#1: How good must a Good Turn be to be good?  The answer is best given by telling you the story of how Scouting came to America.  It shows that it isn't the size of a Good Turn that counts.  What is important is the spirit with which a Scout does a Good Turn.  "Do A Good Turn Daily" is the Boy Scout slogan.

#2: One day in 1909 in London, England, an American visitor, William D. Boyce, lost his way in a dense fog.  He stopped under a street lamp and tried to figure out where he was.  A boy approached him.

Scout: "Can I be of help, sir?"

Boyce: "You certainly can.  I need to find this office."  (he shows the boy a paper)

Scout: "I'll take you there."

#3: When they got to the destinations, Mr. Boyce reached into his pocket for a tip.  The boy stopped him.

Scout: "No thank you, sir.  I am a Scout.  I won't take anything for helping."

Boyce: "A Scout?  And what might that be?"

#4: The boy told the American about himself and his brother Scouts.  Boyce became very interested.  After finishing his errand, he had the boy take him to the British Scouting office.

#5: At the office, Boyce met Lord Robert Baden-Powell, the famous British general who had founded the Scouting movement in Great Britain.  Boyce was so impressed with what he learned that he decided to bring Scouting home with him.

#6: On February 8, 1910, Boyce and a group of outstanding leaders founded the Boy Scouts of America.  From that day forth, Scouts have celebrated February 8 as the birthday of Scouting in the United States.

#7: What happened to the boy who helped Mr. Boyce find his way in the fog?  No one knows.  He had neither asked for money nor given his name, but he will never be forgotten.  His Good Turn helped bring the Scouting movement to our country.

#8: In the British Scout Training Center in Gilwell Park, England.  Scouts from the United States erected a statue of an American Buffalo in honor of this unknown Scout.  One Good Turn to one man became a Good Turn to millions of American boys.  Such is the power of a Good Turn.

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