Scouting, Volume 8, Number 16, October 28, 1920 Page: 1
8 p. : ill. ; 31 cm.View a full description of this periodical.
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Vol. 8
OCTOBER
28, 1920
No. 16
To enjoy today—to protect tomorrow -BUT
He is not the same boy you were.
Many forces not here in your boyhood, are pulling him away
from American Ideals.
Home- Church School are combatted by War's hangover of
irreligion, Bolshevism, social unrest, changing viewpoints.
His schoolmates, his gang or crowd, his chum, are just imma-
ture boys like himself subject to the same bewildering influences.
A million of them turn 21 every year.
What's the answer?'
Hold every scout! Each year doubles in value to him. Keep him.
Make sure of his re-registration NOW, for his sake and his "inheritance"
Then help form new troops. For remember what
Roosevelt said:
"The Boy Scout Movement is distinctly art asset to our
country for the development of efficiency, virility, and good
citizenship
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Boy Scouts of America. Scouting, Volume 8, Number 16, October 28, 1920, periodical, October 28, 1920; New York, New York. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth283184/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Boy Scouts of America National Scouting Museum.