Scouting, Volume 8, Number 9, April 22, 1920 Page: 22
24 p. : ill. ; 31 cm.View a full description of this periodical.
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22
SCOUTING, APRIL 22, 1920
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mmmmm
600 pocket-size
pages of
□ principles
□ practice
□ programs
□ pictures and
□ pep
Now ready to mail the day your
order comes — $1.50 postpaid
Here are the chapter headings
Scouting—A National Service.
A Bird's-Eye View of Scouting.
Early Objectives—in Troop Organization and Meet-
ings—Alternative Methods for the " Tender-
foot" Class.
Hikes and Meetings—Thirty-seven Kinds of Hikes—
Troop Meetings—Elements, Principles, Skele-
ton Program—How to Build Programs.
Scoutcraft—■" Alternative Methods "—A Mobiliza-
tion of Methods Used by Many Successful
Scoutmasters.
Class Requirements—Interpretation and Standard-
ization of Tenderfoot, Second and First Class
Scout Requirements—The Court of Honor and
Merit Badges.
The Scout Troop and Patrol—Problems of Admin-
istration, Membership, Discipline, Selection of
Patrol Leaders, Records, Mobilization, etc.—
Duties of the Troop Committee.
Scouting and the Community—Relations to Home,
School, Church, Community and Nation—Good
Turns—Cooperation—Public Occasions.
-Criteria of Effi-
The Scoutmaster—His Training
ciency.
Boys—Some Problems and Methods of Dealing
With Boys.
The Scout and His Life Work—Suggestions for Vo-
cational Guidance.
Physical Welfare—Keeping Fit—Tobacco, Alcohol—
Sex—Setting-Up Exercises.
Scout Contests—In First Aid, Signaling, Scout's
Pace, Water-Boiling, etc.
Games—Of Instruction, of Attention, of Coopera-
tion, of Vigorous Action, of Fun.
Drill—Single and Double-Rank Drill—The Salute
to the Flag.
The Scout Uniform—Protection by Congress—How
Worn—Who May Wear It.
The Scout Camp—Types, Problems, Menus, Pro-
grams. Technique.
Story Telling—How to Tell a Story—Suggested
Stories.
Some Rural Problems—Suggestions for ^
Scoutmasters in Rural Districts.
Seascouting—A " Crow's Nest View
of this Older Boy Program—
Insignia—Class Require-
ments — Objectives.
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A wonderfully practical, usable book of utmost service to all
leaders of boys. Over 300 illustrations. Not a revision of
the first Scoutmaster's Manual, but an entirely new work
edited by Dr. H. W. Hurt and contributed to by over
a thousand active leaders.
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Now the text book for Ye Troop Almanac
Sent Prepaid for $1.50
Or to registered scout officials only, in combi-
nation with a year's subscription to Boys'
Life—the two—for $2.00.
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Boy Scouts of America. Scouting, Volume 8, Number 9, April 22, 1920, periodical, April 22, 1920; New York, New York. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth283168/m1/22/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Boy Scouts of America National Scouting Museum.