by -the Giants, rumdrs galore have, been, spread rela tive to changes that would be.' made in the club before the opening of next season. Some of these changes will no doubt' materialize, others will -prove to be mere piffle, '. - However," of all. the rumors circulated,- one -thing . seems certain, Carl Maya will, not be with the Yankees nexf- year. Ever since joining the "clui Mays has. been a ' bone of contention that has kept; the teams in . w , co.--1 stant; turmoil, ,-; ;' -v. The purchase of Mays by the. Yan. kess from. Boston after ' President Johnson had ..suspended- the,., pitclier caused: a wide split in the American League that has, hot. yet, been healed. ' The New York club in order: to-! be , able . to play Mays went..: to the courts; and; had a permanent, injunc-r tion,-' restraining President Johnson from' interfering. with hint in any' way. ' - Boston and Chicago side din with New York 4n. the fight pn Johnson, demanding that he be' ousted. The qtheri flve clubs remained . loj'ol. For a timev It appeared- as if . toe split might cause the, formation of a third league.-v '.. -j ,' Then came the, unfortunate? kilting f oi nay unapman Dy a wiioiy piicn-a . ball bv. Mam At on timA it looked. -'.-' as if the-seven other clubs wouUL go -, ' on strike, unless Mays, was remwed Riith and Mays have beett, ai . ever -inne thev - hecama. memlieri' if the club, and as. a result-' disciulins has BiifFere1. . . - . -., It is hinted tbat waivers have been, Rked on s.MavH' ' 'and tha,t' ali i th American League clubd have .pasMd tin TTnwa.,&(. ' it f a tlib '. ' eral National League chibs are wIfrr ' mg to, laxe. mm.! on. jtu- ot.- -wnica. makes it look as' if Mays might- drift '.. out i of the: American. Leajrua. befora' the opeDinir next season. - . V: '"-'" - ' ' - ': . ' ..-, C ' r r : . SIX dUKQKS AllH ACCEPTED:. In trjaij of. herijin jfiNEJFiss . - Marlsott III. Nov. jurors were in the jury - bo - late today at .-. the end. ofthe fourth .day; of eelet- - ' ing a jury today five, men In- c6nne- tiori with' th Ttvrr'.Tt ' rn-.nt MIUtiM: --.-.--j. ; v - . xwo jurors, Berry ueaton bs;, ana, w.' ttepted today. Four, jurors previously had been agreed uptaf. ; " , ; i j' Boxer Agreement Ratified Paris, Nov. 17. The chamber of deputies today ratified an agreement applying the balance of the Boxer in demnity to refloating the Industrial bank of China, which suspended pay ments in June, 1U21. TTie vote wa" 444 to 15. Seeing her before hreakfast fine cure for being love sick. , , ..... ... ... - ,l ' : ' . The package suggests, it. .... ss ' . ; . -'M- ' ' Your taste confirms it; ; v' , " i-vv" ' sM The sales prove it ; . fe .:M- i 5 ; . . Over 'J billion ;spW ' : - : ' - ' ; ' 7 ' V - ' ' " ' . - ' fcCt b (mteripkdtagm ' i : : ' Ni' CIGARETTES I T: 1 '- - - - , J '' Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. , 1
The New Bernian (New Bern, N.C.)
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Nov. 17, 1922, edition 1
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