mmm in newbmWhat are the Bov Scouts doing In Newburgh? This is a most natural question when you see reeords Of great feats out-of-town Sceuts have done. Our troop has not torn the town up with publicity since it was or-Oirganized, but it is doing things! Is another article appears the Scout Oath, and owing to unavoidable conditions the scout laws were not set in type for this issue, which becomes an obligation to every Scout when he becomes a member.If the local troop does nothing more than help hold the boy true to such standards as these it is doing something. xBut here are other things every fapy must do to become a Scout of Firgt Class:—He must ;.know treatment for JftjSflPj?* shock, fractures, bruises, sprains, tens, snake bite, dislocations, sunstroke, hose-%leed, ' toothache, demonstrate, bhndagmg, artificial respiration.He must earn money and de-. posit it in the bank.He must know how to cook without utensil certain very nee-essary articles..He must be able to box Teom-pss and read and make road maps.He must describe fully ten trees, six animals, siib birds, three constellations, thus opening an intrest in field of nature.He must be able to use regular Semaphone or Morse Code 16 letters per minute.He must know principal rope knots,'He must have ability to judge distance, weight, height and gipber.Tnese hrd^usfcrsome - of thing;* every local Boy Scout must lt;3% to belong to the organization. If nothing else is ’done by our Boy Scouts, I ask you—is . it not worth while?But this is not all!. There is a fraternal spirit, a spirit of brotherhood between the boys that -did not exist befpre.The following boys belohg to Cj^wburgh Troop:— JamiSs .A, Powell' Hopkins McKown,. Eugene Klein, 'J'Mgene Cox, Paul . Freel s, arid Frank’' Wjl^e^_ Second Class; Edward Britzius Clayton Frepls, Stewart Vonder-scher, Williiam Koch, Emmett Best. Carroll Williams, Frank Watson, Wilder* and Lawrence Schafer, Tenderfoot. L roy Gardner and Robert Haley are pledges to the troop.