To become a Second Class Brownie you must:
| I. | Intelligence. | Describe the flag of the United States. |
| Tie the following knots: Reef, Sheet, Bend, Clove hitch and Fisherman’s. | ||
| II. | Handcraft. | Hem a duster or darn a stocking. |
| Do up a parcel. | ||
| Set a table for two for dinner. | ||
| III. | Service. | Bind up a cut finger or grazed knee. |
| IV. | Health. | Perform two physical exercises (which should be selected by the Captain). |
| Know how and why you should keep your nails cut and clean; why you should keep your teeth clean and why breathe through the nose. | ||
| Bowl a hoop or hop around a figure 8 course. | ||
| Throw a ball ten yards with right hand and then with left hand. | ||
| Throw a ball so that a girl 6 yards away catches it 4 times out of six. |
Tying up a Parcel
The first duty of a parcel is to be neatly and strongly tied up so that it does not come unfastened, but, poor thing, it cannot do this for itself, so you have to do it a good turn by tying it up. Wrap it neatly in strong paper.
Just as you tuck in the corners of the blankets on your bed to keep you warm and snug, so the corners of the paper should be tidily folded at the ends of a parcel and doubled over flat.
The string should be drawn quite tight, and have only small knots which won’t slip. It is therefore most important that you should learn, as Scouts do, how to tie knots properly.
When a parcel is going by post it gets thrown around a good deal and has to stand a lot of banging about, so bear that in mind when you are tying it up.
It is always wisest to write the name and address of the person to whom you are sending the parcel on the parcel itself. Very often people write this only on labels which they tie on, and then if this label gets torn off at all, away goes the parcel to the dead letter office or gets quite lost.