1 
2 SCOUTING FOR GIRLS 
and fair play. For the instruction of the Captains na- 
tional camps and training schools are being established 
all over the country; and schools and churches every- 
where are co-operating eagerly with this great recreational 
movement, which, they realize, adds something to the 
life of the growing girl that they have not been able to 
supply. 
Colleges are offering fellowships in scouting as a 
serious course for would-be Captains, and prominent 
citizens in every part of the country are identifying them- 
selves with the Local Councils, in an advisory and help- 
ful capacity. 
At the present writing nearly 82,000 girls and more 
than 3,600 Captains represent the original little troop 
in Savannah — surely a satisfying sight for our Founder 
and First President, when she realizes what a healthy 
sprig she has transplanted from the Mother Country ! 
