The Boy Scouts of Woodcraft Camp
n organized boyhood on a world-wide plan. It has in it the essentials for a stronger and better manhood, based on ch
of and sympathy with boys, who can give the necessary time to active work in the field with
s should make constant appeal to the imagination of red-blooded, adventure-loving boys, and which should at the same time be a true "school of the
: To stimulate on the part of every one of my boy readers a desire to master for himself the mysteries of nature's great out-of-doors, the secrets of field and wood and stream, and to show by example what the Boy Scout's oath means in the development of character. Many of the incidents i