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+Project Gutenberg's The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country, by Janet Aldridge
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country
+ The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike
+
+Author: Janet Aldridge
+
+Release Date: June 12, 2011 [EBook #36391]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: The Girls Made Camp and Ate Supper.]
+
+
+
+
+ The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country
+
+ OR
+
+ The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike
+
+ By
+
+ JANET ALDRIDGE
+
+ Author of The Meadow-Brook Girls Under Canvas,
+ The Meadow-Brook Girls Afloat, etc.
+
+ Illustrated
+
+ PHILADELPHIA
+ HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1913, by
+ Howard E. Altemus
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. A Night of Excitement 7
+ II. The Red Eye in the Dark 30
+ III. A Blessing and a Threat 39
+ IV. The Coming of Crazy Jane 50
+ V. Catching the Speckled Beauties 62
+ VI. The Call of the Dancing Bear 69
+ VII. Discovering Midnight Prowlers 79
+ VIII. Caught in a Morass 90
+ IX. The Tramp Club to the Rescue 102
+ X. In the Hands of the Rescuers 112
+ XI. A Contest of Endurance 124
+ XII. Meadow-Brook Girls up a Tree 134
+ XIII. A Serious Predicament 146
+ XIV. Harriet Is Resourceful 152
+ XV. A Race for Life 163
+ XVI. A Treat That Was Not a Treat 173
+ XVII. Trying out the Gipsy Trail 186
+ XVIII. The Queen Takes a Hand 196
+ XIX. Delving Into the Mysteries 206
+ XX. Getting Even With George 217
+ XXI. Harriet Plans to Outwit the Tramp Club 225
+ XXII. A Combietta Concert 230
+ XXIII. The Harmonica Serenade 236
+ XXIV. Conclusion 244
+
+
+
+
+THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I—A NIGHT OF EXCITEMENT
+
+
+“Oh, where can Crazy Jane be!” wailed Margery Brown.
+
+“It isn’t so much a question of where Jane may be as where we ourselves
+are, Buster,” answered Harriet Burrell, laughingly. “However, if she
+doesn’t come, why, we will make the best of it. This will not be the
+first time we have spent the night out of doors.”
+
+“Are we lost?” gasped Hazel Holland.
+
+“It looks very much as though we had gone astray,” replied Miss Elting,
+who was acting as guardian and chaperon to the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Grace Thompson, her impish little face appearing
+to grow several degrees smaller.
+
+“Girls! Please do not become excited,” urged the guardian. “There is no
+cause for alarm. Even if we have lost our way we shall find it again on
+the morrow. Harriet, you have the map. Suppose we examine it again and
+see if we can find out where we are. We surely must be near human
+habitation, and the country is so open that really getting lost is quite
+impossible.”
+
+Harriet Burrell unslung the pack that she carried over her shoulder,
+then felt about in it until she found that for which she was looking.
+She spread the map out on the ground at one side of the road, her
+companions gathering about and gazing down over her shoulder. Miss
+Elting sat down beside the map.
+
+“Here! Trace our day’s route with the pencil,” she said. “This should be
+Harmon’s Valley. That being the case, the village of Harmon should be
+not more than a mile farther on.”
+
+“There is no village anywhere near us, according to the route we have
+traveled since this morning,” answered Harriet.
+
+“Oh, that can’t be possible,” exclaimed Miss Elting.
+
+“Please look for yourself, Miss Elting,” Harriet replied earnestly.
+“After leaving Granite Mountain we swung to the left as you will see by
+the line I have marked.”
+
+“Hm-m-m,” murmured the guardian as she scanned the map.
+
+“It looks to me very much as though we had taken the wrong valley,” said
+Harriet, as she paused in her scrutiny of the map to glance up at the
+hills that shut in the valley where they now were. “See! There isn’t a
+town marked on this map anywhere in this valley.”
+
+“I believe you are right. In order to get to our stopping place for the
+night we shall have to cross those hills to the right. How far is it
+across?”
+
+“Five miles,” answered Harriet, after making some brief measurements.
+
+“Five mileth?” wailed Grace. “Oh, thave me!”
+
+“Tommy, will you be quiet?” begged Margery. “You make me nervous. Miss
+Elting, you aren’t going on, to-night, are you? I simply can’t walk
+another mile. My feet are so numb that I can’t feel them.”
+
+“I can feel mine. They are ath big ath elephantth,” declared Tommy.
+
+“What do you say, girls? Shall we go on or make camp for the night?”
+questioned the guardian. “Remember, Jane McCarthy is no doubt waiting
+with her car for us over in the other valley. She will not know where to
+go if we do not get in touch with her to-night.”
+
+Grace, Hazel and Margery begged Miss Elting to go no farther. They
+already had made ten miles that day, which they declared was quite
+enough.
+
+“What do you say, Harriet?” asked Miss Elting.
+
+“Of course I am a little footsore, but I could walk another ten miles if
+necessary. However, the other girls do not wish to go farther, so I vote
+with them to remain here for the night. But won’t Jane be puzzled where
+to go in the morning!”
+
+“She will find us, my dear,” smiled the guardian.
+
+“If you think best I will cross the ridge, after supper, and see if I
+can find her,” suggested Harriet Burrell.
+
+“No. I could not think of permitting you to do that, Harriet. Jane will
+be sure to wait at the meeting place we agreed upon until noon to-morrow
+before starting on to the next stopping place.”
+
+“But we haven’t any plathe to thleep,” protested the lisping Tommy. “I
+can’t thleep on the ground, can I?”
+
+“No. You are going to sleep standing up like a horse,” answered Margery
+petulantly.
+
+“No, I’m not. I’m going to lie down jutht like I alwayth do,” lisped the
+little girl.
+
+“Girls, stop your disputing. We have other things to think of,” rebuked
+Harriet. “Let’s try to make the best of our unpleasant situation.”
+
+Miss Elting, shading her eyes with her hand, gazed inquiringly at the
+surrounding country. It was barren of buildings except for a large barn
+and a number of stacks and sheds, some distance away in a field to the
+west. Still beyond this was a clump of trees and bushes. There was
+nothing else—no house, no human beings other than themselves in sight.
+
+“Girls, let’s investigate that miniature forest over yonder,” called the
+guardian. “It looks as though it might be an excellent place in which to
+cook supper, provided we are able to find water.”
+
+“Supper!” cried the girls in chorus. They realized all at once that they
+were hungry. With one accord they snatched up their packs, heavy as they
+were, slung them over their shoulders and laboriously climbed the
+roadside fence. Tommy caught her foot on the top rail in attempting to
+jump to the ground on the other side.
+
+“Look out!” warned Miss Elting sharply.
+
+“Thave me!” wailed the lisping Tommy and sprawled on all fours on the
+other side of the fence, kicking frantically as she fell.
+
+“Are you hurt, dear?” cried Harriet, springing over to her companion.
+
+“Hurt? I gueth I am. Don’t you thee, I’ve thkinned my nothe. Oh, I withh
+I were home!”
+
+“No, you don’t. Think what a lot of fun you are having,” comforted
+Harriet. “There! You are all right now.”
+
+“Am I all right?”
+
+“Of course you are.”
+
+“All right, if you thay tho,” nodded Tommy, gathering up her pack and
+moving away with Harriet Burrell’s arm about her. Miss Elting and the
+other girls had started for the clump of trees. Arriving, they quickly
+flung down their packs. The guardian began hunting for water. She found
+a stream of cold water just inside the clump of trees beyond the field,
+as she had anticipated. The greenness of the foliage about the spot had
+told her that water was near. In other parts of the valley the leaves
+were turning. There was a strong suggestion of Autumn in the air, which
+at night was crisp and bracing, though the days thus far on their long
+tramp, had been unusually warm for so late in the Fall.
+
+It was Harriet’s duty to build the fire. She went about this task at
+once. There was some difficulty in finding wood that would burn. After
+searching she found some pieces of old fence rails. These were of pine,
+and as they were too long for a fire over which to cook food, Harriet
+got out her hatchet and began to chop them into smaller pieces. It was a
+hard task to chop through a rail, sharp though the hatchet was. However,
+within fifteen minutes, the girl had accomplished the task and the fire
+was burning.
+
+“I am afraid I can’t promise a great variety or quantity of edibles for
+supper,” announced Miss Elting, “though what there is to eat will be
+appetizing.”
+
+“If there is enough, it will answer,” Margery declared.
+
+“Enough?” repeated Tommy wisely. “Buthter, you thurely ought to diet—a
+girl ath thtout ath you are.”
+
+“I think I’ve heard you remark something of the sort before,” sighed
+Margery wearily. “I wish you would forget that I weigh—well, never mind
+how much! The subject is a distressing one. I’m almost too hungry
+to-night to think of anything except eating.”
+
+Tommy’s mischievous glance roved about, resting first on Harriet, who
+with flushed face was bending over the fire, then on Miss Elting, who
+was slicing bacon. In addition to the bacon there was to be coffee,
+supplemented by a few biscuits. There was nothing very hearty about that
+repast for healthy girls who had tramped for hours under a warm
+September sun. Still, there were no complaints, save as Tommy and
+Margery had voiced their disgust with their present life.
+
+Though none of these young women could guess it, they were destined,
+before morning, to encounter enough excitement to make them all wish
+they had never started on this long walk from Camp Wau-Wau, where they
+had spent the summer, to their homes in Meadow-Brook.
+
+Surely the Meadow-Brook Girls need no introduction to the readers of
+this series who will recall how, under the chaperonage of Miss Elting,
+the four girls had gone to the summer camp in the Pocono Woods, where,
+somehow, each day of their life had grown increasingly exciting. All of
+the things that happened to Harriet and her friends at that time are set
+forth in the first volume of this series, under the title of “The
+Meadow-Brook Girls Under Canvas.” While in the summer camp the
+Meadow-Brook Girls had passed through many varied and exciting
+experiences. The mischievous initiation of Harriet Burrell and Grace
+Thompson by the older girls, the arrival in the camp of Jane McCarthy,
+known to her friends as “Crazy Jane” and the series of lively happenings
+that followed her coming; the nocturnal visit of a bear, and Harriet’s
+spirited chase of the animal were incidents that contributed to the
+interest of the narrative.
+
+Harriet’s brave rescue of her companions during a severe storm and her
+subsequent generous treatment of the two Camp Girls, Patricia Scott and
+Cora Kidder, who had plotted against her, won for her the warm
+admiration of her associates at Camp Wau-Wau.
+
+When it had come time to leave the camp in the great forest it had been
+agreed by the Meadow-Brook Girls and their guardian that, instead of
+returning by train they would walk all the way home, disdaining any
+“lifts” or other helps that prevented them from making their way
+strictly on foot.
+
+So endeared had “Crazy Jane” McCarthy become to them all during her stay
+in camp that she had been voted as one of their number. Crazy Jane,
+however, would hear of but little walking. She sent for her automobile,
+a present from her father, and insisted on using this in “scouting” and
+in carrying the tent and provisions for the Pathfinders, as the
+Meadow-Brook Girls now elected to call themselves.
+
+Each night Jane would meet the girls at a place agreed upon in advance.
+Then the tent would be pitched at some distance from the highway, and
+there the girls would spend the night. But now, on the third day, the
+Meadow-Brook Girls had failed to meet their supply car. What they were
+to do for the night, Miss Elting did not know. Her first move was to see
+to the preparation of the little food that they had with them.
+
+Jane McCarthy, with a full purse and a wealthy, indulgent father, had
+claimed the right of being purveyor of food on that long journey. The
+speed at which that young woman traveled permitted of her foraging far
+and wide. Whereever she went she was likely to be remembered, for it was
+her reckless driving that had given her the name of “Crazy Jane.” Yet
+this light-hearted, impulsive girl had wonderful control of her machine.
+With all her reckless driving she had never yet injured any one, though
+her friends often remonstrated with her for her haphazard style of
+running her car.
+
+Supper finished, Margery and Hazel were left to attend to the dishes,
+and to put them in the packs, which were ordinary hunters’ bags, made to
+strap over the shoulders.
+
+“After you have finished the work, girls,” directed Miss Elting, “be
+sure to extinguish the last spark of the fire. Harriet, will you come
+with me?”
+
+“Thay, where are you going?” cried Grace. “Pleathe don’t go away and
+leave uth here alone. It ith going to be dark, pretty thoon.”
+
+“Don’t you want a place to sleep?” smiled the guardian.
+
+“Yeth, but it’th getting dark,” Tommy insisted.
+
+“All the more reason for finding sleeping quarters,” smiled Miss Elting.
+
+“Are you thinking of trying the barns?” asked Harriet, as she and the
+guardian stepped away.
+
+“Yes. I don’t see anything else to do.”
+
+“We’re going to have a storm,” Harriet went on thoughtfully, “so of
+course we shall do well to secure more shelter than we could get by
+making a brush lean-to.”
+
+“I don’t believe we are in the least danger of being disturbed in the
+barn,” the guardian continued. “I don’t imagine there are any other
+human beings within several miles of this place. This is certainly a
+very lonesome bit of country. It is the first day since we have been out
+that we haven’t met some one. That may be because we have kept away from
+the roads to-day. We haven’t been on a highway more than an hour all day
+long.”
+
+“This is what I like,” answered Harriet. “I just love to strike out
+across country and blaze new trails. It’s ever so much more interesting.
+But, Miss Elting, are you certain there is no one about?”
+
+The guardian halted sharply and faced her companion. She knew Harriet
+Burrell too well not to understand that the girl’s question was
+significant.
+
+“What is it?” she asked.
+
+“I saw some one not far from camp when we were eating our supper,” was
+Harriet’s quiet announcement.
+
+“You are sure of that?”
+
+“Yes; it was just beyond the woods there. At first I thought it a fence
+post; then all at once the post moved. I saw it was a person.”
+
+“What was the person doing, Harriet?”
+
+“The person appeared to be watching us. I also discovered something
+else. The person was a _woman_.”
+
+Miss Elting threw back her head and laughed merrily.
+
+“I don’t think we need to be very much alarmed at that. So long as it
+wasn’t a tramp you saw, we won’t disturb ourselves.”
+
+“She was a strange looking creature,” continued Harriet. “I couldn’t
+make her out very well. All at once she disappeared in the most
+mysterious fashion. You said something. I glanced up, then back to the
+place where the woman had been standing and she had gone. It happened in
+less than half a dozen seconds. She would have to be a pretty lively
+person to get out of sight in that time, wouldn’t she, Miss Elting?”
+
+The guardian nodded. They had now reached the big barn. Like its
+surroundings, it was deserted so far as they were able to observe. Miss
+Elting wished to examine the place while there was still light, so they
+hurried in, the doors being wide open. The scent of hay was strong on
+the air as they entered. There were little heaps of hay on the barn
+floor, and on either side in the mows the hay was piled up high. Ladders
+led up to the top of the mows from the barn floor.
+
+“This looks nice and comfy, doesn’t it?” smiled the guardian.
+
+“The best sort of bedroom,” agreed Harriet. “I hope there are no mice
+here?”
+
+“Mice? Gracious! I hope not, too. I think we can do no better than to
+climb the ladder to the top of one of the mows, roll up in our blankets
+and go to sleep. Which bedroom will you take, the north or the south?”
+
+“I think I should prefer the room on the south side. One is more likely
+to get the morning sun there,” answered Harriet gravely.
+
+Miss Elting laughed.
+
+“Thank you. I hadn’t thought of it in that light. The south side bedroom
+will be best for the Meadow-Brook Girls. I know Jane McCarthy would
+enjoy this sort of camping out. As it is, she will have to sleep at a
+farm house to-night. She will never be able to find us here. Suppose you
+climb the ladder and see how the land lies.”
+
+“You mean the hay,” chuckled Harriet, running up the ladder with
+agility. “Oh, it is fine up here, and just as warm as can be. Won’t it
+be splendid to sleep on the hay?” she called down, peering over the edge
+of the mow.
+
+After gazing over the mows for some moments Harriet finally descended to
+the floor. Next she and Miss Elting made a survey of the yard back of
+the barn. The yard was surrounded by empty sheds and great stacks of hay
+and straw. It was evident that the owners intended to winter
+considerable stock in this remote place.
+
+“Well, what do you think of it, Harriet?” inquired Miss Elting.
+
+“Glorious! It is as clean and sweet here as in our own bedrooms at home.
+I’ll tell you what I will do. I’ll run back and get the girls,” said
+Harriet.
+
+Miss Elting nodded acquiescence and Harriet hurried across the field,
+the teacher remaining at the barn to investigate the place further while
+Harriet went for her companions. This she did, and decided that they
+were most fortunate in finding so comfortable a place in which to spend
+the night.
+
+Half an hour later she heard them coming. Tommy’s chatter sounded louder
+than the conversation of all the rest of the party. Twilight had settled
+over the interior of the barn by the time the girls came trooping in.
+
+“Br-r-r-r! This place looks spooky,” cried Margery. “We aren’t going to
+stay in here all night, are we, Miss Elting?”
+
+“Yes, Margery. You are not afraid of the dark, are you?”
+
+“No-o-o. But——”
+
+“There is nothing to alarm you. As we are all rather tired, I propose
+that we go upstairs and get to bed at once. I am sorry we shall not be
+able to get our baths this evening. This hotel isn’t provided with bath
+tubs. By the way. There are matches in our packs, so we will leave them
+below. One of the first things a Camp Girl learns, you know, is to be
+careful of fire both indoors and out. Strap your blanket rolls over your
+shoulders. You know it is quite a climb to your bedrooms.”
+
+“Up there is where we sleep,” Harriet informed them. The top of the mow
+was not discernible from the barn floor now.
+
+“What! Away up there?” demanded Margery. “How do we get up?”
+
+“We shall have to climb the ladder,” answered Miss Elting.
+
+Margery groaned.
+
+“I’m glad it’s dark. If it were daylight I know I should fall,” declared
+Hazel. “Let me go first. I don’t want to stand here and think about what
+is before me. If I stop to think I’ll never have the courage to climb.”
+
+“Don’t look down,” cautioned the guardian. “There. That’s fine.”
+
+Hazel was going up rapidly. Margery, with many a groan, next essayed the
+climb. Harriet was directly behind her. Margery had not gone far before
+the wisdom of Harriet’s action became apparent. A wail from Margery
+brought a chorus of “ohs!” from her companions.
+
+“I can’t go another step,” gasped Margery. “I’m going to fall. Catch me
+somebody.”
+
+“Margery, keep on climbing. I’m right below you here. Go on,” urged
+Harriet.
+
+“Oh, I—I can’t. I’m dizzy.”
+
+“Buthter ith theathick,” observed Tommy from the barn floor. Harriet
+began lightly, tapping Buster with a switch that she had brought with
+her.
+
+“Oh! Ouch! Stop it! I tell you stop it!” howled Margery.
+
+“Climb!”
+
+Margery _did_ climb. She went up the ladder faster than she ever had
+climbed before, wailing and threatening every foot of the way. Tommy was
+delightedly dancing about on the barn floor during all this time,
+uttering a perfect volley of unintelligible lisps and jeering cries.
+Margery reached the top of the ladder and flung herself panting on the
+hay.
+
+“Be careful not to come too near the edge,” warned Harriet, hurriedly
+clambering down. Buster made no reply. She was too much out of breath to
+say a word. “Now, let’s see what _you_ can do, Tommy. See if you can do
+any better,” chuckled Harriet.
+
+“You jutht thee me climb. I’ll thhow you. I gueth I know how to climb.
+Buthter ith too fat to climb a ladder. Don’t you hit me. I’ll kick you
+if you do,” was her parting admonition as she began running up the
+ladder. Rather to the amazement of her companions, Grace made the climb
+to the haymow without the least difficulty. Only once did her foot slip
+from a rung of the ladder. Grace recovered it with no more than a
+smothered little exclamation.
+
+“You next, Miss Elting,” nodded Harriet.
+
+“I will wait until you get up. I wish to look after the packs first.
+What would we do were we to lose them? We shouldn’t have a thing to eat
+for breakfast, and goodness knows when we will reach a store to purchase
+food.”
+
+It was not long afterwards that the party of young women were fussing
+about in the hay, making their beds for the night. This consisted in
+leveling off the hay and spreading their blankets. Some little time was
+occupied in working out the uneven spots, but after a time they lay down
+with piled-up hay for pillows, and rolled themselves in their blankets.
+
+The girls went to sleep almost at once. Miss Elting, however, remained
+awake until her charges had finally settled down, as she supposed, for
+the night. She was just about to doze off when she was awakened by a
+scream and a commotion at one end of the mow. The guardian sprang up in
+alarm.
+
+“For mercy’s sake! What is it?” she cried.
+
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+
+Miss Elting and Harriet groped their way to Grace.
+
+“I got a bug in my ear. Yeth I did. It bit me. I won’t thtay here
+another minute. I’ll——”
+
+“I’ll go out doors and sleep,” declared Margery in disgust. “The idea of
+being kept awake all night by that crazy girl.”
+
+“Margery!” rebuked the guardian. “Now, Tommy, you must lie down and go
+to sleep. This will not do at all.”
+
+“I will drag my blanket over and keep her company, Miss Elting,” offered
+Harriet. “Perhaps she did get bitten. I felt some sort of insect
+crawling over my face a moment ago. There now, Tommy, you just snuggle
+down and forget all about it.”
+
+“I don’t like bugth,” complained Tommy, somewhat mollified. A few
+moments later she was sound asleep. Harriet, after making sure that
+Grace was slumbering, once more permitted herself to doze off. She had
+been asleep but a few moments when a wild scream of terror awakened them
+all. Harriet felt the blanket jerked violently from her and heard a
+floundering and threshing on all sides that filled her with alarm.
+Stretching out her hand she found that Tommy was no longer beside her.
+Tommy’s voice rose in a loud wail of terror.
+
+“Oh, Tommy!” cried Harriet.
+
+“Girls, girls! What _is_ the matter?” exclaimed Miss Elting.
+
+“A mouthe, a mouthe!” shrieked Tommy.
+
+“This isn’t a hay barn, it’s a lunatic asylum,” scoffed Margery. “Oh,
+mercy! Help, help!” she shrieked. The mouse had found Margery too. In
+the darkness of the haymow the Meadow-Brook Girls were now floundering
+about in great alarm. Out of the disorder Miss Elting quickly brought
+order. She spoke sharply to Tommy, insisted that Margery should return
+to her blanket and commanded the girls to make no further disturbance.
+
+“The idea that Meadow-Brook Girls should be so timid,” she rebuked.
+“Harriet, I am glad to know that you are not.”
+
+“I—I think I should have screamed too if a mouse had—how do you know it
+was a mouse, Tommy?”
+
+“It ran right over my fathe. I gueth I know what it wath. I gueth I will
+thleep thanding up. May I, Miss Elting?”
+
+“If you prefer to do so. I am going back to bed. I must insist on the
+others doing the same, or at least keeping quiet. We shall be in no
+shape to go on with our journey in the morning at this rate.”
+
+Tommy decided that she, too, would lie down and soon their regular
+breathing told the guardian that most, if not all, of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were sound asleep. Harriet, however, now that she had been
+awakened, found it difficult to go to sleep again. She lay staring up
+into the darkness for some time.
+
+A sound down on the barn floor put her instantly on the alert. At first
+she thought some farm animal had wandered into the barn; then the
+distinct sound of human footsteps, reached her ears.
+
+Harriet Burrell listened intently, as yet unafraid. She crawled
+cautiously to the edge of the mow and peered over. A human form was
+faintly outlined down there. The figure was groping along the edge of
+the mow and muttering. The listener was unable to make out the words. At
+last the intruder uttered a sharp little exclamation of satisfaction,
+then began to climb the ladder on the opposite side of the barn floor.
+
+“It’s a woman!” gasped Harriet. “Who can it be, and what does she want
+here?” With straining ears and closed eyes the Meadow-Brook girl
+listened. She heard the woman reach the top of the ladder and step off
+into the hay. A few moments later Harriet heard her mumbling at the far
+side of the mow, over near the opposite end of the hay barn. “How
+strange!” muttered the girl.
+
+A low, distant rumble of thunder attracted her attention in another
+direction. A moment later a faint flash of lightning dispelled the gloom
+a little.
+
+“The storm is coming. I hope the girls won’t wake up.” The darkness now
+seemed to be more intense than before. Harriet was unable to distinguish
+one object from another. She crawled back toward her bed and was about
+to wrap herself in her blanket again when a second time she heard
+footsteps on the barn floor. This time she scrambled back to the edge
+more hastily than before. At first she thought the woman had climbed
+down and was going away from the mow. The girl leaned far over. She
+could see no one this time, but she plainly heard some one climbing up
+the opposite ladder again. Harriet wondered if it were tramps; then she
+recalled that the first visitor, being a woman, would be unlikely to be
+a tramp.
+
+“It must be some one seeking shelter from the coming storm,” Harriet
+finally decided, now wondering if it would not be advisable to wake up
+Miss Elting. Upon second thought the girl decided not to do so. Instead,
+she leaned farther out over the edge of the mow and peered down
+anxiously.
+
+A flash of lightning, more brilliant than the first, lighted up the barn
+from end to end. By the light of the flash Harriet Burrell saw that
+which set her nerves to tingling and caused her to utter a suppressed
+gasp.
+
+Below her on the barn floor stood a man. He was swarthy; his coal black
+hair hung down in long, glistening locks. His eyes, large and very black
+were gazing right up into the girl’s face. She shrank back trembling.
+
+“Oh!” gasped the Meadow-Brook girl. “Oh! He saw me. Oh, what shall I
+do!”
+
+The man began climbing the ladder on her side of the barn. Harriet could
+hear him plainly. She began crawling back into the mow on her hands and
+knees. Her first inclination, on reaching her blanket, was to burrow
+under the hay so as to be out of sight. But it occurred to her that her
+companions would still be in plain sight were another flash of lightning
+to illumine the mow. Harriet promptly decided to lie still and await
+developments. She knew that Miss Elting carried a revolver, and that the
+guardian was proficient in its use. This thought gave Harriet comfort.
+Besides, what was there to fear?
+
+To add to the excitement a second man entered the barn at this juncture.
+But instead of climbing up after the other man he took the opposite
+ladder up which the woman had gone a few moments before. The man on the
+girls’ side was rapidly nearing the top. Harriet lay trembling, hoping
+there would be no more lightning. Suddenly a brilliant flash lighted up
+the barn from end to end. It revealed the man clinging to the ladder,
+his head on a level with the top of the mow, glancing over it keenly,
+searchingly. Harriet’s left hand stole toward Miss Elting who lay within
+easy reach. It was Harriet’s intention to awaken her as quietly as
+possible as soon as the light died away. But ere her hand descended on
+Miss Elting’s arm, something occurred that made this move on Harriet
+Burrell’s part, unnecessary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II—THE RED EYE IN THE DARK
+
+
+There was an ominous snapping sound; then the rung of the ladder gave
+way and the man fell backward to the floor.
+
+“Oh! He has fallen!” gasped Harriet, in dismay, as she scrambled hastily
+toward the edge of the mow. “He must be seriously injured.”
+
+“What ith that noithe?” demanded Grace.
+
+“Sh-h-h!” warned Harriet softly.
+
+Nothing more was heard from Grace for the time being. She had dropped to
+sleep again. Fortunately none of the others had been awakened by the
+racket, but Harriet’s heart was beating rapidly. She leaned over the
+edge of the mow. What the next flash of lightning revealed relieved her
+anxiety somewhat. She saw the man get up and rub his back. She saw, too,
+that he had fallen on a heap of hay, the latter undoubtedly having saved
+him from severe injury. A moment later he limped across the floor and
+began climbing up the ladder on the other side of the barn.
+
+“Thank goodness!” muttered Harriet. “I hope no more of them come in here
+to-night. I shall scream if they do. I know I shall.”
+
+The man threw himself, grumbling, on the hay; silence once more settled
+over the barn so far as the occupants were concerned. The thunder was
+now growing louder, the lightning flashes became more frequent. Harriet,
+however, felt no particular alarm. She was unafraid of thunder storms,
+and gave no thought to the fact that barns are more frequently struck by
+lightning than are dwelling houses.
+
+By this time her companions had begun to stir restlessly. Miss Elting
+sat up.
+
+“Harriet, is that you?” she asked in a low tone.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“What are you doing?”
+
+“Just looking about a little,” replied Harriet in a whisper, not deeming
+it advisable to alarm the guardian by telling her what she had just
+discovered.
+
+“How long has it been storming?” asked the guardian.
+
+“Only a little while. I do not believe it is going to amount to
+anything. I hope this old barn doesn’t leak.”
+
+“No, I do not believe it will. There is too much valuable hay here. The
+owner undoubtedly has seen to it that the roof is sound. Are you going
+to try to sleep?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+Harriet lay down, but she did not sleep. The memory of the old woman and
+the two men over in the other mow, banished all thought of sleep from
+her mind. She did not know whether the woman knew the men were there or
+not. Perhaps they might belong to the same party. However, there had
+been no conversation between them and while the two men were near the
+outer edge of the mow, the woman was at the far end of the barn as
+nearly as Harriet was able to determine.
+
+Soon after that, rain drops began to patter on the barn roof. Then it
+began to rain heavily. Harriet nestled deeper into the blanket and lay
+listening. There was no sound from their neighbors on the other side.
+
+At last the listening girl closed her eyes. No sooner had she done so
+than she opened them again. A flash of lightning, more brilliant than
+any she had yet seen, was playing along the rafters of the barn. The
+thunder followed the flash just as Harriet threw an arm over her eyes to
+shut out the light. It was not a particularly heavy clap of thunder,
+just a quick, sharp report. Above the report a shrill scream of terror
+rang out. Then all was silent.
+
+Instantly every one of the Meadow-Brook Girls sat up wide awake.
+
+“What—what is it?” cried Margery.
+
+“Girls! Girls! are you all right?” called the guardian.
+
+“Oh, what ith it? Did the barn fall down?” wailed Tommy in great alarm.
+
+“What has happened?” questioned Hazel Holland excitedly.
+
+Harriet did not speak. She was listening to what the others of her party
+had not noticed, a sudden sound of voices in the other mow, and the
+hasty clambering down the ladder of the two men she had seen go to the
+opposite mow. At least she believed it to be the two men. Evidently they
+had become alarmed, either by the lightning, the scream of the woman, or
+by the cries of the Meadow-Brook Girls. They ran out of the barn, making
+no attempt to go quietly. Once on the outside she heard one of them
+shout.
+
+“I heard thome one!” exclaimed Tommy.
+
+“So did I,” agreed Hazel.
+
+“I thought I, too, heard some one cry out,” said Miss Elting. “Perhaps
+it was a night bird fleeing from the storm.”
+
+“It was no night bird, Miss Elting,” said Harriet in a low tone. “Did
+you hear that scream? Some one is in trouble. There is a woman on the
+other side of the mow. What shall we do?”
+
+“A woman?”
+
+“Yes, yes. She climbed up to the mow a long time ago. Oh, look, look!”
+
+A tiny red eye had suddenly appeared at the far end of the hay barn. It
+appeared to have risen out of the hay at the extreme end of the opposite
+mow. The girls gazed at it in silence. They did not understand the
+meaning of the strange dull red spot. Even Harriet was for the moment,
+puzzled. Then all at once she understood.
+
+“Quick! Get down to the floor! Don’t waste a minute! Miss Elting please
+look after the girls. There’s a rung on the ladder broken. Watch that no
+one falls. I’m going.”
+
+“Harriet! Harriet! What do you mean?”
+
+“The woman! I must get her. I may want you to help me. If I call you,
+come at once. Oh, I must hurry, Miss Elting.”
+
+“Thee! That red eye ith getting bigger,” cried Tommy.
+
+“It is fire, Miss Elting,” whispered Harriet. “The barn is on fire. The
+last bolt of lightning must have set fire to the hay. Don’t tell the
+girls now, but get them down to the barn floor as quickly as possible.
+There is going to be an awful fire.”
+
+Harriet bounded toward the ladder.
+
+“Harriet! Don’t go. I will go,” shouted the guardian.
+
+“I know where she is,” cried Harriet, swinging herself to the ladder
+using care not to lose her footing on the broken rung.
+
+“The broken rung is the fifth one down,” she called. Grasping the sides
+of the ladder she permitted herself to slide all the way to the bottom,
+wholly unconscious of the fact that the skin was being scraped from the
+palms of her hands.
+
+Reaching the barn floor the girl dashed across it to the opposite side.
+A few precious seconds were lost in groping for the ladder there. She
+found it, ran up with the speed of a squirrel, then went stumbling and
+falling across the mow toward the red eye that was now growing into a
+great red glare.
+
+“Where are you?” she cried, raising her voice to a high pitch.
+
+There was no response from her side. From the other mow came the answer
+from Margery, who did not understand: “We’re here.”
+
+The red eye was now lighting up the far end of the mow so that Harriet
+was able to see much more clearly. Little piles of hay formed deceiving
+shadows. She ran first to one, then to another, in this way losing
+precious seconds.
+
+All at once the girl caught sight of a dark object lying on the hay. She
+ran toward it. It was the huddled form of an old woman, her eyes wide
+and staring. Harriet feared she was dead. The fire had already crept
+perilously near to the woman. The flames at one point had communicated
+with the roof and were eating their way through it. The girls on the
+other mow now realized that the barn was on fire. A chorus of wails
+reached Harriet. But she knew her companions were in good hands, that
+Miss Elting would get them out safely.
+
+Harriet grasped the old woman under the arms and began dragging her
+toward the edge of the mow.
+
+“I’ve got her!” she screamed. “Come and help me as soon as you can, Miss
+Elting. Get the girls down and make them go outside. You will have to
+hurry. The roof may fall in. Make a rope of the blankets. We shall have
+to lower her to the ground. She is helpless.”
+
+“I’ll be with you in a moment,” called the calm, confident voice of the
+guardian. Miss Elting was always to be depended upon in an emergency.
+She had gotten the other girls safely down before Harriet had called out
+to her, thinking that Harriet might need her undivided assistance in
+rescuing the woman from her perilous position.
+
+“Outdoors, girls, every one of you,” she commanded. “Don’t you dare come
+near the barn! Harriet is rescuing some one from the other mow. I am
+going to help her. Leave the blankets, but take the packs with you.” She
+gave the protesting Tommy a push toward the door. Hazel grasped Grace by
+the arm and hurried her out of the barn. Margery needed no assistance.
+She was in as great a hurry to leave the barn as Miss Elting was to have
+her do so.
+
+The guardian climbed the ladder as rapidly as possible, after having
+knotted the five blankets into a kind of rope. She tested each knot with
+her full strength; then being satisfied that the rope would stand a
+heavy strain, she began climbing the ladder holding one end of the
+blanket rope. At the top of the ladder the heat was suffocating, the
+smoke blinding. Harriet was coughing and choking. She was on the verge
+of collapse, having inhaled a great deal of smoke.
+
+“Will—will it reach?” Miss Elting gasped.
+
+“I think so.”
+
+“Ti—ie it under her arms. Go below to catch her if she falls. I’ll let
+her down,” promised Harriet.
+
+“Get down yourself as fast as you can,” commanded the guardian.
+
+Harriet did not move. She buried her head in her skirt and crouched down
+close to the edge of the mow in an effort to get some fresh air, but
+without very great success.
+
+“Now go, please,” urged Harriet. “You are strong enough to catch her if
+the rope breaks. I’m not. I know how to handle it at this end. Hurry,
+Miss Elting. We haven’t a second to lose.”
+
+Miss Elting hesitated, glanced quickly at her companion, then started
+down the ladder. Harriet took a quick turn of the rope about a beam.
+Without the least hesitation, she slid the unconscious woman over the
+edge of the mow feet first. The girl prayed fervently that the rope
+might hold. It did. Little by little, though as rapidly as she dared,
+the girl lowered her burden. Sparks were flying all about her. She stood
+enveloped in a cloud of smoke, but not for an instant did the girl give
+thought to her own perilous position.
+
+“I’ve got her,” screamed Miss Elting. “Come down. Be quick, oh do be
+quick.”
+
+Harriet’s fingers released the rope. She staggered toward the ladder
+groping blindly for it. Reaching it she sank down choking.
+
+“Can you make it?” called the guardian.
+
+“Yes,” was the faint reply. “Get—get her out.”
+
+Miss Elting seeing that Harriet was coming down the ladder, hastily
+dragged the unconscious woman out into the open air. The way seemed
+endless to the descending girl. About half way down her fingers relaxed.
+Harriet fell, landing heavily in a heap on the barn floor. She lay where
+she had fallen, with the flames crackling overhead as they leaped across
+the intervening space and began devouring the mow on the opposite side.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III—A BLESSING AND A THREAT
+
+
+From end to end of the great hay barn the roof was now wrapped in
+flames. Now the stacks at the rear began blazing. The entire building
+was doomed to destruction. In the meantime, Miss Elting, having dragged
+the woman to a point of safety, was working to revive her. So engrossed
+was she that, for the moment, all thought of Harriet Burrell escaped her
+until she was reminded of Harriet by Tommy.
+
+“Where ith Harriet?” piped Tommy.
+
+“Harriet? Oh!” gasped the guardian.
+
+Tommy understood without further explanation and darted toward the barn,
+with Miss Elting running after her to bring her back. But there was no
+stopping Tommy when once she had started to carry out a resolve. She ran
+to the barn on winged feet and plunged into the dense cloud of smoke
+that issued from the burning barn. The little girl had no idea what she
+would do when she got there, and perhaps she might have been injured
+before Miss Elting reached her, had Tommy not fallen accidently over
+Harriet. The latter was unconscious from the smoke she had inhaled.
+Tommy grabbed her by the arms and began dragging her out. The little
+girl had gotten to the door with her burden as Miss Elting reached the
+scene.
+
+“Brave Tommy!” cried the guardian. “You shall have a whole string of
+Camp Girls’ beads for this. Let Harriet lie where she is for the
+present. Place her on her back so the rain may beat in her face. She
+will be all right in a few moments.”
+
+Miss Elting did not know that Harriet had fallen, and that it was not
+only the smoke but the shock of the fall as well that had overcome her.
+
+“But, thuppothe the barn fallth down!” exclaimed Tommy.
+
+“Yes, you are right. We must get her farther away.” Together they
+carried Harriet out to the place where the old woman lay. When they
+reached there the old woman was sitting up looking about her in a dazed
+manner. Shouts and cries off toward the highway told the little company
+that men were hastening to the scene of the fire.
+
+Harriet became conscious in a short time, but she had frequent coughing
+spells for some minutes.
+
+“That ith right. Cough up all the thmoke,” suggested Tommy wisely.
+“You’ll feel better after you get the thmoke out of your thythtem. I
+know, for I thwallowed a lot of thmoke once.”
+
+The men ran past the party of women, shouting and gesticulating. There
+were a dozen of them. Others could be heard approaching the scene of the
+fire. Harriet, as soon as she was able to talk, and the coughing spells
+became less frequent, went over to the woman she had rescued. The
+swarthy complexion, straight black hair, and piercing black eyes of the
+woman were the same characteristics that Harriet had observed in the man
+who had fallen from the ladder.
+
+“Do you feel better?” questioned Harriet, smiling a little.
+
+The old woman nodded, her eyes never leaving the face of her questioner
+for an instant.
+
+“You have this young woman to thank for being alive,” Miss Elting
+informed the old woman, stepping up to her and nodding toward Harriet.
+
+“You saved me, eh?” questioned the stranger, looking searchingly at the
+girl.
+
+Harriet did not reply, but Miss Elting answered for her.
+
+“You saved Sybarina from fire from the skies?” insisted the woman.
+
+“She means the lightning,” suggested Hazel.
+
+“Yes, she did,” repeated Miss Elting. “She climbed the ladder to the hay
+loft and let you down with blankets tied together. Our blankets are
+there yet.”
+
+“Oh, I forgot them,” cried Harriet. “How thoughtless of me! Now we shall
+have nothing to sleep in.”
+
+“Never mind the blankets. We have others in the car.”
+
+“You saved Sybarina?” repeated the old woman, staggering to her feet.
+She had been temporarily paralyzed from the electric bolt, and was as
+yet barely able to stand on her feet.
+
+“Please don’t mention it,” urged Harriet, flushing.
+
+The old woman seized Harriet’s hand and gazed deeply into it by the
+light of the burning barn. As she gazed she swayed her body from side to
+side with quick, nervous movements.
+
+“Ah! Sybarina sees that which pleases her,” crooned the old woman. “She
+sees a noble girl whom the fires from the skies cannot frighten. And she
+sees more. She sees wealth and happiness and a great future for her who
+fears not the fire from above. Sybarina gives you her blessing.”
+
+A heavy hand was laid on the old woman’s shoulder.
+
+“Here, you Gipsy woman. Were you sleeping in that barn?” demanded a
+gruff voice.
+
+“I met two Gipsy men running across the fields to the west as I came
+down,” answered another male voice. “The Gipsies are camped about a mile
+and a half from here. I think we ought to arrest the old woman, don’t
+you, Squire?”
+
+“Sybarina was asleep in the barn,” admitted the Gipsy woman.
+
+“And you set the barn on fire, too,” declared the squire. “I’ll have to
+arrest you.”
+
+“She didn’t set the barn on fire, sir,” defended Harriet Burrell.
+
+“The fires from the skies made the barn burn,” announced the Gipsy
+woman.
+
+“Who are you?” demanded the man, turning sharply to Harriet. “I suppose
+you will tell me _you_ weren’t sleeping in my barn?”
+
+“On the contrary, we were,” interjected Miss Elting.
+
+“Then I arrest the whole parcel of you.”
+
+“Thave me!” wailed Tommy Thompson. “We didn’t thet your old barn on
+fire. We were jutht thleeping there, that wath all.”
+
+“You will all stay here till I get through with this fire; then I’ll
+hold court on you and if you don’t answer to suit me I’ll have you all
+over to the county seat to-morrow.”
+
+“No one set your barn on fire, sir,” declared Harriet, with emphasis.
+“The barn was struck by lightning.”
+
+“Did you see it?”
+
+“I can’t say that I saw the lightning strike, but I saw the flash, then
+saw the fire start up directly afterwards. I heard this woman scream and
+we hurried to her rescue. She was unconscious. The bolt had nearly
+killed her. That proves that it was lightning, not matches, that set
+your barn on fire.”
+
+“What were you doing in my barn?”
+
+“Thleeping with the mithe and the bugth,” volunteered Tommy.
+
+“Who be you? You ain’t Gipsies?”
+
+“No. We are from Meadow-Brook, and we are walking home from the Pocono
+Woods, where we have been spending the summer in camp,” Miss Elting
+informed the man.
+
+“So, that’s it, hey?”
+
+“Yes, sir. A young woman friend of ours usually meets us at night. She
+has our equipment in her automobile, but we took the wrong trail to-day,
+and have lost her. She is over in the other valley waiting for us, I
+think.”
+
+“Is she a crazy woman with light hair that streams over her shoulders,
+and does she drive her car as though she was running a race?”
+
+“From your description I think you must have met Miss McCarthy,”
+answered the guardian, smiling a little. “Have you seen her to-day?”
+
+“I should say I had. She nigh killed a calf of mine this afternoon. I’d
+just like to get my grip on her once. I’d make her answer to the law.”
+
+“Was your calf in the road, sir?” questioned Harriet.
+
+“Yes. What of it?”
+
+“I don’t believe the law would do anything to Miss McCarthy in that
+case. Of course I am sorry for the calf,” said Harriet.
+
+“Oh, the calf ain’t hurt. Jest lost a little hair off her tail, shaved
+off as close as ye could do it with a razor. But that don’t matter. It’s
+the barn and nigh onto a hundred tons of hay gone up in smoke that
+bothers me. I wisht I was sure you was telling the truth. If I thought
+you weren’t I’d have you all in the lock-up afore morning.”
+
+“Are—are there any mithe in the lock-up?” questioned Tommy
+apprehensively.
+
+“Eh? Stacks all gone, too?” This in answer to a word from a farmer who
+came from the rear of the burning barn. “Well, let ’em go. There’ll be
+another crop of hay next year. Mebby the price’ll be better then.”
+
+The loss of his barn did not appear to trouble the “Squire” greatly. All
+the time he was talking he was regarding the women out of the corners of
+his eyes. He saw that they were drenched through and through. Tommy and
+Margery were shivering. He decided that they were persons of some
+consequence, even if they had been sleeping in his barn. His reflections
+were interrupted by Miss Elting.
+
+“Can you tell me which way the young woman and the car went?”
+
+“Can I? I guess I can. She went east. The calf could tell ye, too, if
+she could talk, but she wouldn’t say it quite so easy like as I’m
+tellin’ you now.”
+
+“Jane was looking for us,” nodded Miss Elting. “She must have reasoned
+that we had gotten into this valley by mistake.”
+
+“Where you going to stay the rest of the night?” questioned the squire
+gruffly.
+
+“I am afraid we shall have to stay out in the rain if we don’t succeed
+in finding another barn,” laughed the guardian. “My girls are pretty
+well used to roughing it, though they never before passed quite such a
+night as this has been. Do you know of a farm house nearby where we may
+get lodgings? We are perfectly willing to sleep on the floor in the
+kitchen, provided we can have the room to dry out our clothes, and we
+shall be glad and willing to pay for the trouble.”
+
+“You may come home with me,” answered the man, after a brief hesitation.
+
+“What is your name, sir?” questioned Miss Elting.
+
+“Squire Olney, Miss. You see I ain’t a squire by appointment. The
+neighbors jest call me that because I settle their difficulties. I’ve
+got more land in this township than all the rest of them put together.
+That’s why I ain’t takin’ the burnin’ of the barn to heart so much as
+you think I ought to,” he added, with a broad smile.
+
+“Have you a family at home?” questioned Miss Elting.
+
+“My wife and I are alone. Children all married.”
+
+“How far is it from here to your home, sir?”
+
+“About a mile right over the hill. What do you say?”
+
+“We will go with you. We thank you for your kindness. I am very sorry,
+indeed, that you have lost your barn and your hay,” said the guardian in
+a sympathetic tone.
+
+The squire leaned toward her.
+
+“I ain’t lost anything,” he said, with a wink. “Insured. Insured plumb
+up to the muzzle, and then some more. Boys, I’m going home to show the
+ladies the way. You can have all the hay that’s left. I want the ashes
+for fertilizer. Ashes is good for the cut worms in the cabbage patch.
+Come on, ladies.”
+
+Squire Olney nodded to them and started away. He halted sharply.
+
+“Where’s that old Gipsy woman? She ain’t included in the invitation.”
+
+“Why, she has gone,” exclaimed Hazel. “I didn’t see her go. Did you,
+Harriet?”
+
+Harriet Burrell shook her head. She was puzzled at the mysterious
+disappearance of Sybarina, who had given her rescuer her blessing, then
+so strangely slipped away.
+
+The walk over the hill did not add to the comfort of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls. They splashed through deep puddles of water in the little
+hollows, slipped and stumbled over bare clay spots, fell over stones and
+roots until they were not only soaked to the skin, but badly bruised as
+well. Margery wailed and groaned all the way. Tommy made fun of her
+until they came in sight of the lights in the farm house.
+
+“That’s the old shack that has covered us for nigh onto fifty years,” he
+said, nodding toward the light in the window.
+
+The light and the comfortable looking old farm house made the
+Meadow-Brook Girls almost forget their sodden condition. Mrs. Olney was
+standing on the front porch, gazing down across the field. She
+recognized the squire’s voice, but she was at a loss to understand who
+his companions were.
+
+“Hello, Martha,” he sang out, as he crossed the road with his party.
+
+“That you, Squire?”
+
+“Yep. Me and the girls. Barn all burned down, but I’ve brought the
+leavings. Me and the girls is all right, Martha. But they’re wetter than
+Old Sixty. Poke up the kitchen fire and let them dry their clothing.”
+
+Miss Elting stepped forward and shook hands with Mrs. Olney, briefly
+explaining how they came to be there at that time of the night.
+
+“Female tramps. Got fired from sleepin’ in the squire’s hay barn,”
+chuckled the old man.
+
+Mrs. Olney led the way into the house, where she turned and surveyed her
+callers critically.
+
+“Why, you poor things!” she cried, when she had gotten a good look at
+the Meadow-Brook Girls. “And you sleepin’ in the barn. It’s a shame,”
+she exclaimed, bustling about. “Squire, you tend to that fire yerself.
+I’ll git out some dry clothing for these girls. Then I’ll see about
+making some coffee and getting them something to eat. Come into my
+bedroom, my dears and change your wet clothes.”
+
+“I am afraid that we are putting you to a great deal of trouble,”
+demurred Miss Elting.
+
+“Not a bit of it,” rejoined Mrs. Olney. “Come right along with me.”
+
+Half an hour later, Miss Elting and the Meadow-Brook Girls clothed in
+dressing gowns and wrappers belonging to the hospitable Mrs. Olney sat
+in the big farm house kitchen doing full justice to the luncheon
+provided by the farmer’s wife. After their exciting experiences of the
+night the girls were tired enough to gladly welcome the opportunity of
+sleeping in a real bed, and in spite of their late repast the five
+wayworn travelers slept peacefully, unvisited by nightmares.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV—THE COMING OF CRAZY JANE
+
+
+After bidding good-bye to the hospitable squire and his good wife, next
+morning, the girls started over the fields on their way down the valley
+on the other side of the ridge. Before leaving they had pressed their
+camp dresses and the girls now looked very neat in their dark blue
+uniforms that they had worn at Camp Wau-Wau. They wore also the official
+hat of the Camp Girls, to which organization they belonged. The hat was
+of blue cloth with the letters “C. G.” in white embroidered on the
+front.
+
+About their necks the girls wore a few brightly colored beads which to
+them meant more than precious stones, for each girl had won her beads by
+achievements as a Camp Girl. They hoped to win more on the long tramp
+across country. Harriet and Tommy had won several beads apiece, already,
+by their bravery at the barn fire, though of course the beads had not
+been awarded as yet. That would not be until after Miss Elting had made
+her report to the Chief Guardian at the completion of the trip.
+
+The girls were now well on their way hoping soon to find Jane McCarthy
+and her car awaiting them. It was a five mile tramp over rough and steep
+hills, through woods and ravines. By this time however the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were becoming accustomed to rough traveling. The only one who made
+any really serious complaints was Margery Brown. She was usually in
+distress, but it was observed that the stout girl was beginning to lose
+considerable flesh. Her freckles were more pronounced, however, and her
+face was redder than it ever had been before.
+
+The party, after a trying hike, reached the top of the range of hills
+about eleven o’clock in the morning. A long, sloping meadow stretched
+away from them until it met the highway.
+
+“There is the road,” cried Harriet.
+
+“But Crazy Jane ith nowhere in thight,” observed Tommy solemnly.
+
+“This is where we should have been last night,” nodded Miss Elting. “But
+we should have missed all of our exciting experiences of last night had
+we taken the right trail.”
+
+“Missed them!” exclaimed Margery. “I wish we had. I never shall get over
+thinking about that awful fire and that horrid old Gipsy woman.”
+
+Harriet smiled to herself thinking that it was well that Margery had not
+seen the dark-faced men enter the barn that night.
+
+“Shall we wait, or go on?” questioned Harriet.
+
+Miss Elting decided that they should go on after reaching the highway.
+She told the girls to keep a sharp lookout for “signs.” The sign of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls was a triangle. It might be found chalked on a fence
+or elsewhere by the roadside. An arrow pointing away from the triangle
+indicated the direction in which a Meadow-Brook girl had traveled. An
+arrow pointing straight up indicated, “I will return.” An arrow pointing
+toward the ground meant, “wait here.” A broken arrow, pointing in any
+direction indicated, “danger.”
+
+Reaching the highway the girls scanned the fences. Most of these being
+wire fences there was no space for any of the signs that they had agreed
+upon before starting out on their tramp. Occasionally they halted to
+examine a sign board at the junction of two or more roads, but nowhere
+did they find any trace of Jane and her car. There were not even tire
+tracks in the road. The pedestrians had almost made up their minds that
+Crazy Jane herself had missed her way when Harriet suddenly held up her
+hand.
+
+“I hear the honk of a motor horn,” she said.
+
+“And there’s the sign on that hog pen,” laughed Miss Elting, pointing to
+a pig sty close to where they were standing. “That’s just like Jane. The
+arrow says we are to wait here.”
+
+“A pig pen ith thertainly a nithe plathe to wait,” observed Tommy
+sarcastically.
+
+“We don’t have to wait in the pen, you goose,” jeered Margery.
+
+“Tho I thee,” answered Tommy imperturbably.
+
+“There she comes!” shouted Hazel.
+
+Crazy Jane McCarthy, her blonde hair streaming over her shoulders,
+rounded a bend in the road, the rear wheels of her car skidding nearly
+to the ditch on the outside of the curve. Jane was shouting and waving
+one hand. She brought the car up sliding and leaped to the ground.
+
+“You dears! Where have you been?” she cried, embracing each of the girls
+in turn, not forgetting Miss Elting.
+
+“The question, is where have you been?” laughed the guardian.
+
+“Racing up and down the road looking for you,” returned Jane.
+
+“Where did you sleep?” questioned Harriet.
+
+“At a farm house over in the valley,” chuckled Jane. “Where did you
+sleep?”
+
+“We were in a barn part of the night. Regular tramps, aren’t we,”
+answered Harriet, her eyes sparkling.
+
+“Yeth, and—and the barn burned down,” explained Grace.
+
+“What?”
+
+“Grace is right,” Miss Elting informed Jane. “Lightning struck the barn,
+burning it to the ground. Harriet saved an old Gipsy woman from being
+burned to death. She had been stunned by the bolt of lightning and for
+the time being was paralyzed.”
+
+“Oh, what a shame!” exclaimed Jane. “I always have to be absent when the
+fun is going on. Think of poor me tearing up and down the road, half
+crazy because I’d lost you and you having so much fun all the time,” she
+complained. “Who was the woman you saved, darlin’?” she questioned,
+turning admiring eyes on Harriet Burrell.
+
+“A Gipsy. She called herself Sybarina,” answered Harriet.
+
+“And did the Gipsy tell your fortune, Harriet?”
+
+“Yes, she did,” cried Margery. “She said Harriet was going to be a great
+lady, rich and some other things that I didn’t understand. Then Sybarina
+gave Harriet her blessing.”
+
+“Now, Jane,” said Harriet mischievously. “Tell us about the way you ran
+down the farmer’s calf.”
+
+Jane gazed at Harriet frowningly, then burst into laughter.
+
+“What do you know about that? Who has been telling tales?”
+
+“The farmer said you shaved the hair off the calf’s tail with your car.”
+
+“I was sorry for the calf, but you ought to have seen the farmer wave
+his arms and run after me. He was fairly pulling the hair out of his
+head with rage,” chuckled Crazy Jane. “Well, dears, what have you in
+mind? Want to take a nice ride in the car?”
+
+Harriet shook her head with emphasis.
+
+“When we started on this tramp we agreed that we wouldn’t ride in your
+car at all. I, for one, am going to keep to that agreement.”
+
+“Don’t tempt me,” said Hazel, chancing to catch the merry eye of Jane
+McCarthy.
+
+“We didn’t agree not to eat in the car, did we?” questioned Tommy. “That
+latht gully I fell into gave me an awful appetite.”
+
+“Wait! I’ll set the table,” cried Jane, dashing to the car and unlocking
+the luggage trunk at the rear. From under the rear seat she took a
+board, which she laid across the rear compartment. Over this she spread
+a white cloth and on it began placing a cold luncheon that was
+sufficiently appetizing in looks to excite the poorest appetite. Tommy
+eyed it longingly.
+
+“Get in, girls,” commanded Jane. They made a rush for the car. “I have a
+can of milk in the locker, if the jolting of this old wagon hasn’t
+soured it. You see, I drove rather fast this morning. I wanted to find
+you. I didn’t know what had become of you. Yes; the milk is all right.”
+
+There in Jane’s car by the side of the road they ate their luncheon,
+giving no heed to the curious glances of passers-by.
+
+“Did the farmer really tell you about that calf?” questioned Jane, when
+the girls had nearly finished their meal.
+
+“Yes. It was in his barn we slept until it caught fire,” explained the
+guardian. “He then took us to his home and he and his wife were
+perfectly lovely to us. I wish you had been with us. He is a quaint
+character.”
+
+“If he is anything like his calf, he must be,” observed Crazy Jane. “It
+didn’t know enough to get out of the road when it saw an automobile
+coming at forty-five miles an hour. Where are you going from here?”
+
+“We must consult the map. Are there any good camping places beyond here,
+or were you going so fast you couldn’t see?”
+
+“I never drive so fast that I can’t see,” reproved Jane. “Yes. I know of
+a place, and it’s a fine place for a camp too. It’s called the Willow
+Ponds. It is just far enough back from the road, and there isn’t a house
+in sight.”
+
+“How far is it from here?” asked Hazel.
+
+“Five miles.”
+
+“Five mileth!” repeated Tommy wearily.
+
+“Oh, help!” wailed Margery. “My feet won’t hold out.”
+
+“Then ride with me,” suggested Jane.
+
+“Thank you,” returned Margery, “but I consider walking the lesser of the
+two evils.”
+
+“I fear it will make too short a hike for us, for one day,” reflected
+Miss Elting.
+
+“It will make a ten mile hike,” answered Harriet.
+
+“Yes. But only five miles of walking on the main trail. We shall have
+advanced only five miles. However, perhaps it will be enough for one
+day.”
+
+“That latht gully I fell into gave me an awful appetite,” reiterated
+Tommy apologetically, as she helped herself to another slice of cold
+roast beef.
+
+“Tommy’s appetite doesn’t need that kind of stimulant,” laughed Hazel.
+“Nor does mine. I think I shall have to have another slice of roast
+beef.”
+
+The luncheon ended, the girls reclined on the soft cushions of the car
+for half an hour, after which Harriet and Jane put away the dishes and
+the rest of the food.
+
+“Are we ready to hike?” asked Harriet.
+
+Margery’s face took on a pained expression.
+
+“Oh, I suppose so,” she complained. “The sooner we start the sooner we
+shall get there. Then a long night’s rest in our own tent. Oh, joy, oh,
+joy!”
+
+“It may not be so very joyous, after all,” retorted Miss Elting. “In
+this topsy-turvy bit of country _anything_ may happen, at _any_ moment,
+to keep us awake, or even to banish the wish for sleep.”
+
+“What we need,” said Tommy soberly, “ith a nithe, good-natured dog that
+will bite folkth.”
+
+Miss Elting decided that it was time to start. So shouldering their
+packs the girls moved on.
+
+“I’ll be driving behind you,” said Crazy Jane. “I’ll be pace-maker. If
+you lag I’ll remonstrate by riding over you! How will you like that?”
+
+Miss Elting and Harriet set a good stride. The other girls straggled
+after them, Margery being last of all. Behind them all Jane drove the
+car slowly, the engine making no noise.
+
+“We must walk faster, girls!” cried Miss Elting, looking back. “You,
+especially, Margery. Faster!”
+
+“I couldn’t move any faster,” protested Margery wearily “even if I were
+paid for it.”
+
+Honk! Honk! Honk! sounded an automobile horn behind her. There was a
+whirr of fast-moving wheels.
+
+HONK!
+
+Turning, Margery saw the car bearing down upon her at full speed.
+
+“O-o-o-h!” screamed Margery. Picking up her skirts a trifle she fled
+down the road, while Jane stopped the car just behind her.
+
+“I’m sorry you can’t move fast!” Jane called, teasingly.
+
+Twice after that Crazy Jane forced Margery to quicken her lagging steps
+until at length poor Margery stepped aside, out of the road.
+
+“Not another step for me, Jane McCarthy, unless you keep ahead of the
+whole party,” declared the persecuted Camp Girl.
+
+“Get in and ride,” teased Jane.
+
+“I—I believe I will,” faltered Margery, who was limping now.
+
+“Margery!” exclaimed Harriet rebukingly, “if you ride, then you will
+have to drop out of the hike, and we’ll send you home.”
+
+“I—I think I’ll keep on walking,” Margery decided meekly.
+
+The rest of the journey was accomplished without further complaints from
+either Tommy or Margery. Arriving at a place where they left the road
+and set off across a field, Jane explained that earlier in the day she
+had asked the permission of the owner of the field to camp there. She
+thought it would make an excellent camp site, the ponds being screened
+from the road by a heavy growth of willows, and there was plenty of dry
+wood to be had from the ruins of an old saw mill that stood near the
+ponds. The willows, also, would serve to hide the camp from the gaze of
+curious outsiders, a condition to be desired by young women tramping
+through the country.
+
+The car was driven in among the willows, after which Harriet and Miss
+Elting began hauling the sections of their tent from the rear of the
+car. They went at the pitching of the tent like veterans, and placed the
+sections together, then raised the canvas, staking it down with the
+expertness of circusmen.
+
+Harriet left the final staking-down to Tommy and Margery while she
+gathered the wood for the campfire. Jane and Miss Elting, in the
+meantime had begun getting out the supplies for supper. Two folding
+tables were set up in the tent, covered by fresh table cloths, on which
+were placed the dishes and the silver knives, forks and spoons that Jane
+had brought along. She said silver was none too good for the
+Meadow-Brook Girls. The water in the pond, being from nearby springs,
+was cool and refreshing. The girls decided to take a swim late in the
+evening after their suppers had been well digested.
+
+It was a merry party of happy, brown-faced girls that sat down to the
+evening meal with the cheerful campfire blazing just outside, and the
+cool, fragrant autumn breezes drifting through the tent. Everything was
+charmingly peaceful, but the peace of the night was to be rudely
+disturbed later in the evening, and the girls were to have another
+exciting time of it ere they finally got to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V—CATCHING THE SPECKLED BEAUTIES
+
+
+“Oh, girls, let’s stay here the rest of the fall. Let’s not walk any
+more,” begged Margery.
+
+“Oh, thee the fithh jump!” cried Tommy, pointing to the pond.
+
+“Trout, too. If I only had a rod and line!” exclaimed Harriet.
+
+“You shall have them, darlin’,” answered Jane. “If you want anything you
+don’t see, just ask for it. You’ll find the whole fisherman’s outfit
+strapped under the car—under the left mudguard. What about bait?”
+
+“I think the trout will take flies. That is what they are jumping for,”
+replied Harriet. “Where will I find the flies?”
+
+“In the box under the rear seat.”
+
+“Thay, Harriet!” piped Tommy.
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“Catch me an oythter for breakfatht.”
+
+Harriet paused from jointing Jane’s rod long enough to join in the
+merriment at Tommy’s expense.
+
+“Have you a dusty miller, Jane?” she asked, glancing up with flushed
+face.
+
+“I don’t know whether or not he’s dusty, but there’s an insect in there
+that they call a miller. Dad says it’s a killer. I never saw it show its
+teeth. It’s my opinion that it would be a fool fish that would bite a
+thing like that.”
+
+“You wait and see,” chuckled Harriet, fixing the leader of the fly to
+the silk line, then balancing the rod by its butt, swinging the line
+this way and that through the air to see how the reel worked.
+
+“It will be too late by the time you get ready to fish,” reminded Miss
+Elting.
+
+“It isn’t sunset yet, Miss Elting. There should be good fishing for half
+an hour yet.”
+
+“Well, are you going to fish, or are you going to talk all the time
+during that half hour?” demanded Margery.
+
+For answer Harriet swung the pole above her head. With a swish the dusty
+miller described a long curve in the air, then dived for the water,
+which it took with the faintest possible disturbance.
+
+There followed a swish and a splash. The rod bent until it seemed to the
+spectators as though it would break under the strain. A flashing,
+scintillating body jumped through the air, then plunged down deep into
+the clear waters of the pond.
+
+“A fithh! A fithh!” screamed Tommy. “Harriet hath got a fithh. Oh,
+goodie, goodie, goodie!”
+
+“Pull him in. You’ll lose him!” shouted Margery.
+
+“Now will you look at our Harriet?” cried Crazy Jane, hugging herself
+gleefully, swaying her body from side to side in the ecstasy of her
+delight.
+
+The trout that Harriet Burrell had hooked was a lively fish. It was
+darting and diving with wonderful strength and quickness. The line cut
+the water with a swish, swish, swish that was plainly heard by all.
+
+“Get it, Harriet! Oh, do get it,” begged Hazel, in an agony of
+apprehension lest the trout succeed in freeing itself.
+
+“The real fun of catching a fish is ‘playing’ it, just as Harriet is
+doing,” answered Miss Elting.
+
+Tommy had run out on one of the beams of the old mill race, where she
+was dancing up and down at the imminent risk of a ducking.
+
+“Now, look out, girls,” warned Harriet. “I’m going to try to land him.”
+There was a lively scurrying on the part of the girls. The trout came up
+protesting and fighting every inch of the way. Then Harriet, having
+reeled in the line, pulled the trout in toward the bank.
+
+Unfortunately for Harriet, but fortunately for the fish, Tommy Thompson
+was in the way. The trout slapped her squarely in the face ere Harriet
+had discovered her companion’s location. There was a shrill scream from
+Tommy, a light splash as the trout dropped into the pond, then a mighty
+splash as Tommy, losing her balance, went sprawling into the cold water.
+
+“Oh, I have lost my fish!” wailed Harriet.
+
+“Catch Tommy!” yelled Margery.
+
+Harriet threw down her rod and ran out on the beam where Tommy had been
+standing before the disaster. Tommy was splashing and coughing, making
+frantic efforts to reach shore. Harriet knew the little blonde girl
+could swim, else she would have gone in after her. But Tommy wished to
+attract all the sympathy and attention of her companions in her
+direction, so she kept up a continuous screaming. Harriet reached down
+and gave her a hand.
+
+“How’s the water, Tommy?” questioned Harriet, mischievously.
+
+“Co-o-o-old,” chattered Tommy. “I’m fr-r-r-r-eezing. What did you knock
+me in for?”
+
+“Why, I didn’t realize that you were standing there. Why did you make me
+lose my fish?”
+
+“There, there, girls! Tommy go into the tent at once and take off your
+wet clothing. Put on dry clothes unless you wish to go to bed now.”
+
+“I don’t want to go to bed, I want to watch Harriet catch fithh.”
+
+“Oh, you’ve scared them all out of the pond,” complained Margery.
+
+“I hope you fall in, too, Buthter,” was Tommy’s parting salute, as she
+ran shivering to the tent. Fifteen minutes later, she emerged clad in
+dry clothing and apparently none the worse for her recent wetting.
+
+In the meantime Harriet had returned to her fishing, laughing softly
+over her companion’s mishap and their argument following the plunge.
+There were screams of delight when finally she landed a trout. Nor did
+she stop until the sun dipped behind the western hills and the speckled
+beauties went down into the depths of the stream, or skulked under the
+edge of its banks for the night. The result of the fishing was a dozen
+fine trout, the smallest weighing only a little under a half pound and
+the largest weighing nearly two pounds, according to the guardian’s
+estimate.
+
+Harriet insisted on dressing the fish that night, something she knew
+better how to do than did any of her companions. The fish were then put
+in a pail, the cover tightly fitted and the pail hung in the old mill
+race, where the cold water would flow over the receptacle all night
+long.
+
+“There,” exclaimed Harriet after her work was finished. “We shall have a
+breakfast fit for a king. Now I’m going in bathing. I am so covered with
+dust and grime that I’m ashamed of myself. Come, girls, aren’t you going
+in with me?”
+
+“What! Go into that ice cold water?” demanded Margery. “No, thank you.
+I’ll heat some water and take my bath in the tent.”
+
+“I will go in with you, Harriet,” offered Hazel.
+
+“So will I,” added the guardian. “Come, let’s get ready before the air
+gets colder. Tommy already has had her bath.”
+
+Had they not been inured to cold water and exposure, the experiment
+might have been followed by severe colds if nothing worse. But the
+Meadow-Brook Girls were well seasoned from living out of doors for the
+greater part of the summer and from bathing in the cold stream at Camp
+Wau-Wau. The first plunge into the pond brought gasps and shivers, then
+they splashed about in the water, swimming across the pond and back,
+again and again, while Margery stood on the bank shivering out of pure
+sympathy for them.
+
+“That is what I call great,” cried Harriet, rising dripping to the bank
+after Miss Elting had called to the two girls to come out of the water.
+“I could almost eat another meal after that bath.”
+
+“Tho could I,” piped Tommy, thrusting her head out from the tent flap.
+
+The two girls and the guardian ran laughing to the tent, where, greatly
+refreshed by their cold plunge, they changed their wet bathing suits for
+dry clothing.
+
+Now fresh fuel was piled on the camp fire. The flames blazed high and
+the smoke curled skyward in the still, clear evening air. Harriet and
+Hazel were capering about the fire, holding an impromptu war dance.
+Tommy was standing near one corner of the tent watching the performance,
+when, thinking she had heard a sound behind her, she turned
+apprehensively.
+
+For one horrified moment Tommy Thompson gazed, then with a yell of
+terror sprang for the tent.
+
+“Thave me! Oh, thave me!” she screamed.
+
+“What is it?” cried Harriet and Miss Elting, rushing toward her. Then
+they, too, halted, gazing into the deepening shadows that enveloped the
+rear of the tent. Margery had caught sight of the object that had sent
+Tommy into an agony of terror. Margery had thrown herself headlong into
+the tent screaming wildly. Hazel, Miss Elting and Harriet stood their
+ground.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI—THE CALL OF THE DANCING BEAR
+
+
+“A bear! A bear! Thave me!” came Tommy’s wailing voice from the interior
+of the tent.
+
+“Be quiet!” commanded Miss Elting.
+
+“It’s on a chain. There are two men with it,” said Harriet somewhat
+unsteadily.
+
+Miss Elting stepped forward to obtain a better view of the two men. She
+saw the swarthy faces of two Italians. One was leading the bear by a
+chain, the other carried a long pole. The animal was a huge, ambling,
+cinnamon bear. He wore a muzzle, and the sight of this gave the woman
+and the two girls a greater sense of security.
+
+“What do you wish here?” demanded the guardian.
+
+“We maka da bear dance,” said the man, with the pole, touching his hat
+politely. “You giva mea twent-five cent I maka da bear dance.”
+
+“We do not wish to see the bear dance. You will please go away, or I
+shall call for assistance to drive you off,” returned Miss Elting
+boldly.
+
+“Oh, let the bear dance. It would be great fun,” urged Hazel.
+
+“Twent-five cent to maka da bear dance.”
+
+At this juncture Margery came timidly out of the tent. Tommy,
+white-faced, ready to run at the slightest sign of alarm, crept out
+after her.
+
+“Will—will he bite?” stammered Margery.
+
+“He will hurt his teeth on the muzzle if he does,” answered Harriet
+Burrell laughingly.
+
+The leader gave a sharp command. The bear rose on its hind feet and
+began pawing the air. It fixed its beady eyes on the face of Tommy
+Thompson. Tommy uttered a little cry and shrank back.
+
+“He lika da littla girl,” grinned the Italian.
+
+“Never mind being personal. If you will keep your distance we will pay
+you a quarter to see the bear dance.” Miss Elting drew a coin from her
+pocket, and stepping forward, without the least hesitation, handed it to
+the man with the pole. “Keep him over on that side of the fire. You two
+men remain over there also. Remember, we are quite well prepared to
+assert our rights if you do not do as you are told. Watch that neither
+of them gets into the tent, Harriet,” she added in a whisper.
+
+Harriet Burrell nodded understandingly. The bear, in response to
+frequent prods of the pole, ambled about, dancing awkwardly, now and
+then uttering a growl of resentment at the treatment he was receiving.
+His master put the animal through its paces. At this juncture, Jane
+McCarthy, who, some time before, had driven off to a farm house in quest
+of milk for breakfast, drove in with a great rattle and honking. At
+first the Italians were for dragging their bear away. But, upon
+discovering that the newcomer was only another young woman, they grinned
+and went on with the performance.
+
+“Hello! what have we here?” cried Jane. “Where did you catch that beast?
+Hey, you men! Didn’t I pass you on the road this afternoon? Yes, I did.
+I recognize your friend, the bear. Better look out for those fellows. I
+don’t like the looks of them,” declared Crazy Jane to Miss Elting in a
+low voice. “I’d a heap sooner trust the bear than the men, and I
+wouldn’t care to turn my back on either for very long at one time.” Then
+turning to the men she said: “Make your bear do his tricks over again. I
+haven’t seen the show, you know.”
+
+“Twent-five cent,” answered the man.
+
+Jane looked at him for a few seconds, then, throwing back her head,
+laughed loudly.
+
+“Twent-five cents, eh? I guess not! Does he dance, or does he not?” she
+demanded.
+
+For answer the man with the pole gave the bear a vicious poke, the other
+led the animal to a small tree, to which he tied him.
+
+“My gracious, are they going to camp here?” gasped Margery.
+
+“Don’t be afraid. We will send them on their way soon enough,” answered
+Harriet in a low voice. “I wouldn’t make them angry, Miss Elting.”
+
+“I don’t intend to.”
+
+“Leave them to me. See here, men, what do you propose to do now?”
+demanded Jane briskly.
+
+“We lika somathing to eat.”
+
+“All right. You shall have somathing. Twent-five cent please,” mimicked
+Crazy Jane, holding out a hand. She was so droll about it that the girls
+burst out laughing.
+
+“Oh, you shouldn’t have done that. See, you have made them angry,”
+whispered Hazel.
+
+“I don’t care if I have. I’ll be getting angry myself, pretty
+soon—maybe.”
+
+[Illustration: “Twent-five Cent, Please,” mimicked Jane.]
+
+“Shall I get something for them, Miss Elting?” questioned Harriet.
+
+The guardian nodded. Harriet ran into the tent, where she quickly
+prepared some roast beef sandwiches. These she carried out and handed to
+the leader of the bear. He divided with his companion. The two men sat
+down by the fire and began eating voraciously.
+
+“You gotta coffee?” asked the leader, his mouth so full of the sandwich
+he was eating that he was barely understandable.
+
+“No. We have no coffee made,” replied Miss Elting. “You will have to get
+along with what you have.”
+
+“You maka coffee. You maka now!”
+
+“What?” cried Crazy Jane belligerently. “You order us to make coffee for
+you, you lazy good-for-nothings? Get out of here before I lose my temper
+with you.”
+
+“Easy, Jane!” warned Miss Elting.
+
+“You no giva coffee, I letta out da bear,” threatened the leader,
+scrambling up and running to the tree where the cinnamon bear was
+secured. The second Italian also had risen to his feet. He was edging
+toward the rear of the tent, evidently thinking that he was not
+observed. But Harriet, though not appearing to notice, was watching him
+narrowly. Tommy and Margery were trembling with fear. Harriet and Jane
+were unafraid. They were getting a little angry, however. Miss Elting
+slipped into the tent and getting her revolver, secreted it in a fold of
+her skirt. Just as she emerged the second Italian ducked in under the
+edge of the tent. The tent had been staked down firmly and as the man
+was somewhat stout he stuck when half way under the side wall.
+
+“Come out of that,” commanded Harriet.
+
+Instead of obeying her the man tried to wriggle in.
+
+“I see I’ve got to attack him from inside the tent,” decided the girl.
+Wheeling about she ran into the tent where, in the light from the
+campfire, she could see the tousled head and rolling black eyes of the
+man underneath the side wall. Without speaking she seized a pail of
+water that stood near the entrance of the tent and dashed it full into
+the man’s face.
+
+“Hurrah for Harriet!” cried Crazy Jane from the tent door, where she
+stood waving her arms now and hopping about gleefully.
+
+Choking and sputtering the man wriggled out from under the tent uttering
+a perfect torrent of abuse in his native tongue. It was about this time
+that Miss Elting discovered that she had forgotten to load the revolver
+before taking it from the tent. Meanwhile the leader had untied the
+chain of the bear and was urging it forward, evidently intending to
+frighten the women.
+
+“You giva me mon. I then-a go way with da bear. You giva me mon,” he
+demanded angrily.
+
+Tommy Thompson, at this juncture, found her courage. Snatching up a
+burning fire brand she charged the man leading the bear. He leaped back
+to avoid the thrust of the fiery club. The bear swung a giant paw at
+her. Tommy hit him over the nose with the firebrand. In the meantime
+Hazel Holland, following Harriet’s example, appeared on the scene with
+another pail of water, which she dashed over the leader and the bear.
+
+Fire and water were a little more than the man or the bear had bargained
+for, so they made haste to get out of the danger zone. Crazy Jane, in
+the meantime pursued them shouting and brandishing a stout stick that
+she had picked up in the field. Jane chased the men all the way to the
+road, with Tommy and her fiery club in close pursuit.
+
+“Oh, those rascals!” cried the guardian, when the girls returned. “And
+that miserable bear! I’ll warrant the three of them got the fright of
+their lives. They won’t bother the Meadow-Brook Girls soon again.”
+
+“I am not so certain of that,” answered Harriet, smiling. “We did give
+them a scare, though. But I’m sorry I had almost to drown that one man.
+He was determined to get into the tent. What do you suppose he wanted?”
+
+“To steal something, of course,” answered Miss Elting.
+
+“And Tommy. Did you see Tommy and her torch, girls? Oh, wasn’t it a
+sight?”
+
+“Yes. And Hazel and Harriet with their pails of water,” chuckled the
+guardian.
+
+“Tommy, dear,” exclaimed Miss Elting, as the little girl sat down beside
+her, flushed and triumphant. “You have earned a bead this evening. I
+think each one of you is entitled to a bright red bead. Now pile on the
+wood, girls, so we shall have plenty of light. I don’t apprehend further
+trouble, but it is well to be prepared.”
+
+“I will see to that,” spoke up Harriet. “I have a plan that will make it
+unnecessary for any one to sit up and keep watch.”
+
+Harriet explained her plan, which met with the approval of the others.
+That plan was destined to fulfill its purpose later in the night, for
+their excitement was not yet ended, and before the dawning of another
+day, the Meadow-Brook Girls were once more to distinguish themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII—DISCOVERING MIDNIGHT PROWLERS
+
+
+“Have you a ball of strong twine in your kit, Jane?” asked Harriet. “You
+told me to ask for anything I wanted but did not see.”
+
+“Sure, I have. In the tool box. Wait. I’ll get it for you.”
+
+While Jane went for the twine, Harriet hurried out, returning a few
+moments later with two sticks, each stick being about five feet long.
+Next she got a tin pail and stood the pail bottom-side-up on the sticks.
+Her companions watched her wonderingly.
+
+“What _are_ you trying to do?” demanded Miss Elting.
+
+“Fixing a burglar alarm. You’ll agree that it is all right after I have
+it finished. Now, I want to run this twine all the way around the camp.
+I shall need some round sticks. Help me find some, Tommy. You have sharp
+eyes.”
+
+All hands set out to hunt for the desired sticks. Harriet began
+thrusting them into the soft ground at more or less regular intervals.
+
+When the stakes had been placed loops of string were tied near the tops
+of them, and through these loops was threaded the long twine until the
+camp was entirely surrounded by it. It formed a thread-like barrier that
+seemed too slender a thing to be of much use. One end of the string was
+secured to the two sticks on which the pail had been placed. The slack
+in the string was taken up until the sticks and the pail tilted from the
+wall of the tent at a sharp angle.
+
+“Hurrah!” cried the guardian. “That is a most ingenious contrivance. How
+did you come to think of it?”
+
+“Nethethity ith the mother of invention, tho my father thayth,” spoke up
+Grace.
+
+Harriet nodded approvingly. The others laughed.
+
+“Tommy is becoming quite a philosopher,” averred the guardian. “Aren’t
+you going to give us a demonstration of your invention, Harriet?”
+
+“Very well,” laughed Harriet. “Hazel, will you go out and stumble
+against the string? Don’t you dare to break it for—Oh!”
+
+The two sticks had come down with a crash, the tin pail rattling as it
+rolled over the floor. Tommy screamed and so did Margery.
+
+“There’s your demonstration,” announced Harriet. “Some one is coming. I
+hope it isn’t those Italians again.”
+
+Miss Elting with her loaded revolver, Jane with her club, Harriet armed
+this time with a stout stick, sauntered forth to meet the newcomer. Jane
+had run to the dark side of the tent, thrusting her club across the
+corner ready to use it at the first indication of trouble. To her
+disgust, the farmer from whom she had obtained permission to make camp,
+now appeared on the scene.
+
+“It’s all right, girls. This is the gentleman who let us make camp
+here,” called Jane.
+
+“I just came over to tell you to take care of your fire. If it runs
+it’ll burn off the meadow, it being all fresh seeding there. I wouldn’t
+want to lose it,” hailed their visitor.
+
+“Thank you for calling our attention to it. We are always careful of
+fire,” Miss Elting made reply.
+
+“What was it I fell over when I came in here?” he asked, glancing about
+him. “You certainly look mighty comfortable here.”
+
+The girls looked at each other and giggled.
+
+“It was a little contrivance of one of our young women, so that we might
+be warned of the approach of strangers,” the guardian informed him. “You
+see, it warned us that some one was coming.”
+
+“I guess you can take care of yourselves, all right. Is there anything
+you want? If there is, come over to the house. My wife is curious to see
+this outfit. Maybe she will come over in the morning.”
+
+“Thank you very kindly for your interest,” answered the guardian. “We
+shall be breaking camp early in the morning.”
+
+The farmer left. Harriet nodded to her companions.
+
+“Was the demonstration satisfactory?” she questioned.
+
+“I should say it was,” answered Margery. “It nearly scared me out of my
+wits.”
+
+“I suppose we shall have to mend the string now. The farmer’s big boots
+broke it in two places. However, we needn’t worry about any person
+getting into this camp to-night without giving us warning of his
+approach,” said Harriet. She repaired the broken “burglar alarm,” then
+returning to the tent adjusted the sticks and the pail, placing several
+other pieces of tinware with it. The girls then gathered about the
+campfire, where they chatted, told stories and exchanged experiences
+until a late hour.
+
+Harriet got out the map just before they retired. After consulting with
+Miss Elting for some time, it was decided that they should take a short
+cut across a rugged country, using their compass to guide them, meeting
+Jane some twelve miles further on. She would have to drive more than
+twenty miles to make the point. The girls did not enjoy the highways
+very much. In the first place, the roads were dusty; many curious people
+were to be met with on the roads; then again they thoroughly enjoyed
+breaking new paths through the forests and over fields and hills. Now
+that all the crops had been garnered there was no danger of doing damage
+to the farmers’ fields by tramping across them. Jane was instructed to
+wait for them after driving into the next town for fresh supplies.
+
+“It’s curious that we don’t run across any melon fields. The first one I
+catch sight of I’m going to raid,” she declared.
+
+“No, Jane, you mustn’t do that,” objected the guardian. “What we get we
+must pay for.”
+
+“Certainly,” agreed Jane. “But there isn’t any sport in just walking up
+and paying for melons. It’s a heap more fun to forage for them.”
+
+“But, Jane, think what it means to take an object of value that doesn’t
+belong to you. It is stealing!”
+
+“That’s true. It surely is,” agreed Jane. “I won’t ever mention any such
+thing again.”
+
+“Thank you,” returned Miss Elting with a smile that amply repaid Crazy
+Jane for her decision.
+
+At last all hands began making preparations for bed. Folding cots were
+opened and made up, fresh fuel was heaped on the campfire, then Harriet
+and Miss Elting made a round of the camp to see that all was in shape
+for the night. Jane lighted the big headlights on her car, turning them
+on the darkest part of the camp, after which they drew the flap to the
+tent and began preparing for bed. Half an hour later the camp was
+silent, save for the occasional crackling of the fire. All the dead
+leaves and inflammable stuff had been raked away and the ground dug up
+immediately about the fire to prevent it from spreading. The moon now
+silvered the landscape, and a faint mist was rising from about the
+Willow Ponds, adding to the beauty of the night.
+
+Midnight came, then the silence became more marked than before. About
+one o’clock in the morning two men might have been observed skulking
+about the farther side of the pond nearest to the camp. They took care
+not to come within range of the headlights of Crazy Jane’s motor car.
+Had one looked closely at them the men might have been recognized as the
+same pair that had visited the camp with the bear earlier in the
+evening. What their purpose was in returning could only be surmised.
+
+It might be revenge or robbery. In either event it was bad enough, and
+the Meadow-Brook Girls, sleeping soundly, were blissfully unconscious of
+the danger that menaced them. Their faith in Harriet Burrell’s burglar
+alarm permitted them to sleep without fear.
+
+All at once there was a mighty crash in the tent. As Tommy Thompson
+described it afterwards, “it thounded ath if lightning had thtruck a tin
+thhop.” The tin pail and the other kitchen utensils that had been hung
+on the long sticks in the tent came down with a clatter and a bang. The
+tin pail rolled clear across the tent, landed on Margery Brown, bringing
+from her a scream of terror.
+
+“Quick! Put on your bathrobes!” called Miss Elting. “There is trouble
+here.”
+
+No need to tell them that. The tin pail already had conveyed this
+information to the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+
+Harriet was the first one to run outside the tent.
+
+“There they are!” she cried, having caught sight of two skulking figures
+near the automobile. “It’s the same Italians. Let’s call for help as
+loudly as we can. Perhaps that will make them take to their heels.”
+
+It had the desired effect. Seeing that the camp was fully aroused the
+intruders fled. Then a daring plan suggested itself to Crazy Jane
+McCarthy. Leaving her companions she started on a run for her car.
+
+“Come back! Where are you going?” cried the guardian.
+
+“I’ll show you, I’ll show them! Just watch and you’ll see more fun than
+a barrel of monkeys eating cayenne pepper.”
+
+Dashing up to the car, she advanced the spark control, and gave the
+crank a quick turn. The car began a sputtering that quickly grew into a
+roar from the exhaust. Crazy Jane leaped in. She was clad in a bathrobe
+that reached to her ankles; her tangle of hair fell about her face and
+shoulders giving her face a wilder and more weird expression than ever.
+
+Jane threw in the high speed lever. The car leaped forward. Harriet
+Burrell, who had divined something of Jane’s purpose, made a running
+leap and landed on the step, grasping one of the cover braces for
+support.
+
+“Jane, Jane! For goodness’ sake, what are you going to do?”
+
+“I’m going to give the rascals the scare of their lives. They haven’t
+had enough. Get in!”
+
+Harriet did so, but only to prevent being thrown off the car. She had
+little desire to participate in the drive that she well knew would be an
+exciting one. Miss Elting was shouting to Jane to come back. Jane did
+not or would not hear. Uttering a shrill little cry of triumph she drove
+the car ahead at a perilous rate of speed. Over the rough field the
+automobile lurched and careened imperiling the safety of its occupants
+and threatening momentarily to upset and wreck the car.
+
+The two men were fleeing across the field. Seeing the car bearing down
+upon them, they began to dodge. The big white eyes of the headlights
+followed them wherever they went. It was maddening. Now the fugitives
+began zig-zagging. So did Crazy Jane. Once she nearly ran them down. The
+Italians sprang out of the way just in time and began running back
+toward the camp. Jane pursued them as soon as she could get the car
+turned about and facing the other way. By this time the men had gotten a
+long start.
+
+“They’re making for the camp, the villains,” breathed Jane.
+
+“It is because they are trying to get out of your way,” answered Harriet
+almost breathlessly. “You will have to head them off.”
+
+“Head them off nothing!” exploded Jane. “Rather will I take their heads
+off, the miserable rascals.”
+
+“Jane, Jane! You mustn’t run them down. You simply _must not_. You might
+kill them. Please, please don’t try to do that, dear!” begged Harriet.
+
+“All right, darlin’. But you’re making me lose a lot of fun. I don’t get
+an opportunity like this every day in the week. They deserve all I can
+give them.”
+
+“You mustn’t harm a human being, no matter how bad he is. There, they
+have turned toward the road.”
+
+“I won’t hurt them,” promised Jane. “I’ll just scare them a little.”
+
+“Oh!” cried Harriet as the car rose on two wheels, nearly turning over.
+“Do be careful!”
+
+“Don’t be afraid. As long as I’ve got two wheels on the ground I’m all
+right. Now if I had only one wheel on the old sod you might worry, but
+you wouldn’t worry for long. See ’em go. They know I’ve got them now!”
+
+Just then the men plunged headlong into a ditch that extended all the
+way across the field. The girls had not discovered it until that moment.
+Jane checked her car just in time to prevent it also from going into the
+ditch.
+
+“There’s a bridge to the right,” Harriet informed her, then was sorry
+she had made the suggestion. Crazy Jane charged the bridge at full
+speed. All four wheels seemed to strike the planking at the same
+instant.
+
+Jane turned sharply. They were now chasing the two men obliquely across
+the field. The men were lagging.
+
+“They’re getting winded,” shouted Crazy Jane triumphantly.
+
+“Please go back now,” begged Harriet “You have frightened them enough.
+They never will trouble us again.”
+
+“Not till I get the wretches on a run down the road. I’ve not finished
+with them yet.”
+
+“They have nearly finished themselves,” answered Harriet. She was no
+longer apprehensive that Jane would injure the men intentionally, though
+Harriet feared that one of them might stumble and be crushed underneath
+the car. Still her pulses were beating high, the color in her cheeks had
+mounted to her forehead. She was entering into the spirit of the wild
+chase almost with the enthusiasm of Crazy Jane herself.
+
+The voices of their companions in the camp no longer reached them. The
+two girls were too far away to hear now, even had the car not been
+making such a din.
+
+The two men were making for the roadside fence, a board structure, which
+in the haze of the damp night, the girls did not see. They had forgotten
+that the fence was there.
+
+All at once the men reached the fence. Grasping the top board they flung
+themselves over, landing heavily on the ground on the other side.
+
+“Look out!” cried Harriet warningly.
+
+“Hold fast!” yelled Jane.
+
+Crash!
+
+The car struck the fence with a mighty crash accompanied by the sound of
+splintering woodwork. The headlights went out, and Jane brought her car
+to a stop in the midst of the wreck at the roadside.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII—CAUGHT IN A MORASS
+
+
+“Well, here we are,” announced Crazy Jane calmly.
+
+“Oh, see those fellows run!” cried Harriet, gaspingly. “There they go!”
+she cried, in almost hysterical amusement, after she had picked herself
+up from the bottom of the car, where the collision had hurled her.
+
+“I’ve a good notion to send the car straight through the fence, and
+chase that pair of skulkers out of the state!” Jane McCarthy proposed
+vindictively.
+
+“Don’t you try to do it,” protested Harriet, now sobered by the
+realization of how reckless her companion might easily become. “Jane,
+_some day_ you’ll really hit some one—that would be awful!”
+
+“But I didn’t half frighten that pair of rascals,” returned Jane.
+
+“If the men weren’t frightened, then they’ll never know fear,” insisted
+Harriet Burrell. “How badly is the car damaged?”
+
+“A blow on the nose, but the nose is not even out of joint,” Jane
+answered coolly.
+
+“Then let us get back to Miss Elting. How she’ll scold!”
+
+Miss Elting did scold when they reached camp with the car. It is to be
+feared, however, that Jane heard but little of the rebuke, for she was
+busy examining the damage done to her beloved car. She found that she
+could put the lamps in condition again. The guard rod in front of the
+radiator was also injured. Jane decided that this could be easily fixed.
+
+“Girls, girls! What do you mean by such actions. Jane, I am amazed at
+you. Harriet, how could you?” Miss Elting rebuked them roundly.
+
+“I—I guess it was impulse,” answered Harriet, her face crimsoning under
+the reproachful words of the guardian. “Please don’t scold us. We drove
+the men off. They will not trouble us again, I am quite sure.”
+
+“But they might have been run down, girls.”
+
+“Served them right if they had, bad luck to them!” retorted Jane
+mischievously. “However, ’all’s well that ends well.’ I’m for bed. What
+do you say?”
+
+“Thay, why didn’t you take me along?” demanded Tommy.
+
+“It was quite bad enough without your assistance,” replied the guardian.
+“Yes, we had better retire at once. Do you wish to put up your burglar
+alarm again, Harriet?”
+
+“I do not think it will be necessary. The men won’t prowl about the camp
+again to-night.”
+
+“No, they won’t,” agreed Jane, laughing uproariously. “They’re running
+yet and they’ll be running as long as their wind holds out. I wonder
+where they left the bear? Wouldn’t it be fun if we could find the bear
+and let him loose?”
+
+“Oh-h-h!” cried Margery. “How can you talk so, Jane?”
+
+“Most certainly not,” rebuked Miss Elting. “You have done quite enough
+as it is, without turning a bear loose on the community. You had better
+all go back to bed. What did you do to your car, Jane?”
+
+“Bumped its nose, that’s all. My only regret is that I didn’t bump it
+against one of the Italians. I shouldn’t have minded giving the bear a
+smash, too. Good night. Sweet dreams, darlin’s!” Jane flounced into the
+tent and throwing off her bathrobe tumbled into bed, where she was soon
+sound asleep. The others did not quiet down quite so quickly. Harriet,
+especially, lay thinking over the experiences of the evening, and each
+time the thought of the pursuit of the Italians by Crazy Jane and her
+motor car occurred to her, Harriet would laugh softly to herself. She
+finally laughed herself to sleep, to be awakened in what seemed but a
+few moments later, by the blowing of a fish horn at the lips of Crazy
+Jane McCarthy. Day had dawned. The sun was just peeping over the eastern
+hills, the campfire was blazing and Miss Elting was getting breakfast.
+
+Harriet quickly drew on her bathing suit, then, running out of the tent,
+plunged into the pond, uttering a little scream as the cold water
+enveloped her. None of the others had the courage to take a cold plunge
+that morning, as the air was rather cool. As for Harriet, she remained
+in the pond until Miss Elting insisted that she come ashore.
+
+Camp was struck immediately after breakfast as the girls wished to make
+as much progress on their journey in the cool of the morning as
+possible. They struck camp with the skill of veterans, and within half
+an hour from the time they began the operation, everything was packed
+and stowed in the car.
+
+“Now, don’t you girls try to play me any more tricks to-day. I’ve got
+the food. If you don’t find Jane, you get no supper. Understand?”
+laughed Jane.
+
+“I’ve got thome bithcuit in my pack,” piped Tommy.
+
+“She won’t have them for long,” laughed Margery. “Tommy will have eaten
+the biscuits before she has gone a mile.”
+
+“Well, I don’t eat tho much that I get fat,” protested Tommy. “I gueth I
+know when to thtop.”
+
+Miss Elting was giving Jane final directions as to when and where to
+look for them, after which the four girls and their guardian, with their
+packs slung over their backs, stout sticks in their hands to assist them
+over rough places and also to frighten away troublesome dogs, started
+out on their journey of ten miles or more. They crossed the road,
+traveled up a hill and headed straight across country. The unmarked
+trail was rough and following it fatigued them considerably during the
+first two miles of their journey.
+
+Shortly after eleven o’clock they came in sight of a remote farm house
+tucked away in a valley. Miss Elting decided to call there to get some
+milk. The woman of the house at first regarded them with suspicion, but
+she soon thawed under Miss Elting’s gentle voice and winning smile.
+
+The milk had not been skimmed. All the old milk had been churned that
+day. There was nothing left but buttermilk, the woman told them.
+
+“Buttermilk!” cried the girls in chorus.
+
+“I jutht love buttermilk!” declared Tommy. “Do you have buttermilk
+cowth? Ithn’t that fine? I’m going to make my father buy me a buttermilk
+cow.”
+
+“Well, I was going to feed that buttermilk to the hogs, but seeing as
+you want it I suppose you may have it,” decided the woman with some
+reluctance. “Do you like it cold?”
+
+The party answered in the affirmative. The housewife lowered a pail of
+buttermilk into the well to cool, the party sitting down under an apple
+tree in the yard to rest themselves in the meantime. Margery lay down
+and went to sleep. Tommy amused herself by tickling Buster’s ear with a
+long, dead stalk of timothy grass. Margery in her sleep thought it a
+fly. She fought the fly for some time, then finally opening her eyes,
+she caught Tommy red handed. Tommy fled into the farm house, where she
+pretended to be much interested in the housewife’s work. She soon won
+her way into the good graces of the woman, and when, finally, the little
+lisping girl emerged from the house she was carrying a tin tray of food.
+
+“Jutht thee what I’ve got,” she cried. “It taketh Tommy Thompthon to get
+thingth to eat.”
+
+There were sandwiches, ginger cookies—great fat brown fellows—and a
+large dish of apple sauce.
+
+“Oh, girls!” cried Margery her eyes glistening at the prospect of a
+feast. “I could die eating that food.”
+
+“Tommy, did you beg for this?” demanded the guardian.
+
+“I gueth not. I jutht athked for it,” returned Tommy calmly. “When you
+want thomething you want, jutht athk for it, and if you don’t get it you
+haven’t wasted anything but your breath.”
+
+“Madam, we are very grateful to you for this kindness, and will pay you
+before leaving,” called Miss Elting to the housewife, who came out at
+this juncture to draw up the bucket of buttermilk from the cool depths
+of the well.
+
+“You’re welcome, I’m sure. I just baked to-day. Hope the cookies are all
+right. They didn’t rise to suit me.”
+
+“They’d have burthted if they’d rithen any more,” observed Tommy. She
+was rebuked by a look from Harriet.
+
+“I hope you like them,” smiled the woman.
+
+“Oh, they are simply delicious,” answered Harriet, with glowing eyes.
+“And that buttermilk! I never drank any that tasted better.”
+
+The party ate their fill of the good things, Margery doing even more
+than her share in disposing of both buttermilk and food. When they had
+finished, the tray was empty. The woman offered to bring them more food,
+but Miss Elting said “no.” She gave the woman fifty cents despite the
+protests of the latter; then, after a brief rest, they started on again,
+first having expressed their thanks to the housewife, who stood in the
+door of her home watching the little party until it had passed out of
+sight.
+
+About the middle of the afternoon the girls halted for another rest
+because of Margery’s complaints that she was feeling ill.
+
+“You ate too much,” declared Harriet. “It doesn’t do to eat so much when
+one is taking exercise as we are.”
+
+“Yeth. Buthter alwayth eatth too much,” averred Tommy wisely.
+
+“Oh!” moaned Margery Brown, sitting down all in a heap. “I can’t walk
+another step to-day.”
+
+“Do you think we should leave her here?” asked Harriet, with solemn face
+but twinkling eyes.
+
+“We shall see how she feels after I have given her something to settle
+her stomach,” answered Miss Elting gravely.
+
+“No, no, no!” wailed Margery. “Don’t leave me. I’ll go. Let me lie still
+and rest myself a little first.”
+
+“You thee Buthter, it doethn’t pay to be tho greedy,” admonished Tommy.
+
+“Will you please make her stop?” begged Buster. “I can’t stand it.”
+
+“Tommy!” rebuked Harriet. “Haven’t you any consideration for Margery?”
+
+“Yeth. Of courthe I have. But thhe doethn’t detherve any thympathy.”
+
+“I’m ashamed of you, Tommy, dear. Wait. You, too, will be ill one of
+these days, then we shall make unpleasant remarks to you,” warned
+Harriet.
+
+Grace Thompson flushed guiltily.
+
+“That ith too bad, Buthter. I didn’t mean to make you feel worthe.
+Honetht I didn’t. I hope you will be better pretty thoon.” Tommy kissed
+her. “There. Ithn’t that better?”
+
+“Yes,” admitted Margery. She already had taken some peppermint drops
+that Miss Elting had administered. After a further rest the girls
+assisted her to her feet and walked her slowly up and down the road. She
+was then permitted to sit down and rest again. Tommy, an expression of
+concern on her impish face, crouched before the now pale-faced Buster,
+munching a hard biscuit.
+
+“Come, girls,” said Miss Elting finally. “It is nearly five o’clock. We
+were to meet Jane at five, and we must have a good two hours’ walk ahead
+of us still. Now that Margery is feeling so ill we shall not be able to
+make nearly as good time as that. I wonder if we hadn’t better find the
+highway and finish the day’s tramp on that?”
+
+Margery protested that they must not change their plans on her account.
+She declared that she could walk as well as any of them.
+
+“Margery will repent her rash assertions before she has gone a mile,”
+laughed Hazel.
+
+“No. I think she will be all right, now,” replied the guardian.
+“Margery, if you find that you are feeling worse, at any time, you must
+be sure to tell me at once. Now, girls, march!”
+
+The little company plodded along. Harriet linked one arm within
+Margery’s. The latter, while feeling much improved, was still a little
+weak and Harriet Burrell’s sturdy arm was appreciated.
+
+About six o’clock they came to a long hill that sloped gently down into
+a valley. The greater part of the valley was covered with trees. It
+appeared to be a dense forest of second growth, the trees not being very
+large. The guardian consulted the map.
+
+“Yes. We are on the right trail. We must keep straight on through the
+woods. According to this map there should be a trail that leads directly
+to the other side of the valley, and when we reach that point we shall
+have finished our day’s journey.”
+
+“I am afraid we are going to be caught in the dark, Miss Elting,” said
+Harriet.
+
+“If we find the trail we do not need to worry about that. We can’t very
+well go astray. I would suggest that, when we get down farther into the
+valley, we spread out and look for the wood trail. The one who first
+discovers it will shout. By taking this open formation we shall be
+saving time. It certainly seems to me that the distance to be covered
+to-day is more than ten miles.”
+
+“It does seem so,” agreed Hazel. “But we have lost considerable time on
+the way.”
+
+They began spreading out when about half way down the hill, calling to
+each other good-naturedly, shouting as they got farther and farther
+away. Tommy discovered the road. She ran out into the field waving her
+arms and crying shrilly to attract the attention of her companions. They
+hurried toward her. The road, as they soon learned, was a mere path and
+one not much frequented at that, as was evidenced by the vegetation that
+grew in the middle of it.
+
+“This looks to me like rather low swampy land,” declared Harriet. “It is
+my idea that we had better stick closely to the path, or we may get into
+trouble.” She did not say definitely what she feared, not wishing to
+needlessly terrorize Margery and Tommy. Miss Elting understood their
+danger, however. She nodded. Harriet started along the trail, leading
+the way, with the guardian following at her heels. They went on in this
+way for half an hour. The forest grew darker as they proceeded, the
+vegetation being thick in there. The day was waning rapidly. It was not
+very long before they were groping their way, rather than finding it by
+sight.
+
+A scream from Margery, who was at the rear, brought them up sharply.
+Then Tommy’s voice was raised in a sharp cry of alarm.
+
+“What is it?” shouted Harriet.
+
+“I’m sinking!” screamed Margery.
+
+Harriet instantly knew the meaning of this. Her worst fears were
+confirmed. They were in the middle of a vast morass that stretched on
+each side of the trail.
+
+“Thave me! Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+
+Both girls were in the mud, but just how deeply Harriet Burrell did not
+know. Now Hazel added her cries to those of Tommy and Margery. She, too,
+had stepped off the path. Harriet could hear Hazel floundering in the
+mire. Miss Elting hurried back to them, regardless of her own safety.
+
+“Be careful!” called Harriet warningly, groping her way to her
+companions who were crying and screaming for help.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX—THE TRAMP CLUB TO THE RESCUE
+
+
+“Look out, Miss Elting,” warned Harriet again. “The girls are in the
+mud.”
+
+“So am I,” cried the guardian in a voice of alarm. “Oh, it’s deep. I’m
+sinking.”
+
+“Stand perfectly still,” advised Harriet. “You will get in deeper if you
+struggle. I’ll see what I can do. I may get in, too.”
+
+“Be quick, Harriet,” urged the guardian. “This is serious. I can’t move
+an inch.”
+
+“I’ll do the best I can. Oh, I wish I had some good sized limbs of trees
+to throw to you. Here’s one. Where are you, Miss Elting?”
+
+“Here. It’s no use. I can’t pull myself out.”
+
+Margery was screaming at the top of her voice. It seemed as though her
+cries must be heard throughout the woods. No amount of urging could
+induce her to be quiet.
+
+“Let her yell. Let her make all the noithe she can. Maybe thomebody will
+hear her,” wailed Tommy.
+
+This was good logic. Miss Elting told Buster to shout as loudly as she
+could. The other girls now added their voices to Buster’s frantic
+screams. Harriet was moving about as rapidly as she dared, but she was
+unable to find any limbs large enough to be of much use to Miss Elting,
+who was nearest to the trail over which they had come. Harriet tried
+another experiment. Breaking down a sapling that grew beside the path
+she thrust this toward the guardian.
+
+“Take hold of it,” she commanded. “Have you got it, Miss Elting?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Give way loosely when I pull. I may be able to pull you out. Don’t
+resist at all.”
+
+“It’s no use, Harriet!” announced the guardian, after several minutes of
+the hardest sort of work on Harriet’s part. “I am getting deeper in the
+mud with every move I make. You will have to think of something else.”
+
+“Girls, stop your screaming for a moment,” called Harriet. “Tell me how
+you are? Are you sinking deeper into the mud or are you remaining about
+the same?”
+
+“Whenever I make the slightest movement I sink in deeper. I’m keeping as
+still as possible,” answered Hazel.
+
+“I’m in almotht up to my waitht,” cried Tommy. “I’m going to be buried
+alive. Oh, thave me!”
+
+“As long as you are able to scream like that you are all right,”
+comforted Harriet. “When you stop yelling I shall begin to believe you
+are in real trouble.”
+
+Harriet now set to work cutting down small saplings with her hatchet.
+These she threw out into the space between Miss Elting and the three
+girls. They were close together, which somewhat simplified the work. The
+Meadow-Brook girl knew that it would take a quantity of the small trees
+and limbs to support her weight, but it was the only course she knew of
+to follow. Fortunately for Harriet she was an athletic girl, possessing
+great strength for one of her age and build. Better still, she possessed
+a courage and will all her own. Then, too, Harriet Burrell was one of
+those doggedly determined persons who never know when they are worsted.
+Her mind was working even more rapidly than were her hands. She had
+succeeded in piling up enough stuff to form a slight support for the
+arms of her companions. She now explained her plan to them.
+
+“I don’t think I shall be able to get you out of the morass without
+taking a long chance of getting in myself,” she began.
+
+“Oh-h-h-h!” cried the girls despairingly. They had relied implicitly on
+Harriet’s resourceful brain to find the means to release them from their
+dangerous predicament.
+
+“Wait until I have finished. You know that I’m not afraid. You know
+better than to think so,” soothed Harriet. “Don’t you see, if I were to
+get caught in the mud, your last hope would be gone? We might all perish
+here before any one found us.”
+
+“You are right as usual, Harriet,” said Miss Elting. She was apparently
+calm. If she were nervous no trace of it was discoverable in her voice.
+“What do you propose to do?”
+
+“I am going to pile some more stuff on what I have already placed there.
+Each of you is to throw out her arms and if possible lock hands across
+the barrier. When one hand gets tired change to the other one. That will
+keep you from sinking down much deeper. The saplings should keep you up,
+though it will be a rather severe strain on your arm.”
+
+“What will you do, Harriet?” asked Miss Elting.
+
+“I am going for help.”
+
+“Oh, don’t leave uth!” wailed Grace.
+
+“Harriet is right,” agreed Hazel. “It is the only thing to do. But which
+way will you go?”
+
+“I will go back the way we came. I believe that if I am careful I shall
+be able to reach solid ground without getting off the trail. A short
+distance from here the ground rises somewhat and is harder. Once I reach
+that I shall be safe.”
+
+“But, Harriet, where will you go for help?”
+
+“I saw the top of some farm buildings to the west of where we were just
+before we entered this horrid place. I think it will be best for me to
+hurry there. I ought to be back in a couple of hours at the outside.”
+
+“Two _hourth_!” mourned Tommy.
+
+“That will be better than staying there all night, won’t it?” demanded
+Harriet.
+
+“I should say it will,” agreed Hazel.
+
+“Then hurry, dear,” urged Miss Elting.
+
+“Is any one of you in pain?” questioned Harriet.
+
+“I think not,” replied Miss Elting. “The ground is too soft to hurt.
+That’s the worst of it. If the ground weren’t so soft and sticky we
+should be able to get out. Do you think you could build a fire before
+you go, Harriet?”
+
+“I wouldn’t dare to do so. Suppose it should spread to the trees about
+you after I had gone? There are cedars and small pine trees in here. The
+foliage of these trees is like tinder.”
+
+“You are right!” exclaimed the guardian. “To build a fire would be the
+height of folly. Hurry, please. We will be here when you come back,” she
+added with a forced laugh.
+
+“Be brave, girls. Remember, we are Meadow-Brook Girls,” said Harriet, as
+with a shouted “good-bye” she started back along the trail on her
+mission. Both arms were outspread so that she might be warned by touch
+when getting too close to the sides of the trail.
+
+“Girls,” began Miss Elting brightly, after Harriet had left them.
+“Harriet reminded us that we are Meadow-Brook Girls. Let’s show that we
+are by giving the Meadow-Brook yell. Now. One, two, three, go!”
+
+ “Meadow-Brook. Meadow-Brook.
+ Rah, rah, rah!
+ Meadow-Brook, Meadow-Brook,
+ Sis, boom, ah-h-h!”
+
+The girls’ voices grew stronger after the second line. The voices of
+Miss Elting and Tommy Thompson rose above those of the other two. Some
+one laughed. It was Tommy. Her laugh was a trifle hysterical, but it was
+a laugh, and for the moment it relieved the strain somewhat. Miss Elting
+gave them no time to think about themselves.
+
+“Girls. Forty-nine Blue Bottles now,” she cried, then began the chant
+herself, the others joining in promptly.
+
+ “Forty-nine blue bottles were hanging on the wall,
+ Forty-nine blue bottles were hanging on the wall.
+ Take one of the bottles down and there’ll be forty-eight
+ blue bottles a hanging on the wall, a hanging on the
+ wall.”
+
+They continued to chant regardless of aching throats and hoarse voices,
+until every one of those offending blue bottles had been removed from
+the wall.
+
+“Now the Meadow-Brook yell again. It will bring assistance to us if any
+one hears it,” reminded the guardian. They repeated the yell.
+
+“Gracious!” cried Miss Elting.
+
+“Oh, what is it now?” begged Margery, in a frightened voice.
+
+“Why, some malicious person has put all those forty-nine blue bottles
+back on the wall again. What shall we do?”
+
+“I gueth we’ll have to take them off,” lisped Tommy, amid laughter from
+her companions and the guardian as well.
+
+“I can’t,” moaned Margery. She began to choke and cough. “I’ve swallowed
+a bug.”
+
+“Oh, the poor bug. I’m tho thorry for him,” piped Tommy.
+
+“Maybe we can catch him in one of those bottles,” suggested Miss Elting.
+“Come, girls, you aren’t going to desert me now, are you? Already!
+‘Forty-nine blue bottles were hanging on the wall.’”
+
+Once more the girls went over the familiar refrain, ending finally with
+the Meadow-Brook yell. Again and again did they take the bottles from
+the wall, but as often as they removed them invisible hands replaced
+every one of the forty-nine blue bottles in their accustomed position on
+the wall.
+
+For the tenth time the forty-nine blue bottles had been taken down and
+hung up again. The voices of the girls were so hoarse that they could
+barely speak aloud, though they were laughing hysterically as they
+labored with the forty-ninth. They had almost forgotten that they were
+in danger, forgotten their aching bodies, forgotten that Harriet Burrell
+was speeding through the darkness in quest of assistance, when a distant
+but familiar cry reached their ears. It was the long drawn out
+“hoo-e-e-e-e” of the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+Miss Elting heard it first. Her companions were laughing so immoderately
+that they failed to hear it the first time. The guardian’s voice failed
+her. A lump rose in her throat. The strain had been so great that
+several times she found herself on the point of giving way. Now the
+reaction had set in.
+
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e!”
+
+Tommy heard it, and uttered a scream. The call was repeated. This time
+all the girls heard it plainly.
+
+“It’s Harriet, it’s Harriet!” cried Hazel.
+
+“Yes. Rescue is at hand,” replied Miss Elting fervently.
+
+A light twinkled far away through between the trees. It seemed to the
+anxious eyes of the guardian as though it were miles and miles distant.
+She raised her voice in a shout, but the voice was so weak that it
+carried but a short distance.
+
+“Shout, girls!” she begged. “You may be able to make them hear. I can’t.
+My voice has completely left me. Tommy! You can always scream. Do so
+now.”
+
+Tommy let loose a thrilling, penetrating yell. The rescue party heard
+it. They answered with return shouts in male voices.
+
+“That sounds to me like boys’ voices,” cried Miss Elting huskily.
+
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy. “My hair ith all tumbled down, my frock
+ith muddy from top to bottom and my fathe ith thmudged. I’m a thight, I
+know I am. I can’t retheive company to-day. Thend them away, pleathe.”
+
+Some one came running toward them considerably in advance of the light.
+
+“Girls! Girls!” shouted an anxious voice.
+
+“Here!” cried the guardian.
+
+“Thank goodness you’re alive,” answered Harriet Burrell. “I’ve been
+terribly anxious about you. Here—here’s a can of fresh water. I know
+your throats must be dry.”
+
+Reaching forward, Harriet handed the can to the guardian. Miss Elting
+passed it on to Tommy. Each of the girls drank.
+
+“Where are you, folks?” shouted a boyish voice.
+
+“Here. Just ahead of you,” answered Harriet. She had sunk down on the
+trail, her strength gone. A moment later she was on her feet again,
+hurrying down the trail to guide the rescuers to the spot.
+
+A tall young fellow clad in khaki, a campaign hat on his head, rushed
+up. Behind him came half a dozen other young men similarly clad. They
+were bearing fence rails on their shoulders, fairly staggering under the
+weight of their burdens.
+
+“Oh, I’m so glad!” cried Miss Elting, now on the verge of tears after
+the strain. “Who are they, Harriet, my brave girl?”
+
+“We’re the Tramp Club,” answered the first boy. “We’ll introduce
+ourselves after we get you girls out of the morass. You’re in a fine
+mess and you certainly do need help.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X—IN THE HANDS OF THE RESCUERS
+
+
+“Now, keep perfectly quiet. Don’t move an inch. We’ll have you out of it
+in a few moments. Here, Dill, give me the rope. Now the end of a rail.
+The young lady over there with the flaxen hair——”
+
+“It ithn’t flaxen. It ith blonde,” protested Tommy indignantly.
+
+“I stand corrected,” laughed the young man. “Please grab the rope and
+pull on it. I don’t dare throw a rail out there for fear of hitting one
+of you. Being the farthest out, you will be able to pull the rail right
+up to you. Never mind if you do settle down an inch or two. I’ll have
+you out at any rate. Do you understand?”
+
+“Yeth.”
+
+“Then here goes.” The boy tossed a coil of rope so accurately that the
+coil dropped directly over Grace Thompson’s head. She uttered a little
+scream as the rope slipped over her head, then clawed frantically at it.
+“That’s right,” cried her rescuer. “Now pull.”
+
+Tommy pulled desperately drawing the rail towards her, but sinking
+deeper and deeper into the mud until she was nearly up to her armpits.
+The little lisping girl took fresh alarm. She began to cry, “Thave me!”
+
+“Don’t be frightened. Here’s another rail!” encouraged the youth. “We’ve
+got to build up a bridge. Those limbs and saplings you have out there
+will make an excellent foundation. Hurry them up here, Dill! The young
+ladies will grow impatient and refuse to wait for us longer.”
+
+The girls declined to laugh at this pleasantry. They were in too much
+distress. Harriet stood holding a lantern above her head so that the
+boys might see to work to the best advantage. The rails were drawn out
+by Tommy in each instance, assisted by the girls between herself and the
+path. Then the leader set his boys at work felling the largest trees
+they could find along the trail. The lads went at their work with a
+will. As soon as the trees and brush were cut down they were carried
+over and dumped in on the rail and brush foundation, forming a rude
+bridge. The leader then advanced cautiously over it until he reached a
+point near to the guardian and the girls.
+
+“Now we will see what we can do.”
+
+A rope was passed about the waist of the guardian despite her protests
+that the others should be gotten out of the morass first. Three boys
+were put at the shore end of the rope with orders to pull when their
+leader gave the word. He, on his part, took firm hold of Miss Elting
+under the arms, then shouted “now!”
+
+Those on shore began to pull. The leader, at the same time, began to
+lift with all his might, moving the guardian’s shoulders from left to
+right.
+
+“Tell me if the rope hurts you,” gasped the muscular young fellow.
+
+Miss Elting came up so suddenly that her rescuer fell over, narrowly
+escaping a plunge into the morass. The guardian was finally dragged to
+the path. The rescuers then turned their attention to the other girls.
+Their wooden raft was slowly sinking under the weight that had been put
+upon it, but fresh stuff was being constantly piled on it to keep it
+above the mud. One by one the Meadow-Brook Girls were hauled out.
+
+Harriet had helped Miss Elting aside into the shadows, where she
+assisted the guardian in scraping the mud from her clothing. At first
+Miss Elting was barely able to stand. She found herself trembling from
+head to foot now that the strain, mental and physical, was removed.
+
+“Here’s another one!” cried the cheery voice of the leader
+
+“What wonderful boys!” breathed Miss Elting, starting to go to Tommy’s
+assistance.
+
+“Please lie down on the ground and rest, Miss Elting. Don’t try to get
+up until we are ready to start. I can take care of the others as they
+are dragged out,” directed Harriet.
+
+She assisted Tommy to a place beside Miss Elting, the latter insisting
+upon trying to help the unfortunate and humiliated Tommy in her
+distressing condition.
+
+“I withh I had thome clotheth fit to be theen,” complained the little
+girl. “Thith dreth ith a thight.”
+
+“Be thankful that you are alive,” answered Harriet sharply.
+
+“We should have perished, had it not been for you,” answered the
+guardian.
+
+“Considering that I was the only one who didn’t get into the mud, I
+simply had to be the one to go for help. I don’t deserve any credit,”
+flung back Harriet, hurrying over to assist the suffering Buster. After
+Buster, came Hazel, the last to be rescued.
+
+“Have we got them all?” questioned the young man.
+
+“Yes, thank goodness,” answered Harriet.
+
+“We are under great obligations to you, young gentlemen. We are in no
+condition to properly express our appreciation this evening. I hope we
+may have an opportunity to do so in the morning,” said Miss Elting.
+
+“We are very glad to have been able to help you. We needed a little
+exercise,” laughed the young man. “Yes, we shall see you again, but we
+haven’t finished our work yet. What do you say? Shall we fix up some
+litters and carry the young ladies out?”
+
+“I don’t know. We shall see in a few moments. Give them a chance to
+rest. They are completely exhausted.”
+
+“Certainly. We fellows are going on ahead to examine this path. We'll
+return presently.”
+
+The boys trudged off down the trail.
+
+“We shan’t go far,” called back the leader, then strode off after his
+companions. Harriet and Miss Elting made the girls as comfortable and
+presentable as possible, though it was apparent that both girls and
+clothes needed a thorough scrubbing.
+
+“I don’t know how we are going to reach camp,” pondered the guardian,
+while waiting for Grace, Margery and Hazel to rest.
+
+“Oh, I forgot to tell you,” exclaimed Harriet; “Jane met these boys this
+afternoon. Two of them are acquaintances of hers. They are high school
+boys from the town of Proctor. Like ourselves they are out on a long
+tramp, and they are camped right near where we are to camp for the
+night. They assisted Jane to put up the camp and get everything in
+order. Then, when night came, Jane began to grow worried. She declared
+that something had happened to us. One of the boys wanted to know which
+way we were to come and Jane told them.”
+
+“‘Then they have gotten into the swamp and they’re in trouble,’ declared
+one of the boys. It seems that these boys passed through here yesterday,
+and two of them got into the morass in broad daylight. No wonder we
+floundered into it trying to get through there in the dark. Of course
+Jane was wild with anxiety. She said they must help her find us. This
+they were willing and glad to do. They decided to come to this end of
+the swamp and begin their search from the point where we were supposed
+to have entered.”
+
+“Did you meet them?” interrupted Miss Elting.
+
+“Yes. Jane rushed them, in her car, to the nearest point on the road,
+then ran across the field with them to the place where we took the swamp
+trail. I met them just as I came out into the field. Jane was wild with
+delight, then she cried when I told her where you were. She wanted to
+come here with me. I told her to hurry back to camp and prepare hot
+water, get everything ready, then come for us. She will be back long
+before we get out of the swamp I think. The boys told me all that I have
+told you, as we were hurrying in here. It is very fortunate for us that
+we met them,” declared Harriet in a matter-of-fact tone.
+
+“I think you are a very brave and resourceful girl, Harriet. You will
+get some honor beads for this. Girls, shall we sing ‘Forty-nine Blue
+Bottles’ now?” questioned Miss Elting quizzically.
+
+“No!” shouted Tommy, so loudly that the Tramp Club, who had gone a short
+distance down the trail, heard and thought that the girls were calling
+them back.
+
+“Did you call us?” hailed the leader, running back toward the girls.
+
+“No,” returned Miss Elting. “We are all right, thank you.”
+
+The boys continued on down the trail. Half an hour later they returned
+to find the girls somewhat rested and ready to proceed on their journey.
+
+“Do you think you feel strong enough to go on?” asked the leader of the
+Tramp Club solicitously.
+
+“Yes,” replied Miss Elting. “We are anxious to meet Jane and get settled
+for the night. You have not told us yet to whom we are indebted for our
+rescue.”
+
+“My name is George Baker. I’m the captain of the Tramp Club. They’re a
+fine lot of fellows, but full of mischief.”
+
+“As I said before, we haven’t words with which to express our gratitude
+to you for what you have done for us,” said Miss Elting. “Ah! There are
+your friends. Won’t you introduce us to them? I’ll first introduce my
+Meadow-Brook Girls.” Miss Elting introduced the girls to the Tramp Club
+as a body, after which the captain did the same with his friends. The
+names of the members of the club as given by the captain in his
+introduction, were Dill Dodd, Fred Avery, Sam Crocker, Charles Mabie,
+Will Burgess and Davy Dockrill.
+
+“Taken altogether, ladies,” remarked the captain, “we are a choice band
+of ruffians on the road, though sometimes gentlemen when we are at
+home.”
+
+“I disagree with you,” laughed the guardian. “I shall never meet any
+finer gentlemen than I have met to-night.”
+
+The captain doffed his hat. Tommy was regarding him out of the corners
+of her eyes. She seemed about to say something; then, apparently
+changing her mind, smiled impishly to herself and remained silent.
+
+“I told your friend, Miss McCarthy, to set the boys at work getting
+things ready for the ladies when they reached camp,” said the captain.
+“My, but I got some thrills riding out here with Miss McCarthy. We must
+have driven out here at the rate of about a hundred miles an hour. I
+never before rode so fast in my life. Here, fellows, what’s the matter
+with you! This is no marathon. The young ladies can’t hit up that pace
+and keep on their feet. Slow down.”
+
+“We can walk jutht ath fatht ath any boy in bootth,” retorted Tommy
+indignantly.
+
+Captain Baker touched the rim of his hat.
+
+“I’ll argue it out with you some other time, Miss Thompson,” he said.
+
+“Oh!” moaned Margery, staggering a little.
+
+The head tramp immediately sprang to Margery’s assistance. “Let me help
+you,” he insisted, taking Margery by the arm. Miss Elting stepped up on
+the other side of Margery, taking the latter’s free arm.
+
+“Now, you will be all right, dear,” encouraged the guardian.
+
+Harriet, in the meantime, was assisting Tommy along. The boys ahead
+began to sing. In this way the party followed the trail out to the
+field. The girls breathed sighs of relief as they emerged into the open.
+
+Just then, out of the darkness, rushed a figure, throwing itself upon
+Tommy and Harriet.
+
+“Oh, you dear girls!” cried Jane, flinging an arm about the neck of
+each. “I nearly cried my eyes out over you. But, when the boys started
+out to find you, I knew it would be all right. Everything is ready for
+you. Nice warm baths, and there will be a pot of hot coffee for you.
+I’ll whisk you to camp in short order.”
+
+“Never mind the whisking,” spoke up the guardian. “Captain Baker has
+told us about your whisking him out here this evening.”
+
+Jane threw back her head and laughed.
+
+“How about going back? I’ll tell you what, boys. I’ll take the girls and
+one of you, then I’ll come back and get the rest.”
+
+“No thank you, we will walk it,” answered the chief tramp promptly.
+
+“Never,” insisted Jane. “You come with us, young man. I’ll be back here
+in half an hour for the rest of these brave boys.”
+
+The captain declined to desert his men. Jane therefore urged him no
+further. The boys assisted in helping the Meadow-Brook Girls into the
+car, then Jane drove away at a rapid rate. She let the girls out at
+their camp, located in a very pretty and now moonlit valley.
+
+“You’ll find everything ready. I’m going back for those unruly boys,”
+Jane announced, turning her car about and racing back over the road, her
+hair streaming over one shoulder, her eyes sparkling with the excitement
+of it all. The tramps had another lively ride to camp. Jane did not
+spare them. She took an almost savage delight in trying to frighten
+them, but did not succeed very well in this attempt. If they were afraid
+they failed to show it.
+
+On reaching camp the tired wayfarers lost no time in making for their
+tent where hot water for their baths awaited them. By the time Jane
+returned with the members of the Tramp Club the Meadow-Brook Girls, clad
+in dry, fresh clothing, were ready to receive their guests. They
+presented a wholly different appearance, now, and the boys gazed at them
+admiringly.
+
+“Jane, the boys must join us at supper,” declared Miss Elting.
+
+George shook his head.
+
+“There are too many of us. We’ll eat you out of house and home.”
+
+“There’s lots more stuff to eat in the automobile,” declared Jane
+hospitably. “You wait till I unload the real supplies.”
+
+She dragged out a hamper. It was filled with good things to eat, and
+what particularly pleased the boys, was the unexpected invitation to eat
+with their new found friends.
+
+Though the girls were tired and exhausted from their trying experiences
+in the swamp, it proved a happy evening. It was decided to remain in
+camp all next day to rest. Strangely enough Captain Baker announced that
+they too had already concluded that they needed a rest. He said they
+would do some foraging next day, and bring the girls some good things to
+eat to pay them back for what they had eaten and for the exciting ride
+Jane had given them.
+
+Miss Elting smiled knowingly. The tramps appeared to be gentlemanly
+boys, however “full of mischief” they might be.
+
+It was ten o’clock when the Tramp Club said good night and set out for
+their own camp.
+
+“Now, children, go to bed at once,” directed the guardian. “We have had
+excitement enough for one day at least.”
+
+The girls agreed with her, and half an hour later the camp had settled
+down for the night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI—A CONTEST OF ENDURANCE
+
+
+“Forty-nine blue bottleth were hanging on the wall,” muttered Tommy in
+her sleep, as Miss Elting and Harriet stepped into their tent at eight
+o’clock the next morning, after having finished their inspection of the
+camp. The rest of the Meadow-Brook Girls were still sleeping soundly.
+
+“Poor Tommy,” smiled the guardian.
+
+“What is Tommy muttering about forty-nine blue bottles?” questioned
+Harriet.
+
+The guardian laughed merrily.
+
+“I had the girls say that doggerel about the forty-nine blue bottles
+while we were stuck fast in the mud. You see, I wished to keep their
+minds from their troubles. We repeated the song until we were so hoarse
+we could scarcely speak.”
+
+“I noticed that when I returned, but thought you had all caught cold. So
+it was forty-nine blue bottles that made you so hoarse,” laughed
+Harriet. “I think you deserve the real credit of the rescue. Had you not
+done what you did to keep up the spirits of the girls there might have
+been a different ending,” declared Harriet Burrell with emphasis. She
+kissed the guardian impulsively, than stepping softly, to avoid waking
+her sleeping companions, she made her way outside the tent. Shading her
+eyes and gazing about she finally discovered a brown-clad figure sitting
+on a fence. He evidently was observing the camp, for, when he caught
+sight of Harriet, he waved his hand.
+
+“I’ll wager that’s Captain Baker,” smiled Harriet, waving back to him.
+“He is a peculiar young man. We are under great obligations to them all,
+but those boys think girls are of no account. We are going to clash with
+them. I know we are.”
+
+Harriet poked the fire and built it up until a cloud of smoke was
+ascending skyward. It was not a skilfully made fire, but Harriet had a
+purpose in making a great smudge that morning. She wished to show the
+tramps that the girls had just gotten up and were not yet ready to
+receive company. She had construed Captain Baker’s action in watching
+the camp as being for the purpose of learning when the Meadow-Brook
+outfit was ready to see them. As the girl cast frequent glances across
+the fields she saw the other members of the Tramp Club scattered about
+not far from their own camp, though all of the boys kept a respectful
+distance from the camp occupied by the girls.
+
+Breakfast was out of the way and the camp of the Meadow-Brook Girls put
+to rights by ten o’clock. The travelers felt somewhat lame and stiff
+after their experience in the swamp. Tommy walked with a distinct limp,
+which Harriet accused her of putting on for effect.
+
+“I’m not pretending,” protested Tommy indignantly. “I gueth you would
+walk like I do if you had been fatht in the mud motht all night.”
+
+Harriet laughed good-naturedly.
+
+A halloo out back of the camp cut short any further argument. It was
+Captain Baker with his fellow “tramps.”
+
+“Is it too early in the morning to make our party call?” shouted George.
+
+“No. Come right along,” called Harriet cordially. “We got up rather late
+this morning. Didn’t I see you sitting on the fence off yonder?”
+
+“Yes, I was watching for a woodchuck to come out. Fellows, you’ve all
+met Miss Burrell, I think. And Miss Thompson.”
+
+“Yeth I met them in the thwamp,” lisped Tommy.
+
+Miss Elting came out, her face wearing a radiant smile of welcome for
+the tramps. Their hats were off instantly. She insisted on shaking hands
+with each of the boys in turn.
+
+“I suppose you have had your breakfast?” smiled the guardian.
+
+“Breakfast!” exclaimed Davy Dockrill. “Yes. We men eat our breakfast at
+six o’clock. We aren’t like girls, who take their breakfast in place of
+luncheon.”
+
+“And eat cookies between meals,” laughed Harriet. “How many miles do you
+walk a day?”
+
+“Oh, a lot,” answered George airily.
+
+“How many?” persisted Harriet.
+
+“Well, maybe ten, fifteen, twenty miles, maybe more.”
+
+“I’ll wager that you take a ride now and then,” interjected Tommy.
+
+“We don’t. We walk, I tell you.”
+
+“We aren’t like girls, who have to stop and rest every half mile or so,”
+declared Will Burgess.
+
+“And get stuck in the mud,” laughed Fred Avery.
+
+“That’ll be about all, boys,” reproved Captain Baker, frowning. “I told
+you these boys were full of mischief. But you mustn’t mind them,” he
+added apologetically.
+
+“Oh, we don’t mind them at all,” smiled Harriet.
+
+“When are you going to start out again?”
+
+“Not until some time to-morrow morning,” answered Miss Elting. “We are
+all a little lame and tired to-day.”
+
+The captain nodded gravely.
+
+“Yes; girls can’t stand as much as boys when it comes to hard work like
+a week or so of walking,” he said with an air of conviction.
+
+“Yeth they can,” resented Tommy. “Girlth can walk jutht ath far in a day
+ath boyth can.”
+
+“You’ve got to show us before we can believe that,” declared Davy.
+
+“Very well; we will show you,” answered Harriet quietly. “Name your
+conditions.”
+
+“Do you mean it?” questioned George.
+
+“Of course I mean it.”
+
+“You’re plucky, all right,” he said regarding her admiringly. “But I
+don’t like to have a contest with girls.”
+
+“Why not? Are you afraid of them?” demanded Margery.
+
+The boy flushed.
+
+“No, ma’am. It isn’t manly, that’s all.”
+
+“You mean it wouldn’t be manly to be beaten by girls, eh?” suggested
+Harriet.
+
+“Well, yes, I suppose that’s what I mean.”
+
+“Oh, very well. If you wish to back out, why, of course——”
+
+“Back out? I guess not!” exclaimed Sam. “We’ll walk your heads off, if
+you say the word.”
+
+“Oh, mercy, no,” protested Harriet, laughingly. “I hope you will not do
+anything so terrible as that. You haven’t said what the conditions are
+to be. We must have some rules if we are to have a hiking contest. They
+have rules even in a walking contest, I understand.”
+
+Captain Baker pondered a moment.
+
+“I don’t know about rules. I think it will have to be a go-as-you-please
+contest.”
+
+“We are willing to abide by whatever you say,” replied Harriet.
+
+“Where do you go to-morrow? I mean where do you make your next camp?”
+
+Harriet consulted their map.
+
+“We are going to try to make Hunt’s Corners,” she said, scrutinizing the
+map.
+
+“May I see that map?” asked Davy.
+
+“I don’t think it would be quite fair,” answered Harriet brightly. “You
+see, our route is marked out on the map. Were I to show it to you, you
+would know which way we are going. That would give you an advantage. I
+will show the map to you some other time.”
+
+“Of course it would be unfair. We don’t want to see the map, Davy,”
+rebuked George. “How far is it to Hunt’s Corners?”
+
+“Ten or twelve miles.”
+
+“Don’t let that trouble you, boys. I’ll be on hand with the car and I’ll
+pick up the stragglers,” interjected Jane, joining the group. She had
+been at work cleaning her car. Her face was smudged and her hands
+blackened. “If any of you get tired out I’ll promise to take care of
+you.”
+
+“Thank you,” answered the captain, flushing. His companions laughed at
+him.
+
+“But, Captain,” protested Harriet, “we haven’t decided on anything. Is
+this to be a race for one day, or for all the way home? You go right
+through Meadow-Brook, do you not?”
+
+“Yes. Just as you say. I don’t think you can stand it to race all the
+way home.”
+
+“Perhaps not,” answered Harriet dryly.
+
+“No. The poor, delicate things,” mourned Jane. “Just think how you are
+going to walk them to death. You boys should be ashamed of yourselves.”
+
+“I don’t care if the girls don’t,” laughed George. “Yes. We’ll walk you
+all the way in to Meadow-Brook. The party that gets in first must give
+the other side something. What’ll it be?” asked George.
+
+“I’ll take marthhmallowth for mine,” piped Tommy.
+
+“That’s it. A box of candy for each of you if you win. What do you say,
+fellows?” questioned George, appealing to his companions.
+
+They nodded, smiling acquiescence.
+
+“Suppose we give each of you a handkerchief if you win,” smiled Harriet.
+
+“It’s a go,” declared Captain George.
+
+“Then I propose this. Each party is to go as it chooses. The one that
+gets in first wins,” suggested Harriet.
+
+“Are tricks barred?” demanded Sam.
+
+“I don’t know what you mean by tricks. Strategy isn’t,” returned
+Harriet.
+
+“Whew! That’s a big word,” exclaimed Dill.
+
+“Neither party is to ride, you know,” spoke up George, eyeing them
+suspiciously.
+
+“Certainly not,” answered Harriet. “We shouldn’t do such a dishonest
+thing.”
+
+“I beg your pardon. Of course not. You girls have a car and, perhaps,
+you might think it amusing to work a trick on us.”
+
+“Our Meadow-Brook Girls aren’t that kind, Mr. Baker,” interposed Miss
+Elting severely.
+
+“Ride? You couldn’t drag them into the car,” declared Jane.
+
+“By the way, young men, have you seen anything of two Italians and a
+bear?” asked Miss Elting.
+
+“Yes. We met them two days ago,” answered the captain. “Why?”
+
+“We had some difficulty with them; that’s all.”
+
+“I wish we had known that.” The captain’s lips compressed, a frown
+appearing on his forehead. “What did they do?”
+
+Miss Elting told the boys the whole story. How the boys did laugh when
+the guardian described how Jane had chased the Italians about the field
+with her car!
+
+“We will keep out of the road when you are abroad, Miss McCarthy,” said
+George. “I don’t believe you are a safe person to be allowed on the
+highway.”
+
+“You are right, she isn’t,” nodded Miss Elting. “Well, have you settled
+your plans for the contest?”
+
+“All the plans we can make. We are to walk to Meadow-Brook. Neither
+party should actually walk more than ten hours a day——”
+
+“My goodneth,” interrupted Tommy. “Ten hourth a day. Thave me!”
+
+Captain Baker smiled a superior smile and nodded to his companions.
+
+“Oh, no. We shouldn’t want to wear you out to that extent,” replied
+Harriet mildly.
+
+“In the meantime we wish you to come to supper with us this evening,”
+invited Miss Elting. “We will show you that Meadow-Brook Girls can cook
+as well as walk. We shan’t promise you much of a variety, but there will
+be plenty to eat. That will give you new strength for the coming
+contest,” she added, with a mischievous twinkle in her eyes.
+
+The captain accepted the invitation for his friends. He offered to bring
+over some provisions and some milk. Jane replied that she had arranged
+for the milk, which she was to go after in her car. It was decided that
+the boys need bring nothing with them, there being enough in camp for
+all. The Tramp Club went away, to return at about half past five in the
+afternoon.
+
+The young men had become very much interested in the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+As Captain Baker characterized them, “They aren’t the helpless, fainting
+kind. Those girls know how to take care of themselves. Now, what do you
+think of their fighting off two Italians and a bear? Fellows, we’ve got
+to hike some to beat them! They’ve got something in the back of their
+heads that we don’t know about.”
+
+“Pshaw! We can walk them off the earth,” scoffed Sam.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII—MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS UP A TREE
+
+
+Supper, that night, was a jolly affair. Miss Elting decided that, though
+the boys were full of pranks, they were lads well worth knowing. She,
+naturally, was very particular as to the associates of her charges, but
+she approved of the Tramp Club. The boys, even as their captain had
+averred at the first meeting, were “full of mischief.” Despite their
+love of fun however they were straightforward, manly young men.
+
+The party broke up about nine o’clock that evening.
+
+“To-morrow the contest begins,” reminded the captain.
+
+“So it does,” answered Harriet, as though she had overlooked that fact.
+“What time do you start?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know. What time do you start?”
+
+“After breakfast,” laughed Harriet.
+
+“Ha, ha! That’s another joke,” chuckled Dill.
+
+“It isn’t as yet. Perhaps it may be to-morrow night,” replied Harriet.
+But just how much of a joke it was to be, or on whom, Harriet Burrell at
+that moment did not know. She rather suspected it would be on the Tramp
+Club, but in this conjecture she was wrong.
+
+“Oh, Harriet, why did you ever get us into this?” groaned Margery, after
+the departure of the boys. “Here am I half dead, with swollen feet and
+aching bones, and now I’ve got to enter a race of I don’t know how many
+miles against a lot of athletic boys.”
+
+“As I said before, Margery, you may ride in the car if you prefer.”
+
+“No; I’m going through with this hike if it kills me.”
+
+“That’s the way to talk!” nodded Harriet briskly. “Faint heart never won
+strong race.”
+
+“Have you any plans for fooling the boys, Harriet?” asked Jane.
+
+Harriet shook her head, but, after a gesture of apology, drew Jane
+aside, whispering with her.
+
+“Can you spare us a moment, Miss Elting?” asked Harriet. Soon the three
+were in earnest council.
+
+“I agree,” called Tommy ironically. “What ith it? I’m thtrong for it!”
+
+“It’s going to be hard work,” declared the guardian, “and it’ll be rough
+traveling during the last five miles, but we’ll be there by noon. We
+made no agreement with the boys to stop at any particular place?”
+
+“No, Miss Elting,” Harriet answered.
+
+“Then everybody to bed!” ordered the guardian tersely.
+
+At three the next morning four sleepy girls were tumbled out of bed by a
+barely less drowsy chaperon. But swift, silent work had to be done.
+Harriet put wood on the still glowing coals of the fire, then prepared
+coffee and a light meal.
+
+“Thtop it!” screamed Tommy, when energetic Jane “struck” the tent,
+bringing it down on a pair of heads, the other of which was Margery’s.
+
+Jane McCarthy, heedless of their protests, hustled relentlessly. The
+girls and their guardian ate as best they could, under the
+circumstances. By the time the light breakfast had been eaten all the
+packing had been done, and everything was ready for moving, except the
+dishes and supplies. These were packed by Margery, Hazel and Tommy. At
+four o’clock all was in readiness for the start.
+
+“We are going to travel eastward over the mountains, girls,” explained
+Harriet. “We shall have dense forests to go through and rugged paths to
+follow, but we shall save a number of miles and a great deal of time by
+going that way. We ought to reach Meadow-Brook some hours ahead of the
+boys if they take the road, as I heard Mr. Baker say they would. We
+shall touch the road occasionally, especially after we get over the
+mountains. And you, Jane, must leave a sign on the fence. We will do the
+same. Wherever we touch the highway we will make a sign, also putting
+down the time. Those boys don’t know anything about our secret signs,
+and they mustn’t.”
+
+“Are we all ready?” asked the guardian.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“You had better start your car quietly, Jane,” suggested Miss Elting.
+
+Jane nodded. She understood. The camp of the Tramp Club was not so far
+away but that the boys could hear the motor plainly if they were awake,
+which the girls very much doubted, as the Tramps had confessed that they
+sat up late nights, telling stories, playing Indian war games and
+scouting in the woods.
+
+“Shoulder packs!” commanded Harriet.
+
+A few moments later the four girls with their guardian, after having put
+out the fire, started from the field. They were headed for the highway.
+Jane stood beside her car, waving to them until they were out of sight,
+then she calmly climbed into the vehicle and went to sleep. Crazy Jane
+had a plan of her own.
+
+About five o’clock the camp of the Tramp Club began to show signs of
+life. The captain roused his companions. It had been his intention to
+get out earlier, but he had overslept, as had all of his men. Still, he
+did not consider that there was any necessity for great haste. Of course
+he had not the slightest idea that the Meadow-Brook Girls had broken
+camp at any such early hour.
+
+The boys, while losing no time, made no effort at great haste. It was
+nearly six o’clock when they finished their breakfast and half an hour
+later, before they strapped on their packs and started down the road.
+
+Dill Dodd chuckled triumphantly as he pointed to Jane McCarthy’s
+automobile standing right where it had been since the previous
+afternoon.
+
+“All sleepy heads over there,” nodded Sam. “We could beat that outfit
+and sleep all the time.”
+
+“Wait a minute,” answered George. “I don’t see the tent, do you,
+fellows?”
+
+No one spoke for a moment. Then the leader announced that he was going
+down to the girls’ camp. He returned at a trot after having visited the
+deserted camp and peered into the automobile.
+
+“Well, what is it?” questioned several boys.
+
+“Fellows, we’re stung. They’ve gone!” declared George.
+
+“But—but the automobile is there?”
+
+“Yes, and that Miss McCarthy is curled up like a kitten on the back seat
+sleeping as sweetly as you please. There’s not another girl in camp.”
+
+“Well, what do you know about that?” drawled Davy.
+
+“How long have they been gone, do you think?” asked Will.
+
+“From the feel of the ashes I should say several hours.” George did not
+know that they had smothered the fire with a damp blanket. “That was a
+fine trick to play on us the first day,” growled George. “That’s the
+girl of it.”
+
+“Hold on, Cap. You know Miss Burrell, who seems to be the spokesman for
+the outfit, said strategy wasn’t barred. This isn’t a trick, it’s
+strategy. There’s a difference between tricking and strategy you know.”
+
+“Boys, we’ve _got to_ catch up with them,” declared the captain. “Are we
+going to let a lot of girls get the best of us?”
+
+“No!” shouted the boys in chorus.
+
+“Then hike! Don’t lose your wind at the start. Strike a steady clip, but
+after half an hour hit it up, and keep hitting it up till we catch up
+with them and take the lead once more. This is a fine mess, but we’ll
+soon be out of it with flying colors.”
+
+The Tramp Club walked for two hours without finding any trace of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls. The boys were becoming worried. By this time they
+surely ought to have found the tracks of the girls in the road.
+
+“You don’t think they have taken a short cut, do you?” asked Charlie.
+
+Baker shook his head.
+
+“They couldn’t get over those mountains. No; they have been following
+the side of the road, so we wouldn’t be able to pick up the trail.
+They’re sharp ones. They know something about trailing. That’s plain to
+be seen. Hark! what’s that?”
+
+The honk, honk of an automobile horn was heard in the far distance to
+the rear of them. They listened a moment, then pressed on. It was not an
+unusual happening to be passed by a motor car. They soon realized,
+however, that this one was coming at a much higher rate of speed than
+the statute said was lawful.
+
+A cloud of dust arose a full half mile to the rear of them. As it bore
+down on the boys the dust rose higher and higher.
+
+“Hoo-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e!” yelled a shrill voice from the heart of the dust
+cloud.
+
+“It’s that Miss McCarthy. They call her Crazy Jane,” shouted Dill.
+“Let’s hold her up.”
+
+Bent on mischief, the boys formed a chain across the road with clasped
+hands. On came the car careening from side to side, its horn honking
+hoarsely like the warning of a sentinel crow, its driver uttering her
+shrill “hoo-e-e-e,” her hair standing out almost straight behind her in
+the breeze.
+
+The boys stood firm; the car did not slacken its speed.
+
+“Jump for your lives!” yelled the captain of the tramps. “She’s going to
+run us down!”
+
+A great black object flitted past them just as their ranks opened. There
+was not even time to get out of the road. The most they could do was to
+make an opening large enough—and barely large enough at that—to permit
+the passage of the car, which went roaring past them. A long-drawn
+“hoo-e-e-e,” floated back to them, a choking cloud of dust and sand
+showered over them, sending the boys into severe coughing fits as they
+staggered off to the side of the highway and sat down on the dusty
+grass.
+
+“Well, what do you think of that?” gasped Sam Crocker.
+
+“I think it’s exceedingly lucky for us that we got out of the road when
+we did,” answered Captain George, shaking an angry fist in the direction
+of the disappearing cloud of dust. “Why, she would have run right over
+us.”
+
+“She would,” agreed the boys in chorus.
+
+“But also she wouldn’t. She knew we would get out of the way,” added Sam
+Crocker.
+
+“Come on, fellows. This won’t do,” cried George. “We’ve got to make
+tracks now.” They scrambled to their feet and set out at a fast pace. In
+the meantime Jane McCarthy, chuckling over the scare she had given the
+Tramp Club, was racing along the highway in her mad drive to the
+eastward.
+
+A few miles farther on she stopped the car and after taking a survey of
+the land, got out and made some chalk marks on a fence. Then she drove
+on more leisurely.
+
+While all this was happening the Meadow-Brook Girls were traveling on,
+also at a fast pace. They had gotten over the rugged range of hills
+after having sustained some scratches on their hands and several rents
+in their frocks. They then came out into a corn field. A highway lay
+below them which they would have to cross. On the opposite side of the
+highway lay an apple orchard, the trees standing close together, their
+tops in most instances interlacing.
+
+“I wonder if the boys have passed here?” questioned Hazel, shading her
+eyes and gazing up and down the road.
+
+“No. They must still be a long way back,” answered Harriet.
+
+The Meadow-Brook Girls started down the hill, climbing the fence into
+the road. There before them, plainly discernible, were the tracks of an
+automobile.
+
+“Jane went past here not long ago,” decided Margery. “These are her car
+tracks, I am sure.”
+
+“Yes, and there’s a chalk mark on the fence,” said Miss Elting, pointing
+down the road a few rods. They hurried over to examine the sign.
+
+“A broken arrow,” exclaimed Harriet. “That means danger or ‘look out.’
+Now, I wonder what we are to look out for? I don’t see anything
+alarming.”
+
+“I think Jane means to inform us that the boys are not far from here and
+to look out for them,” suggested the guardian.
+
+“Yes, that must be it. Half-past twelve, the signal says, she passed
+here. That is nearly an hour ago. Come, girls, let’s get over that fence
+in a hurry and be off. Once through the orchard, and they can’t see us,”
+urged Harriet Burrell.
+
+“Wait; let’s be certain that we are right,” warned the guardian. She
+took a careful survey about them. Nothing of an alarming nature was to
+be seen. It was just an ordinary country scene, with the sun shining
+down overhead, the air warm and oppressive about them.
+
+“Everything appears to be all right,” she decided finally. “Yes, go
+ahead, girls.” Miss Elting was the first to climb the roadside fence and
+drop down on the other side. She was quickly followed by the four girls
+of her party. “Keep on the alert, girls. If any of you catches sight of
+the boys drop down behind trees and don’t speak.” The guardian had
+entered into the spirit of the contest with an enthusiasm equal to that
+of the girls themselves. “I can’t believe that they have gotten ahead of
+us. It isn’t probable that that was what Jane meant when she marked the
+danger signal on the fence here.”
+
+“Wait,” called Harriet. Springing back over the fence she wrote the
+letters “O. K.” underneath the broken arrow and the triangle. This was
+for the purpose of informing Jane that her message had been read and
+understood in case she were to return that way later on, as she was more
+than likely to do.
+
+This done they started briskly in among the trees of the orchard. They
+had not gone far before Tommy, who was in the lead, uttered a shrill
+little scream of alarm. The girls had started to run toward her when
+they halted abruptly. Just ahead of them stood a great hulking bull with
+head lowered to the ground, his small eyes fixed menacingly on the
+girls. The bull uttered a deep, rumbling bellow.
+
+“Thave me! Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+
+“Run for your lives, girls,” shouted the guardian.
+
+They turned and were about to flee for the road when they came to
+another abrupt stop. To the right and the left of them were two other
+bulls, each with lowered head, pawing the dirt with first one front foot
+then the other.
+
+All at once the girls understood the meaning of Jane’s danger sign. She
+had seen the bulls in passing, and knowing that her companions would
+pass that way, had halted to leave a warning for them.
+
+“Quick! Into the trees!” shouted Miss Elting. She grabbed the trembling
+Tommy and helped her up into a tree, Harriet in the meantime performing
+the same service for Margery and Hazel. Then the guardian and Harriet
+began scrambling up, but ere they had gotten off the ground the bulls
+charged them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII—A SERIOUS PREDICAMENT
+
+
+“Climb! Miss Elting, climb!” begged Harriet.
+
+Margery and Tommy uttered shrill cries of terror.
+
+The guardian reached for the crotch of the tree, just above her head,
+and drew herself up. Harriet leaped into the air, catching hold of an
+overhanging limb. She intended to pull herself free from the ground and
+out of the reach of the angry bulls.
+
+The limb snapped. Apple tree boughs always are treacherous. Harriet
+landed on the ground in a heap. A gasp of horror escaped from the lips
+of the girls in the trees near at hand.
+
+There followed a bellow and a rush from the third bull, which was some
+few yards distant from its fellows. The girls closed their eyes as the
+lowered head and wicked-looking horns seemed to come into contact with
+Harriet Burrell’s body. Miss Elting, strong-nerved as she was, could not
+repress a scream. Margery, utterly terror-stricken, lost her balance,
+and had it not been for Hazel, who threw an arm about her, Margery would
+have fallen from the tree and been at the mercy of the savage bulls.
+
+In the meantime, having heard no scream from Harriet, the girls opened
+their eyes fearfully. They saw Harriet leaping for a higher limb of the
+tree. The head of the bull had crashed against the base of the tree
+where Harriet had been but a second before.
+
+With remarkable presence of mind the girl, when she struck the ground,
+had rolled herself to one side, thus placing the tree between herself
+and her assailant. This gave her a few seconds respite. But in these few
+seconds Harriet gathered her faculties together. Springing to her feet
+she had flung herself straight up into the air, with arms thrown above
+her head to grasp the limb that her quick eyes had noted.
+
+Most girls would have fainted, but Harriet Burrell did not. She was not
+of the fainting kind, as Captain Baker had so truly said a few hours
+before. A few awful seconds of suspense followed.
+
+With feet curled under her, the girl’s hands reached and clasped the
+limb. Then she drew herself up to it; a feat requiring both muscle and
+practice. Once there she lay along the creaking limb of the apple tree
+just out of reach of the tossing horns, gazing down into the bloodshot
+eyes of the ferocious beast. The limb bent perilously. It threatened, at
+any second, to give way beneath her weight.
+
+“Climb higher!” cried Miss Elting, “oh, climb higher!”
+
+“I don’t dare move. The limb may break if I do,” answered Harriet in a
+wholly calm voice.
+
+“Thave me, thave me!” wailed Tommy Thompson weakly.
+
+“What shall we do? Please be careful, Harriet,” begged the guardian in
+an agonized voice.
+
+“I intend to be careful. I haven’t any burning desire to fall on those
+sharp horns. I never saw such a fiendish expression in the eyes of an
+animal.”
+
+The limb creaked warningly. Harriet instantly ceased speaking. Somehow,
+she thought, the muscular effort of speaking must be putting a little
+added weight on the limb.
+
+The bull walked away a few paces. He stopped and began bellowing and
+pawing.
+
+“See if you can’t call him away. I simply don’t dare to move as long as
+he is so near,” said Harriet.
+
+“How shall I call him?” questioned the guardian.
+
+“Flaunt something at him.”
+
+“I haven’t anything to flaunt.”
+
+“Wait till I take off my thkirt,” piped the little lisping girl.
+
+“Be careful that you don’t fall,” warned Harriet.
+
+Tommy quickly stripped off her skirt, then leaning over, swung it back
+and forth. Instantly there was a bellow and a charge from the enraged
+bull. The skirt was whisked from her hands on the sharp horns of the
+furious animal that had charged it.
+
+“Thave me!” cried Tommy. “Oh, thave my thkirt!”
+
+There was reason for alarm in Tommy’s case at that moment. The bull was
+tossing its head to release the skirt that had become impaled upon the
+sharp horns. Presently the skirt fell to the ground. The animal began
+stamping upon and prodding it. Tommy got into action at about the same
+time. Shrieking and protesting, she began pelting the animal with apples
+that she picked from the tree for the purpose. Some of the missiles
+reached their mark. Most of them did not.
+
+“Oh, my thkirt, my thkirt!” wailed the little girl.
+
+“Never mind, you have saved Harriet,” comforted Miss Elting.
+
+Harriet, the instant the bull left her, started to wriggle backwards.
+The limb gave way with a crash, and Harriet plunged to the ground, but
+by skilfully twisting her body she avoided striking on her head. She was
+up like a flash and once more sprang for the tree. This time she did not
+trust to a treacherous limb, but scrambled hastily up the trunk and
+perched herself high and safe in the crotch of the tree a few seconds
+later.
+
+“Gracious! That was a narrow escape,” gasped the guardian. “How do you
+feel?”
+
+“I am all right.” Harriet smiled faintly. Her cheeks were pale and her
+eyes large and bright. There were no other indications that she was
+disturbed at her succession of narrow escapes from the bull. “Poor
+Tommy, you lost your skirt, didn’t you?”
+
+“Ye—eth. Oh, what thhall I do?”
+
+“I guess you will have to finish the day’s hike in your petticoat,”
+answered Miss Elting. “However, from present indications it will be dark
+by the time we get away from here. Besides your petticoat is black and
+will easily pass for an outside skirt.”
+
+“I can’t, I can’t,” wailed the girl. “I won’t go on thith way.”
+
+“Don’t worry, Tommy. You may have my skirt. I don’t mind going without
+it at all. I have a black underskirt, so the absence of my outside skirt
+will hardly be noticed,” answered Harriet.
+
+“I won’t. The naughty old bull. I want my own thkirt.”
+
+“You won’t need it,” said Margery, speaking for the first time since she
+had been overcome with terror.
+
+“Don’t you think they will go away?” questioned Hazel anxiously.
+
+“Not so long as we are up here,” replied Harriet. “I know their kind
+pretty well. I was chased by one at grandfather’s farm two years ago.
+There is only one way to save yourself from them when they are
+angry—that is to keep out of their way. I think——”
+
+“Oh, look! Look, girls!” cried Hazel in a tone of suppressed eagerness.
+
+“Oh, thave me! There they come,” moaned Tommy.
+
+“It’s the Tramp Club as I live,” exclaimed Miss Elting. “Girls, we must
+call to them. It is a humiliating position for us, but we must get out
+of here. They can at least go for the farmer and ask him to drive the
+animals off.”
+
+“Oh, Miss Elting, please don’t call to them,” begged Harriet.
+
+The boys were swinging down the road at a rapid but steady pace. They
+were walking in step, each with a heavy pack on his back, hat brims
+tilted back, a manly looking lot of young men. As they reached a point
+opposite to the lower end of the orchard they began to sing, their
+voices raised in chorus:
+
+ “Forty-nine blue bottles are hanging on the wall,
+ Forty-nine blue bottles are hanging on the wall.
+ Take one of the bottles down and there’ll be forty-eight
+ blue bottles a hanging on the wall, a hanging on
+ the wall.
+ Take one of the bottles down and there’ll be forty-eight
+ blue bottles a hanging on the wall, a hanging on
+ the wall.”
+
+“Oh, help!” moaned Margery Brown.
+
+“Thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+
+Harriet and Miss Elting burst out laughing, but not loudly enough for
+their laughter to reach the Tramp Club, the members of which
+organization were trudging along past the orchard, wholly unconscious of
+the nearness of their friends.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV—HARRIET IS RESOURCEFUL
+
+
+The boys were still removing blue bottles from the wall as they swung on
+out of sight of the girls in the apple trees. Harriet Burrell was
+shaking with laughter.
+
+“That ith right. Laugh!” jeered Tommy. “I gueth it ith funny, but I
+don’t thee it. Maybe I’ll laugh, to-morrow.”
+
+“It is really the most laughable situation I ever heard of,” admitted
+the guardian.
+
+“One side of it, yes,” agreed Harriet. “The other side isn’t so funny.
+We must think of getting out of here. All our plans have come to
+nothing. The boys have passed us. I am afraid we shan’t be able to catch
+up with them again unless we can get a start before long.”
+
+The bulls, attracted by the singing, had turned, now facing the road.
+They regarded the boys menacingly, but the Tramp Club did not see them.
+Now the animals once more turned toward the trees that held the girls.
+The beasts resumed their bellowing and pawing and moved up under the
+trees, tossing their heads, issuing challenge after challenge to the
+girls to come down. But the challenges were not accepted. Harriet
+regarded the beasts frowningly. The other girls gazed at them in terror.
+
+“Now, Harriet Burrell, as you wouldn’t allow me to call the boys, what
+do you propose to do? Remain up in a tree all night?” demanded the
+guardian.
+
+“By no means.”
+
+“I don’t dare thleep up here,” complained Tommy. “What if I thhould fall
+out?”
+
+“You wouldn’t have far to fall,” answered Margery.
+
+“Oh, wouldn’t it be awful,” gasped Hazel, “if we were to fall out of
+these trees?”
+
+“The animals will go to sleep themselves after dark, I am sure. We shall
+be able to get away then,” replied Harriet wisely.
+
+“I believe you are right. I hadn’t thought of that,” nodded Miss Elting.
+“But must we remain in this position all the rest of the day?”
+
+“No, indeed,” replied Harriet. “I had hoped that the owner of these
+animals might come along, but there seems to be no one about. You see,
+in the autumn, the farmers are seldom abroad in the fields unless they
+chance to be plowing, so I think we had better move.”
+
+“What have you in mind, Harriet? I know you have formed some plan to get
+us out of this predicament.”
+
+“Yes, I have. The plan may not work, but it is worth trying. I wish you
+would call the beasts to your tree. I can depend upon you. You will not
+lose your head. You will have to use your own skirt this time, but for
+goodness’ sake, don’t lose it. Some one must be presentable when we get
+to camp.”
+
+“See here, Harriet, I positively forbid your taking any further chances.
+You have had enough narrow escapes to-day as it is.”
+
+“There will be no particular danger for me, Miss Elting. You will be in
+more danger than I shall be when the plan really begins to work. Will
+you call the bulls over to your tree?”
+
+“Yes. But I warn you I shan’t be a party to any more foolishness.”
+
+Harriet made no reply. She scanned the orchard about her, finally fixing
+her eyes upon a tree with low-hanging limbs, situated several rods
+farther down the orchard and away from the road. The girl nodded, as
+though in answer to some question she had asked of herself.
+
+“Now I am ready. I have removed my skirt,” called the guardian. “What
+next?”
+
+“Wait a moment.” Harriet clambered down the tree a little way, placing
+herself in a position where she could jump without loss of time. “Now
+wave your skirt, please.”
+
+Miss Elting leaned down from her position in the tree and began swinging
+her skirt slowly back and forth. The result was immediate and startling.
+With bellows of rage, three savage bulls with lowered heads charged the
+blue skirt. It seems that these animals were not particular as to color.
+Blue was every bit as aggravating as red to them.
+
+Harriet, the instant the beasts began charging, had dropped fearlessly
+to the ground. The bulls had not observed her.
+
+“Harriet!” screamed Margery.
+
+Harriet gave no heed to the cry of alarm. Instead she ran with all speed
+farther down the orchard, casting apprehensive glances over her shoulder
+now and then. A cry of warning from Miss Elting told her that the bulls
+had turned and were charging her. Harriet gave one quick glance over her
+shoulder, then leaped for a tree, up which she clambered with agility.
+She was none too soon, for, by the time she had cleared the trunk, the
+bulls met at the tree with horns clashing. For a moment they turned
+their attention to each other and then backed away and looked up at
+their intended victim.
+
+“Miss Elting!” called the girl.
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“I am going to decoy the bulls as far away from you as possible. When
+you hear me scream you are all to climb down from the trees and run for
+the road fence. I’ll try to hold the ugly beasts here while you are
+making the dash. But run for your life. Don’t you dare to fall down.”
+
+“All of us?” questioned the guardian apprehensively.
+
+“Yes, please.”
+
+“But, Harriet—suppose that we do get safely away—how are you going to
+leave the orchard?”
+
+“I have thought of a way to do it,” Harriet assured the guardian. “The
+danger, now, is in so many of us being here. When I scream the first
+time you are to run. When you get safely over the fence you are to give
+me the signal ‘hoo-e-e-e-e.’ I will know, by that, that you are safe.
+When I give you a second call, after you are in the highway, try to
+attract the attention of the bulls. That will be my chance to make a
+dash for the nearest fence.”
+
+“I don’t like your plan,” objected the guardian. “You are taking too
+great a risk.”
+
+“It is the only way we can get away from here before night,” argued
+Harriet. “Even then, we should find it difficult to escape, for I think
+the beasts would camp right under these trees. They are determined to
+get us. I’m going to fool them. Now, call them!”
+
+The guardian did so. The animals did not show any immediate inclination
+to move. So Miss Elting cautiously got down to the ground. That was all
+that was necessary. The beasts charged her. The guardian lost no time in
+scrambling into the tree. In the meantime Harriet had again dropped to
+the ground and was running at the top of her speed. She was still within
+easy reach of the voices of her companions, though out of their sight.
+
+“Where are they?” she called.
+
+“Right here,” answered the guardian.
+
+“All right. Don’t try to keep them there. I am not afraid.”
+
+“We have no desire to, I assure you, Harriet. But do be careful.”
+
+Harriet was still on the ground. She moved a little farther down through
+the orchard, getting out where the trees were less thick, so as to be
+still within sight of the beasts she was hoping to lure away from the
+trees that held her companions. The bulls did not appear to see her, so
+Harriet stripped off her own skirt and began waving it at them. It was
+several moments later when the bulls discovered her and then they
+started for her without loss of time.
+
+“Run!” screamed Harriet. “Run! Don’t make a sound to attract their
+attention.” She adopted her own advice and started down through an aisle
+of apple trees, her feet scarcely seeming to touch the ground. The girl
+was flaunting her skirt over her head. She heard bellows of rage off
+toward the trees in which her companions were perched. The girl halted.
+A few seconds later she saw the beasts coming. Instead of immediately
+taking to a tree Harriet began running again, still waving the skirt
+high above her head.
+
+Harriet heard Tommy give a little scream. It was quickly suppressed.
+Undoubtedly Miss Elting had sharply rebuked the terrified little girl.
+Harriet did not pause again. This was her last chance to get the bulls
+away from the trees that held her companions. Their safety depended upon
+her doing so. She was determined to succeed, even at the imminent risk
+of losing her own safety. The animals did not seem to be gaining on her,
+but all at once they put on a great burst of speed. Harriet darted
+sideways, then straight ahead again. This time she leaped out into the
+open, flaunting the skirt, tantalizing the ugly beasts, resorting to
+every artifice she could think of to take their attention from Miss
+Elting and the other girls.
+
+Harriet succeeded beyond her expectations. She also succeeded in
+enraging the beasts far more than she had hoped to do.
+
+Now they were getting too close for safety, so Harriet darted in among
+the trees, followed by the three savage, bellowing bulls. She grasped
+the first low-hanging limb that she came to, and swung herself up into a
+tree. A pair of sharp horns caught the end of the skirt, rending it
+nearly to the waist. Harriet clung desperately to the skirt. She did not
+propose to lose it if she could help doing so. Jerking the skirt away
+she climbed higher and, bracing herself, gazed down triumphantly.
+
+“That’s the time I fooled you, didn’t I?” she taunted. Leaning forward
+the girl waved the skirt. She reached down far enough to flaunt the
+skirt full in the face of the nearest animal. He bellowed his rage and
+pawed the dirt. She continued to aggravate him. If she could only keep
+them all there until her companions reached the highway!
+
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e!” sounded the distant, long-drawn call of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls.
+
+“Oh, they’re safe!” cried Harriet joyfully. For a moment she closed her
+eyes and clung panting to the trunk of the tree. After resting a few
+moments she cautiously drew on her skirt and fastened it, three pairs of
+red, evil eyes observing her threateningly. Then she climbed to the
+topmost branches of the apple tree, hoping to get high enough to obtain
+a glimpse of her companions.
+
+“I might have known that a tree with such low boughs would not be high
+enough for that,” she muttered. “But I’ll call.”
+
+Listening she heard the “Hoo-e-e-e!” of Miss Elting again.
+
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e!” answered Harriet Burrell.
+
+In response the others began shouting. The bulls did not appear to be
+interested. One of them lay down.
+
+“My goodness! I do hope they aren’t going to stay here the rest of the
+day,” cried Harriet. “I don’t know what I shall do in that event.”
+
+She now tried Tommy’s plan and began pelting the animal that had lain
+down with apples. It took very little of this sort of treatment to bring
+the beast to his feet. He leaped up with a bellow and began pawing up
+the dirt, sending showers of it over his companions.
+
+Harriet chuckled.
+
+“Now, if only Miss Elting will attract their attention. I think I had
+better try to hide myself and keep quiet.” This she did. She could hear
+the shouts and yells of her companions. They were setting up a great
+racket off there in the road, doing their utmost to draw the attention
+of the animals away from Harriet.
+
+After fully five minutes of this one of the bulls walked off with his
+head in the air. He stood a moment with head still erect, gazing off
+toward the highway. Suddenly he started on a run. The other two bulls
+followed him with their gaze for a few moments, then they, too, started
+away at a moderate trot.
+
+“The plan has worked! It has worked!” cried Harriet in triumph, under
+her breath. “Oh, I do hope they get far enough away. I must crawl down
+so as to be ready for my big spring. This is almost equal to a Spanish
+bull fight, except that I haven’t any barbs to stick into them.”
+
+The girl crept cautiously to the ground. She stood at the foot of the
+tree, shielding her body by its trunk, peering around the tree at the
+running bulls. They were headed straight toward the road fence,
+traveling more rapidly now.
+
+In order to reach the fence at the side of the field, Harriet would be
+obliged to go out into the open, where, if the animals turned, she would
+be sure to be discovered.
+
+A cry from her companions told her that the time for action on her part
+had arrived. Without an instant’s hesitation Harriet Burrell started for
+a fence which stood to the eastward of her place of refuge. A few
+moments later she had cleared the orchard and reached the open field.
+She saw the three bulls pawing the ground by the roadside fence in the
+distance. Her companions were standing in the middle of the road waving
+their skirts at the animals, not daring to get close to the fence.
+
+“Run! Run, Harriet!” screamed Miss Elting.
+
+As though they had understood the meaning of the guardian’s warning, the
+bulls wheeled sharply. They saw the fleeing figure of the Meadow-Brook
+Girl and, leaving Miss Elting and her party, charged straight across the
+field towards Harriet, while the latter was still some distance from the
+fence towards which she was running.
+
+“Run! Oh, run!” came the voice of Miss Elting in a terrified wail.
+“Run!”
+
+Suddenly, Harriet, who had turned to glance over her shoulder to measure
+the distance between herself and her pursuers, stumbled and plunged
+headfirst into a little depression in the ground.
+
+A scream rose from her horrified companions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV—A RACE FOR LIFE
+
+
+“She’ll be killed!” wailed Hazel, covering her eyes to shut out the
+sight.
+
+“Thave her!” screamed Tommy. The little girl sprang forward, scrambled
+over the fence and, had she, too, not fallen would have dashed down the
+field to Harriet Burrell’s assistance, utterly regardless of her own
+peril. The guardian climbed over the fence and had placed a firm grip on
+the little girl before the latter could get to her feet. Miss Elting
+fairly dragged Tommy back to the fence and assisted her over.
+
+“She’s up again!” cried Hazel. “Oh, hurry, hurry!” Her voice rose to a
+piercing wail.
+
+Harriet had gotten to her feet. She cast one frightened look over her
+shoulder, then continued to run towards the fence. They saw that she
+limped a little. Nor was the girl running as fast as before her fall.
+The three bulls had gained considerably during the few seconds that
+Harriet had been down. They were now charging with lowered heads,
+bunched closely together, this time as though determined that their
+victim should not escape them.
+
+Just ahead of her, Harriet had seen a ditch, deep and broad, made for
+the purpose of draining the land. Instantly a plan formed in her active
+mind. She could not hope to win the race for life by running straight
+ahead now that the beasts had gained so much on her.
+
+“She’s tiring! They’ll get her!” moaned Hazel.
+
+“Why didn’t you let me go?” screamed Tommy, beside herself with anxiety.
+
+The guardian did not answer. Her eyes, wide and staring, were following
+every movement of the fleeing girl and the pursuing bulls.
+
+Harriet stopped short, bending over in a crouching position.
+
+“She’s going to try to trick them! Oh, what courage!” breathed Miss
+Elting.
+
+“Look! Thee her now!” shouted Tommy, with a note of triumph in her
+strained voice.
+
+The animals were fairly upon Harriet. When it seemed as though their
+horns were touching her, the girl leaped obliquely into the ditch. They
+saw her run, splashing along in it for a few rods, then spring to the
+bank on the same side from which she had jumped in.
+
+The watchers saw something else too. The bulls, so intent upon reaching
+their victim, had taken no notice of the ditch. Perhaps they had been
+charging with closed eyes, as many bulls do. At any rate the leading
+beast flung himself headlong into the ditch. The others braced
+themselves with their front feet and went sliding into the ditch on top
+of their leader, digging furrows with their hoofs in the soft dirt.
+
+Harriet Burrell’s ruse had been successful. She spoke no word, but a
+glint of triumph flashed into her eyes as she cast a quick glance at the
+floundering animals, then ran straight toward her companions. This time
+there was no limping, no lessening of speed. She had covered less than
+half the distance before two of the animals that had slid into the ditch
+had recovered themselves and began looking about for the prey that had
+eluded them.
+
+The slender figure of the Meadow-Brook girl, they soon discovered, was
+racing across the field. The two bulls clambered out of the ditch and
+charged again. Now that they were in the open field it was a race that
+would go to the fleetest. No tricks would avail Harriet this time. She
+knew that her safety depended on outrunning her pursuers. Had Harriet
+not been an athletic girl she would have succumbed long before. As it
+was she ran at a wonderful rate of speed. The shouts of her companions,
+though heard but faintly, encouraged her, for Harriet’s mind was on her
+work.
+
+The ruse practiced by Harriet had given her the lead in the race. Miss
+Elting, however, saw that the bulls were gaining on the plucky girl.
+
+“Girls,” she said sharply, “remain where you are.” With that she climbed
+to the top of the fence and leaped over into the field. It was her idea
+that even though Harriet did succeed in reaching the fence, the girl
+might not have sufficient vitality left to enable her to climb over it.
+
+Harriet, as she drew near, discovered the guardian on her side of the
+fence and divined the latter’s purpose. The girl motioned for Miss
+Elting to get back. The guardian shook her head and remained where she
+was.
+
+“Go back! Go back! I’m all right,” cried Harriet breathlessly.
+
+The bulls were gaining rapidly. They were now but a few rods behind
+Harriet Burrell. She put on more speed after one last look over her
+shoulder while Tommy and Hazel were shouting their encouragement.
+
+“You will be caught. Quick!” gasped Harriet, as she drew rapidly near to
+the guardian. “Oh, please hurry back to the road!”
+
+Miss Elting did not move. Harriet dashed up beside her and stopped
+short. Miss Elting grasped the girl’s arm. Harriet pulled herself free.
+
+“Not an inch till you get over,” declared the girl.
+
+The guardian glanced at her questioningly, then vaulted the fence.
+Harriet followed her. But ere Harriet had touched the ground on the
+other side, two sharp-horned heads crashed into the fence. Harriet sank
+down at the side of the road breathless and exhausted.
+
+Miss Elting pulled the girl to her feet.
+
+“Throw your shoulders well back and inhale deeply!” she commanded. She
+then led Harriet slowly up and down the road for a few moments.
+Harriet’s heavy respirations soon moderated, and ten minutes later her
+breathing was almost normal.
+
+“I think we had better wait here. Jane will be along looking for us if
+we do not get to our camping place by night. Do you feel exhausted?”
+asked Miss Elting.
+
+“A little weak in the knees, that’s all,” answered Harriet. “I shall be
+ready to move in a few minutes. I don’t want to stay here. We must try
+to catch up with the boys.”
+
+“No. I shall not allow it. Yon have done quite enough for one day—quite
+enough to tire out the strongest man. Do you really think you can stand
+it to walk slowly?”
+
+“Of course I can,” answered Harriet brightly. “See, I still have some
+sprint left in me.” Harriet ran up and down the road, vaulting the fence
+on the opposite side of it.
+
+“You have indeed,” laughed Miss Elting. It was the first laugh that had
+been heard in some time. “You are the most remarkable girl I’ve ever
+known, or ever shall know. Now we had better decide on which way we
+shall go. I think the shorter way will be to skirt the orchard and
+continue on across the fields. We shan’t try the orchard again.”
+
+All the girls agreed with the guardian. They had had quite enough of
+that particular orchard. Following the road for a short distance they
+came to the adjoining field, which they entered and continued on their
+journey. The afternoon was now well advanced. Miss Elting had left a
+mark on the fence to inform Jane of their route, in case she should come
+back to look for them. This with the time of their passing would give
+Jane an idea when to expect them at the place stretched for the camp.
+
+As they proceeded, Harriet’s strength returned to her. By the time they
+had walked two miles from the scene of their recent exciting experiences
+she had fully recovered from her recent exhaustion. Tommy, now that she
+had time to think about herself, was bewailing the loss of her skirt.
+She firmly declared she would not go to camp with only an underskirt on
+and announced her intention of sleeping out in the fields.
+
+Six o’clock had arrived by the time they came out on the crest of a hill
+overlooking the valley in which they hoped to find Jane McCarthy and
+their camp. They scanned the valley eagerly.
+
+“There’s our tent,” cried Hazel, pointing to a clump of trees to the
+left of them. No person was in sight, however. This they thought
+strange.
+
+“I should not be surprised if everybody had gone in search of us,” said
+Miss Elting.
+
+“I hope they don’t find uth,” spoke up Tommy.
+
+“It will be a good opportunity for you to get into camp without being
+seen,” suggested Harriet. “Come, let’s hurry down before some one does
+come.”
+
+In order that their approach might be the more screened, they hurried
+over to a fence along which bushes and small trees grew. Sheltered by
+these they made their way down into the valley. But when they reached
+the road Tommy halted.
+
+“Not another thtep,” she declared stubbornly. No amount of urging would
+induce her to go on. It was decided to leave her there while the rest
+continued on, Harriet promising to return to the little girl with
+another skirt as soon as possible. So Tommy hid in the bushes, peering
+out at the retreating forms of her companions.
+
+A fire was smouldering in the Meadow-Brook camp. As the party of girls
+approached, four boys sprang up. They had been sitting about the fire.
+Their hats were off instantly, and they tried gallantly to force down
+the grins that persisted in appearing on their faces.
+
+“Why, how do you do?” greeted Captain Baker of the Tramp Club.
+
+“Where is Miss McCarthy?” questioned Miss Elting, pretending not to have
+observed the grins.
+
+“She and a couple of the fellows went back to look for you,” spoke up
+Dill Dodd. “The pace was rather swift for you, even if you did get an
+early start, wasn’t it?” he chuckled.
+
+“Yes, the pace was much swifter than you imagine,” answered the guardian
+frigidly.
+
+“It is too bad that Miss McCarthy started out. She may spend a good part
+of the evening searching for you, not knowing that you have reached
+camp,” said the captain.
+
+“She will know,” replied Harriet. “Jane will be back here soon.”
+
+“How will she know?” frowned Davy.
+
+“Oh, they have a wireless telegraph system, you know,” chuckled Sam.
+
+“Yes, that is it! How did you guess it?” smiled Harriet.
+
+“Don’t forget Tommy,” reminded Miss Elting.
+
+Harriet flushed. She had indeed, forgotten all about the little lisping
+girl who was hiding in the bushes. Harriet hurried into the tent.
+
+“That’s right. You are one girl short,” exclaimed George, suddenly
+discovering the absence of Miss Thompson. “Did she fall by the wayside?
+Was the pace too swift for her?”
+
+“Young man, you talk too much,” objected Margery indignantly.
+
+“I know it,” laughed George. “I can’t help it.”
+
+Miss Elting’s face relaxed in a smile.
+
+“Where _is_ Miss Thompson?” questioned Dill.
+
+“Miss Thompson will be here soon,” replied the guardian.
+
+Unnoticed by the boys Harriet slipped away, a bundle under her arm. She
+returned, a quarter of an hour later, accompanied by Tommy clad in her
+outside skirt and at peace with the world. They had barely reached the
+camp before the sound of a motor horn was heard. A few moments afterward
+Crazy Jane came tearing along the road and swung up to the camp.
+
+“Here we are darlin’s,” she cried. “I got your message.”
+
+“Message?” questioned the captain. “Who gave her a message, Fred?”
+
+“Blest if I know,” answered Fred Avery, getting down from the car,
+removing his hat and scratching his head thoughtfully. “Wireless, I
+think.”
+
+“What did I tell you?” nodded Sam.
+
+The captain regarded Fred inquiringly.
+
+“Oh, don’t ask me,” said the latter. “Miss McCarthy got out of her car
+about five miles back, walked to the fence then back to the car. She
+said her friends had passed there about four o’clock in the afternoon
+and were in camp then.”
+
+“Well, what do you know about that?” wondered the captain. “Tell us how
+you did it?”
+
+“A little bird told me,” chuckled Jane. The girls burst into a merry
+peal of laughter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI—A TREAT THAT WAS NOT A TREAT
+
+
+“Never mind. We won’t be as mean as you are,” declared Sam, springing
+up. “We will return good for evil.”
+
+“Did you see the three bulls?” interrupted Jane. “I knew you would cross
+that orchard and I was afraid you’d meet them.”
+
+“We did,” answered Miss Elting.
+
+“What’s that?” The captain was interested instantly. “You say you met
+the bulls?”
+
+“Yes. I might as well tell you,” explained Miss Elting. “You think we
+weren’t able to keep the pace we set for ourselves. I don’t want my
+girls to rest under that imputation, for I believe that they can
+completely outdistance you boys. We did meet the three bulls. Yes, they
+treed us. We were all up in apple trees when you boys passed singing
+‘Forty-nine Blue Bottles.’”
+
+Some one laughed. The captain frowned at the boy who had done so.
+
+“You let us pass, and never called us to come to your assistance?” he
+demanded.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“We preferred to get out of our scrape without appealing to our rivals,
+Captain Baker.”
+
+“Whew! That was a fix. How’d you manage it?”
+
+“Through the resourcefulness and courage of Harriet Burrell. Had it not
+been for her we undoubtedly should still be up in the trees in the apple
+orchard.”
+
+“Please tell us about it.”
+
+“Please don’t,” begged Harriet blushingly.
+
+“Now that you have aroused our curiosity, it would be cruel not to tell
+us the whole story,” declared George.
+
+“Yeth. Cruelty to animalth,” nodded Tommy.
+
+Miss Elting, despite Harriet’s protestations, did tell the boys the
+story, giving the full credit for their rescue to Harriet Burrell, to
+whom it belonged. The boys listened in open-mouthed wonder.
+
+“Fellows, we aren’t so much as we think we are,” declared the chief of
+the Tramp Club. “I propose three cheers for Miss Burrell. Now!
+Altogether! One, two, three!”
+
+They gave three rousing cheers in which, Tommy’s shrill voice joined.
+
+“Who’s all right?” demanded the captain at the end of the cheer.
+
+“Miss Burrell’s all right!” yelled the Tramps. “For she’s a jolly good
+fel—low; For she’s a jolly good fellow,” sang the Tramps, as with hands
+on each other’s shoulders they marched through the camp, and out into
+the field on their way to their own camp, a short distance from that of
+the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+Miss Elting was laughing merrily. Harriet’s face was crimson.
+
+“I call that downright mean. They were making fun of me.”
+
+“Why, Harriet! You know they were not,” rebuked Miss Elting. “It was the
+highest compliment those lads could pay.”
+
+“It hath been a day of experientheth, hathn’t it?” Tommy questioned.
+
+Harriet’s face was still flushed as she began to prepare the supper.
+Each member of the party now remembered that she had an appetite. While
+they were getting the meal Jane told them how the boys had gloated over
+having “walked the girls off their feet,” as the tramps expressed it.
+Jane announced triumphantly that she had been more than a match for
+them, which her companions could well believe, for Jane had a sharp
+tongue, besides being the possessor of a fund of Irish wit.
+
+The smoke curling up from the other camp told the girls that the boys
+were busy getting their own supper. While eating, the guardian was
+obliged to go over the story of their experiences for the benefit of
+Jane, who interrupted now and then with humorous questions.
+
+“Are the boys coming over this evening?” asked Margery, after they had
+finished supper and she and Tommy were washing the dishes.
+
+“They did not say,” called Hazel. “It is safe to believe they will. I
+wonder if we can’t get rid of those boys? They make me nervous. It seems
+to me that they are perpetually on the scene whether one wants to see
+them or not.”
+
+“Don’t be hard on the poor Tramp Club, Hazel,” laughed Harriet.
+“Remember you might still be stuck fast in the swamp had they not come
+to the rescue.”
+
+“That’s so,” responded Hazel, with a sigh. “I never thought of that.
+They’re really not so bad after all.”
+
+“I have met worse,” averred Harriet solemnly. Whereupon there was a
+general laugh.
+
+The tramps had gathered the fuel for the Meadow-Brook Girls, stacking it
+up in piles of various lengths. The lads really were trying to make
+themselves useful to the young women. As yet there had been no outward
+evidence of Captain Baker’s assertion that some of them were “full of
+mischief.” The girls had piled the campfire high with wood and gathered
+about it when strains of music were heard.
+
+“Oh, it ith a band, it ith a band,” cried Tommy.
+
+“Coming to serenade us, probably,” announced Margery.
+
+“No. I think it is some one playing on harmonicas,” answered Miss Elting
+after a moment of listening.
+
+“It’s those boys,” groaned Hazel. “What mischief are they up to now?”
+
+“I told you. They are coming over to serenade us. I think the serenade
+must be for Harriet.”
+
+“They are carrying something on their shoulders too,” cried Harriet.
+
+The girls, by this time, had run out to the edge of the camp and in the
+faint twilight were trying to make out what it was that the Tramp Club
+were carrying. As the boys drew nearer, the girls saw that it was a
+burlap sack. Four boys were bearing the sack on their shoulders. It
+appeared to be very heavy.
+
+“Why, boys,” exclaimed Miss Elting. “Are you moving?”
+
+“Yes, Miss Elting,” answered Captain Baker, doffing his hat. “We are
+moving, in a sense. We have come prepared to lay the spoils of our
+forage at the feet of beauty. Boys, dump the bag. You know where.”
+
+One of the boys untied the string by which the mouth of the sack had
+been secured, then the two lads at that end stepped from under.
+Instantly the contents began rolling out at Harriet Burrell’s feet.
+
+“Muskmelons!” gasped the girls.
+
+Great golden and green muskmelons bumped to the ground. Harriet’s face
+was full of color.
+
+“They—they aren’t all for me? Surely, you don’t think I am equal to
+eating all of those?” she gasped.
+
+“They are laid at your feet,” answered George dramatically. “For you and
+your friends.”
+
+“This is splendid,” declared the guardian, her face aglow with pleasure.
+“But we do not deserve so much. You have robbed yourselves. Where did
+you get them?”
+
+“Of a farmer,” replied George promptly.
+
+“You must take most of them for yourselves, boys,” urged Miss Elting.
+“We simply could not eat half of all that lot.”
+
+“No. They are all for you. We have plenty. Besides, you’ll find some of
+them aren’t good, but out of the lot you may be able to get enough for
+breakfast.”
+
+“We can eat all night if nethethary,” announced Tommy. “Maybe we can eat
+them all before we go on to-morrow.”
+
+“One melon apiece will be quite enough for us, my dears,” reproved Miss
+Elting. “Won’t you join us in our feast, boys?”
+
+The young men shook their heads.
+
+“They’re yours,” replied the captain, his eyes on Harriet as he said it.
+“I brought you some salt, too,” he added, drawing a piece of newspaper
+from his pocket. “Perhaps you like salt on your melons.”
+
+“You are very thoughtful,” smiled Miss Elting. “I think we have salt.
+How about it, Jane?”
+
+“We have a whole bag of it.”
+
+“We will take yours, thank you,” smiled Harriet. “It is much finer salt
+than ours.”
+
+“Yes, it’s the salt the farmer over yonder uses to give to his sheep,”
+interjected Sam. “We borrowed some from him.”
+
+Miss Elting laughed a little at this blunt speech.
+
+“You are very funny, boys!” she said. “But we are grateful to you. I
+don’t know how we shall be able to repay you.”
+
+“We have shared your hospitality—your bounteous hospitality,” answered
+the captain. “We wished to make some slight return.”
+
+“What shall we do with what melons are left over?” asked Miss Elting.
+
+“Carry them on with you. You have a car in which to transport your
+stuff.”
+
+“I suppose we had better do that,” mused the guardian. “When we reach
+the next camping place we shall insist on entertaining you at our camp.
+We greatly appreciate this treat.”
+
+“Thank you,” said George Baker, looking somewhat embarrassed.
+
+Shortly afterwards Captain Baker rose from where he had been sitting and
+with an uneasy look on his face announced that they must go. With his
+fellows he hurriedly left the camp, not even taking the melon sack
+along. They were seen no more that night.
+
+The girls noted Baker’s embarrassed manner and thought it strange that
+the boys should have left so abruptly. They were at a loss to understand
+it.
+
+“I am glad they have left the melons, anyway,” declared Harriet.
+
+“Yes, wasn’t that lovely of the boys to bring the fruit to us?” nodded
+Miss Elting. “They are really nice boys. I am rather glad that we met
+them.”
+
+“You may change your mind before we have finished with them,” replied
+Harriet, with an enigmatical smile.
+
+[Illustration: “So I've Caught You at It?”]
+
+“What do you mean, dear?”
+
+“I can’t really explain. But I feel rather than know that those young
+men are ready to play tricks. They’d better not try any of them or we
+shall make them regret that they ever played tricks on the Meadow-Brook
+Girls.”
+
+“Aren’t the melonth delithiouth?” breathed Tommy. She was now eating her
+second melon. The other girls were enjoying theirs equally well.
+
+“Yes,” agreed Miss Elting. “The finest I ever ate. They must have cost
+the boys quite a sum of money, even though melons are cheap in the
+country. I——”
+
+“Thomebody ith coming,” warned Tommy.
+
+“The boys are returning, I presume,” smiled Miss Elting. But instead of
+the boys they were surprised to see a strange man striding into camp. He
+was plainly a farmer. He wore his whiskers long and his trousers were
+tucked in the tops of his boots. His face did not bear a pleasant
+expression.
+
+“So I’ve caught you at it, eh?” he said sarcastically.
+
+“What do you mean?” demanded the guardian rising hastily.
+
+“You know well enough what I mean. In the first place, you are
+trespassing on my premises.”
+
+“We have permission to camp here,” interjected Jane.
+
+“Who gave it?”
+
+“The farmer who owns this land.”
+
+“I happen to own this land, and I haven’t given any tramps permission to
+camp on it.”
+
+“Then some one must have played a trick on me,” declared Crazy Jane.
+“Wait till I get sight of that man again.”
+
+“We are very sorry, sir, but we are wholly innocent of trespassing. We
+are not tramps, either. Of course we are willing to pay you for the
+privilege of camping here to-night. What do you consider a fair price?”
+
+“Wal, I reckon about seventy-five cents will be all right for the
+camping.”
+
+Miss Elting handed the money over to him.
+
+“I am sorry to have put you to all this trouble, but we supposed we had
+permission to stay here over night.”
+
+“Thay,” questioned Tommy. “You are a rich man, aren’t you?”
+
+“No. Why?”
+
+“Well, you thhould be.”
+
+“By the way, ladies, there is another little matter that you’ll have to
+fix up before we go any further.”
+
+The guardian and the girls glanced inquiringly at their mercenary
+visitor.
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“Them melons,” answered the farmer, indicating the fruit with a nod.
+
+“I don’t understand you, sir.” The guardian was plainly perplexed.
+Harriet was smiling broadly. She thought she understood now.
+
+“The melons you stole from my field.”
+
+“Stole from your field?” gasped Miss Elting.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Sir, you insult us! We have stolen neither melons nor anything else. I
+demand that you leave this camp instantly. We shall not endure such
+accusations.”
+
+“You didn’t steal them, eh?”
+
+“No, we didn’t,” answered Jane, who had stepped forward.
+
+“Then where did you get them?”
+
+The girls looked at one another. No one spoke. None wished to place the
+blame on the Tramp Club. The girls now began to understand the hurried
+departure of Captain Baker and his friends. Miss Elting saw that there
+was only one course to pursue under the circumstances.
+
+“I can’t tell you where we got the melons, sir, but we didn’t steal
+them. How much are the melons worth?”
+
+“Why?” queried the farmer, scenting a bargain.
+
+“We intend to pay for them,” answered Harriet coldly.
+
+“How many melons were there?” asked the farmer, more blandly.
+
+“Two dozen,” Harriet replied.
+
+“That’ll be about four-eighty,” nodded the farmer.
+
+“But that’s——”
+
+“It’s cheaper than the risk of going to jail,” broke in the farmer
+meaningly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII—TRYING OUT THE GIPSY TRAIL
+
+
+The farmer pocketed the money that Miss Elting handed him.
+
+“I’ve my own opinion of you!” flared Crazy Jane.
+
+“Maybe you have,” chuckled the farmer, “but——”
+
+“You’re quite right,” Jane McCarthy taunted. “You wouldn’t feel highly
+complimented if I were to express that opinion!”
+
+“If it’s that kind of an opinion——” muttered the farmer, turning red
+under the coat of tan on his face.
+
+“It’s _worse_!” retorted Crazy Jane incisively.
+
+Muttering under his breath, but failing to speak clearly, the abashed
+farmer turned on his heel, striding away.
+
+The humor of the situation now appealing to them, the girls and their
+guardian began to laugh heartily.
+
+“Harriet, I believe you suspected this all the time,” declared Miss
+Elting finally.
+
+“Those boys looked mischievous. I didn’t know what it was all about, but
+after a while, I confess, I did suspect them. Never mind, I’ll be even
+with them.”
+
+“No, you leave it to me,” interjected Jane.
+
+“I am glad that none of you girls betrayed the boys,” declared Miss
+Elting approvingly. “I would suggest that you say nothing to them when
+we next see them. Let them introduce the subject if it is introduced at
+all. They may betray themselves. Tommy, don’t you lisp a word of it.”
+
+“I don’t lithp,” retorted the little girl indignantly. “I thpeak jutht
+like other folkth.”
+
+“I did not mean it that way, dear,” laughed the guardian. “I meant that
+you shouldn’t mention our experience to any one. Now that we have bought
+and paid for the melons I think we had better stow them in the car.
+Come, let us get ready for bed.”
+
+“Are we to make an early start in the morning?” asked Hazel.
+
+“Yes. We must not delay if we expect to remain in the contest.”
+
+The girls had no intention of giving up the contest. They thought it
+possible that they might have the company of the Tramp Club on the
+morrow, as a good part of the Meadow-Brook course lay over a highway,
+this being the most direct route for the day’s tramping.
+
+Rather to their surprise they discovered no trace of the Tramp Club next
+day. The smoke from the latter’s campfire was no longer visible when the
+girls left their own camp in the morning, nor was there any indication
+on the road that the boys had passed over it. What the girls did not
+know was that the boys had slipped off into a ravine when the word had
+been brought to them that the irate farmer was out looking for the
+people who had visited his melon patch. From there they had moved inland
+and made a new camp. In the morning they took a roundabout course,
+avoiding the highway. It were better to be beaten by the girls that day
+than to be caught by the angry farmer. It was because of this longer
+route that the Meadow-Brook Girls were again able to get ahead of their
+rivals.
+
+The tracks of Jane’s car had long since been obliterated when the party
+neared the end of the day’s journey. This did not trouble them, for a
+certain definite stopping place had been agreed upon, and as was
+customary, when following the highway, the girls now and then dropped a
+handful of grass in the road. Especially was this done when they came to
+forks in the road, so that in case Jane McCarthy returned that way to
+look for them she might see which direction they had taken. In doing
+this, though the girls were unaware of the fact, they were following a
+gipsy practice as old as gipsies themselves. It was the gipsies’ way of
+marking their trail for the benefit of others of their kind who had
+straggled behind.
+
+“I think this is the place,” decided Miss Elting, halting, pointing down
+a narrow lane that extended through a field of stunted bushes and brush.
+The gate that had once shut off this byway from the main road lay broken
+at one side of it and a ridge of grass had grown knee high in the middle
+of the lane. It was a lane that had once led down to a cider mill that
+now lay a heap of ruins.
+
+“It ith thpooky-looking,” observed Tommy.
+
+“Jane is here,” exclaimed Harriet. “I see her car tracks, but I don’t
+see her car.”
+
+“No; the car has come out onto the highway and gone on,” Miss Elting
+declared. “Jane must have driven to the next town to get something. We
+will go down that lane.”
+
+Harriet dropped some grass in the road, marking a trail into the byway
+to notify Jane that they had arrived. They then made their way down the
+lane. The girls were tired and footsore. Walking in the road had been
+more wearisome than tramping over the hills and fields, perhaps because
+the former was less interesting and more monotonous. It was therefore a
+welcome sight when they espied the tent that they called home, even
+though it was a now weather-beaten and dingy-looking piece of canvas.
+But Jane was nowhere in sight. Neither was her car.
+
+“Where can Jane be?” exclaimed Margery.
+
+“Perhaps this will explain matters,” replied Miss Elting, taking down a
+sheet of writing paper that had been pinned to the flap of the tent.
+“Ah! Jane says she has gone on to the town of Granite to meet her
+father, from whom she got a letter this morning. She says she may not be
+back until late, and that we shall find the melons in the bushes to the
+west of the tent.”
+
+“I don’t want any of those old melons,” pouted Margery.
+
+“I do,” retorted Tommy. “I’ll eat all I can get.”
+
+“At least, we have a right to eat them now that we have paid for them,”
+smiled the guardian. “The first thing to do will be to heat some water
+and bathe. We are all very dusty. Tommy, you and Margery take your baths
+first. In the meantime we will build the fire and get the supper going.
+This is going to be a pleasant camp. I wonder if we shall see our
+friends, the boys, this evening?”
+
+“Not if they see us first,” chuckled Harriet. “Oh, what we won’t do to
+them when we get the opportunity.”
+
+“Jane must have had quite a time putting up the tent without
+assistance,” remarked Miss Elting. “She did it very well, too.”
+
+Harriet was making the fire with Hazel’s assistance, Tommy and Margery
+were preparing for their baths. Twilight was upon them before they
+realized it. By that time the supper was cooking, the coffee steaming,
+the savory odor of food filling the air about them. The melons were
+reserved for the dessert. These had ripened and were now soft, sweet and
+delicious.
+
+“Girls, it is worth four dollars and eighty cents to have such melons,
+isn’t it?” smiled the guardian.
+
+“Yes, indeed,” chorused the girls.
+
+“I wonder what has become of the Tramp Club,” mused Harriet.
+
+“You will not see any more of the Tramps for a while,” laughed Hazel.
+“It is a wonder to me that we haven’t seen any real tramps since we have
+been out on this trip. At potato-digging time one usually sees a great
+many of them.”
+
+“We haven’t been on the road much, or perhaps we should have seen more
+of them. That is one advantage in keeping away from the highways. One
+meets few live things in the fields except the birds and occasionally
+sheep and cattle.”
+
+“Not to mention bulls,” finished Harriet laughingly. “Speaking of
+tramps, I believe I just saw one over yonder,” added the girl.
+
+“Are you joking?” questioned the guardian.
+
+For answer Harriet sprang up and ran toward the tent. She did not reach
+it. She halted sharply as a man stepped in front of her. He was a
+typical follower of the road, dirty, unkempt and evil looking.
+
+“What do you want here?” demanded Harriet, with a calmness that she was
+far from feeling.
+
+“Not much. We want some money and something to eat,” leered the
+intruder.
+
+“You will get neither here. What were you doing in that tent? You came
+here to rob us. Go away before we give you something you won’t like.”
+
+Miss Elting and Hazel sprang up, scattering the tin dishes far and wide
+as they ran to Harriet’s assistance, when three other men stepped into
+view from the far side of the tent.
+
+“If you folks will hand out your valuables, and make no racket about it,
+we won’t hurt you,” announced one of the newcomers. “What we want is a
+little help, that’s all. We’re poor fellows in distress. We ain’t the
+kind that rob women. We ask for assistance.”
+
+Miss Elting’s revolver was in the tent where she could not reach it now.
+Had she had it with her she would have assisted the men in a way that
+they would not have liked. What to do under the circumstances she did
+not know. Neither Tommy nor Margery appeared able to do anything. They
+were frightened nearly out of their wits.
+
+“You have a peculiar way of asking for assistance. Had you come to us in
+the proper manner we should have been glad to give you something to eat.
+Now we shall not. Neither have we money for you. I order you to go away
+from here. If you refuse the consequences will be on your own heads. We
+are not quite so defenseless as you might think. Will you go?”
+
+The spokesman laughed. The spirit of the girls appeared to amuse him.
+The fellow had not the least idea that there was any other person about.
+He, with his companions, had seen the Meadow-Brook Girls come into the
+camp alone. Not another person so far as they knew, was within some
+miles of the place. They had watched the camp and waited until dark to
+carry out their plan of robbing the five women.
+
+“Can you get it, do you think, Harriet?” questioned Miss Elting in a low
+tone.
+
+“I’ll try,” she answered. She knew what the guardian meant. “It” meant
+Miss Elting’s revolver. All at once the girl darted past the man who
+stood directly in front of her. She had almost reached the tent, when
+one of the tramps caught hold of her by the shoulder. Harriet was lithe
+and quick. She slipped from his detaining clutch and sprang back. But
+her opportunity was gone. The men partly divining her purpose, had
+quickly blocked the entrance to the tent. The leader nodded to one of
+them to watch Tommy and Margery. Three others directed their attention
+to Miss Elting, Harriet and Hazel. They placed themselves in such
+positions that the girls were hedged in. To try to run would be to fall
+into the clutches of one or another of the three ruffians who were
+guarding them.
+
+One of the men uttered a shrill whistle. Still another tramp came
+running into the camp.
+
+“Turn out the tent in a hurry. Don’t take anything that ain’t good.
+There’s money in there somewhere. Now turn your pockets out, ladies.”
+
+His words were cut short by a long wailing cry uttered by Harriet
+Burrell.
+
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Help, help!” It was the call of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls, with the warning cry for assistance added.
+
+The man who had made the demand sprang at her. Harriet leaped back. In
+doing so she felt her arms pinioned by a second man. She had forgotten
+for the moment that there were guards behind her. Miss Elting suddenly
+found her arms gripped from behind. She struggled with all her strength.
+So did Harriet. Hazel screamed as she felt her own arms pinioned.
+
+“Herd the other two in the tent, then git all the swag you can find,”
+commanded the spokesman breathlessly, for he was having his hands full
+helping his assistant to hold Miss Elting and the two girls. One grasped
+Tommy and Margery by their arms, and fairly dragging them over, flung
+them into the tent. “Get the stuff! Never mind those two. They’re too
+scared to bother. It’s these that we’ve got to look out for,” he
+directed.
+
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Help, help!” screamed Harriet.
+
+“Yell, Hazel!” gasped Harriet.
+
+“I—I can’t! Oh, I can’t!” wailed Hazel.
+
+Tommy found her voice at this juncture and raised it in a piercing
+scream. A moment later a blanket was twisted about her head and she was
+flung into a corner, clawing and kicking. Margery cowered at one side of
+the tent, too frightened to move.
+
+Just then a new note was sounded. From behind the tent rose a shrill cry
+in a voice unfamiliar to either the girls or to the thieving tramps, a
+voice that caused the tramps to release their prisoners and turn to face
+the owner of the voice prepared for trouble.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII—THE QUEEN TAKES A HAND
+
+
+A strange figure stepped into the light of the campfire. It was the
+figure of an old woman, bent with age. Her face was yellow and wrinkled,
+her eyes, black and piercing. She hobbled a few steps toward them, using
+a long stick as though for support.
+
+“Out with you, villains!” she screamed, brandishing the stick
+threateningly. “My curses be upon your vile heads! Rob, would you? You
+shall burn in the fire from the clouds,” she hissed, pointing to the
+spokesman. “And you,” pointing to another, “shall wither in the pit with
+the iron doors, where all evil doers shall come sooner or later. You
+shall perish as you deserve. Sybarina says it. So it shall be. Out with
+you!”
+
+“It’s the Gipsy Queen,” screamed Hazel.
+
+For a moment the tramps stood utterly dumbfounded. They realized that
+the old Gipsy was laying a curse upon them. More or less superstitious,
+they stood in considerable awe of Sybarina and her supposedly
+supernatural powers. The tramp who had pinioned Harriet’s arms behind
+her back involuntarily relaxed his hold. Harriet made a dash for
+freedom. In an instant her captor was at her heels.
+
+“Don’t pay any attention to that old lunatic,” he shouted to his
+companions. “She can’t hurt you. Get the stuff and be quick about it.”
+
+But he had reckoned without his host. Raising her head, Sybarina sent a
+long shrill call echoing across the fields. Even in the excitement of
+the moment Harriet realized that it was a signal. A second later the
+call was answered.
+
+“Skip!” warned the leader of the tramps. “It’s Gipsies. We’ll have the
+whole lot to fight if we don’t light out!”
+
+At this juncture five dark swarthy men came running across the fields.
+With one accord the tramps took to their heels. The Gipsies started in
+pursuit of them, but the tramps had a lead of several yards and fear
+lending wings to their feet, they soon outdistanced their pursuers who
+finally abandoned the chase and returned to where Sybarina stood,
+surrounded by the Meadow-Brook Girls and their guardian.
+
+Harriet sprang eagerly forward to thank their rescuers, but Sybarina
+waved her aside. Turning to the Gipsy men she spoke a few sharp words in
+the Romany tongue. The men nodded, talked among themselves for a moment
+then turned and strolled off in the direction whence they had come.
+
+“Oh, Sybarina!” cried Harriet disappointedly. “Why didn’t you let me
+thank them for chasing those tramps away?”
+
+“I, their queen, have commended them. That is sufficient,” returned
+Sybarina proudly. “They need no thanks for obeying my commands.”
+
+“Then we must thank you doubly,” smiled Harriet, holding out her hand to
+the old Gipsy. “What would we have done if you had not been near?”
+
+“It is well,” replied Sybarina earnestly, taking Harriet’s hand in both
+of hers. “But you must come with Sybarina. You must not stay here alone
+this night. The bad men will return again. But Sybarina’s men will stay
+here and watch for them. You and your kind friends will go with Sybarina
+to her camp.”
+
+“But how did you happen to find us?” questioned Miss Elting.
+
+“Sybarina has eyes. Did those eyes not see the patteran (trail of
+grass)? Did she not read the message of the patteran that all of her
+tribe know? Where did you learn to make the patteran that leads the
+Gipsy toward the land where the sun goes down?”
+
+“She means the grass that we dropped in the road,” explained Harriet.
+
+The old woman nodded.
+
+“The patteran,” she reiterated.
+
+“Why,” laughed Harriet. “We did that so that our friend Jane McCarthy
+would know where we had gone.”
+
+“Then there is Romany in your blood. None but the people of the Romany
+would think of such a thing. Where is the other princess?” questioned
+the queen, glancing about.
+
+“Miss McCarthy has gone to meet her father,” Miss Elting informed the
+old woman. “But we have not thanked you enough for the great service
+that you have done us.”
+
+“It is nothing. Did not the princess save Sybarina’s miserable life? The
+debt is still unpaid. Many summers will come, and many summers will go,
+ere the debt is paid. Sybarina never will live to pay it. Her people
+will remember. The Romany has a long memory, princess. Come, pretty
+ladies, come to the camp of the Gipsy. It is not good that you should
+stay the night here. To-morrow night, yes, but not this night.”
+
+“What do you say, girls?” questioned Miss Elting.
+
+“Spend a night in a Gipsy camp?” asked Harriet.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I think that would be fine.”
+
+“But, Sybarina, what of our own camp? Will not the men return and rob
+us?”
+
+“I have told you. Sybarina’s people will be on guard. You need have no
+fear. And when the princess with the fair hair returns, she shall be led
+to the Gipsy camp. Come.”
+
+“Wait please, until we fix our camp and leave a message for Miss
+McCarthy,” said Miss Elting.
+
+So excited were the Meadow-Brook Girls at the prospect of spending a
+night in a Gipsy camp that they almost forgot the thrilling experiences
+through which they had passed. There were few preparations to be made.
+Miss Elting pocketed her revolver, though she had no idea that she would
+need it. She knew that the old Gipsy woman might be trusted; that a
+Gipsy never forgets a favor—nor a wrong. Sybarina felt under deep
+obligations to them for what they had done for her. By inviting them to
+her camp she was conferring upon them the highest possible mark of her
+regard, as the guardian who knew something of the wandering tribes of
+Gipsies was well aware.
+
+The camp was some little distance from where the Meadow-Brook tent was
+pitched. A note for Jane was pinned to the tent flap on the same spot
+where she had pinned hers; then the party set out through the darkness.
+Not a man of the tribe was to be seen. The guardian asked no questions.
+She knew that Sybarina’s word was law and that keen eyes were upon the
+Meadow-Brook camp, that no marauders would be permitted to enter there
+that night. Sybarina led the way as if it were a familiar path, calling
+out now and then to warn the travelers of a root or a stone that lay
+unseen in the path they were following. How she was aware of the
+presence of the obstacles the girls could not imagine.
+
+They came in sight of the dull glow of the Gipsy campfire after a
+quarter of an hour’s walking. Then as they stepped into the circle of
+light, many inquiring eyes were fixed upon them. There were dark-eyed,
+olive-complexioned women of various ages, children clad in bright
+colors, some sitting under wagons eating bread and butter, others
+peering from the gaudily painted wagons, and still others lying asleep
+upon the ground just outside the circle. Horses might have been heard
+munching at the foliage out in the bushes, occasionally neighing or
+stamping. The fire crackled merrily. It was a bright but unfamiliar
+scene to the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+Tommy and Margery were a trifle apprehensive.
+
+“Where are we going to thleep?” questioned Tommy cautiously.
+
+“I don’t know, dear,” returned Miss Elting. “Sybarina will provide a
+place when the time comes. We have our own blankets. I think we may
+sleep out of doors if we wish to do so. But we have a long evening
+before us yet. It is your opportunity to learn something of the life and
+habits of the Gipsies.”
+
+“Thay, Mith Elting do—do you think it thafe to thtay here?” questioned
+Tommy.
+
+“Perfectly so. Much more so than in our own camp this evening.”
+
+Sybarina was brewing the tea with her own hands. Miss Elting stepped
+over to her.
+
+“May I assist you?” she asked.
+
+The Gipsy queen shook her head.
+
+“Sybarina will make the tea for her friends, her good friends, the
+pretty ladies. Sybarina will have other guests this evening.”
+
+“Oh, will you?” questioned the guardian, in a surprised tone.
+
+“Yes. Pretty ladies will come to cross the Gipsy’s palm with silver.
+Sybarina will read the future and the past for them. Sybarina will read
+your future too, but you and your friends need not cross her palm with
+silver. Sybarina is your friend.”
+
+Harriet had been an interested listener to the brief dialogue. She drew
+a little closer.
+
+“I should like to learn to read the past and future, Sybarina. Will you
+teach me?” asked Harriet.
+
+The old woman fixed her piercing eyes upon the eager face before her.
+
+“The princess shall be taught to read the future this very night. The
+stars have said it.”
+
+“I’m afraid I never could learn to read palms in one night,” laughed
+Harriet.
+
+“The stars and the voices of the air will help you. Be not afraid. But
+you must be a Gipsy true.”
+
+“How do you mean?”
+
+“You must be like other Gipsies.”
+
+“Oh! You mean dress like them?”
+
+“Yes. After the tea you shall see.”
+
+Tea was a most formal affair. Sybarina first took a sip from her own cup
+then passed the cup to the others, each girl taking a sip in turn, after
+which cups were served to each member of the party. By this time the
+other members of the tribe appeared to have lost interest in the
+visitors.
+
+“My girls would know something of your people, Sybarina,” suggested Miss
+Elting after the formalities of the tea drinking had been finished and
+the girls had settled down to their own cups of tea.
+
+She regarded her teacup frowningly, as though she were seeking light in
+the amber fluid.
+
+“My daughters,” said the old woman. “It takes many years to earn the
+confidence of a Romany. You have done so in a hour. All are Gorgios to
+the Gipsy.”
+
+“What ith a Gorgio?” piped Tommy.
+
+“Any one not Romany is a Gorgio. Forever has the Gorgio hounded the
+Gipsy. The Gorgio thinks the Gipsy a thief, but the Gipsy is not a
+thief. The Gipsy has little history, my daughters, but the Gipsy dates
+back to antiquity, to the famed Kings of Egypt. He keeps his sacred
+tongue—the Romany. It is his secret language. Through it he can hold
+converse with the Romanys of the world. Ages and ages ago, the Romany
+was called a Jat. That was in far off India. Then came a bad king from
+Persia who stole ten thousand of them to make music for him. There they
+remained until nine hundred years after the Son of Man came, when they
+were taken captive again and held in bondage until at last they
+separated and journeyed to the far places of the world. To-day the Gipsy
+is the only free man who wanders the earth. He pays no tithes, he has no
+cares.”
+
+“But you have a ruler, a head of all the Gipsies, have you not?”
+interjected Miss Elting.
+
+“There is the queen of all,” answered the old woman softly. “She now is
+one hundred years old. She lives in Roumania. Each year are her commands
+received by all her peoples throughout the world. How, I cannot tell
+you. It is a secret of the Romanys. We love, we hate, but not as do the
+Gorgios. But see! The princess has returned. She seeks her friends.”
+
+“You—you mean Miss McCarthy?” questioned Harriet.
+
+The Gipsy nodded gravely.
+
+“Good grathiouth,” exclaimed Tommy. “Thhe’th got eyeth in the top of her
+head. How doeth thhe know that Jane hath come back?”
+
+“I read the message in the teacup,” answered Sybarina. “It is time, fair
+daughter to begin, if you would read the secrets of the stars. Come with
+me and you shall be prepared.”
+
+Harriet rose and followed the old woman to one of the gaudily painted
+wagons, without the slightest hesitancy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX—DELVING INTO THE MYSTERIES
+
+
+“Oh, good gracious! Where are they?” cried Crazy Jane, as she walked
+into the Gipsy camp.
+
+The girls glanced at each other wonderingly. Had not the Gipsy queen
+just told them that Jane had arrived at the Meadow-Brook camp? The
+mystery was too great for them to solve.
+
+“But darlin’s, what does it mean? The Gipsy girl who came for me, said
+you were staying here for the night.”
+
+“We have been invited to be the guests of the tribe for this night,
+Jane. Sybarina is the queen of these Gipsies, you know. She is the one
+we rescued from the burning barn.”
+
+“Of course. Why are you here?”
+
+The guardian explained how they had been attacked by tramps and how the
+Gipsy woman and her companions had come to their rescue.
+
+Jane was amazed, then her face flushed with anger. She wanted to know if
+the Tramp Club had been seen. Miss Elting said they had not.
+
+“But where is my darlin’ Harriet?” questioned Jane, gazing at her
+inquiringly.
+
+“She has gone with the queen into one of the wagons. You will see her
+soon.”
+
+“Won’t it be jolly, Jane, to spend a night in a Gipsy camp?” cried
+Hazel.
+
+“Well, that depends. I’ve heard the tribes weren’t overly clean.”
+
+“Sh-h-h!” warned Miss Elting. “You mustn’t say such things here.
+Remember we are guests.”
+
+“I’m not likely to forget it. Oh, look at that pretty Gipsy girl! What a
+beauty!” cried Jane delightedly.
+
+The Gipsy girl who had emerged from one of the wagons was indeed pretty.
+Her hands were demurely folded, her head lowered, and her eyes veiled by
+drooping lashes, as she moved slowly toward the group. She came to a
+halt directly in front of Crazy Jane.
+
+“Cross my palm with silver and I’ll read your past and your future,”
+invited the pretty Gipsy girl.
+
+Crazy Jane leaned forward regarding the Gipsy girl with keen, searching
+eyes.
+
+“Indeed I will. Yes, darlin’, you can read my future and my past. How
+much silver shall I cross your palm with?”
+
+“What you will, pretty lady.”
+
+Jane placed a shining fifty cent piece on the open palm. Something about
+the palm appeared to interest her very much. Just at this juncture, the
+Gipsy girl chanced to look up. The eyes of the two girls met. Jane
+uttered a whoop and embraced the girl in a bearlike hug.
+
+“If it isn’t my own darlin’ Harriet,” she cried. “But who would have
+thought it. Hurrah for Harriet, the Gipsy!”
+
+“Ah, daughter, she is the true Romany,” interrupted Sybarina, suddenly
+appearing behind Harriet. “None but a true daughter of Romany could have
+said those words so well.” The old woman’s eyes gleamed with pride. Then
+she exclaimed: “I see strangers coming to the camp of the Gipsy! Would
+you have them see you, or would you watch them from the wagons?”
+
+“From the wagons,” chorused the girls.
+
+“The Romany princess, she of the brown eyes, may wander at will. The
+strangers will not think her a Gorgio. She is a true Romany.”
+
+“Thank you, Sybarina, I will go with my friends. Perhaps I may come out
+later,” answered Harriet. She was dressed in Gipsy costume, and her
+face, already dark, had been slightly stained with herbs which the old
+woman had rubbed on both her face and hands.
+
+The young men and women from nearby farms began to stroll into the camp
+to have their fortunes told. With them came several keen-eyed farmers,
+leading horses which they had brought in for a chance at a trade. The
+Gipsy men quickly gathered about the animals, then began the incessant
+talk of the horse trader, the Gipsies being particularly shrewd in that
+line of business. In the meantime Sybarina and several other women of
+the tribe were reading the futures of the giggling country girls. It was
+all very interesting to the girls in the nearby wagon. They were peering
+out from the darkened interior, unseen. Never before had they
+experienced anything so romantic or so picturesque.
+
+Harriet finally wandered out into the field. She attracted attention
+only because of her slender figure and pretty face. She had no fear of
+being recognized, for no one there ever had seen her before.
+
+“Isn’t she a typical Gipsy, though?” chuckled Jane, gazing admiringly at
+Harriet.
+
+“Unless one knew she were not, one couldn’t tell the difference,”
+answered Miss Elting. “Just look at that girl for whom the queen is
+telling a fortune. See how eagerly she drinks in every word. Every word
+is true to her. She believes it all.”
+
+“So does Sybarina,” replied Hazel.
+
+“Yes, I think she does. Do you know, Jane, she told us when you arrived
+at the tent. I think it must have been at the moment when you reached
+there. I can’t imagine how she knew.”
+
+“Maybe she heard the car,” suggested Margery.
+
+“No she didn’t,” declared Jane. “I drove into the camp without making a
+sound. I wanted to give you a surprise. I wonder how she knew I was
+near.”
+
+Neither Jane nor any of her companions had thought of the big headlights
+on the car, the glint of which had flashed on the foliage of a tree near
+the gipsy camp just as Jane was swinging into the byway that led down to
+the Meadow-Brook camp. Perhaps the old gipsy’s keen eyes had caught this
+flash and read it aright. But this the girls were never to know. Their
+attention, just now, was attracted by the sound of loud talking. Voices
+were heard approaching the camp.
+
+“I guess we are going to have quite a party this evening,” said Harriet,
+stepping into the wagon. “Oh, this is simply great! What a pity we
+aren’t all made up to look like Gipsies.”
+
+“Look, girls!” exclaimed the guardian.
+
+They did look, with widening eyes.
+
+“My grathiouth, if it ithn’t thothe Tramp boyth,” breathed Tommy.
+
+“It certainly is the Tramp Club. There’s Captain Baker and Sammy and
+Dill and Davy. Where could they have come from?” wondered Hazel.
+
+“Oh, let’s go out and call to them,” suggested Margery enthusiastically.
+
+“Wait,” warned Harriet. “I have a plan that I think will work to
+perfection. If it does, we’ll have some fun with the Tramp Club this
+evening.”
+
+“What is it, darlin’?”
+
+Harriet whispered in Jane’s ear. Crazy Jane uttered a loud laugh.
+
+“Sh-h-h!” warned the guardian. “You will betray our hiding place to
+those boys.”
+
+“I must get word to Sybarina. I wish she would come over here,” mused
+Harriet.
+
+As though in answer to her wish, Sybarina rose and hobbled toward the
+wagon. She halted at the step without looking up.
+
+“The friends of the pretty ladies are here. What do the pretty ladies
+wish to do?”
+
+“Oh, Sybarina! I want to read the future for that boy yonder on the
+right, the one with the reddish hair. May I? Please let me.”
+
+“It shall be as the Romany girl wishes, but she must be grave, she must
+not make her real self known to the laughing boy.”
+
+“No, no, no! I promise not to betray my identity. But what shall I say?
+I don’t know what to say,” begged Harriet.
+
+“The words will come unbidden to the lips of the Romany girl. Fear not.
+Come.” There was a suspicion of a twinkle in the piercing black eyes as
+Sybarina stretched forth her hand to Harriet Burrell. Harriet’s heart
+thumped violently as she stepped down from the wagon. “If I get a chance
+to read George Baker’s palm I will make him stand as near to the wagon
+as possible, so you girls can hear what I say to him, but don’t you dare
+make a sound.”
+
+“Isn’t she the clever darlin’?” chuckled Crazy Jane.
+
+“Harriet is a very resourceful girl,” answered Hazel admiringly.
+
+“Yes; Harriet has added a good many honor beads to her string during
+this hike,” replied the guardian. “I think, too, that she is going to
+pay those boys the debt that we owe them.”
+
+“Listen!” commanded Jane. Sybarina was speaking.
+
+“Behold before you the Star of the East. Behold one who has come out of
+the East to read the future true. Cross her palm with silver and the
+Oracle will speak, revealing the past and foretelling the future.”
+
+The Gipsy queen had not led Harriet into the bright light. Instead the
+girl, in the fainter light at the outer edge of the circle, stood with
+downcast eyes, hands folded before her.
+
+[Illustration: “Cross My Hand With Silver.”]
+
+“Who shall be the first to hear the future and the past from the Star of
+the East?”
+
+“Say, fellows, now is the time to find out a few things,” laughed
+Captain George Baker. “Here’s where I consult the Star of the East.
+Here, young woman, read my palm. I don’t know anything about this
+fortune-telling business, and I don’t believe in it, but I’m willing to
+take a chance on it. How much does it cost to consult the stars?”
+
+“For a silver quarter I will reveal the past only. Cross my hand with a
+silver dollar and both the past and future shall be as an open book,”
+answered Harriet, speaking in a low tone, disguising her voice as much
+as possible.
+
+George uttered a low whistle.
+
+“A dollar! Whew! Isn’t that pretty high?”
+
+“The stars are higher,” was the curt reply of the Star of the East.
+
+There was an audible giggle from the interior of the nearby wagon.
+Harriet heard it, but Captain Baker was too much interested in the
+prospect of having his fortune told to give heed to the sound.
+
+“Isn’t she the clever darlin’?” reiterated Crazy Jane, restraining
+herself from shouting only by a great effort of will.
+
+“All right. Here’s your money. But, mind you, I’ll expect a lot of
+information for a dollar.”
+
+“The past and future are not measured by silver,” retorted Harriet.
+“That which is past the Oracle has revealed to me. That which is to be,
+I alone can tell. I am but the mouthpiece of the Oracle, but the Oracle
+cannot lie.”
+
+“I’m glad to be assured of hearing the truth, at any rate,” replied
+George flippantly.
+
+“Be at rest. You shall hear the truth,” promised the Star of the East
+dryly. Then taking George’s hand in hers she gravely scrutinized the
+lines of his palm.
+
+“The lines of your hand tell me many things,” she began.
+
+“Then be sure that you tell me all about them. I want my money’s worth,”
+urged the captain.
+
+“The past and future shall be fully revealed to you,” promised the
+supposed Gipsy. Captain George Baker of the Tramp Club then listened to
+a fortune that, though it did not wholly please, amazed him beyond
+measure.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX—GETTING EVEN WITH GEORGE
+
+
+“Your hand tells me that you travel not alone,” continued Harriet.
+“Other youths are with you. Together you have journeyed for many days
+along the highway.”
+
+“Well? That’s nothing. Anybody could see that,” jeered George.
+
+“If you would listen to the word of the Oracle, be silent. On your
+journey, maidens have crossed your path. They, too, are wayfarers along
+the trail. You have held out the hand of fellowship to them, but your
+friendship is false and your hearts are full of guile.”
+
+“That’s just where you’re wrong,” interrupted George. “Those girls are
+all right and we like them a lot. I’d like to know how you know so much
+about them.”
+
+“The Gipsy knows many things,” replied Harriet enigmatically. “Your hand
+reveals to her the grievous wrong you have done these trusting maidens.”
+
+“Oh, that’s not so,” contradicted George.
+
+“None can deceive the Oracle,” was the stern answer. “I see here a camp.
+The campfire burns brightly. About it sit the maidens. Look! Six youths
+approach. With them they bear a sack filled with the melons of the
+field. The maidens welcome them with smiles and pleasant words. They
+little know whence came these melons. They little know that before them
+lies the bitter fruit of lawless thievery.”
+
+“Oh, that’s putting it altogether too strong,” expostulated George. “How
+can you tell anything about where those melons came from by the lines of
+my hand?”
+
+“To the Prophet of the Oracle all things are plain,” replied the Star of
+the East. “In the early darkness of the night, ere the moon rose, the
+evildoers stole forth, and robbed the farmer of his melons.”
+
+“This is becoming too personal,” gasped George, mopping his forehead.
+
+“Word was brought to the farmer of this wicked deed and he hurried forth
+to catch the thieves,” continued Harriet. “Long did he search for them.
+Then seeing the camp of the maidens he approached, and finding them
+innocently eating his melons, he poured forth the vials of his wrath
+upon their defenseless heads. He branded them as thieves and demanded
+settlement. They crossed the farmer’s palm with much silver to pay for
+the stolen melons. They were too noble to betray the real thieves.”
+
+Captain George shifted uneasily. “That’s really too bad. I’m sorry they
+got into such a mess,” he muttered. “I wonder what they think of us.”
+
+“Their hearts are filled with shame and sorrow at the deceitfulness of
+those whom they supposed were their friends.”
+
+“But—but the boys didn’t intend to make trouble for the girls,”
+protested the captain. “They thought it would be great fun to forage for
+melons, and at the same time to give the girls a treat.”
+
+The supposed gipsy shook her head slowly.
+
+“It makes no difference what they thought. The deed is done. There is
+only one way in which the wrong can be righted.”
+
+“How can these boys square themselves with the girls?” questioned George
+eagerly.
+
+“I will consult the Oracle.” The Gipsy girl stood with head bent as
+though in deep thought. Then she said solemnly: “If the wicked boys will
+go to those whom they have so cruelly wronged and ask pardon for their
+unmanly behavior perhaps forgiveness may be theirs.”
+
+“I—I guess I’d better,” returned George earnestly. At this juncture a
+smothered giggle from the darkened Gipsy wagon came near breaking up the
+seance. He glanced up suspiciously. Harriet’s face was grave.
+
+“You have chosen wisely. Will you obey the command of the Oracle?”
+
+“Oh, ye—es. I’ll apologize. I’ll do it. It’s wonderful. I never thought
+there was so much to fortune telling.”
+
+“There is more to it than you dream,” answered Harriet Burrell, and with
+much truth on her side. There was indeed more to it than Captain George
+Baker dreamed. In the Gipsy wagon four girls and their guardian were
+making desperate efforts to control their laughter that the sounds of
+their merriment might not be heard by the young man outside.
+
+“Can you answer any question I ask you?” queried George, after thinking
+deeply.
+
+“The Oracle knows all things, if it will but speak,” answered the Gipsy
+girl, leaving an avenue of escape if he should ask her something that
+she was unable to answer.
+
+“Where are the girls now?”
+
+“They are near at hand. Would you see them?”
+
+“No, no. Not to-night,” hastily interposed Captain Baker. “What I wish
+to know is where they are.”
+
+“You would know if they have outwitted you in the race?”
+
+“Yes, yes. But how do you know what I am thinking about?”
+
+“The mouthpiece of the Oracle knows all things,” crooned the fortune
+teller. “No, they have not yet won the race. You shall see them on the
+morrow.”
+
+“Where? Tell me where?”
+
+“A short span of twelve miles hence there is a spring. The spring is
+known as Granite Spring.”
+
+“Yes, yes? Will they be there?” he asked eagerly.
+
+“No, not there,” replied the Gipsy. “But you will find them near at
+hand. Seek and you shall find, but go with humble spirit, else disaster
+may overtake you.”
+
+“Thank you, I’ll do as you say. This is wonderful. I want my friends to
+have their fortunes told by you. You are the right kind. I wonder if you
+can tell me just what these girls are going to do to get ahead of us in
+the race.”
+
+“I will consult the Oracle once more,” replied the fortune teller.
+
+It was fully two minutes before Harriet raised her head. George stood
+eagerly awaiting her answer.
+
+“The Oracle knows but will not say,” replied Harriet coldly. “The Oracle
+is ever fair and just. It will not reveal the plans of the maidens to
+their enemies. The Star of the East is weary. She cannot read the palms
+of your friends. Your way lies yonder. Your companions await you.”
+
+Captain George, very red of face, a sheepish expression in his eyes, got
+up hastily and walked over to his companions who were sitting on the
+ground awaiting him.
+
+“Come on, fellows. Let’s get out of here. This place gives me the
+creeps.”
+
+“You seemed mighty interested in what that Gipsy girl had to say. Did
+she tell you anything remarkable?” asked Dill laughingly.
+
+“Did she? I should say she did.”
+
+“Then you did better than the rest of us. That other young Gipsy woman
+didn’t tell me a single thing.”
+
+“The old Gipsy woman gave it to me red hot!” exclaimed Sam. “She told me
+some things I’d just as soon not have heard. She said I was started on
+the road to thievery. Now what do you think of that?”
+
+“That’s nothing,” replied George. “The young one told me all about it.”
+
+“About what?” questioned Davy.
+
+“That melon business.”
+
+“You don’t mean it?”
+
+“Yes, I do. She told me about the whole affair.”
+
+“Well, what do you think of that?” wondered Fred.
+
+“I didn’t think much of it.”
+
+“How do you suppose she found out about it?”
+
+“Don’t ask me,” replied George gloomily. “She said that the Oracle told
+her.”
+
+“You don’t believe such nonsense as that, do you?” asked Davy.
+
+“I don’t know what to think about it. Gipsies are queer folks. They’re
+too mysterious to suit me. I’ve got all I want of them. They know too
+much,” declared the captain. “Why, they can read one’s thoughts.”
+
+In the meantime, Harriet gleefully watched the departure of the boys
+from the camp. There was laughter in her eyes. She turned to the wagon
+where her companions were now giving expression to uncontrolled
+merriment. Few visitors remained in the camp, and these were some
+distance away.
+
+“Well, I think I have evened up matters with that young man,” declared
+Harriet. “What do you say, girls?” she asked, thrusting a laughing face
+into the wagon.
+
+“Oh, Harriet!” gasped Miss Elting. “It was the funniest thing I ever
+heard. And he believed every word of it.”
+
+“Why shouldn’t he? It was the truth. By the way, Miss Elting—I have
+collected one dollar of that four dollars and eighty cents that you paid
+for the melons,” said Harriet, extending a hand in the palm of which lay
+Captain Baker’s silver dollar.
+
+“Oh, no, no,” protested the guardian, drawing back. “I could not think
+of accepting the money.”
+
+“Why not? I can collect the whole amount in a very short time at this
+rate,” laughed Harriet.
+
+“Oh, darlin’! What a girl, what a girl!” laughed Crazy Jane.
+
+“No. You must not keep it. It does not rightfully belong to you.”
+
+“Then if you refuse to accept the money I shall give it to Sybarina.
+She’ll take it. Trust a Gipsy to take everything that is offered.”
+
+Sybarina graciously accepted the money. Her eyes shone as she hobbled
+over to Harriet Burrell and exclaimed earnestly: “I said you were the
+true Romany. Now I know it. Did I not tell you the power to foretell
+both the past and future would come to you unbidden?”
+
+“Yes,” laughed Harriet, “but I happened to know considerable about the
+Tramp Club’s affairs particularly since they visited a certain melon
+patch. Is there any danger of those boys returning to-night?”
+
+Sybarina shook her head. “They have returned to their camp.”
+
+“Where are they camping?”
+
+“On yonder hillside. Even now you can catch the glow of their campfire.
+But you shall see them again and you shall make them red of face for the
+trick which they played on you and your friends, my Romany girls. You
+would outwit them?”
+
+“We are trying to get home ahead of them.”
+
+The old woman nodded.
+
+“The way shall be made clear to you. Sybarina will tell the Romany girl
+how to defeat her rivals, to show them that the Romany tribes know the
+secret bypaths as the birds know the trail to the sunny land when the
+frost is in the air. Come, child. Come, sit by the fire, while Sybarina
+tells you that which shall make the way clear.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI—HARRIET PLANS TO OUTWIT THE TRAMP CLUB
+
+
+A long conversation was held between Harriet and the Gipsy queen, the
+latter drawing a map on the ground with a willow wand to show the girl
+the route that she was to travel after the Meadow-Brook Girls had gone
+on for another day.
+
+Harriet’s eyes were sparkling. She thought she saw a way to outwit the
+Tramp Club. Harriet was chuckling gleefully when she joined her
+companions. She declined to tell them that night, however, just what the
+Gipsy had communicated to her.
+
+“Where shall we sleep to-night?” asked Miss Elting.
+
+“Sybarina says we may have the wagon to sleep in,” answered Harriet.
+“Shall we use it?”
+
+“No. I think I prefer to sleep in the open,” answered the guardian. “It
+is not a cool night. Suppose we roll up in our blankets and sleep by the
+campfire? What do you say, girls?”
+
+“I thay yeth,” spoke up Tommy. “I’ll put my feet againtht the fire; then
+I won’t have cold feet any more.”
+
+They were sound asleep in a few moments after turning in. Even the Gipsy
+dogs that had been barking most of the evening, and the crying babies,
+to whom none of the tribe had given the slightest heed, were now quietly
+asleep. Sybarina watched her guests roll up in their blankets and nodded
+approvingly.
+
+“The true Romany,” she muttered. For a long time the old woman sat by
+the fire, sat until the embers fell together and the sticks began to
+blacken, when she rose and peered into each sleeping face of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls. Sybarina then hobbled to her own wagon and
+disappeared within.
+
+The Meadow-Brook Girls awakened next morning with the sun in their eyes.
+Miss Elting sat up and called softly to Harriet. The guardian and
+Harriet rubbed their eyes and blinked dazedly about them. There was
+something strange about their surroundings, but just what that
+strangeness was they for the moment did not know. All at once they
+discovered what had happened. They were absolutely alone, save for their
+sleeping companions.
+
+“Why, they’ve gone!” cried Harriet.
+
+“Gone and we never woke up,” laughed Miss Elting. “How strange.”
+
+“Who hath gone?” mumbled Tommy, sitting up.
+
+“The Gipsies,” answered Harriet.
+
+“They must have left in a great hurry, for some reason,” suggested the
+guardian. “I don’t understand it. Nor do I understand how they managed
+to slip away so quietly.”
+
+The wagon tracks were plainly outlined in the soft earth and the
+remnants of the campfire were there, but that was all. Yet it was not
+all. As Harriet sought to draw on her shoe she felt something hard in
+the toe. Groping in the shoe with her fingers she drew forth a tightly
+wrapped paper. Opening this she found a tiny brass triangle. On it were
+crudely cut several strange characters.
+
+“How curious,” breathed Harriet. “But how did it get in my shoe?” she
+wondered.
+
+“Look on the wrapping paper,” suggested Miss Elting.
+
+Harriet did so. As she looked the puzzled expression on her face gave
+place to a smile.
+
+“It is from Sybarina,” she exclaimed. “This is what she writes: ‘A charm
+for the Romany girl. No harm shall come to her who wears it. Happiness
+and prosperity shall be hers forever and always. It is the Gipsy good
+luck charm. Who knows but that, some day, you may wear it as a queen?
+Farewell until we meet again.’”
+
+“How strange!” murmured Harriet, holding up the trinket that her
+companions might see.
+
+“I wonder if it ith a charm againtht bullth?” piped Tommy.
+
+“I would suggest, girls, that we return to our own camp. It may not be
+there by this time.”
+
+Upon reaching their own camp they were much relieved to find everything
+as it should be. Nothing had been disturbed. But, ere they had finished
+their breakfast, three farmers came striding in to know if anything had
+been seen of the Gipsies.
+
+“They left early this morning,” answered Miss Elting. “Why?”
+
+“Wal, nothing only one of them traded off on me a ring-boned, spavined
+old hoss, which he said was sound. I’ll catch them when they come this
+way again.”
+
+“I think I understand why the Gipsies took such an early departure,”
+said Harriet after the men had gone. “But I do not believe Sybarina had
+anything to do with such dishonest dealing.”
+
+The day’s route was laid out after breakfast. The boys undoubtedly had
+gone on, for nothing was to be seen of their campfire. Miss Elting
+rather thought they would see no more of the Tramp Club after the
+fortune-telling that Harriet had given the chief the night before. But
+with the route that Sybarina had laid out for the girls, the guardian
+believed they could make some time and gain the advantage over the boys.
+
+Camp was hurriedly struck after breakfast. Their route that day lay
+across lots and their camping place was to be on the edge of a forest
+easily accessible to Jane with her motor car. Using government maps, as
+they were doing, they were able to locate every little rise of ground,
+every hollow and almost every clump of bushes along their way. These
+government maps Miss Elting had purchased at a comparatively small cost,
+as any one may do. They are very useful to one who is taking a tramp
+through the country, and the Meadow-Brook Girls found them so.
+
+Jane accompanied her companions out to the highway and followed along
+behind them in her car for the first mile. Then their ways parted, the
+tramping girls to climb a hill, Crazy Jane to follow the highway on to
+the point where she too was to leave the road and make camp for them.
+But there was always a long wait for Jane, so the girl occupied the time
+in driving to the nearest village to make a number of purchases at the
+stores.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII—A COMBIETTA CONCERT
+
+
+Her shopping done Jane lost no time in cranking up her car, hopped in
+and with a wave of her hand swung down the road and went honking through
+the village on the way to the place chosen for the Meadow-Brook Girls’
+camp for that night. Jane had avoided all questions about herself and
+her party, except to say that they were camping. The girl did not
+propose to leave a trail for the Tramp Club if she could avoid it. As
+the girls were nearing the end of their journey it behooved them to
+cloak their movements with secrecy if they hoped to outwit their young
+rivals and win the race, which they were determined to do.
+
+Jane had pitched the tent just within the edge of the woods and had
+started a small cook-fire when the welcome “hoo-e-e-e” of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls first reached her ears. She ran out into the open
+waving her apron and shouting a welcome.
+
+“There she is,” cried Margery.
+
+“Dear old Jane!” exclaimed Hazel. “She has gotten everything ready for
+us and started a fire.”
+
+“I propose three cheers for Jane McCarthy,” cried Harriet. The cheers
+were given in the shrillest tones of the Meadow-Brook Girls. Jane bowed
+in exaggerated fashion at this ovation.
+
+“Have you seen the boys to-day, Jane?” was Harriet’s first question.
+
+“Not a sign of them, the rascals,” replied Jane.
+
+“I imagine that they are at Granite Spring, half a dozen miles back,”
+laughed Harriet.
+
+“What makes you think so?” asked Hazel.
+
+“Because, when I read Captain Baker’s fortune, I told him that our next
+camping place was to be not far from that place. He will make straight
+for Granite Spring, you see if he doesn’t.”
+
+“Then I don’t think we’ll see the lads again this trip,” concluded Jane.
+“But, girls, you’ve got to get busy if you hope to win this contest.
+Three more days of hiking will bring you to Meadow-Brook. If the boys
+once get ahead of you, you can’t expect to catch up with them and win in
+that length of time.”
+
+“We simply must win, Jane,” returned Harriet determinedly.
+
+“Then you’d better begin to think about how you’re going to do it,”
+advised Jane dryly.
+
+“Jane is right,” agreed the guardian. “We must plan to-night. And I
+think we shall have to put in one big day’s walk, perhaps more than
+that. I should first like to know where the boys are. Jane, will you
+make an effort to locate them to-morrow?”
+
+“Yes, indeed, Miss Elting.”
+
+“When we have definite information on that point we ought to be able to
+map out a plan of campaign that will win the contest for us. I believe
+we have gotten ahead of them now and that we shall be able to keep our
+lead.”
+
+“Of course we are going to win,” reiterated Harriet Burrell.
+
+“If it is all settled that we are to win the race, I propose that we
+celebrate to-night,” suggested Jane.
+
+“How?” asked Margery.
+
+“I’ve got a bag of fruit in the car. We’ll make fruit lemonade, then
+we’ll have a combietta concert.”
+
+“What ith a combietta conthert?” interrupted Tommy curiously.
+
+“Wait and see,” teased Jane.
+
+“Now, Jane, be good and tell us about this combietta affair?” coaxed
+Hazel. “What is it?”
+
+“An instrumental concert,” giggled Jane. “I got the musical instruments
+when I was in town doing some shopping. Oh, don’t worry, darlin’s. You
+all know to play them. The first thing to do is to decide upon the tune.
+How about the ‘Marching Through Georgia’ for a starter?”
+
+Jane spread out six squares of thin white paper. She then produced the
+same number of small packages.
+
+“Oh, we’ll wake the squirrels and the chipmunks and the weasles,”
+promised Jane, with a grin of anticipation.
+
+Tommy picked at the wrapping on the end of one of the small packages and
+uttered an exclamation of disappointment.
+
+“It ithn’t a musical inthrument at all,” she declared indignantly. “It
+ith nothing but a common old black comb.”
+
+“That’s just where you’re wrong,” answered Jane. “These combs are new. I
+bought them in the village store this very day. Listen, dears. This is
+the combietta. It makes music through its teeth, and plays any tune you
+call for.”
+
+“Wonderful,” laughed Miss Elting. “There is something very familiar
+about this marvelous musical instrument. Combietta, do you call it,
+Jane?”
+
+“Sure I do. But the name is my own invention. The music is as old as the
+combs themselves and I don’t know how old they are.”
+
+“I remember having made music with combs when I was a girl in short
+frocks,” nodded the guardian. “Play, Jane, and show the girls how to
+make music.”
+
+Crazy Jane folded one of the square slips of paper over the teeth of one
+of the combs, then placed the comb’s teeth between her own.
+
+“Zu—zu—zu-zee-zee-zah,” she breathed through paper and comb, which
+strange sounds were instantly interpreted by Jane’s companions, as “Come
+Back to Erin.”
+
+Each girl with a cry of delight, now snatched up a comb, wrapped it in
+the thin paper and joined enthusiastically in the chorus of “Come Back
+to Erin.” Tommy Thompson, fully as delighted as her companions, leaned
+against a tree making hideous noises on her comb; Miss Elting, sitting
+on a stump, eyes fixed on the foliage far above her, was an enthusiastic
+performer in the combietta concert.
+
+“Now, ‘Marching Through Georgia,’” she cried.
+
+“I can’t play fast enough to play that,” complained Buster.
+
+“Then play anything you like,” answered Harriet, with a merry laugh.
+
+“Yes. Make a noise. You don’t all have to play the same tune. This is a
+celebration,” shouted Jane. “What we want is noise and lots of it to
+celebrate the victory we are going to win.”
+
+And noise there was, a perfect pandemonium of sounds, principally
+inharmonious.
+
+A sudden, startling chorus of yells and a burst of music from the
+forest, brought the girls’ concert to a sudden stop. Lights flashed from
+the bushes near at hand, whirling about them in giddy circles like great
+pinwheels. The Meadow-Brook Girls were surrounded by wildly yelling
+figures, strange flaring lights—and music.
+
+“Indianth!” screamed Tommy. “We’ll all be thcalped. Oh, thave me!” Then
+the little lisping girl ran like a frightened deer, for the protection
+of the Meadow-Brook Girls’ tent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII—THE HARMONICA SERENADE
+
+
+“Oh, what is it?” wailed Margery.
+
+No one was able to answer the question for the moment. It was a
+startling interruption. Even Harriet, though unafraid, could not make up
+her mind what was the meaning of the outbreak.
+
+Now she saw what the lights were. They were flaring torches made from
+cat-tails. Then all at once she recalled that the Tramp Club boys played
+harmonicas. She had heard them play once before.
+
+“Don’t be afraid, girls. It is the boys,” said Harriet in a relieved
+tone.
+
+“The boys?” questioned Miss Elting. Then her face lighted up
+understandingly. “Oh the rascals!” she exclaimed.
+
+The girls now that they knew no danger threatened them stood perfectly
+still, waiting for the concert to come to an end.
+
+“You may come in, boys, when you have finished your concert,” called the
+guardian. “We have enjoyed the serenade very much.”
+
+The music and shouting ceased abruptly. A moment later Captain Baker
+stepped into the camp. His face was flushed, but there was a certain
+sheepishness about him that made Harriet Burrell’s eyes twinkle.
+
+“Why, Captain! We did not look for you this evening,” greeted Miss
+Elting.
+
+“Thought you had given us the slip, did you?” grinned George. “You’ll
+have to get up earlier in the morning, to do that.”
+
+“Oh, won’t you though!” chorused his companions trooping in after their
+captain.
+
+“But how did you find us?” questioned Harriet.
+
+“Easiest thing in the world. We followed Miss McCarthy’s car tracks.”
+
+“Where to?” twinkled Jane.
+
+“All over the country. You surely led us a fine chase. But we found you,
+just the same.”
+
+Tommy now ventured from the tent.
+
+“Thay, you nearly thcared me to death,” she chided. “What do you boyth
+want?”
+
+“Why, Tommy, they came to serenade us,” reproved Miss Elting. “We
+enjoyed the music very much,” she said, turning toward the boys. “If you
+will sit down and play another selection, we will serve refreshments
+afterwards. Jane! Will you get the things ready?”
+
+“Yes. But the boys don’t deserve it. However, so long as we are going to
+win the race we can afford to treat them well,” teased Jane.
+
+The captain smiled a superior smile.
+
+“We could have gone right on to the end of the route to-day without
+stopping, if we had wished to do so. But we didn’t want to take an
+unfair advantage of you.”
+
+“Oh, no. You boys never do take an unfair advantage, do you?” chuckled
+Crazy Jane. Miss Elting gave her a warning glance. The captain did not
+observe it.
+
+“Give them another tune, boys,” George ordered.
+
+“First please extinguish those cat-tail torches,” requested Harriet.
+“You will set the woods on fire, if you are not careful. Everything is
+so dry now that a fire would start very easily.”
+
+The torches were ground out under foot, after which the Tramp Club
+played “Home Sweet Home” on the harmonicas. At a nod from the guardian
+the girls got out their combs and joined in the tune. The woodland
+inhabitants probably never had heard a concert like this. It sent the
+birds hopping from limb to limb in great alarm. Fortunately there were
+no neighbors near at hand, so only the inhabitants of the forest were
+disturbed.
+
+Jane that day had purchased a large chocolate cake at a baker shop in
+the village. She brought this out then disappeared into the tent,
+emerging a few minutes later with a pail of fruit lemonade, while Hazel,
+who had accompanied Jane, followed her, bearing cups and glasses. Miss
+Elting busied herself with cutting the cake and Harriet served the
+lemonade.
+
+“Well, boys, here’s to the candy we’re going to have when we get to our
+journey’s end,” teased Jane McCarthy, raising her glass of lemonade.
+
+“And here,” returned the captain, raising his glass with a flourish, “is
+to those beautiful handkerchiefs that we’re going to wear next to our
+hearts for years and years to come.”
+
+“To the stars that hold our future,” teased Harriet.
+
+The captain paused with the glass of lemonade in his hand. He glanced
+quickly at Harriet Burrell, but the innocent expression on her face told
+him nothing. Miss Elting saw that George had something on his mind. She
+suspected what it was. An amused smile played about the corners of the
+guardian’s mouth. There was a smile in Harriet’s eyes, too, as she
+caught and read the thought in the mind of Miss Elting.
+
+After the cake and lemonade had been disposed of, the party of young
+people chatted for the better part of an hour. Captain Baker, however,
+appeared uneasy. Twice he essayed to speak then checked himself
+abruptly.
+
+“It’s coming now,” whispered Harriet. “He’s trying to think of a way to
+begin.”
+
+Miss Elting nodded.
+
+“I have a confession to make,” began the captain, in an embarrassed
+manner.
+
+“A confession!” exclaimed Harriet in a surprised tone.
+
+“Yes, I have. Oh, it isn’t for myself alone, but for my friends as
+well,” continued the captain doggedly. The other boys exhibited signs of
+uneasiness.
+
+“What about, Mr. Baker?” asked the guardian sweetly.
+
+“It is about those melons.”
+
+“But, my dear boy, you need not apologize for them. They were simply
+delicious. I can’t tell you how much we enjoyed them.” Miss Elting was
+making it as hard for George as possible.
+
+“It—it isn’t that. Oh, what’s the use? I don’t know how to say it. We
+hadn’t any right to give you those melons, Miss Elting.”
+
+“No right? Please explain yourself, Mr. Baker.”
+
+“I’ll tell you all about it. We took those melons from the farmer’s
+field without leave. We didn’t mean to play a mean trick on you, but we
+did. We didn’t think the farmer would accuse you girls of stealing the
+melons. We’re awfully sorry he made such a fuss about it and that you
+had to pay for them. Will you please let us return to you the money that
+you paid him. It was our treat, you know.”
+
+“Hm-m-m! This is a serious matter,” replied the guardian slowly. The
+girls sat with lowered heads so that the boys might not discover the
+laughter in their eyes. “I cannot accept the money for the melons. We
+had better consider the incident closed. It is very manly of you,
+however, to come and tell us about it. But what induced you to do so?”
+
+“I gueth hith conthcience troubled him,” suggested Tommy wisely.
+
+“Yes, I think so. But there was something else,” admitted the boy. “It
+wasn’t wholly conscience. We didn’t realize how very wrong it was
+until——”
+
+“Until the Oracle told you,” nodded Tommy.
+
+“What!” exclaimed George. The eyes of the Tramp Club were fixed on
+Tommy. “What do you mean by that?”
+
+Harriet got up and with crossed hands before her, chin lowered, eyelids
+half veiling her eyes, moved demurely toward the captain.
+
+“Cross my palm with silver and the past and future shall be revealed to
+you,” she mumbled.
+
+George Baker gazed at her, with suspicious, puzzled eyes. All at once he
+sprang up.
+
+“I know you now! I knew I had seen you before, but I couldn’t place you.
+You were the Star of the East!”
+
+“Yes,” admitted Harriet.
+
+“And thhe told your fortune,” chuckled Tommy.
+
+Margery and Hazel giggled. Crazy Jane exclaimed derisively:
+
+“Oh, boys, boys! That’s the time you got your desserts! We paid you back
+with interest!”
+
+“It was a mean trick,” flared George. “We never would have thought it of
+you. It was the meanest trick I ever heard of. I’m sorry I made a fool
+of myself by coming here and apologizing to you.”
+
+“Mr. Baker, don’t lose your temper,” begged Miss Elting, scarcely able
+to control her voice for laughter. “We have evened our score so let’s
+shake hands and be friends.”
+
+“No, thank you. I’m sorry to refuse, but you have made fools of us,”
+retorted George angrily.
+
+“Oh, no. That ith not pothible,” piped Tommy.
+
+“Come on, fellows. We will get out of here before they make us angry,”
+urged Captain Baker, snatching up his hat and starting away.
+
+“Please wait,” begged Miss Elting.
+
+George shook his head.
+
+“What about our compact?” called Harriet.
+
+“We’re going on and win the race. We’ll show you that you aren’t such
+athletes as you think. At least you shan’t make fools of us at that.
+Good night.”
+
+Captain Baker and his friends strode angrily from the camp. They did not
+so much as look back. Perhaps the boys were really not so angry as they
+pretended to be.
+
+“It’s too bad. I didn’t think they would take it that way,” cried
+Harriet. “I surely thought they would be able to take a joke. Well,
+what’s done can’t be undone. There’s nothing more to be done except to
+go on and try to win the race.”
+
+Jane had disappeared. Where she had gone the girls did not know. It was
+some time before she returned and when she did she was excited. Her hair
+was awry and her face flushed.
+
+“Jane, where have you been?” demanded the guardian.
+
+“I’ve been scouting. Girls, those miserable boys are planning to play
+another trick on you. They’re going to start to-night and go on without
+stopping until they get home. What shall we do?”
+
+The girls gazed solemnly into each other’s eyes.
+
+“That seems to settle it,” spoke up Margery finally. “Well, let them
+have the race. Who cares?”
+
+“We all care,” answered Harriet, springing to her feet. “We simply must
+win that race now. Everybody will laugh at us if we don’t, and I just
+couldn’t stand it to see those boys grinning triumphantly at us
+afterwards. I don’t care so much about the others.”
+
+“What would you suggest, Harriet?” inquired Miss Elting.
+
+“Suggest? Why, there is only one thing to suggest. Checkmate them at
+their own game. We’ll start for Meadow-Brook this very night and we’ll
+keep going until we get there. Are you with me, girls?”
+
+“Yes!” shouted the girls.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV—CONCLUSION
+
+
+“Not quite so fast, girls,” warned Miss Elting.
+
+They turned toward her questioningly. Their eyes were sparkling, their
+faces flushed.
+
+“What would you suggest, Miss Elting?” asked Harriet.
+
+“Remember, that, if we take the route suggested by the Gipsy, we shall
+have to travel some of the roughest country in the state. Are you equal
+to the hike?”
+
+“Yes!”
+
+“We shall have to walk all night and a good part of the day to-morrow,
+and even then the boys may win the contest. Are you willing to try it?”
+
+“Yes!”
+
+“Then we will make our plans and get started. According to my
+calculations, it will be a twenty mile hike to Meadow-Brook by the way
+we propose to go. The boys will have a good ten miles further to travel
+if they go by way of the road. But having better going they will
+naturally travel much faster than we. Listen! We must travel light, with
+nothing in our packs except just sufficient food to carry us through.
+Jane, you will have to spend the night at the nearest farm house and
+come back for the tent and supplies in the morning. I hardly believe any
+one will disturb them over night. You must go at once or the people of
+the house will have retired. Go quietly.”
+
+Ten minutes later Jane was on her way to the farm house in her car,
+undetected by the members of the Tramp Club.
+
+“Now we will get ready at once. Let us be certain that none of the boys
+are watching. I would suggest that you girls lie down for an hour or so,
+while Harriet and myself get the packs together.”
+
+Hazel obediently led the way into the tent, Margery and Tommy following.
+
+“I can’t thleep. I’m too exthited,” protested Tommy. She and her
+companions did sleep however. They were allowed to rest for two hours.
+When they awakened Harriet informed them that the Tramp Club already had
+started. Half an hour later the girls themselves had taken the trail to
+Meadow-Brook.
+
+The Pathfinders made straight for a blue range of mountains that stood
+out dark and forbidding in the bright moonlight. The girls were full of
+enthusiasm, and would have walked much faster had not their guardian
+insisted on their saving their strength for the more difficult traveling
+after they reached the hills.
+
+It was three o’clock in the morning when finally they dropped down a
+sharp incline into the gloomy depths of a rocky canyon. A trickling
+stream flowed through the canyon and the walls stood high on either
+side, rising sheer for a hundred feet.
+
+“You will have to wade, girls. But I think we are all sufficiently
+hardened so that we shall not suffer more than temporary discomfort from
+getting our feet wet,” said the guardian, with an encouraging smile.
+
+The girls plunged into the brook without hesitation. The water was only
+ankle deep, but the stones on the bottom of the creek were moss-covered
+and slippery. Still, they made good progress, really traveling faster
+than before they had entered the canyon.
+
+At daylight Miss Elting called a halt. She had chosen a place where a
+dry shelf of rock offered a resting place. The girls threw themselves
+down flat on their backs. There was no wood with which to build a fire,
+but Miss Elting produced a small alcohol stove from her pack and made
+coffee. This with biscuits they had brought proved very refreshing. The
+guardian did not permit them to remain on the shelf of rock for a long
+time, fearing that their muscles might become stiffened. Then the
+journey was taken up again. So full of enthusiasm and determination were
+the Meadow-Brook Girls that not one of them offered a word of complaint;
+but when at two o’clock that afternoon, they emerged from the canyon
+into the open country, Tommy and Margery were limping a little.
+
+Beyond in the haze of a distant valley lay Meadow-Brook. The girls eager
+to get to their journey’s end pushed on again. After half an hour’s
+walking, Miss Elting called a halt. She shaded her eyes and gazed off to
+the west. A thin brown line was crawling slowly along the road.
+
+“It’s the boys!” cried Harriet.
+
+“They’re going to win,” groaned Margery.
+
+“They are not. We must run for it.”
+
+“Yes,” agreed Miss Elting. “But don’t get excited. Keep your lips
+tightly closed. Breathe through your nostrils and keep your shoulders
+well back. Don’t keep yourselves rigid, but just trudge along with every
+muscle relaxed. They don’t see us. Ready! Go!”
+
+The girls crossed the field at a trot. It was a good two miles to the
+village. They ran slowly, but steadily. At the end of a mile the
+guardian again ordered a halt, directing the girls to lie down in the
+field flat on their backs. A few moments later they were up and off
+again. They saw the boys a long distance to the rear, still trudging
+doggedly along. And half an hour later the girls stepped from the field
+out into the road. They heard the chug of a motor car. It swept on and
+overtook them. It was Jane. She was howling like a wild Indian.
+
+“They’re coming! They’re coming. Run for it!” she yelled.
+
+By this time the boys had discovered the girls. They, too, began to run.
+The race was on in earnest. Never had those girls run and stumbled and
+lurched along as they did that afternoon. The boys gained slowly. The
+girls were nearing home. Jane was leading the procession, standing up in
+her car, steering as she stood, setting the pace for the Meadow-Brook
+Girls. She was shouting and yelling to keep up their courage, but it was
+an almost killing pace that she was making for them.
+
+The girls staggered over the line that marked the village limits.
+
+“Home!” cried Miss Elting.
+
+“We’ve won!” screamed Jane almost beside herself with joy.
+
+The girls walked unsteadily to one side of the road and sat down
+gasping. They had won the race, but by a slender margin. The boys were
+still forging ahead, running at top speed. They had thrown away their
+packs and were racing into the village in light order. Five minutes
+later a crowd of weary, humiliated boys came hurrying up to where the
+girls sat. They were much more fatigued than were their opponents,
+besides which, they were chagrined beyond words.
+
+“Did we win?” jeered Jane triumphantly.
+
+“Yes. You won,” admitted Captain Baker sourly. “I take off my hat to
+you.” He suited the action to the word. “You beat us at our own game. I
+don’t know how you did it, but you did and that’s all there is about it,
+and we aren’t going to whine. We’ll take our medicine. We’re going to
+stay in town the rest of the day, and we’ll see you later on. Good-bye
+until to-night.”
+
+The girls’ weariness left them almost magically. They hopped into Jane’s
+car and were swiftly whirled home. Later in the afternoon a box of
+marshmallows for each of the girls was delivered to Miss Elting. But the
+fun was not yet ended.
+
+That night the Tramp Club and the Meadow-Brook Girls were the guests of
+Tommy Thompson’s father and mother at dinner. Tommy’s parents, as well
+as the parents of the other girls, were delighted with the splendid
+physical condition of their daughters. Before each girl’s plate at the
+table that stretched the length of the big dining room, was a box of
+marshmallows, before each boy’s plate a handkerchief.
+
+The marshmallow boxes were tied with pink ribbon, the color chosen by
+the Meadow-Brook Girls for their organization.
+
+“On Hallowe’en,” declared Dill Dodd solemnly, “you shall hear from the
+tramps again, and the message will have a bearing on the question of
+melons.”
+
+Nor did Baker’s Tramp Club forget. Surely enough, on Hallowe’en Harriet
+received for herself and her friends two great, ripe, luscious
+watermelons with a most cordially worded note from the boys.
+
+“We must see to it that the Tramp Club never do anything like this
+again,” said Miss Elting, as she and the Meadow-Brook Girls cut up and
+enjoyed the watermelons. “At this season of the year fruit of this kind
+comes only from hot houses and is very expensive. The boys, to show
+their contrition, have mortgaged their pocket money, I fear.”
+
+Soon after their return the Meadow-Brook Girls entered upon the duties
+and pleasures of the new school year. We may be assured also that at the
+proper time, Miss Elting would see to it that the beads which the girls
+had won by their deeds of daring and other achievements during their
+recent trip, would be awarded. But we shall hear from them again.
+
+They had ahead of them many happy days of outdoor life and adventure, as
+will be learned in the next volume of this series, which is published
+under the title, “The Meadow-Brook Girls Afloat; Or, The Stormy Cruise
+of the Red Rover.”
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+ HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY’S CATALOGUE OF
+ The Best and Least Expensive
+ Books for Real Boys and Girls
+
+Really good and new stories for boys and girls are not plentiful. Many
+stories, too, are so highly improbable as to bring a grin of derision to
+the young reader’s face before he has gone far. The name of ALTEMUS is a
+distinctive brand on the cover of a book, always ensuring the buyer of
+having a book that is up-to-date and fine throughout. No buyer of an
+ALTEMUS book is ever disappointed.
+
+Many are the claims made as to the inexpensiveness of books. Go into any
+bookstore and ask for an Altemus book. Compare the price charged you for
+Altemus books with the price demanded for other juvenile books. You will
+at once discover that a given outlay of money will buy more of the
+ALTEMUS books than of those published by other houses.
+
+ Every dealer in books carries the ALTEMUS books.
+
+ Sold by all booksellers or sent postpaid on receipt of price
+
+ Henry Altemus Company
+ 507-513 Cherry Street, Philadelphia
+
+
+ The Motor Boat Club Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The keynote of these books is manliness. The stories are wonderfully
+entertaining, and they are at the same time sound and wholesome. No boy
+will willingly lay down an unfinished book in this series.
+
+ 1 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB OF THE KENNEBEC; Or,
+ The Secret of Smugglers’ Island.
+ 2 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB AT NANTUCKET; Or,
+ The Mystery of the Dunstan Heir.
+ 3 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB OFF LONG ISLAND; Or,
+ A Daring Marine Game at Racing Speed.
+ 4 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB AND THE WIRELESS; Or,
+ The Dot, Dash and Dare Cruise.
+ 5 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB IN FLORIDA; Or,
+ Laying the Ghost of Alligator Swamp.
+ 6 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB AT THE GOLDEN GATE; Or,
+ A Thrilling Capture in the Great Fog.
+ 7 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB ON THE GREAT LAKES; Or,
+ The Flying Dutchman of the Big Fresh Water.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Range and Grange Hustlers
+
+ By FRANK GEE PATCHIN
+
+Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life on great
+ranches in the West? Any bright boy will “devour” the books of this
+series, once he has made a start with the first volume.
+
+ 1 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS ON THE RANCH; Or,
+ The Boy Shepherds of the Great Divide.
+ 2 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS’ GREATEST ROUND-UP; Or,
+ Pitting Their Wits Against a Packers’ Combine.
+ 3 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS ON THE PLAINS; Or,
+ Following the Steam Plows Across the Prairie.
+ 4 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS AT CHICAGO; Or,
+ The Conspiracy of the Wheat Pit.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Submarine Boys Series
+
+ By VICTOR G. DURHAM
+
+These splendid books for boys and girls deal with life aboard submarine
+torpedo boats, and with the adventures of the young crew, and possess,
+in addition to the author’s surpassing knack of storytelling, a great
+educational value for all young readers.
+
+ 1 THE SUBMARINE BOYS ON DUTY; Or,
+ Life on a Diving Torpedo Boat.
+ 2 THE SUBMARINE BOYS’ TRIAL TRIP; Or,
+ “Making Good” as Young Experts.
+ 3 THE SUBMARINE BOYS AND THE MIDDIES; Or,
+ The Prize Detail at Annapolis.
+ 4 THE SUBMARINE BOYS AND THE SPIES; Or,
+ Dodging the Sharks of the Deep.
+ 5 THE SUBMARINE BOYS’ LIGHTNING CRUISE; Or,
+ The Young Kings of the Deep.
+ 6 THE SUBMARINE BOYS FOR THE FLAG; Or,
+ Deeding Their Lives to Uncle Sam.
+ 7 THE SUBMARINE BOYS AND THE SMUGGLERS; Or,
+ Breaking Up the New Jersey Customs Frauds.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Square Dollar Boys Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The reading boy will be a voter within a few years; these books are
+bound to make him think, and when he casts his vote he will do it more
+intelligently for having read these volumes.
+
+ 1 THE SQUARE DOLLAR BOYS WAKE UP; Or,
+ Fighting the Trolley Franchise Steal.
+ 2 THE SQUARE DOLLAR BOYS SMASH THE RING; Or,
+ In the Lists Against the Crooked Land Deal.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Ben Lightbody Series
+
+ By WALTER BENHAM
+
+ 1 BEN LIGHTBODY, SPECIAL; Or,
+ Seizing His First Chance to Make Good.
+ 2 BEN LIGHTBODY’S BIGGEST PUZZLE; Or,
+ Running the Double Ghost to Earth.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Pony Rider Boys Series
+
+ By FRANK GEE PATCHIN
+
+These tales may be aptly described as those of a new Cooper. In every
+sense they belong to the best class of books for boys and girls.
+
+ 1 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE ROCKIES; Or,
+ The Secret of the Lost Claim.
+ 2 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN TEXAS; Or,
+ The Veiled Riddle of the Plains.
+ 3 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN MONTANA; Or,
+ The Mystery of the Old Custer Trail.
+ 4 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE OZARKS; Or,
+ The Secret of Ruby Mountain.
+ 5 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE ALKALI; Or,
+ Finding a Key to the Desert Maze.
+ 6 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN NEW MEXICO; Or,
+ The End of the Silver Trail.
+ 7 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE GRAND CANYON; Or,
+ The Mystery of Bright Angel Gulch.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Boys of Steel Series
+
+ By JAMES R. MEARS
+
+The author has made of these volumes a series of romances with scenes
+laid in the iron and steel world. Each book presents a vivid picture of
+some phase of this great industry. The information given is exact and
+truthful; above all, each story is full of adventure and fascination.
+
+ 1 THE IRON BOYS IN THE MINES; Or,
+ Starting at the Bottom of the Shaft.
+ 2 THE IRON BOYS AS FOREMEN; Or,
+ Heading the Diamond Drill Shift.
+ 3 THE IRON BOYS ON THE ORE BOATS; Or,
+ Roughing It on the Great Lakes.
+ 4 THE IRON BOYS IN THE STEEL MILLS; Or,
+ Beginning Anew in the Cinder Pits.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ West Point Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The principal characters in these narratives are manly, young Americans
+whose doings will inspire all boy readers.
+
+ 1 DICK PRESCOTT’S FIRST YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Two Chums in the Cadet Gray.
+ 2 DICK PRESCOTT’S SECOND YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Finding the Glory of the Soldier’s Life.
+ 3 DICK PRESCOTT’S THIRD YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Standing Firm for Flag and Honor.
+ 4 DICK PRESCOTT’S FOURTH YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Ready to Drop the Gray for Shoulder Straps.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Annapolis Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The Spirit of the new Navy is delightfully and truthfully depicted in
+these volumes.
+
+ 1 DAVE DARRIN’S FIRST YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Two Plebe Midshipmen at the U. S. Naval Academy.
+ 2 DAVE DARRIN’S SECOND YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Two Midshipmen as Naval Academy “Youngsters.”
+ 3 DAVE DARRIN’S THIRD YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Leaders of the Second Class Midshipmen.
+ 4 DAVE DARRIN’S FOURTH YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Headed for Graduation and the Big Cruise.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Young Engineers Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The heroes of these stories are known to readers of the High School Boys
+Series. In this new series Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton prove worthy of
+all the traditions of Dick & Co.
+
+ 1 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN COLORADO; Or,
+ At Railroad Building in Earnest.
+ 2 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN ARIZONA; Or,
+ Laying Tracks on the “Man-Killer” Quicksand.
+ 3 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN NEVADA; Or,
+ Seeking Fortune on the Turn of a Pick.
+ 4 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN MEXICO; Or,
+ Fighting the Mine Swindlers.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Boys of the Army Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+These books breathe the life and spirit of the United States Army of
+to-day, and the life, just as it is, is described by a master pen.
+
+ 1 UNCLE SAM’S BOYS IN THE RANKS; Or,
+ Two Recruits in the United States Army.
+ 2 UNCLE SAM’S BOYS ON FIELD DUTY; Or,
+ Winning Corporal’s Chevrons.
+ 3 UNCLE SAM’S BOYS AS SERGEANTS; Or,
+ Handling Their First Real Commands.
+ 4 UNCLE SAM’S BOYS IN THE PHILIPPINES; Or,
+ Following the Flag Against the Moros.
+
+ (Other volumes to follow rapidly.)
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Battleship Boys Series
+
+ By FRANK GEE PATCHIN
+
+These stories throb with the life of young Americans on to-day’s huge
+drab Dreadnaughts.
+
+ 1 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS AT SEA; Or,
+ Two Apprentices in Uncle Sam’s Navy.
+ 2 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS FIRST STEP UPWARD; Or,
+ Winning Their Grades as Petty Officers.
+ 3 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS IN FOREIGN SERVICE; Or,
+ Earning New Ratings in European Seas.
+ 4 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS IN THE TROPICS; Or,
+ Upholding the American Flag in a Honduras Revolution.
+
+(Other volumes to follow rapidly.)
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Meadow-Brook Girls Series
+
+ By JANET ALDRIDGE
+
+Real live stories pulsing with the vibrant atmosphere of outdoor life.
+
+ 1 THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS UNDER CANVAS; Or,
+ Fun and Frolic in the Summer Camp.
+ 2 THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY; Or,
+ The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike.
+ 3 THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS AFLOAT; Or,
+ The Stormy Cruise of the Red Rover.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ High School Boys Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+In this series of bright, crisp books a new note has been struck.
+
+Boys of every age under sixty will be interested in these fascinating
+volumes.
+
+ 1 THE HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMEN; Or,
+ Dick & Co.’s First Year Pranks and Sports.
+ 2 THE HIGH SCHOOL PITCHER; Or,
+ Dick & Co. on the Gridley Diamond.
+ 3 THE HIGH SCHOOL LEFT END; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Grilling on the Football Gridiron.
+ 4 THE HIGH SCHOOL CAPTAIN OF THE TEAM; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Leading the Athletic Vanguard.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Grammar School Boys Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+This series of stories, based on the actual doings of grammar school
+boys, comes near to the heart of the average American boy.
+
+ 1 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS OF GRIDLEY; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Start Things Moving.
+ 2 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS SNOWBOUND; Or,
+ Dick & Co. at Winter Sports.
+ 3 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS IN THE WOODS; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Trail Fun and Knowledge.
+ 4 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS IN SUMMER ATHLETICS; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Make Their Fame Secure.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ High School Boys’ Vacation Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+“Give us more Dick Prescott books!”
+
+This has been the burden of the cry from young readers of the country
+over. Almost numberless letters have been received by the publishers,
+making this eager demand; for Dick Prescott, Dave Darrin, Tom Reade, and
+the other members of Dick & Co. are the most popular high school boys in
+the land. Boys will alternately thrill and chuckle when reading these
+splendid narratives.
+
+ 1 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS’ CANOE CLUB; Or,
+ Dick & Co.‘s Rivals on Lake Pleasant.
+ 2 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS IN SUMMER CAMP; Or,
+ The Dick Prescott Six Training for the Gridley Eleven.
+ 3 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS’ FISHING TRIP; Or,
+ Dick & Co. in the Wilderness.
+ 4 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS’ TRAINING HIKE; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Making Themselves “Hard as Nails.”
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Circus Boys Series
+
+ By EDGAR B. P. DARLINGTON
+
+Mr. Darlington’s books breathe forth every phase of an intensely
+interesting and exciting life.
+
+ 1 THE CIRCUS BOYS ON THE FLYING RINGS; Or,
+ Making the Start in the Sawdust Life.
+ 2 THE CIRCUS BOYS ACROSS THE CONTINENT; Or,
+ Winning New Laurels on the Tanbark.
+ 3 THE CIRCUS BOYS IN DIXIE LAND; Or,
+ Winning the Plaudits of the Sunny South.
+ 4 THE CIRCUS BOYS ON THE MISSISSIPPI; Or,
+ Afloat with the Big Show on the Big River.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The High School Girls Series
+
+ By JESSIE GRAHAM FLOWER, A. M.
+
+These breezy stories of the American High School Girl take the reader
+fairly by storm.
+
+ 1 GRACE HARLOWE’S PLEBE YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ The Merry Doings of the Oakdale Freshman Girls.
+ 2 GRACE HARLOWE’S SOPHOMORE YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ The Record of the Girl Chums in Work and Athletics.
+ 3 GRACE HARLOWE’S JUNIOR YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ Fast Friends in the Sororities.
+ 4 GRACE HARLOWE’S SENIOR YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ The Parting of the Ways.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Automobile Girls Series
+
+ By LAURA DENT CRANE
+
+No girl’s library—no family book-case can be considered at all complete
+unless it contains these sparkling twentieth-century books.
+
+ 1 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS AT NEWPORT; Or,
+ Watching the Summer Parade.
+ 2 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS IN THE BERKSHIRES; Or,
+ The Ghost of Lost Man’s Trail.
+ 3 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS ALONG THE HUDSON; Or,
+ Fighting Fire in Sleepy Hollow.
+ 4 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS AT CHICAGO; Or,
+ Winning Out Against Heavy Odds.
+ 5 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS AT PALM BEACH; Or,
+ Proving Their Mettle Under Southern Skies.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country, by
+Janet Aldridge
+
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+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country
+ The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike
+
+Author: Janet Aldridge
+
+Release Date: June 12, 2011 [EBook #36391]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i001' id='i001'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-cvr.jpg' alt='' title=''/><br />
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i002' id='i002'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-fpc.jpg" alt="The Girls Made Camp and Ate Supper." title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>The Girls Made Camp and Ate Supper.</span>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:1.4em;'>The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>OR</p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike</p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By</p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;'>JANET ALDRIDGE</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>Author of The Meadow-Brook Girls Under Canvas,</span></p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>The Meadow-Brook Girls Afloat, etc.</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>Illustrated</p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>PHILADELPHIA</span></p>
+<p>HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Copyright, 1913, by</span></p>
+<p><span class='sc'>Howard E. Altemus</span></p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;'>CONTENTS</span></p>
+</div>
+<table class='c' summary=''>
+<tr><td style='font-size:smaller'>CHAPTER</td><td></td><td style='font-size:smaller'>PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>I.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Night of Excitement</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chI'>7</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>II.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Red Eye in the Dark</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chII'>30</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>III.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Blessing and a Threat</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chIII'>39</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>IV.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Coming of Crazy Jane</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chIV'>50</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>V.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Catching the Speckled Beauties</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chV'>62</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>VI.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Call of the Dancing Bear</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chVI'>69</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>VII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Discovering Midnight Prowlers</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chVII'>79</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>VIII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Caught in a Morass</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chVIII'>90</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>IX.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Tramp Club to the Rescue</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chIX'>102</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>X.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>In the Hands of the Rescuers</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chX'>112</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XI.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Contest of Endurance</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXI'>124</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Meadow-Brook Girls up a Tree</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXII'>134</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XIII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Serious Predicament</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXIII'>146</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XIV.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Harriet Is Resourceful</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXIV'>152</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XV.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Race for Life</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXV'>163</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XVI.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Treat That Was Not a Treat</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXVI'>173</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XVII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Trying out the Gipsy Trail</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXVII'>186</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XVIII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Queen Takes a Hand</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXVIII'>196</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XIX.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Delving Into the Mysteries</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXIX'>206</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XX.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Getting Even With George</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXX'>217</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XXI.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Harriet Plans to Outwit the Tramp Club</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXXI'>225</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XXII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Combietta Concert</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXXII'>230</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XXIII.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Harmonica Serenade</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXXIII'>236</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td valign='top' style='text-align:right; padding-right:1em;'>XXIV.</td><td valign='top' style='text-align:left; padding-right:3em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Conclusion</span></td><td valign='top' style='text-align:right;'><a href='#chXXIV'>244</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<h1><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7'></a>7</span>The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country</h1>
+<h2><a name='chI' id='chI'></a>CHAPTER I—A NIGHT OF EXCITEMENT</h2>
+<p>
+“Oh, where can Crazy Jane be!” wailed
+Margery Brown.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t so much a question of
+where Jane may be as where we ourselves are,
+Buster,” answered Harriet Burrell, laughingly.
+“However, if she doesn’t come, why, we
+will make the best of it. This will not be the
+first time we have spent the night out of doors.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are we lost?” gasped Hazel Holland.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It looks very much as though we had gone
+astray,” replied Miss Elting, who was acting as
+guardian and chaperon to the Meadow-Brook
+Girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Grace Thompson,
+her impish little face appearing to grow several
+degrees smaller.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls! Please do not become excited,”
+urged the guardian. “There is no cause for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8'></a>8</span>
+alarm. Even if we have lost our way we shall
+find it again on the morrow. Harriet, you have
+the map. Suppose we examine it again and see
+if we can find out where we are. We surely
+must be near human habitation, and the country
+is so open that really getting lost is quite
+impossible.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet Burrell unslung the pack that she
+carried over her shoulder, then felt about in it
+until she found that for which she was looking.
+She spread the map out on the ground at
+one side of the road, her companions gathering
+about and gazing down over her shoulder.
+Miss Elting sat down beside the map.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here! Trace our day’s route with the pencil,”
+she said. “This should be Harmon’s Valley.
+That being the case, the village of Harmon
+should be not more than a mile farther on.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“There is no village anywhere near us, according
+to the route we have traveled since this
+morning,” answered Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that can’t be possible,” exclaimed Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please look for yourself, Miss Elting,” Harriet
+replied earnestly. “After leaving Granite
+Mountain we swung to the left as you will see
+by the line I have marked.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hm-m-m,” murmured the guardian as she
+scanned the map.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9'></a>9</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It looks to me very much as though we had
+taken the wrong valley,” said Harriet, as she
+paused in her scrutiny of the map to glance up
+at the hills that shut in the valley where they
+now were. “See! There isn’t a town marked
+on this map anywhere in this valley.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I believe you are right. In order to get to
+our stopping place for the night we shall have
+to cross those hills to the right. How far is it
+across?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Five miles,” answered Harriet, after making
+some brief measurements.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Five mileth?” wailed Grace. “Oh, thave
+me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tommy, will you be quiet?” begged Margery.
+“You make me nervous. Miss Elting,
+you aren’t going on, to-night, are you? I simply
+can’t walk another mile. My feet are so
+numb that I can’t feel them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can feel mine. They are ath big ath
+elephantth,” declared Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you say, girls? Shall we go on
+or make camp for the night?” questioned the
+guardian. “Remember, Jane McCarthy is no
+doubt waiting with her car for us over in the
+other valley. She will not know where to go if
+we do not get in touch with her to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Grace, Hazel and Margery begged Miss Elting
+to go no farther. They already had made
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10'></a>10</span>
+ten miles that day, which they declared was
+quite enough.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you say, Harriet?” asked Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course I am a little footsore, but I could
+walk another ten miles if necessary. However,
+the other girls do not wish to go farther, so I
+vote with them to remain here for the night.
+But won’t Jane be puzzled where to go in the
+morning!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She will find us, my dear,” smiled the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you think best I will cross the ridge, after
+supper, and see if I can find her,” suggested
+Harriet Burrell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. I could not think of permitting you
+to do that, Harriet. Jane will be sure to wait
+at the meeting place we agreed upon until noon
+to-morrow before starting on to the next stopping
+place.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But we haven’t any plathe to thleep,” protested
+the lisping Tommy. “I can’t thleep on
+the ground, can I?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. You are going to sleep standing up
+like a horse,” answered Margery petulantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I’m not. I’m going to lie down jutht
+like I alwayth do,” lisped the little girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls, stop your disputing. We have other
+things to think of,” rebuked Harriet. “Let’s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11'></a>11</span>
+try to make the best of our unpleasant situation.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting, shading her eyes with her hand,
+gazed inquiringly at the surrounding country.
+It was barren of buildings except for a large
+barn and a number of stacks and sheds, some
+distance away in a field to the west. Still beyond
+this was a clump of trees and bushes.
+There was nothing else—no house, no human
+beings other than themselves in sight.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls, let’s investigate that miniature forest
+over yonder,” called the guardian. “It
+looks as though it might be an excellent place in
+which to cook supper, provided we are able to
+find water.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Supper!” cried the girls in chorus. They
+realized all at once that they were hungry.
+With one accord they snatched up their packs,
+heavy as they were, slung them over their
+shoulders and laboriously climbed the roadside
+fence. Tommy caught her foot on the top rail
+in attempting to jump to the ground on the other
+side.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look out!” warned Miss Elting sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me!” wailed the lisping Tommy and
+sprawled on all fours on the other side of the
+fence, kicking frantically as she fell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are you hurt, dear?” cried Harriet, springing
+over to her companion.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12'></a>12</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hurt? I gueth I am. Don’t you thee, I’ve
+thkinned my nothe. Oh, I withh I were home!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, you don’t. Think what a lot of fun you
+are having,” comforted Harriet. “There!
+You are all right now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Am I all right?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course you are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, if you thay tho,” nodded Tommy,
+gathering up her pack and moving away with
+Harriet Burrell’s arm about her. Miss Elting
+and the other girls had started for the clump
+of trees. Arriving, they quickly flung down
+their packs. The guardian began hunting for
+water. She found a stream of cold water just
+inside the clump of trees beyond the field, as she
+had anticipated. The greenness of the foliage
+about the spot had told her that water was near.
+In other parts of the valley the leaves were
+turning. There was a strong suggestion of Autumn
+in the air, which at night was crisp and
+bracing, though the days thus far on their long
+tramp, had been unusually warm for so late in
+the Fall.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was Harriet’s duty to build the fire. She
+went about this task at once. There was some
+difficulty in finding wood that would burn.
+After searching she found some pieces of old
+fence rails. These were of pine, and as they
+were too long for a fire over which to cook food,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13'></a>13</span>
+Harriet got out her hatchet and began to chop
+them into smaller pieces. It was a hard task to
+chop through a rail, sharp though the hatchet
+was. However, within fifteen minutes, the girl
+had accomplished the task and the fire was
+burning.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am afraid I can’t promise a great variety
+or quantity of edibles for supper,” announced
+Miss Elting, “though what there is to eat will
+be appetizing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If there is enough, it will answer,” Margery
+declared.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Enough?” repeated Tommy wisely. “Buthter,
+you thurely ought to diet—a girl ath thtout
+ath you are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think I’ve heard you remark something
+of the sort before,” sighed Margery wearily.
+“I wish you would forget that I weigh—well,
+never mind how much! The subject is a distressing
+one. I’m almost too hungry to-night
+to think of anything except eating.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy’s mischievous glance roved about,
+resting first on Harriet, who with flushed face
+was bending over the fire, then on Miss Elting,
+who was slicing bacon. In addition to the
+bacon there was to be coffee, supplemented by
+a few biscuits. There was nothing very hearty
+about that repast for healthy girls who had
+tramped for hours under a warm September
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14'></a>14</span>
+sun. Still, there were no complaints, save as
+Tommy and Margery had voiced their disgust
+with their present life.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though none of these young women could
+guess it, they were destined, before morning,
+to encounter enough excitement to make them
+all wish they had never started on this long
+walk from Camp Wau-Wau, where they had
+spent the summer, to their homes in Meadow-Brook.
+</p>
+<p>
+Surely the Meadow-Brook Girls need no introduction
+to the readers of this series who
+will recall how, under the chaperonage of Miss
+Elting, the four girls had gone to the summer
+camp in the Pocono Woods, where, somehow,
+each day of their life had grown increasingly
+exciting. All of the things that happened to
+Harriet and her friends at that time are set
+forth in the first volume of this series, under
+the title of “<span class='sc'>The Meadow-Brook Girls Under
+Canvas</span>.” While in the summer camp the
+Meadow-Brook Girls had passed through many
+varied and exciting experiences. The mischievous
+initiation of Harriet Burrell and Grace
+Thompson by the older girls, the arrival in the
+camp of Jane McCarthy, known to her friends
+as “Crazy Jane” and the series of lively happenings
+that followed her coming; the nocturnal
+visit of a bear, and Harriet’s spirited chase of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15'></a>15</span>
+the animal were incidents that contributed to
+the interest of the narrative.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet’s brave rescue of her companions
+during a severe storm and her subsequent generous
+treatment of the two Camp Girls, Patricia
+Scott and Cora Kidder, who had plotted against
+her, won for her the warm admiration of her associates
+at Camp Wau-Wau.
+</p>
+<p>
+When it had come time to leave the camp in
+the great forest it had been agreed by the
+Meadow-Brook Girls and their guardian that,
+instead of returning by train they would walk
+all the way home, disdaining any “lifts” or
+other helps that prevented them from making
+their way strictly on foot.
+</p>
+<p>
+So endeared had “Crazy Jane” McCarthy
+become to them all during her stay in camp
+that she had been voted as one of their number.
+Crazy Jane, however, would hear of but
+little walking. She sent for her automobile, a
+present from her father, and insisted on using
+this in “scouting” and in carrying the tent and
+provisions for the Pathfinders, as the Meadow-Brook
+Girls now elected to call themselves.
+</p>
+<p>
+Each night Jane would meet the girls at a
+place agreed upon in advance. Then the tent
+would be pitched at some distance from the
+highway, and there the girls would spend the
+night. But now, on the third day, the Meadow-Brook
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16'></a>16</span>
+Girls had failed to meet their supply car.
+What they were to do for the night, Miss Elting
+did not know. Her first move was to see to the
+preparation of the little food that they had with
+them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane McCarthy, with a full purse and a
+wealthy, indulgent father, had claimed the right
+of being purveyor of food on that long journey.
+The speed at which that young woman traveled
+permitted of her foraging far and wide. Whereever
+she went she was likely to be remembered,
+for it was her reckless driving that had given
+her the name of “Crazy Jane.” Yet this light-hearted,
+impulsive girl had wonderful control
+of her machine. With all her reckless driving
+she had never yet injured any one, though her
+friends often remonstrated with her for her haphazard
+style of running her car.
+</p>
+<p>
+Supper finished, Margery and Hazel were
+left to attend to the dishes, and to put them
+in the packs, which were ordinary hunters’ bags,
+made to strap over the shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+“After you have finished the work, girls,”
+directed Miss Elting, “be sure to extinguish the
+last spark of the fire. Harriet, will you come
+with me?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thay, where are you going?” cried Grace.
+“Pleathe don’t go away and leave uth here
+alone. It ith going to be dark, pretty thoon.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17'></a>17</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t you want a place to sleep?” smiled
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth, but it’th getting dark,” Tommy insisted.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All the more reason for finding sleeping
+quarters,” smiled Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are you thinking of trying the barns?”
+asked Harriet, as she and the guardian stepped
+away.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. I don’t see anything else to do.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’re going to have a storm,” Harriet
+went on thoughtfully, “so of course we shall do
+well to secure more shelter than we could get
+by making a brush lean-to.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t believe we are in the least danger
+of being disturbed in the barn,” the guardian
+continued. “I don’t imagine there are any
+other human beings within several miles of this
+place. This is certainly a very lonesome bit of
+country. It is the first day since we have been
+out that we haven’t met some one. That may
+be because we have kept away from the roads
+to-day. We haven’t been on a highway more
+than an hour all day long.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is what I like,” answered Harriet. “I
+just love to strike out across country and blaze
+new trails. It’s ever so much more interesting.
+But, Miss Elting, are you certain there is no
+one about?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18'></a>18</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian halted sharply and faced her
+companion. She knew Harriet Burrell too well
+not to understand that the girl’s question was
+significant.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I saw some one not far from camp when
+we were eating our supper,” was Harriet’s
+quiet announcement.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You are sure of that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes; it was just beyond the woods there.
+At first I thought it a fence post; then all at
+once the post moved. I saw it was a person.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What was the person doing, Harriet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The person appeared to be watching us. I
+also discovered something else. The person
+was a <em>woman</em>.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting threw back her head and laughed
+merrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t think we need to be very much
+alarmed at that. So long as it wasn’t a tramp
+you saw, we won’t disturb ourselves.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She was a strange looking creature,” continued
+Harriet. “I couldn’t make her out very
+well. All at once she disappeared in the most
+mysterious fashion. You said something. I
+glanced up, then back to the place where the
+woman had been standing and she had gone.
+It happened in less than half a dozen seconds.
+She would have to be a pretty lively person to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19'></a>19</span>
+get out of sight in that time, wouldn’t she, Miss
+Elting?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian nodded. They had now reached
+the big barn. Like its surroundings, it was deserted
+so far as they were able to observe.
+Miss Elting wished to examine the place while
+there was still light, so they hurried in, the
+doors being wide open. The scent of hay was
+strong on the air as they entered. There were
+little heaps of hay on the barn floor, and on
+either side in the mows the hay was piled up
+high. Ladders led up to the top of the mows
+from the barn floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This looks nice and comfy, doesn’t it?”
+smiled the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The best sort of bedroom,” agreed Harriet.
+“I hope there are no mice here?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mice? Gracious! I hope not, too. I think
+we can do no better than to climb the ladder
+to the top of one of the mows, roll up in our
+blankets and go to sleep. Which bedroom will
+you take, the north or the south?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think I should prefer the room on the
+south side. One is more likely to get the morning
+sun there,” answered Harriet gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting laughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you. I hadn’t thought of it in that
+light. The south side bedroom will be best for
+the Meadow-Brook Girls. I know Jane McCarthy would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20'></a>20</span>
+enjoy this sort of camping out.
+As it is, she will have to sleep at a farm house
+to-night. She will never be able to find us here.
+Suppose you climb the ladder and see how the
+land lies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mean the hay,” chuckled Harriet, running
+up the ladder with agility. “Oh, it is fine
+up here, and just as warm as can be. Won’t
+it be splendid to sleep on the hay?” she called
+down, peering over the edge of the mow.
+</p>
+<p>
+After gazing over the mows for some moments
+Harriet finally descended to the floor.
+Next she and Miss Elting made a survey of the
+yard back of the barn. The yard was surrounded
+by empty sheds and great stacks of hay
+and straw. It was evident that the owners intended
+to winter considerable stock in this remote
+place.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what do you think of it, Harriet?”
+inquired Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Glorious! It is as clean and sweet here as
+in our own bedrooms at home. I’ll tell you
+what I will do. I’ll run back and get the girls,”
+said Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting nodded acquiescence and Harriet
+hurried across the field, the teacher remaining
+at the barn to investigate the place further
+while Harriet went for her companions. This
+she did, and decided that they were most fortunate
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21'></a>21</span>
+in finding so comfortable a place in
+which to spend the night.
+</p>
+<p>
+Half an hour later she heard them coming.
+Tommy’s chatter sounded louder than the conversation
+of all the rest of the party. Twilight
+had settled over the interior of the barn by the
+time the girls came trooping in.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Br-r-r-r! This place looks spooky,” cried
+Margery. “We aren’t going to stay in here all
+night, are we, Miss Elting?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, Margery. You are not afraid of the
+dark, are you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No-o-o. But——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“There is nothing to alarm you. As we are
+all rather tired, I propose that we go upstairs
+and get to bed at once. I am sorry we shall
+not be able to get our baths this evening. This
+hotel isn’t provided with bath tubs. By the
+way. There are matches in our packs, so we
+will leave them below. One of the first things
+a Camp Girl learns, you know, is to be careful
+of fire both indoors and out. Strap your
+blanket rolls over your shoulders. You know
+it is quite a climb to your bedrooms.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Up there is where we sleep,” Harriet informed
+them. The top of the mow was not discernible
+from the barn floor now.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What! Away up there?” demanded Margery.
+“How do we get up?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22'></a>22</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“We shall have to climb the ladder,” answered
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Margery groaned.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m glad it’s dark. If it were daylight I
+know I should fall,” declared Hazel. “Let me
+go first. I don’t want to stand here and think
+about what is before me. If I stop to think I’ll
+never have the courage to climb.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t look down,” cautioned the guardian.
+“There. That’s fine.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Hazel was going up rapidly. Margery, with
+many a groan, next essayed the climb. Harriet
+was directly behind her. Margery had not gone
+far before the wisdom of Harriet’s action became
+apparent. A wail from Margery brought
+a chorus of “ohs!” from her companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t go another step,” gasped Margery.
+“I’m going to fall. Catch me somebody.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Margery, keep on climbing. I’m right below
+you here. Go on,” urged Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I—I can’t. I’m dizzy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Buthter ith theathick,” observed Tommy
+from the barn floor. Harriet began lightly,
+tapping Buster with a switch that she had
+brought with her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh! Ouch! Stop it! I tell you stop it!”
+howled Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Climb!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Margery <em>did</em> climb. She went up the ladder
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23'></a>23</span>
+faster than she ever had climbed before, wailing
+and threatening every foot of the way.
+Tommy was delightedly dancing about on the
+barn floor during all this time, uttering a perfect
+volley of unintelligible lisps and jeering
+cries. Margery reached the top of the ladder
+and flung herself panting on the hay.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be careful not to come too near the edge,”
+warned Harriet, hurriedly clambering down.
+Buster made no reply. She was too much out
+of breath to say a word. “Now, let’s see what
+<em>you</em> can do, Tommy. See if you can do any
+better,” chuckled Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You jutht thee me climb. I’ll thhow you.
+I gueth I know how to climb. Buthter ith too
+fat to climb a ladder. Don’t you hit me. I’ll
+kick you if you do,” was her parting admonition
+as she began running up the ladder. Rather
+to the amazement of her companions, Grace
+made the climb to the haymow without the least
+difficulty. Only once did her foot slip from a
+rung of the ladder. Grace recovered it with no
+more than a smothered little exclamation.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You next, Miss Elting,” nodded Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will wait until you get up. I wish to look
+after the packs first. What would we do were
+we to lose them? We shouldn’t have a thing to
+eat for breakfast, and goodness knows when
+we will reach a store to purchase food.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24'></a>24</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not long afterwards that the party of
+young women were fussing about in the hay,
+making their beds for the night. This consisted
+in leveling off the hay and spreading
+their blankets. Some little time was occupied
+in working out the uneven spots, but after a
+time they lay down with piled-up hay for pillows,
+and rolled themselves in their blankets.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls went to sleep almost at once. Miss
+Elting, however, remained awake until her
+charges had finally settled down, as she supposed,
+for the night. She was just about to
+doze off when she was awakened by a scream
+and a commotion at one end of the mow. The
+guardian sprang up in alarm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“For mercy’s sake! What is it?” she cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting and Harriet groped their way to
+Grace.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I got a bug in my ear. Yeth I did. It bit
+me. I won’t thtay here another minute.
+I’ll——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll go out doors and sleep,” declared Margery
+in disgust. “The idea of being kept
+awake all night by that crazy girl.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Margery!” rebuked the guardian. “Now,
+Tommy, you must lie down and go to sleep.
+This will not do at all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will drag my blanket over and keep her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25'></a>25</span>
+company, Miss Elting,” offered Harriet. “Perhaps
+she did get bitten. I felt some sort of insect
+crawling over my face a moment ago.
+There now, Tommy, you just snuggle down and
+forget all about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t like bugth,” complained Tommy,
+somewhat mollified. A few moments later she
+was sound asleep. Harriet, after making sure
+that Grace was slumbering, once more permitted
+herself to doze off. She had been asleep
+but a few moments when a wild scream of terror
+awakened them all. Harriet felt the blanket
+jerked violently from her and heard a floundering
+and threshing on all sides that filled her
+with alarm. Stretching out her hand she found
+that Tommy was no longer beside her. Tommy’s
+voice rose in a loud wail of terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Tommy!” cried Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls, girls! What <em>is</em> the matter?” exclaimed
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A mouthe, a mouthe!” shrieked Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This isn’t a hay barn, it’s a lunatic asylum,”
+scoffed Margery. “Oh, mercy! Help,
+help!” she shrieked. The mouse had found
+Margery too. In the darkness of the haymow
+the Meadow-Brook Girls were now floundering
+about in great alarm. Out of the disorder Miss
+Elting quickly brought order. She spoke
+sharply to Tommy, insisted that Margery
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26'></a>26</span>
+should return to her blanket and commanded the
+girls to make no further disturbance.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The idea that Meadow-Brook Girls should
+be so timid,” she rebuked. “Harriet, I am
+glad to know that you are not.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I think I should have screamed too if a
+mouse had—how do you know it was a mouse,
+Tommy?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It ran right over my fathe. I gueth I know
+what it wath. I gueth I will thleep thanding up.
+May I, Miss Elting?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you prefer to do so. I am going back to
+bed. I must insist on the others doing the same,
+or at least keeping quiet. We shall be in no
+shape to go on with our journey in the morning
+at this rate.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy decided that she, too, would lie down
+and soon their regular breathing told the guardian
+that most, if not all, of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were sound asleep. Harriet, however,
+now that she had been awakened, found it difficult
+to go to sleep again. She lay staring up
+into the darkness for some time.
+</p>
+<p>
+A sound down on the barn floor put her instantly
+on the alert. At first she thought some
+farm animal had wandered into the barn; then
+the distinct sound of human footsteps, reached
+her ears.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet Burrell listened intently, as yet unafraid.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27'></a>27</span>
+She crawled cautiously to the edge of
+the mow and peered over. A human form was
+faintly outlined down there. The figure was
+groping along the edge of the mow and muttering.
+The listener was unable to make out
+the words. At last the intruder uttered a sharp
+little exclamation of satisfaction, then began to
+climb the ladder on the opposite side of the
+barn floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a woman!” gasped Harriet. “Who can
+it be, and what does she want here?” With
+straining ears and closed eyes the Meadow-Brook
+girl listened. She heard the woman
+reach the top of the ladder and step off into
+the hay. A few moments later Harriet heard
+her mumbling at the far side of the mow, over
+near the opposite end of the hay barn. “How
+strange!” muttered the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+A low, distant rumble of thunder attracted
+her attention in another direction. A moment
+later a faint flash of lightning dispelled the
+gloom a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The storm is coming. I hope the girls
+won’t wake up.” The darkness now seemed to
+be more intense than before. Harriet was unable
+to distinguish one object from another.
+She crawled back toward her bed and was about
+to wrap herself in her blanket again when a
+second time she heard footsteps on the barn
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28'></a>28</span>
+floor. This time she scrambled back to the edge
+more hastily than before. At first she thought
+the woman had climbed down and was going
+away from the mow. The girl leaned far over.
+She could see no one this time, but she plainly
+heard some one climbing up the opposite ladder
+again. Harriet wondered if it were tramps;
+then she recalled that the first visitor, being a
+woman, would be unlikely to be a tramp.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It must be some one seeking shelter from
+the coming storm,” Harriet finally decided,
+now wondering if it would not be advisable to
+wake up Miss Elting. Upon second thought the
+girl decided not to do so. Instead, she leaned
+farther out over the edge of the mow and peered
+down anxiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+A flash of lightning, more brilliant than the
+first, lighted up the barn from end to end. By
+the light of the flash Harriet Burrell saw that
+which set her nerves to tingling and caused her
+to utter a suppressed gasp.
+</p>
+<p>
+Below her on the barn floor stood a man. He
+was swarthy; his coal black hair hung down
+in long, glistening locks. His eyes, large and
+very black were gazing right up into the girl’s
+face. She shrank back trembling.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh!” gasped the Meadow-Brook girl. “Oh!
+He saw me. Oh, what shall I do!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The man began climbing the ladder on her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29'></a>29</span>
+side of the barn. Harriet could hear him
+plainly. She began crawling back into the mow
+on her hands and knees. Her first inclination,
+on reaching her blanket, was to burrow under
+the hay so as to be out of sight. But it occurred
+to her that her companions would still
+be in plain sight were another flash of lightning
+to illumine the mow. Harriet promptly decided
+to lie still and await developments. She knew
+that Miss Elting carried a revolver, and that
+the guardian was proficient in its use. This
+thought gave Harriet comfort. Besides, what
+was there to fear?
+</p>
+<p>
+To add to the excitement a second man entered
+the barn at this juncture. But instead of
+climbing up after the other man he took the opposite
+ladder up which the woman had gone a
+few moments before. The man on the girls’
+side was rapidly nearing the top. Harriet lay
+trembling, hoping there would be no more lightning.
+Suddenly a brilliant flash lighted up the
+barn from end to end. It revealed the man
+clinging to the ladder, his head on a level with
+the top of the mow, glancing over it keenly,
+searchingly. Harriet’s left hand stole toward
+Miss Elting who lay within easy reach. It was
+Harriet’s intention to awaken her as quietly as
+possible as soon as the light died away. But
+ere her hand descended on Miss Elting’s arm,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30'></a>30</span>
+something occurred that made this move on Harriet
+Burrell’s part, unnecessary.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chII' id='chII'></a>CHAPTER II—THE RED EYE IN THE DARK</h2>
+<p>
+There was an ominous snapping sound;
+then the rung of the ladder gave way
+and the man fell backward to the floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh! He has fallen!” gasped Harriet, in
+dismay, as she scrambled hastily toward the
+edge of the mow. “He must be seriously injured.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What ith that noithe?” demanded Grace.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sh-h-h!” warned Harriet softly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing more was heard from Grace for the
+time being. She had dropped to sleep again.
+Fortunately none of the others had been awakened
+by the racket, but Harriet’s heart was
+beating rapidly. She leaned over the edge of
+the mow. What the next flash of lightning revealed
+relieved her anxiety somewhat. She saw
+the man get up and rub his back. She saw, too,
+that he had fallen on a heap of hay, the latter
+undoubtedly having saved him from severe injury.
+A moment later he limped across the
+floor and began climbing up the ladder on the
+other side of the barn.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31'></a>31</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank goodness!” muttered Harriet. “I
+hope no more of them come in here to-night. I
+shall scream if they do. I know I shall.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The man threw himself, grumbling, on the
+hay; silence once more settled over the barn
+so far as the occupants were concerned. The
+thunder was now growing louder, the lightning
+flashes became more frequent. Harriet, however,
+felt no particular alarm. She was unafraid
+of thunder storms, and gave no thought
+to the fact that barns are more frequently struck
+by lightning than are dwelling houses.
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time her companions had begun to
+stir restlessly. Miss Elting sat up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet, is that you?” she asked in a low
+tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What are you doing?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just looking about a little,” replied Harriet
+in a whisper, not deeming it advisable to alarm
+the guardian by telling her what she had just
+discovered.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How long has it been storming?” asked the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Only a little while. I do not believe it is
+going to amount to anything. I hope this old
+barn doesn’t leak.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I do not believe it will. There is too
+much valuable hay here. The owner undoubtedly has seen
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32'></a>32</span>
+to it that the roof is sound. Are
+you going to try to sleep?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet lay down, but she did not sleep. The
+memory of the old woman and the two men
+over in the other mow, banished all thought of
+sleep from her mind. She did not know whether
+the woman knew the men were there or not.
+Perhaps they might belong to the same party.
+However, there had been no conversation between
+them and while the two men were near
+the outer edge of the mow, the woman was at
+the far end of the barn as nearly as Harriet
+was able to determine.
+</p>
+<p>
+Soon after that, rain drops began to patter on
+the barn roof. Then it began to rain heavily.
+Harriet nestled deeper into the blanket and lay
+listening. There was no sound from their
+neighbors on the other side.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last the listening girl closed her eyes. No
+sooner had she done so than she opened them
+again. A flash of lightning, more brilliant than
+any she had yet seen, was playing along the
+rafters of the barn. The thunder followed the
+flash just as Harriet threw an arm over her
+eyes to shut out the light. It was not a particularly
+heavy clap of thunder, just a quick,
+sharp report. Above the report a shrill scream
+of terror rang out. Then all was silent.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33'></a>33</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Instantly every one of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls sat up wide awake.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What—what is it?” cried Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls! Girls! are you all right?” called
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, what ith it? Did the barn fall down?”
+wailed Tommy in great alarm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What has happened?” questioned Hazel
+Holland excitedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet did not speak. She was listening to
+what the others of her party had not noticed,
+a sudden sound of voices in the other mow, and
+the hasty clambering down the ladder of the
+two men she had seen go to the opposite mow.
+At least she believed it to be the two men. Evidently
+they had become alarmed, either by the
+lightning, the scream of the woman, or by the
+cries of the Meadow-Brook Girls. They ran out
+of the barn, making no attempt to go quietly.
+Once on the outside she heard one of them
+shout.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I heard thome one!” exclaimed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So did I,” agreed Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thought I, too, heard some one cry out,”
+said Miss Elting. “Perhaps it was a night bird
+fleeing from the storm.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was no night bird, Miss Elting,” said
+Harriet in a low tone. “Did you hear that
+scream? Some one is in trouble. There is a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34'></a>34</span>
+woman on the other side of the mow. What
+shall we do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A woman?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, yes. She climbed up to the mow a long
+time ago. Oh, look, look!”
+</p>
+<p>
+A tiny red eye had suddenly appeared at the
+far end of the hay barn. It appeared to have
+risen out of the hay at the extreme end of the
+opposite mow. The girls gazed at it in silence.
+They did not understand the meaning of the
+strange dull red spot. Even Harriet was for
+the moment, puzzled. Then all at once she understood.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Quick! Get down to the floor! Don’t
+waste a minute! Miss Elting please look after
+the girls. There’s a rung on the ladder broken.
+Watch that no one falls. I’m going.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet! Harriet! What do you mean?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The woman! I must get her. I may want
+you to help me. If I call you, come at once. Oh,
+I must hurry, Miss Elting.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thee! That red eye ith getting bigger,”
+cried Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is fire, Miss Elting,” whispered Harriet.
+“The barn is on fire. The last bolt of lightning
+must have set fire to the hay. Don’t tell
+the girls now, but get them down to the barn
+floor as quickly as possible. There is going to
+be an awful fire.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35'></a>35</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet bounded toward the ladder.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet! Don’t go. I will go,” shouted the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know where she is,” cried Harriet, swinging
+herself to the ladder using care not to lose
+her footing on the broken rung.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The broken rung is the fifth one down,” she
+called. Grasping the sides of the ladder she
+permitted herself to slide all the way to the bottom,
+wholly unconscious of the fact that the
+skin was being scraped from the palms of her
+hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+Reaching the barn floor the girl dashed across
+it to the opposite side. A few precious seconds
+were lost in groping for the ladder there. She
+found it, ran up with the speed of a squirrel,
+then went stumbling and falling across the mow
+toward the red eye that was now growing into a
+great red glare.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are you?” she cried, raising her
+voice to a high pitch.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was no response from her side. From
+the other mow came the answer from Margery,
+who did not understand: “We’re here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The red eye was now lighting up the far end
+of the mow so that Harriet was able to see
+much more clearly. Little piles of hay formed
+deceiving shadows. She ran first to one, then
+to another, in this way losing precious seconds.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36'></a>36</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+All at once the girl caught sight of a dark
+object lying on the hay. She ran toward it. It
+was the huddled form of an old woman, her eyes
+wide and staring. Harriet feared she was
+dead. The fire had already crept perilously
+near to the woman. The flames at one point
+had communicated with the roof and were eating
+their way through it. The girls on the other
+mow now realized that the barn was on fire. A
+chorus of wails reached Harriet. But she knew
+her companions were in good hands, that Miss
+Elting would get them out safely.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet grasped the old woman under the
+arms and began dragging her toward the edge
+of the mow.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve got her!” she screamed. “Come and
+help me as soon as you can, Miss Elting. Get
+the girls down and make them go outside. You
+will have to hurry. The roof may fall in. Make
+a rope of the blankets. We shall have to lower
+her to the ground. She is helpless.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll be with you in a moment,” called the
+calm, confident voice of the guardian. Miss
+Elting was always to be depended upon in an
+emergency. She had gotten the other girls
+safely down before Harriet had called out to
+her, thinking that Harriet might need her undivided
+assistance in rescuing the woman from
+her perilous position.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37'></a>37</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Outdoors, girls, every one of you,” she commanded.
+“Don’t you dare come near the barn!
+Harriet is rescuing some one from the other
+mow. I am going to help her. Leave the
+blankets, but take the packs with you.” She
+gave the protesting Tommy a push toward the
+door. Hazel grasped Grace by the arm and
+hurried her out of the barn. Margery needed
+no assistance. She was in as great a hurry to
+leave the barn as Miss Elting was to have her
+do so.
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian climbed the ladder as rapidly
+as possible, after having knotted the five
+blankets into a kind of rope. She tested each
+knot with her full strength; then being satisfied
+that the rope would stand a heavy strain,
+she began climbing the ladder holding one end
+of the blanket rope. At the top of the ladder
+the heat was suffocating, the smoke blinding.
+Harriet was coughing and choking. She was
+on the verge of collapse, having inhaled a great
+deal of smoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Will—will it reach?” Miss Elting gasped.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think so.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ti—ie it under her arms. Go below to
+catch her if she falls. I’ll let her down,” promised
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Get down yourself as fast as you can,” commanded
+the guardian.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38'></a>38</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet did not move. She buried her head
+in her skirt and crouched down close to the edge
+of the mow in an effort to get some fresh air,
+but without very great success.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now go, please,” urged Harriet. “You are
+strong enough to catch her if the rope breaks.
+I’m not. I know how to handle it at this end.
+Hurry, Miss Elting. We haven’t a second to
+lose.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting hesitated, glanced quickly at her
+companion, then started down the ladder. Harriet
+took a quick turn of the rope about a beam.
+Without the least hesitation, she slid the unconscious
+woman over the edge of the mow feet
+first. The girl prayed fervently that the rope
+might hold. It did. Little by little, though as
+rapidly as she dared, the girl lowered her burden.
+Sparks were flying all about her. She
+stood enveloped in a cloud of smoke, but not
+for an instant did the girl give thought to her
+own perilous position.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve got her,” screamed Miss Elting.
+“Come down. Be quick, oh do be quick.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet’s fingers released the rope. She
+staggered toward the ladder groping blindly
+for it. Reaching it she sank down choking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can you make it?” called the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” was the faint reply. “Get—get her
+out.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39'></a>39</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting seeing that Harriet was coming
+down the ladder, hastily dragged the unconscious
+woman out into the open air. The way
+seemed endless to the descending girl. About
+half way down her fingers relaxed. Harriet
+fell, landing heavily in a heap on the barn floor.
+She lay where she had fallen, with the flames
+crackling overhead as they leaped across the
+intervening space and began devouring the mow
+on the opposite side.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chIII' id='chIII'></a>CHAPTER III—A BLESSING AND A THREAT</h2>
+<p>
+From end to end of the great hay barn
+the roof was now wrapped in flames.
+Now the stacks at the rear began blazing.
+The entire building was doomed to destruction.
+In the meantime, Miss Elting, having
+dragged the woman to a point of safety,
+was working to revive her. So engrossed was
+she that, for the moment, all thought of Harriet
+Burrell escaped her until she was reminded
+of Harriet by Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where ith Harriet?” piped Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet? Oh!” gasped the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy understood without further explanation
+and darted toward the barn, with Miss
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40'></a>40</span>
+Elting running after her to bring her back. But
+there was no stopping Tommy when once she
+had started to carry out a resolve. She ran to
+the barn on winged feet and plunged into the
+dense cloud of smoke that issued from the burning barn.
+The little girl had no idea what she
+would do when she got there, and perhaps she
+might have been injured before Miss Elting
+reached her, had Tommy not fallen accidently
+over Harriet. The latter was unconscious from
+the smoke she had inhaled. Tommy grabbed
+her by the arms and began dragging her out.
+The little girl had gotten to the door with her
+burden as Miss Elting reached the scene.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Brave Tommy!” cried the guardian. “You
+shall have a whole string of Camp Girls’ beads
+for this. Let Harriet lie where she is for the
+present. Place her on her back so the rain may
+beat in her face. She will be all right in a few
+moments.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting did not know that Harriet had
+fallen, and that it was not only the smoke but
+the shock of the fall as well that had overcome
+her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, thuppothe the barn fallth down!” exclaimed
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, you are right. We must get her
+farther away.” Together they carried Harriet
+out to the place where the old woman lay.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41'></a>41</span>
+When they reached there the old woman was
+sitting up looking about her in a dazed manner.
+Shouts and cries off toward the highway told
+the little company that men were hastening to
+the scene of the fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet became conscious in a short time, but
+she had frequent coughing spells for some minutes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That ith right. Cough up all the thmoke,”
+suggested Tommy wisely. “You’ll feel better
+after you get the thmoke out of your thythtem.
+I know, for I thwallowed a lot of thmoke once.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The men ran past the party of women, shouting
+and gesticulating. There were a dozen of
+them. Others could be heard approaching the
+scene of the fire. Harriet, as soon as she was
+able to talk, and the coughing spells became less
+frequent, went over to the woman she had
+rescued. The swarthy complexion, straight
+black hair, and piercing black eyes of the woman
+were the same characteristics that Harriet had
+observed in the man who had fallen from the
+ladder.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you feel better?” questioned Harriet,
+smiling a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old woman nodded, her eyes never leaving
+the face of her questioner for an instant.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have this young woman to thank for
+being alive,” Miss Elting informed the old
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42'></a>42</span>
+woman, stepping up to her and nodding toward
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You saved me, eh?” questioned the
+stranger, looking searchingly at the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet did not reply, but Miss Elting answered
+for her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You saved Sybarina from fire from the
+skies?” insisted the woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She means the lightning,” suggested Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, she did,” repeated Miss Elting. “She
+climbed the ladder to the hay loft and let you
+down with blankets tied together. Our blankets
+are there yet.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I forgot them,” cried Harriet. “How
+thoughtless of me! Now we shall have nothing
+to sleep in.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind the blankets. We have others
+in the car.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You saved Sybarina?” repeated the old
+woman, staggering to her feet. She had been
+temporarily paralyzed from the electric bolt,
+and was as yet barely able to stand on her feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please don’t mention it,” urged Harriet,
+flushing.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old woman seized Harriet’s hand and
+gazed deeply into it by the light of the burning
+barn. As she gazed she swayed her body from
+side to side with quick, nervous movements.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ah! Sybarina sees that which pleases her,”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43'></a>43</span>
+crooned the old woman. “She sees a noble
+girl whom the fires from the skies cannot
+frighten. And she sees more. She sees wealth
+and happiness and a great future for her who
+fears not the fire from above. Sybarina gives
+you her blessing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+A heavy hand was laid on the old woman’s
+shoulder.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here, you Gipsy woman. Were you sleeping
+in that barn?” demanded a gruff voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I met two Gipsy men running across the
+fields to the west as I came down,” answered
+another male voice. “The Gipsies are camped
+about a mile and a half from here. I think we
+ought to arrest the old woman, don’t you,
+Squire?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sybarina was asleep in the barn,” admitted
+the Gipsy woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And you set the barn on fire, too,” declared
+the squire. “I’ll have to arrest you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She didn’t set the barn on fire, sir,” defended
+Harriet Burrell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The fires from the skies made the barn
+burn,” announced the Gipsy woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who are you?” demanded the man, turning
+sharply to Harriet. “I suppose you will
+tell me <em>you</em> weren’t sleeping in my barn?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“On the contrary, we were,” interjected Miss
+Elting.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44'></a>44</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I arrest the whole parcel of you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me!” wailed Tommy Thompson.
+“We didn’t thet your old barn on fire. We
+were jutht thleeping there, that wath all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You will all stay here till I get through
+with this fire; then I’ll hold court on you and
+if you don’t answer to suit me I’ll have you all
+over to the county seat to-morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No one set your barn on fire, sir,” declared
+Harriet, with emphasis. “The barn was struck
+by lightning.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you see it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t say that I saw the lightning strike,
+but I saw the flash, then saw the fire start up
+directly afterwards. I heard this woman
+scream and we hurried to her rescue. She was
+unconscious. The bolt had nearly killed her.
+That proves that it was lightning, not matches,
+that set your barn on fire.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What were you doing in my barn?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thleeping with the mithe and the bugth,”
+volunteered Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who be you? You ain’t Gipsies?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. We are from Meadow-Brook, and we
+are walking home from the Pocono Woods,
+where we have been spending the summer in
+camp,” Miss Elting informed the man.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So, that’s it, hey?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, sir. A young woman friend of ours
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45'></a>45</span>
+usually meets us at night. She has our equipment
+in her automobile, but we took the wrong
+trail to-day, and have lost her. She is over in
+the other valley waiting for us, I think.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is she a crazy woman with light hair that
+streams over her shoulders, and does she drive
+her car as though she was running a race?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“From your description I think you must
+have met Miss McCarthy,” answered the guardian,
+smiling a little. “Have you seen her to-day?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should say I had. She nigh killed a calf
+of mine this afternoon. I’d just like to get my
+grip on her once. I’d make her answer to the
+law.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Was your calf in the road, sir?” questioned
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. What of it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t believe the law would do anything
+to Miss McCarthy in that case. Of course I am
+sorry for the calf,” said Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, the calf ain’t hurt. Jest lost a little
+hair off her tail, shaved off as close as ye could
+do it with a razor. But that don’t matter. It’s
+the barn and nigh onto a hundred tons of hay
+gone up in smoke that bothers me. I wisht I
+was sure you was telling the truth. If I
+thought you weren’t I’d have you all in the lock-up
+afore morning.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46'></a>46</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are—are there any mithe in the lock-up?”
+questioned Tommy apprehensively.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Eh? Stacks all gone, too?” This in answer
+to a word from a farmer who came from
+the rear of the burning barn. “Well, let ’em
+go. There’ll be another crop of hay next year.
+Mebby the price’ll be better then.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The loss of his barn did not appear to trouble
+the “Squire” greatly. All the time he was
+talking he was regarding the women out of the
+corners of his eyes. He saw that they were
+drenched through and through. Tommy and
+Margery were shivering. He decided that they
+were persons of some consequence, even if they
+had been sleeping in his barn. His reflections
+were interrupted by Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can you tell me which way the young woman
+and the car went?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can I? I guess I can. She went east. The
+calf could tell ye, too, if she could talk, but she
+wouldn’t say it quite so easy like as I’m tellin’
+you now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane was looking for us,” nodded Miss Elting.
+“She must have reasoned that we had
+gotten into this valley by mistake.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where you going to stay the rest of the
+night?” questioned the squire gruffly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am afraid we shall have to stay out in the
+rain if we don’t succeed in finding another
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47'></a>47</span>
+barn,” laughed the guardian. “My girls are
+pretty well used to roughing it, though they
+never before passed quite such a night as this
+has been. Do you know of a farm house nearby
+where we may get lodgings? We are perfectly
+willing to sleep on the floor in the kitchen, provided
+we can have the room to dry out our
+clothes, and we shall be glad and willing to pay
+for the trouble.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You may come home with me,” answered
+the man, after a brief hesitation.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is your name, sir?” questioned Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Squire Olney, Miss. You see I ain’t a
+squire by appointment. The neighbors jest call
+me that because I settle their difficulties. I’ve
+got more land in this township than all the rest
+of them put together. That’s why I ain’t takin’
+the burnin’ of the barn to heart so much as you
+think I ought to,” he added, with a broad smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have you a family at home?” questioned
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My wife and I are alone. Children all married.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How far is it from here to your home, sir?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“About a mile right over the hill. What do
+you say?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We will go with you. We thank you for
+your kindness. I am very sorry, indeed, that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48'></a>48</span>
+you have lost your barn and your hay,” said
+the guardian in a sympathetic tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+The squire leaned toward her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I ain’t lost anything,” he said, with a wink.
+“Insured. Insured plumb up to the muzzle,
+and then some more. Boys, I’m going home to
+show the ladies the way. You can have all the
+hay that’s left. I want the ashes for fertilizer.
+Ashes is good for the cut worms in the cabbage
+patch. Come on, ladies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Squire Olney nodded to them and started
+away. He halted sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where’s that old Gipsy woman? She ain’t
+included in the invitation.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, she has gone,” exclaimed Hazel. “I
+didn’t see her go. Did you, Harriet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet Burrell shook her head. She was
+puzzled at the mysterious disappearance of
+Sybarina, who had given her rescuer her blessing,
+then so strangely slipped away.
+</p>
+<p>
+The walk over the hill did not add to the
+comfort of the Meadow-Brook Girls. They
+splashed through deep puddles of water in the
+little hollows, slipped and stumbled over bare
+clay spots, fell over stones and roots until they
+were not only soaked to the skin, but badly
+bruised as well. Margery wailed and groaned
+all the way. Tommy made fun of her until they
+came in sight of the lights in the farm house.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49'></a>49</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the old shack that has covered us
+for nigh onto fifty years,” he said, nodding toward
+the light in the window.
+</p>
+<p>
+The light and the comfortable looking old
+farm house made the Meadow-Brook Girls almost
+forget their sodden condition. Mrs. Olney
+was standing on the front porch, gazing down
+across the field. She recognized the squire’s
+voice, but she was at a loss to understand who
+his companions were.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hello, Martha,” he sang out, as he crossed
+the road with his party.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That you, Squire?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yep. Me and the girls. Barn all burned
+down, but I’ve brought the leavings. Me and
+the girls is all right, Martha. But they’re wetter
+than Old Sixty. Poke up the kitchen fire
+and let them dry their clothing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting stepped forward and shook hands
+with Mrs. Olney, briefly explaining how they
+came to be there at that time of the night.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Female tramps. Got fired from sleepin’ in
+the squire’s hay barn,” chuckled the old man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Olney led the way into the house, where
+she turned and surveyed her callers critically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, you poor things!” she cried, when she
+had gotten a good look at the Meadow-Brook
+Girls. “And you sleepin’ in the barn. It’s a
+shame,” she exclaimed, bustling about.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50'></a>50</span>
+“Squire, you tend to that fire yerself. I’ll git
+out some dry clothing for these girls. Then I’ll
+see about making some coffee and getting them
+something to eat. Come into my bedroom, my
+dears and change your wet clothes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am afraid that we are putting you to a
+great deal of trouble,” demurred Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a bit of it,” rejoined Mrs. Olney. “Come
+right along with me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Half an hour later, Miss Elting and the
+Meadow-Brook Girls clothed in dressing gowns
+and wrappers belonging to the hospitable Mrs.
+Olney sat in the big farm house kitchen doing
+full justice to the luncheon provided by the
+farmer’s wife. After their exciting experiences
+of the night the girls were tired enough
+to gladly welcome the opportunity of sleeping
+in a real bed, and in spite of their late repast
+the five wayworn travelers slept peacefully, unvisited
+by nightmares.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chIV' id='chIV'></a>CHAPTER IV—THE COMING OF CRAZY JANE</h2>
+<p>
+After bidding good-bye to the hospitable
+squire and his good wife, next morning,
+the girls started over the fields on their
+way down the valley on the other side of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51'></a>51</span>
+ridge. Before leaving they had pressed their
+camp dresses and the girls now looked very
+neat in their dark blue uniforms that they had
+worn at Camp Wau-Wau. They wore also the
+official hat of the Camp Girls, to which organization
+they belonged. The hat was of blue cloth
+with the letters “C. G.” in white embroidered
+on the front.
+</p>
+<p>
+About their necks the girls wore a few
+brightly colored beads which to them meant
+more than precious stones, for each girl had
+won her beads by achievements as a Camp Girl.
+They hoped to win more on the long tramp
+across country. Harriet and Tommy had won
+several beads apiece, already, by their bravery
+at the barn fire, though of course the beads had
+not been awarded as yet. That would not be
+until after Miss Elting had made her report to
+the Chief Guardian at the completion of the
+trip.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls were now well on their way hoping
+soon to find Jane McCarthy and her car awaiting
+them. It was a five mile tramp over rough
+and steep hills, through woods and ravines. By
+this time however the Meadow-Brook Girls were
+becoming accustomed to rough traveling. The
+only one who made any really serious complaints
+was Margery Brown. She was usually
+in distress, but it was observed that the stout
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52'></a>52</span>
+girl was beginning to lose considerable flesh.
+Her freckles were more pronounced, however,
+and her face was redder than it ever had been
+before.
+</p>
+<p>
+The party, after a trying hike, reached the
+top of the range of hills about eleven o’clock
+in the morning. A long, sloping meadow
+stretched away from them until it met the highway.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There is the road,” cried Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But Crazy Jane ith nowhere in thight,” observed
+Tommy solemnly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is where we should have been last
+night,” nodded Miss Elting. “But we should
+have missed all of our exciting experiences of
+last night had we taken the right trail.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Missed them!” exclaimed Margery. “I
+wish we had. I never shall get over thinking
+about that awful fire and that horrid old Gipsy
+woman.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet smiled to herself thinking that it was
+well that Margery had not seen the dark-faced
+men enter the barn that night.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shall we wait, or go on?” questioned Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting decided that they should go on
+after reaching the highway. She told the girls
+to keep a sharp lookout for “signs.” The sign
+of the Meadow-Brook Girls was a triangle. It
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53'></a>53</span>
+might be found chalked on a fence or elsewhere
+by the roadside. An arrow pointing away from
+the triangle indicated the direction in which a
+Meadow-Brook girl had traveled. An arrow
+pointing straight up indicated, “I will return.”
+An arrow pointing toward the ground meant,
+“wait here.” A broken arrow, pointing in any
+direction indicated, “danger.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Reaching the highway the girls scanned the
+fences. Most of these being wire fences there
+was no space for any of the signs that they had
+agreed upon before starting out on their tramp.
+Occasionally they halted to examine a sign
+board at the junction of two or more roads, but
+nowhere did they find any trace of Jane and
+her car. There were not even tire tracks in the
+road. The pedestrians had almost made up
+their minds that Crazy Jane herself had missed
+her way when Harriet suddenly held up her
+hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I hear the honk of a motor horn,” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And there’s the sign on that hog pen,”
+laughed Miss Elting, pointing to a pig sty close
+to where they were standing. “That’s just like
+Jane. The arrow says we are to wait here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A pig pen ith thertainly a nithe plathe to
+wait,” observed Tommy sarcastically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We don’t have to wait in the pen, you
+goose,” jeered Margery.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54'></a>54</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tho I thee,” answered Tommy imperturbably.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There she comes!” shouted Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+Crazy Jane McCarthy, her blonde hair
+streaming over her shoulders, rounded a bend in
+the road, the rear wheels of her car skidding
+nearly to the ditch on the outside of the curve.
+Jane was shouting and waving one hand. She
+brought the car up sliding and leaped to the
+ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You dears! Where have you been?” she
+cried, embracing each of the girls in turn, not
+forgetting Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The question, is where have you been?”
+laughed the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Racing up and down the road looking for
+you,” returned Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where did you sleep?” questioned Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“At a farm house over in the valley,”
+chuckled Jane. “Where did you sleep?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We were in a barn part of the night. Regular
+tramps, aren’t we,” answered Harriet, her
+eyes sparkling.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth, and—and the barn burned down,” explained
+Grace.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Grace is right,” Miss Elting informed
+Jane. “Lightning struck the barn, burning it
+to the ground. Harriet saved an old Gipsy
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55'></a>55</span>
+woman from being burned to death. She had
+been stunned by the bolt of lightning and for
+the time being was paralyzed.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, what a shame!” exclaimed Jane. “I
+always have to be absent when the fun is going
+on. Think of poor me tearing up and down the
+road, half crazy because I’d lost you and you
+having so much fun all the time,” she complained.
+“Who was the woman you saved,
+darlin’?” she questioned, turning admiring
+eyes on Harriet Burrell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A Gipsy. She called herself Sybarina,” answered
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And did the Gipsy tell your fortune, Harriet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, she did,” cried Margery. “She said
+Harriet was going to be a great lady, rich and
+some other things that I didn’t understand.
+Then Sybarina gave Harriet her blessing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, Jane,” said Harriet mischievously.
+“Tell us about the way you ran down the farmer’s
+calf.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane gazed at Harriet frowningly, then burst
+into laughter.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you know about that? Who has
+been telling tales?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The farmer said you shaved the hair off the
+calf’s tail with your car.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I was sorry for the calf, but you ought to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56'></a>56</span>
+have seen the farmer wave his arms and run
+after me. He was fairly pulling the hair out of
+his head with rage,” chuckled Crazy Jane.
+“Well, dears, what have you in mind? Want
+to take a nice ride in the car?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet shook her head with emphasis.
+</p>
+<p>
+“When we started on this tramp we agreed
+that we wouldn’t ride in your car at all. I, for
+one, am going to keep to that agreement.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t tempt me,” said Hazel, chancing to
+catch the merry eye of Jane McCarthy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We didn’t agree not to eat in the car, did
+we?” questioned Tommy. “That latht gully I
+fell into gave me an awful appetite.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait! I’ll set the table,” cried Jane, dashing
+to the car and unlocking the luggage trunk
+at the rear. From under the rear seat she took
+a board, which she laid across the rear compartment.
+Over this she spread a white cloth
+and on it began placing a cold luncheon that
+was sufficiently appetizing in looks to excite the
+poorest appetite. Tommy eyed it longingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Get in, girls,” commanded Jane. They
+made a rush for the car. “I have a can of
+milk in the locker, if the jolting of this old wagon
+hasn’t soured it. You see, I drove rather fast
+this morning. I wanted to find you. I didn’t
+know what had become of you. Yes; the milk
+is all right.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57'></a>57</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+There in Jane’s car by the side of the road
+they ate their luncheon, giving no heed to the
+curious glances of passers-by.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did the farmer really tell you about that
+calf?” questioned Jane, when the girls had
+nearly finished their meal.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. It was in his barn we slept until it
+caught fire,” explained the guardian. “He
+then took us to his home and he and his wife
+were perfectly lovely to us. I wish you had
+been with us. He is a quaint character.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If he is anything like his calf, he must be,”
+observed Crazy Jane. “It didn’t know enough
+to get out of the road when it saw an automobile
+coming at forty-five miles an hour. Where
+are you going from here?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We must consult the map. Are there any
+good camping places beyond here, or were you
+going so fast you couldn’t see?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I never drive so fast that I can’t see,” reproved
+Jane. “Yes. I know of a place, and
+it’s a fine place for a camp too. It’s called the
+Willow Ponds. It is just far enough back from
+the road, and there isn’t a house in sight.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How far is it from here?” asked Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Five miles.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Five mileth!” repeated Tommy wearily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, help!” wailed Margery. “My feet
+won’t hold out.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58'></a>58</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then ride with me,” suggested Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” returned Margery, “but I consider
+walking the lesser of the two evils.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I fear it will make too short a hike for us,
+for one day,” reflected Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It will make a ten mile hike,” answered Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. But only five miles of walking on the
+main trail. We shall have advanced only five
+miles. However, perhaps it will be enough for
+one day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That latht gully I fell into gave me an awful
+appetite,” reiterated Tommy apologetically,
+as she helped herself to another slice of cold
+roast beef.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tommy’s appetite doesn’t need that kind of
+stimulant,” laughed Hazel. “Nor does mine.
+I think I shall have to have another slice of
+roast beef.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The luncheon ended, the girls reclined on the
+soft cushions of the car for half an hour, after
+which Harriet and Jane put away the dishes and
+the rest of the food.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are we ready to hike?” asked Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Margery’s face took on a pained expression.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I suppose so,” she complained. “The
+sooner we start the sooner we shall get there.
+Then a long night’s rest in our own tent. Oh,
+joy, oh, joy!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59'></a>59</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It may not be so very joyous, after all,”
+retorted Miss Elting. “In this topsy-turvy bit
+of country <em>anything</em> may happen, at <em>any</em> moment,
+to keep us awake, or even to banish the
+wish for sleep.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What we need,” said Tommy soberly, “ith
+a nithe, good-natured dog that will bite folkth.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting decided that it was time to start.
+So shouldering their packs the girls moved on.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll be driving behind you,” said Crazy Jane.
+“I’ll be pace-maker. If you lag I’ll remonstrate
+by riding over you! How will you like
+that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting and Harriet set a good stride.
+The other girls straggled after them, Margery
+being last of all. Behind them all Jane drove
+the car slowly, the engine making no noise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We must walk faster, girls!” cried Miss
+Elting, looking back. “You, especially, Margery.
+Faster!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I couldn’t move any faster,” protested Margery
+wearily “even if I were paid for it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Honk! Honk! Honk! sounded an automobile
+horn behind her. There was a whirr of fast-moving
+wheels.
+</p>
+<p>
+HONK!
+</p>
+<p>
+Turning, Margery saw the car bearing down
+upon her at full speed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“O-o-o-h!” screamed Margery. Picking up
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60'></a>60</span>
+her skirts a trifle she fled down the road, while
+Jane stopped the car just behind her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m sorry you can’t move fast!” Jane
+called, teasingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Twice after that Crazy Jane forced Margery
+to quicken her lagging steps until at length poor
+Margery stepped aside, out of the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not another step for me, Jane McCarthy,
+unless you keep ahead of the whole party,” declared
+the persecuted Camp Girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Get in and ride,” teased Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I believe I will,” faltered Margery, who
+was limping now.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Margery!” exclaimed Harriet rebukingly,
+“if you ride, then you will have to drop out
+of the hike, and we’ll send you home.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I think I’ll keep on walking,” Margery
+decided meekly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The rest of the journey was accomplished
+without further complaints from either Tommy
+or Margery. Arriving at a place where they
+left the road and set off across a field, Jane
+explained that earlier in the day she had asked
+the permission of the owner of the field to camp
+there. She thought it would make an excellent
+camp site, the ponds being screened from the
+road by a heavy growth of willows, and there
+was plenty of dry wood to be had from the ruins
+of an old saw mill that stood near the ponds.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61'></a>61</span>
+The willows, also, would serve to hide the camp
+from the gaze of curious outsiders, a condition
+to be desired by young women tramping through
+the country.
+</p>
+<p>
+The car was driven in among the willows,
+after which Harriet and Miss Elting began hauling
+the sections of their tent from the rear of
+the car. They went at the pitching of the tent
+like veterans, and placed the sections together,
+then raised the canvas, staking it down with the
+expertness of circusmen.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet left the final staking-down to Tommy
+and Margery while she gathered the wood for
+the campfire. Jane and Miss Elting, in the
+meantime had begun getting out the supplies
+for supper. Two folding tables were set up in
+the tent, covered by fresh table cloths, on
+which were placed the dishes and the silver
+knives, forks and spoons that Jane had brought
+along. She said silver was none too good for
+the Meadow-Brook Girls. The water in the
+pond, being from nearby springs, was cool and
+refreshing. The girls decided to take a swim
+late in the evening after their suppers had been
+well digested.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a merry party of happy, brown-faced
+girls that sat down to the evening meal with
+the cheerful campfire blazing just outside, and
+the cool, fragrant autumn breezes drifting
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62'></a>62</span>
+through the tent. Everything was charmingly
+peaceful, but the peace of the night was to be
+rudely disturbed later in the evening, and the
+girls were to have another exciting time of it
+ere they finally got to sleep.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chV' id='chV'></a>CHAPTER V—CATCHING THE SPECKLED BEAUTIES</h2>
+<p>
+“Oh, girls, let’s stay here the rest of the
+fall. Let’s not walk any more,”
+begged Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thee the fithh jump!” cried Tommy,
+pointing to the pond.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Trout, too. If I only had a rod and line!”
+exclaimed Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You shall have them, darlin’,” answered
+Jane. “If you want anything you don’t see,
+just ask for it. You’ll find the whole fisherman’s
+outfit strapped under the car—under the
+left mudguard. What about bait?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think the trout will take flies. That is
+what they are jumping for,” replied Harriet.
+“Where will I find the flies?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“In the box under the rear seat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thay, Harriet!” piped Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Catch me an oythter for breakfatht.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63'></a>63</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet paused from jointing Jane’s rod
+long enough to join in the merriment at
+Tommy’s expense.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have you a dusty miller, Jane?” she asked,
+glancing up with flushed face.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know whether or not he’s dusty,
+but there’s an insect in there that they call a
+miller. Dad says it’s a killer. I never saw it
+show its teeth. It’s my opinion that it would
+be a fool fish that would bite a thing like that.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You wait and see,” chuckled Harriet, fixing
+the leader of the fly to the silk line, then
+balancing the rod by its butt, swinging the line
+this way and that through the air to see how
+the reel worked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It will be too late by the time you get ready
+to fish,” reminded Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t sunset yet, Miss Elting. There
+should be good fishing for half an hour yet.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, are you going to fish, or are you going
+to talk all the time during that half hour?”
+demanded Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+For answer Harriet swung the pole above her
+head. With a swish the dusty miller described
+a long curve in the air, then dived for the water,
+which it took with the faintest possible disturbance.
+</p>
+<p>
+There followed a swish and a splash. The
+rod bent until it seemed to the spectators as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64'></a>64</span>
+though it would break under the strain. A
+flashing, scintillating body jumped through the
+air, then plunged down deep into the clear
+waters of the pond.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A fithh! A fithh!” screamed Tommy.
+“Harriet hath got a fithh. Oh, goodie, goodie,
+goodie!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Pull him in. You’ll lose him!” shouted
+Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now will you look at our Harriet?” cried
+Crazy Jane, hugging herself gleefully, swaying
+her body from side to side in the ecstasy of her
+delight.
+</p>
+<p>
+The trout that Harriet Burrell had hooked
+was a lively fish. It was darting and diving
+with wonderful strength and quickness. The
+line cut the water with a swish, swish, swish
+that was plainly heard by all.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Get it, Harriet! Oh, do get it,” begged
+Hazel, in an agony of apprehension lest the
+trout succeed in freeing itself.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The real fun of catching a fish is ‘playing’
+it, just as Harriet is doing,” answered Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy had run out on one of the beams of
+the old mill race, where she was dancing up
+and down at the imminent risk of a ducking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, look out, girls,” warned Harriet.
+“I’m going to try to land him.” There was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65'></a>65</span>
+a lively scurrying on the part of the girls. The
+trout came up protesting and fighting every
+inch of the way. Then Harriet, having reeled
+in the line, pulled the trout in toward the bank.
+</p>
+<p>
+Unfortunately for Harriet, but fortunately
+for the fish, Tommy Thompson was in the way.
+The trout slapped her squarely in the face ere
+Harriet had discovered her companion’s location.
+There was a shrill scream from Tommy,
+a light splash as the trout dropped into the
+pond, then a mighty splash as Tommy, losing
+her balance, went sprawling into the cold water.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I have lost my fish!” wailed Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Catch Tommy!” yelled Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet threw down her rod and ran out on
+the beam where Tommy had been standing before
+the disaster. Tommy was splashing and
+coughing, making frantic efforts to reach shore.
+Harriet knew the little blonde girl could swim,
+else she would have gone in after her. But
+Tommy wished to attract all the sympathy and
+attention of her companions in her direction,
+so she kept up a continuous screaming. Harriet
+reached down and gave her a hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How’s the water, Tommy?” questioned Harriet,
+mischievously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Co-o-o-old,” chattered Tommy. “I’m
+fr-r-r-r-eezing. What did you knock me in
+for?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66'></a>66</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, I didn’t realize that you were standing
+there. Why did you make me lose my
+fish?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“There, there, girls! Tommy go into the tent
+at once and take off your wet clothing. Put
+on dry clothes unless you wish to go to bed
+now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t want to go to bed, I want to watch
+Harriet catch fithh.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, you’ve scared them all out of the pond,”
+complained Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I hope you fall in, too, Buthter,” was
+Tommy’s parting salute, as she ran shivering to
+the tent. Fifteen minutes later, she emerged
+clad in dry clothing and apparently none the
+worse for her recent wetting.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the meantime Harriet had returned to her
+fishing, laughing softly over her companion’s
+mishap and their argument following the
+plunge. There were screams of delight when
+finally she landed a trout. Nor did she stop
+until the sun dipped behind the western hills
+and the speckled beauties went down into the
+depths of the stream, or skulked under the edge
+of its banks for the night. The result of the
+fishing was a dozen fine trout, the smallest
+weighing only a little under a half pound and
+the largest weighing nearly two pounds, according
+to the guardian’s estimate.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67'></a>67</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet insisted on dressing the fish that
+night, something she knew better how to do
+than did any of her companions. The fish were
+then put in a pail, the cover tightly fitted and
+the pail hung in the old mill race, where the
+cold water would flow over the receptacle all
+night long.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There,” exclaimed Harriet after her work
+was finished. “We shall have a breakfast fit
+for a king. Now I’m going in bathing. I am
+so covered with dust and grime that I’m
+ashamed of myself. Come, girls, aren’t you
+going in with me?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What! Go into that ice cold water?” demanded
+Margery. “No, thank you. I’ll heat
+some water and take my bath in the tent.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will go in with you, Harriet,” offered
+Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So will I,” added the guardian. “Come,
+let’s get ready before the air gets colder.
+Tommy already has had her bath.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Had they not been inured to cold water and
+exposure, the experiment might have been followed
+by severe colds if nothing worse. But
+the Meadow-Brook Girls were well seasoned
+from living out of doors for the greater part
+of the summer and from bathing in the cold
+stream at Camp Wau-Wau. The first plunge
+into the pond brought gasps and shivers, then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68'></a>68</span>
+they splashed about in the water, swimming
+across the pond and back, again and again,
+while Margery stood on the bank shivering out
+of pure sympathy for them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That is what I call great,” cried Harriet,
+rising dripping to the bank after Miss Elting
+had called to the two girls to come out of the
+water. “I could almost eat another meal after
+that bath.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tho could I,” piped Tommy, thrusting her
+head out from the tent flap.
+</p>
+<p>
+The two girls and the guardian ran laughing
+to the tent, where, greatly refreshed by their
+cold plunge, they changed their wet bathing
+suits for dry clothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now fresh fuel was piled on the camp fire.
+The flames blazed high and the smoke curled
+skyward in the still, clear evening air. Harriet
+and Hazel were capering about the fire,
+holding an impromptu war dance. Tommy was
+standing near one corner of the tent watching
+the performance, when, thinking she had heard
+a sound behind her, she turned apprehensively.
+</p>
+<p>
+For one horrified moment Tommy Thompson
+gazed, then with a yell of terror sprang for the
+tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me! Oh, thave me!” she screamed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” cried Harriet and Miss Elting,
+rushing toward her. Then they, too, halted,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69'></a>69</span>
+gazing into the deepening shadows that enveloped
+the rear of the tent. Margery had caught
+sight of the object that had sent Tommy into
+an agony of terror. Margery had thrown herself
+headlong into the tent screaming wildly.
+Hazel, Miss Elting and Harriet stood their
+ground.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chVI' id='chVI'></a>CHAPTER VI—THE CALL OF THE DANCING BEAR</h2>
+<p>
+“A bear! A bear! Thave me!” came
+Tommy’s wailing voice from the interior
+of the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be quiet!” commanded Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s on a chain. There are two men with
+it,” said Harriet somewhat unsteadily.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting stepped forward to obtain a better
+view of the two men. She saw the swarthy
+faces of two Italians. One was leading the bear
+by a chain, the other carried a long pole. The
+animal was a huge, ambling, cinnamon bear.
+He wore a muzzle, and the sight of this gave
+the woman and the two girls a greater sense
+of security.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you wish here?” demanded the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We maka da bear dance,” said the man,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70'></a>70</span>
+with the pole, touching his hat politely. “You
+giva mea twent-five cent I maka da bear dance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We do not wish to see the bear dance. You
+will please go away, or I shall call for assistance
+to drive you off,” returned Miss Elting
+boldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, let the bear dance. It would be great
+fun,” urged Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Twent-five cent to maka da bear dance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+At this juncture Margery came timidly out
+of the tent. Tommy, white-faced, ready to run
+at the slightest sign of alarm, crept out after
+her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Will—will he bite?” stammered Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“He will hurt his teeth on the muzzle if he
+does,” answered Harriet Burrell laughingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The leader gave a sharp command. The bear
+rose on its hind feet and began pawing the air.
+It fixed its beady eyes on the face of Tommy
+Thompson. Tommy uttered a little cry and
+shrank back.
+</p>
+<p>
+“He lika da littla girl,” grinned the Italian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind being personal. If you will
+keep your distance we will pay you a quarter
+to see the bear dance.” Miss Elting drew a
+coin from her pocket, and stepping forward,
+without the least hesitation, handed it to the
+man with the pole. “Keep him over on that
+side of the fire. You two men remain over there
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71'></a>71</span>
+also. Remember, we are quite well prepared
+to assert our rights if you do not do as you
+are told. Watch that neither of them gets into
+the tent, Harriet,” she added in a whisper.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet Burrell nodded understandingly. The
+bear, in response to frequent prods of the pole,
+ambled about, dancing awkwardly, now and
+then uttering a growl of resentment at the
+treatment he was receiving. His master put
+the animal through its paces. At this juncture,
+Jane McCarthy, who, some time before, had
+driven off to a farm house in quest of milk for
+breakfast, drove in with a great rattle and honking.
+At first the Italians were for dragging
+their bear away. But, upon discovering that
+the newcomer was only another young woman,
+they grinned and went on with the performance.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hello! what have we here?” cried Jane.
+“Where did you catch that beast? Hey, you
+men! Didn’t I pass you on the road this afternoon?
+Yes, I did. I recognize your friend,
+the bear. Better look out for those fellows. I
+don’t like the looks of them,” declared Crazy
+Jane to Miss Elting in a low voice. “I’d a
+heap sooner trust the bear than the men, and
+I wouldn’t care to turn my back on either for
+very long at one time.” Then turning to the
+men she said: “Make your bear do his tricks
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72'></a>72</span>
+over again. I haven’t seen the show, you
+know.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Twent-five cent,” answered the man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane looked at him for a few seconds, then,
+throwing back her head, laughed loudly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Twent-five cents, eh? I guess not! Does
+he dance, or does he not?” she demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+For answer the man with the pole gave the
+bear a vicious poke, the other led the animal
+to a small tree, to which he tied him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My gracious, are they going to camp here?”
+gasped Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t be afraid. We will send them on
+their way soon enough,” answered Harriet in
+a low voice. “I wouldn’t make them angry,
+Miss Elting.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t intend to.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Leave them to me. See here, men, what
+do you propose to do now?” demanded Jane
+briskly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We lika somathing to eat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right. You shall have somathing.
+Twent-five cent please,” mimicked Crazy Jane,
+holding out a hand. She was so droll about it
+that the girls burst out laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, you shouldn’t have done that. See,
+you have made them angry,” whispered Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t care if I have. I’ll be getting angry
+myself, pretty soon—maybe.”
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i003' id='i003'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-073.jpg" alt="“Twent-five Cent, Please,” mimicked Jane." title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>“Twent-five Cent, Please,” mimicked Jane.</span>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75'></a>75</span></div>
+<p>
+“Shall I get something for them, Miss Elting?”
+questioned Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian nodded. Harriet ran into the
+tent, where she quickly prepared some roast
+beef sandwiches. These she carried out and
+handed to the leader of the bear. He divided
+with his companion. The two men sat down
+by the fire and began eating voraciously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You gotta coffee?” asked the leader, his
+mouth so full of the sandwich he was eating
+that he was barely understandable.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. We have no coffee made,” replied Miss
+Elting. “You will have to get along with what
+you have.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You maka coffee. You maka now!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What?” cried Crazy Jane belligerently.
+“You order us to make coffee for you, you lazy
+good-for-nothings? Get out of here before I
+lose my temper with you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Easy, Jane!” warned Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You no giva coffee, I letta out da bear,”
+threatened the leader, scrambling up and running
+to the tree where the cinnamon bear was
+secured. The second Italian also had risen to
+his feet. He was edging toward the rear of the
+tent, evidently thinking that he was not observed.
+But Harriet, though not appearing to
+notice, was watching him narrowly. Tommy
+and Margery were trembling with fear. Harriet and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76'></a>76</span>
+Jane were unafraid. They were getting
+a little angry, however. Miss Elting
+slipped into the tent and getting her revolver,
+secreted it in a fold of her skirt. Just as she
+emerged the second Italian ducked in under the
+edge of the tent. The tent had been staked
+down firmly and as the man was somewhat
+stout he stuck when half way under the side
+wall.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come out of that,” commanded Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Instead of obeying her the man tried to wriggle
+in.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I see I’ve got to attack him from inside the
+tent,” decided the girl. Wheeling about she ran
+into the tent where, in the light from the campfire,
+she could see the tousled head and rolling
+black eyes of the man underneath the side wall.
+Without speaking she seized a pail of water that
+stood near the entrance of the tent and dashed
+it full into the man’s face.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hurrah for Harriet!” cried Crazy Jane
+from the tent door, where she stood waving her
+arms now and hopping about gleefully.
+</p>
+<p>
+Choking and sputtering the man wriggled
+out from under the tent uttering a perfect torrent
+of abuse in his native tongue. It was about
+this time that Miss Elting discovered that she
+had forgotten to load the revolver before taking
+it from the tent. Meanwhile the leader had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77'></a>77</span>
+untied the chain of the bear and was urging it
+forward, evidently intending to frighten the
+women.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You giva me mon. I then-a go way with da
+bear. You giva me mon,” he demanded angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy Thompson, at this juncture, found
+her courage. Snatching up a burning fire
+brand she charged the man leading the bear.
+He leaped back to avoid the thrust of the fiery
+club. The bear swung a giant paw at her.
+Tommy hit him over the nose with the firebrand.
+In the meantime Hazel Holland, following
+Harriet’s example, appeared on the scene with
+another pail of water, which she dashed over
+the leader and the bear.
+</p>
+<p>
+Fire and water were a little more than the
+man or the bear had bargained for, so they
+made haste to get out of the danger zone.
+Crazy Jane, in the meantime pursued them
+shouting and brandishing a stout stick that she
+had picked up in the field. Jane chased the men
+all the way to the road, with Tommy and her
+fiery club in close pursuit.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, those rascals!” cried the guardian,
+when the girls returned. “And that miserable
+bear! I’ll warrant the three of them got the
+fright of their lives. They won’t bother the
+Meadow-Brook Girls soon again.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78'></a>78</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am not so certain of that,” answered Harriet,
+smiling. “We did give them a scare,
+though. But I’m sorry I had almost to drown
+that one man. He was determined to get into
+the tent. What do you suppose he wanted?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“To steal something, of course,” answered
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And Tommy. Did you see Tommy and her
+torch, girls? Oh, wasn’t it a sight?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. And Hazel and Harriet with their
+pails of water,” chuckled the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tommy, dear,” exclaimed Miss Elting, as
+the little girl sat down beside her, flushed and
+triumphant. “You have earned a bead this
+evening. I think each one of you is entitled
+to a bright red bead. Now pile on the wood,
+girls, so we shall have plenty of light. I don’t
+apprehend further trouble, but it is well to be
+prepared.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will see to that,” spoke up Harriet. “I
+have a plan that will make it unnecessary for
+any one to sit up and keep watch.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet explained her plan, which met with
+the approval of the others. That plan was
+destined to fulfill its purpose later in the night,
+for their excitement was not yet ended, and before
+the dawning of another day, the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were once more to distinguish
+themselves.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79'></a>79</span><a name='chVII' id='chVII'></a>CHAPTER VII—DISCOVERING MIDNIGHT PROWLERS</h2>
+<p>
+“Have you a ball of strong twine in your
+kit, Jane?” asked Harriet. “You
+told me to ask for anything I wanted
+but did not see.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure, I have. In the tool box. Wait. I’ll
+get it for you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+While Jane went for the twine, Harriet hurried
+out, returning a few moments later with
+two sticks, each stick being about five feet long.
+Next she got a tin pail and stood the pail bottom-side-up
+on the sticks. Her companions
+watched her wonderingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What <em>are</em> you trying to do?” demanded
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Fixing a burglar alarm. You’ll agree that
+it is all right after I have it finished. Now, I
+want to run this twine all the way around the
+camp. I shall need some round sticks. Help
+me find some, Tommy. You have sharp
+eyes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+All hands set out to hunt for the desired
+sticks. Harriet began thrusting them into the
+soft ground at more or less regular intervals.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80'></a>80</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+When the stakes had been placed loops of
+string were tied near the tops of them, and
+through these loops was threaded the long twine
+until the camp was entirely surrounded by it. It
+formed a thread-like barrier that seemed too
+slender a thing to be of much use. One end of
+the string was secured to the two sticks on which
+the pail had been placed. The slack in the
+string was taken up until the sticks and the
+pail tilted from the wall of the tent at a sharp
+angle.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hurrah!” cried the guardian. “That is a
+most ingenious contrivance. How did you come
+to think of it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nethethity ith the mother of invention, tho
+my father thayth,” spoke up Grace.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet nodded approvingly. The others
+laughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tommy is becoming quite a philosopher,”
+averred the guardian. “Aren’t you going to
+give us a demonstration of your invention, Harriet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very well,” laughed Harriet. “Hazel, will
+you go out and stumble against the string?
+Don’t you dare to break it for—Oh!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The two sticks had come down with a crash,
+the tin pail rattling as it rolled over the floor.
+Tommy screamed and so did Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s your demonstration,” announced
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81'></a>81</span>
+Harriet. “Some one is coming. I hope it isn’t
+those Italians again.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting with her loaded revolver, Jane
+with her club, Harriet armed this time with a
+stout stick, sauntered forth to meet the newcomer.
+Jane had run to the dark side of the
+tent, thrusting her club across the corner ready
+to use it at the first indication of trouble. To
+her disgust, the farmer from whom she had
+obtained permission to make camp, now appeared
+on the scene.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s all right, girls. This is the gentleman
+who let us make camp here,” called Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I just came over to tell you to take care of
+your fire. If it runs it’ll burn off the meadow,
+it being all fresh seeding there. I wouldn’t
+want to lose it,” hailed their visitor.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you for calling our attention to it.
+We are always careful of fire,” Miss Elting
+made reply.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What was it I fell over when I came in
+here?” he asked, glancing about him. “You
+certainly look mighty comfortable here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls looked at each other and giggled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was a little contrivance of one of our
+young women, so that we might be warned of
+the approach of strangers,” the guardian informed
+him. “You see, it warned us that some
+one was coming.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82'></a>82</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I guess you can take care of yourselves,
+all right. Is there anything you want? If there
+is, come over to the house. My wife is curious
+to see this outfit. Maybe she will come over in
+the morning.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you very kindly for your interest,”
+answered the guardian. “We shall be breaking
+camp early in the morning.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The farmer left. Harriet nodded to her companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Was the demonstration satisfactory?” she
+questioned.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should say it was,” answered Margery.
+“It nearly scared me out of my wits.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I suppose we shall have to mend the string
+now. The farmer’s big boots broke it in two
+places. However, we needn’t worry about any
+person getting into this camp to-night without
+giving us warning of his approach,” said Harriet.
+She repaired the broken “burglar alarm,”
+then returning to the tent adjusted the sticks
+and the pail, placing several other pieces of
+tinware with it. The girls then gathered about
+the campfire, where they chatted, told stories
+and exchanged experiences until a late hour.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet got out the map just before they retired.
+After consulting with Miss Elting for
+some time, it was decided that they should take
+a short cut across a rugged country, using their
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83'></a>83</span>
+compass to guide them, meeting Jane some
+twelve miles further on. She would have to
+drive more than twenty miles to make the point.
+The girls did not enjoy the highways very
+much. In the first place, the roads were dusty;
+many curious people were to be met with on
+the roads; then again they thoroughly enjoyed
+breaking new paths through the forests and
+over fields and hills. Now that all the crops
+had been garnered there was no danger of doing
+damage to the farmers’ fields by tramping
+across them. Jane was instructed to wait for
+them after driving into the next town for fresh
+supplies.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s curious that we don’t run across any
+melon fields. The first one I catch sight of I’m
+going to raid,” she declared.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, Jane, you mustn’t do that,” objected
+the guardian. “What we get we must pay
+for.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly,” agreed Jane. “But there isn’t
+any sport in just walking up and paying for
+melons. It’s a heap more fun to forage for
+them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, Jane, think what it means to take an
+object of value that doesn’t belong to you. It
+is stealing!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s true. It surely is,” agreed Jane.
+“I won’t ever mention any such thing again.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84'></a>84</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” returned Miss Elting with a
+smile that amply repaid Crazy Jane for her
+decision.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last all hands began making preparations
+for bed. Folding cots were opened and made
+up, fresh fuel was heaped on the campfire,
+then Harriet and Miss Elting made a round of
+the camp to see that all was in shape for the
+night. Jane lighted the big headlights on her
+car, turning them on the darkest part of the
+camp, after which they drew the flap to the tent
+and began preparing for bed. Half an hour
+later the camp was silent, save for the occasional
+crackling of the fire. All the dead leaves
+and inflammable stuff had been raked away and
+the ground dug up immediately about the fire
+to prevent it from spreading. The moon now
+silvered the landscape, and a faint mist was
+rising from about the Willow Ponds, adding to
+the beauty of the night.
+</p>
+<p>
+Midnight came, then the silence became more
+marked than before. About one o’clock in the
+morning two men might have been observed
+skulking about the farther side of the pond
+nearest to the camp. They took care not to
+come within range of the headlights of Crazy
+Jane’s motor car. Had one looked closely at
+them the men might have been recognized as
+the same pair that had visited the camp with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85'></a>85</span>
+the bear earlier in the evening. What their
+purpose was in returning could only be surmised.
+</p>
+<p>
+It might be revenge or robbery. In either
+event it was bad enough, and the Meadow-Brook
+Girls, sleeping soundly, were blissfully unconscious
+of the danger that menaced them. Their
+faith in Harriet Burrell’s burglar alarm permitted
+them to sleep without fear.
+</p>
+<p>
+All at once there was a mighty crash in the
+tent. As Tommy Thompson described it afterwards,
+“it thounded ath if lightning had thtruck
+a tin thhop.” The tin pail and the other kitchen
+utensils that had been hung on the long sticks
+in the tent came down with a clatter and a bang.
+The tin pail rolled clear across the tent, landed
+on Margery Brown, bringing from her a scream
+of terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Quick! Put on your bathrobes!” called
+Miss Elting. “There is trouble here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+No need to tell them that. The tin pail already
+had conveyed this information to the
+Meadow-Brook Girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet was the first one to run outside the
+tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There they are!” she cried, having caught
+sight of two skulking figures near the automobile.
+“It’s the same Italians. Let’s call for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86'></a>86</span>
+help as loudly as we can. Perhaps that will
+make them take to their heels.”
+</p>
+<p>
+It had the desired effect. Seeing that the
+camp was fully aroused the intruders fled. Then
+a daring plan suggested itself to Crazy Jane
+McCarthy. Leaving her companions she started
+on a run for her car.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come back! Where are you going?” cried
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll show you, I’ll show them! Just watch
+and you’ll see more fun than a barrel of monkeys
+eating cayenne pepper.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Dashing up to the car, she advanced the spark
+control, and gave the crank a quick turn. The
+car began a sputtering that quickly grew into
+a roar from the exhaust. Crazy Jane leaped
+in. She was clad in a bathrobe that reached to
+her ankles; her tangle of hair fell about her face
+and shoulders giving her face a wilder and more
+weird expression than ever.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane threw in the high speed lever. The
+car leaped forward. Harriet Burrell, who had
+divined something of Jane’s purpose, made a
+running leap and landed on the step, grasping
+one of the cover braces for support.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane, Jane! For goodness’ sake, what are
+you going to do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m going to give the rascals the scare of
+their lives. They haven’t had enough. Get in!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87'></a>87</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet did so, but only to prevent being
+thrown off the car. She had little desire to participate
+in the drive that she well knew would
+be an exciting one. Miss Elting was shouting
+to Jane to come back. Jane did not or would
+not hear. Uttering a shrill little cry of triumph
+she drove the car ahead at a perilous
+rate of speed. Over the rough field the automobile
+lurched and careened imperiling the
+safety of its occupants and threatening momentarily
+to upset and wreck the car.
+</p>
+<p>
+The two men were fleeing across the field.
+Seeing the car bearing down upon them, they
+began to dodge. The big white eyes of the
+headlights followed them wherever they went.
+It was maddening. Now the fugitives began
+zig-zagging. So did Crazy Jane. Once she
+nearly ran them down. The Italians sprang
+out of the way just in time and began running
+back toward the camp. Jane pursued them as
+soon as she could get the car turned about and
+facing the other way. By this time the men
+had gotten a long start.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re making for the camp, the villains,”
+breathed Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is because they are trying to get out of
+your way,” answered Harriet almost breathlessly.
+“You will have to head them off.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Head them off nothing!” exploded Jane.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88'></a>88</span>
+“Rather will I take their heads off, the miserable
+rascals.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane, Jane! You mustn’t run them down.
+You simply <em>must not</em>. You might kill them.
+Please, please don’t try to do that, dear!”
+begged Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, darlin’. But you’re making me
+lose a lot of fun. I don’t get an opportunity
+like this every day in the week. They deserve
+all I can give them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mustn’t harm a human being, no matter
+how bad he is. There, they have turned toward
+the road.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I won’t hurt them,” promised Jane. “I’ll
+just scare them a little.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh!” cried Harriet as the car rose on two
+wheels, nearly turning over. “Do be careful!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t be afraid. As long as I’ve got two
+wheels on the ground I’m all right. Now if
+I had only one wheel on the old sod you might
+worry, but you wouldn’t worry for long. See
+’em go. They know I’ve got them now!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Just then the men plunged headlong into a
+ditch that extended all the way across the field.
+The girls had not discovered it until that moment.
+Jane checked her car just in time to prevent
+it also from going into the ditch.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s a bridge to the right,” Harriet informed
+her, then was sorry she had made the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89'></a>89</span>
+suggestion. Crazy Jane charged the bridge at
+full speed. All four wheels seemed to strike
+the planking at the same instant.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane turned sharply. They were now chasing
+the two men obliquely across the field. The
+men were lagging.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re getting winded,” shouted Crazy
+Jane triumphantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please go back now,” begged Harriet
+“You have frightened them enough. They
+never will trouble us again.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not till I get the wretches on a run down
+the road. I’ve not finished with them yet.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They have nearly finished themselves,” answered
+Harriet. She was no longer apprehensive
+that Jane would injure the men intentionally,
+though Harriet feared that one of them
+might stumble and be crushed underneath the
+car. Still her pulses were beating high, the
+color in her cheeks had mounted to her forehead.
+She was entering into the spirit of the wild
+chase almost with the enthusiasm of Crazy Jane
+herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+The voices of their companions in the camp
+no longer reached them. The two girls were
+too far away to hear now, even had the car not
+been making such a din.
+</p>
+<p>
+The two men were making for the roadside
+fence, a board structure, which in the haze of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90'></a>90</span>
+the damp night, the girls did not see. They had
+forgotten that the fence was there.
+</p>
+<p>
+All at once the men reached the fence. Grasping
+the top board they flung themselves over,
+landing heavily on the ground on the other side.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look out!” cried Harriet warningly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hold fast!” yelled Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+Crash!
+</p>
+<p>
+The car struck the fence with a mighty crash
+accompanied by the sound of splintering woodwork.
+The headlights went out, and Jane
+brought her car to a stop in the midst of the
+wreck at the roadside.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chVIII' id='chVIII'></a>CHAPTER VIII—CAUGHT IN A MORASS</h2>
+<p>
+“Well, here we are,” announced Crazy
+Jane calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, see those fellows run!”
+cried Harriet, gaspingly. “There they go!”
+she cried, in almost hysterical amusement, after
+she had picked herself up from the bottom of
+the car, where the collision had hurled her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve a good notion to send the car straight
+through the fence, and chase that pair of
+skulkers out of the state!” Jane McCarthy proposed
+vindictively.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91'></a>91</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t you try to do it,” protested Harriet,
+now sobered by the realization of how reckless
+her companion might easily become. “Jane,
+<em>some day</em> you’ll really hit some one—that would
+be awful!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But I didn’t half frighten that pair of rascals,”
+returned Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If the men weren’t frightened, then they’ll
+never know fear,” insisted Harriet Burrell.
+“How badly is the car damaged?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A blow on the nose, but the nose is not even
+out of joint,” Jane answered coolly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then let us get back to Miss Elting. How
+she’ll scold!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting did scold when they reached camp
+with the car. It is to be feared, however, that
+Jane heard but little of the rebuke, for she was
+busy examining the damage done to her beloved
+car. She found that she could put the lamps in
+condition again. The guard rod in front of the
+radiator was also injured. Jane decided that
+this could be easily fixed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls, girls! What do you mean by such
+actions. Jane, I am amazed at you. Harriet,
+how could you?” Miss Elting rebuked them
+roundly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I guess it was impulse,” answered Harriet,
+her face crimsoning under the reproachful
+words of the guardian. “Please don’t scold
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92'></a>92</span>
+us. We drove the men off. They will not
+trouble us again, I am quite sure.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But they might have been run down, girls.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Served them right if they had, bad luck to
+them!” retorted Jane mischievously. “However,
+’all’s well that ends well.’ I’m for bed.
+What do you say?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thay, why didn’t you take me along?” demanded
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was quite bad enough without your assistance,”
+replied the guardian. “Yes, we had
+better retire at once. Do you wish to put up
+your burglar alarm again, Harriet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do not think it will be necessary. The
+men won’t prowl about the camp again to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, they won’t,” agreed Jane, laughing uproariously.
+“They’re running yet and they’ll
+be running as long as their wind holds out. I
+wonder where they left the bear? Wouldn’t it
+be fun if we could find the bear and let him
+loose?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh-h-h!” cried Margery. “How can you
+talk so, Jane?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Most certainly not,” rebuked Miss Elting.
+“You have done quite enough as it is, without
+turning a bear loose on the community. You had
+better all go back to bed. What did you do to
+your car, Jane?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93'></a>93</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Bumped its nose, that’s all. My only regret
+is that I didn’t bump it against one of the
+Italians. I shouldn’t have minded giving the
+bear a smash, too. Good night. Sweet dreams,
+darlin’s!” Jane flounced into the tent and
+throwing off her bathrobe tumbled into bed,
+where she was soon sound asleep. The others
+did not quiet down quite so quickly. Harriet,
+especially, lay thinking over the experiences of
+the evening, and each time the thought of the
+pursuit of the Italians by Crazy Jane and her
+motor car occurred to her, Harriet would laugh
+softly to herself. She finally laughed herself
+to sleep, to be awakened in what seemed but a
+few moments later, by the blowing of a fish horn
+at the lips of Crazy Jane McCarthy. Day had
+dawned. The sun was just peeping over the
+eastern hills, the campfire was blazing and Miss
+Elting was getting breakfast.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet quickly drew on her bathing suit, then,
+running out of the tent, plunged into the pond,
+uttering a little scream as the cold water enveloped
+her. None of the others had the courage
+to take a cold plunge that morning, as the
+air was rather cool. As for Harriet, she remained
+in the pond until Miss Elting insisted
+that she come ashore.
+</p>
+<p>
+Camp was struck immediately after breakfast
+as the girls wished to make as much progress on their
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94'></a>94</span>
+journey in the cool of the morning
+as possible. They struck camp with the skill
+of veterans, and within half an hour from the
+time they began the operation, everything was
+packed and stowed in the car.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, don’t you girls try to play me any more
+tricks to-day. I’ve got the food. If you don’t
+find Jane, you get no supper. Understand?”
+laughed Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve got thome bithcuit in my pack,” piped
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She won’t have them for long,” laughed
+Margery. “Tommy will have eaten the biscuits
+before she has gone a mile.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I don’t eat tho much that I get fat,”
+protested Tommy. “I gueth I know when to
+thtop.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting was giving Jane final directions
+as to when and where to look for them, after
+which the four girls and their guardian, with
+their packs slung over their backs, stout sticks
+in their hands to assist them over rough places
+and also to frighten away troublesome dogs,
+started out on their journey of ten miles or
+more. They crossed the road, traveled up a
+hill and headed straight across country. The
+unmarked trail was rough and following it
+fatigued them considerably during the first two
+miles of their journey.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95'></a>95</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Shortly after eleven o’clock they came in
+sight of a remote farm house tucked away in
+a valley. Miss Elting decided to call there to
+get some milk. The woman of the house at
+first regarded them with suspicion, but she soon
+thawed under Miss Elting’s gentle voice and
+winning smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+The milk had not been skimmed. All the old
+milk had been churned that day. There was
+nothing left but buttermilk, the woman told
+them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Buttermilk!” cried the girls in chorus.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I jutht love buttermilk!” declared Tommy.
+“Do you have buttermilk cowth? Ithn’t that
+fine? I’m going to make my father buy me a
+buttermilk cow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I was going to feed that buttermilk
+to the hogs, but seeing as you want it I suppose
+you may have it,” decided the woman with
+some reluctance. “Do you like it cold?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The party answered in the affirmative. The
+housewife lowered a pail of buttermilk into
+the well to cool, the party sitting down under
+an apple tree in the yard to rest themselves
+in the meantime. Margery lay down and
+went to sleep. Tommy amused herself by tickling
+Buster’s ear with a long, dead stalk of
+timothy grass. Margery in her sleep thought
+it a fly. She fought the fly for some time, then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96'></a>96</span>
+finally opening her eyes, she caught Tommy red
+handed. Tommy fled into the farm house,
+where she pretended to be much interested in
+the housewife’s work. She soon won her way
+into the good graces of the woman, and when,
+finally, the little lisping girl emerged from the
+house she was carrying a tin tray of food.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jutht thee what I’ve got,” she cried. “It
+taketh Tommy Thompthon to get thingth to
+eat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+There were sandwiches, ginger cookies—great
+fat brown fellows—and a large dish of apple
+sauce.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, girls!” cried Margery her eyes glistening
+at the prospect of a feast. “I could die
+eating that food.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tommy, did you beg for this?” demanded
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I gueth not. I jutht athked for it,” returned
+Tommy calmly. “When you want
+thomething you want, jutht athk for it, and if
+you don’t get it you haven’t wasted anything but
+your breath.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Madam, we are very grateful to you for
+this kindness, and will pay you before leaving,”
+called Miss Elting to the housewife, who
+came out at this juncture to draw up the bucket
+of buttermilk from the cool depths of the well.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re welcome, I’m sure. I just baked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97'></a>97</span>
+to-day. Hope the cookies are all right. They
+didn’t rise to suit me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’d have burthted if they’d rithen any
+more,” observed Tommy. She was rebuked by
+a look from Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I hope you like them,” smiled the woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, they are simply delicious,” answered
+Harriet, with glowing eyes. “And that buttermilk!
+I never drank any that tasted better.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The party ate their fill of the good things,
+Margery doing even more than her share in
+disposing of both buttermilk and food. When
+they had finished, the tray was empty. The
+woman offered to bring them more food, but
+Miss Elting said “no.” She gave the woman
+fifty cents despite the protests of the latter;
+then, after a brief rest, they started on again,
+first having expressed their thanks to the housewife,
+who stood in the door of her home watching
+the little party until it had passed out of
+sight.
+</p>
+<p>
+About the middle of the afternoon the girls
+halted for another rest because of Margery’s
+complaints that she was feeling ill.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You ate too much,” declared Harriet. “It
+doesn’t do to eat so much when one is taking
+exercise as we are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth. Buthter alwayth eatth too much,”
+averred Tommy wisely.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98'></a>98</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh!” moaned Margery Brown, sitting down
+all in a heap. “I can’t walk another step to-day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you think we should leave her here?”
+asked Harriet, with solemn face but twinkling
+eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We shall see how she feels after I have
+given her something to settle her stomach,” answered
+Miss Elting gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, no, no!” wailed Margery. “Don’t
+leave me. I’ll go. Let me lie still and rest myself
+a little first.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You thee Buthter, it doethn’t pay to be tho
+greedy,” admonished Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Will you please make her stop?” begged
+Buster. “I can’t stand it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tommy!” rebuked Harriet. “Haven’t you
+any consideration for Margery?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth. Of courthe I have. But thhe doethn’t
+detherve any thympathy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m ashamed of you, Tommy, dear. Wait.
+You, too, will be ill one of these days, then we
+shall make unpleasant remarks to you,” warned
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Grace Thompson flushed guiltily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That ith too bad, Buthter. I didn’t mean to
+make you feel worthe. Honetht I didn’t. I
+hope you will be better pretty thoon.” Tommy
+kissed her. “There. Ithn’t that better?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99'></a>99</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” admitted Margery. She already had
+taken some peppermint drops that Miss Elting
+had administered. After a further rest the
+girls assisted her to her feet and walked her
+slowly up and down the road. She was then
+permitted to sit down and rest again. Tommy,
+an expression of concern on her impish face,
+crouched before the now pale-faced Buster,
+munching a hard biscuit.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come, girls,” said Miss Elting finally. “It
+is nearly five o’clock. We were to meet Jane
+at five, and we must have a good two hours’
+walk ahead of us still. Now that Margery is
+feeling so ill we shall not be able to make nearly
+as good time as that. I wonder if we hadn’t
+better find the highway and finish the day’s
+tramp on that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Margery protested that they must not change
+their plans on her account. She declared that
+she could walk as well as any of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Margery will repent her rash assertions before
+she has gone a mile,” laughed Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. I think she will be all right, now,” replied
+the guardian. “Margery, if you find that
+you are feeling worse, at any time, you must
+be sure to tell me at once. Now, girls, march!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The little company plodded along. Harriet
+linked one arm within Margery’s. The latter,
+while feeling much improved, was still a little
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100'></a>100</span>
+weak and Harriet Burrell’s sturdy arm was
+appreciated.
+</p>
+<p>
+About six o’clock they came to a long hill that
+sloped gently down into a valley. The greater
+part of the valley was covered with trees. It
+appeared to be a dense forest of second growth,
+the trees not being very large. The guardian
+consulted the map.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. We are on the right trail. We must
+keep straight on through the woods. According
+to this map there should be a trail that leads
+directly to the other side of the valley, and
+when we reach that point we shall have finished
+our day’s journey.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am afraid we are going to be caught in
+the dark, Miss Elting,” said Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If we find the trail we do not need to worry
+about that. We can’t very well go astray. I
+would suggest that, when we get down farther
+into the valley, we spread out and look for the
+wood trail. The one who first discovers it will
+shout. By taking this open formation we shall
+be saving time. It certainly seems to me that
+the distance to be covered to-day is more than
+ten miles.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It does seem so,” agreed Hazel. “But we
+have lost considerable time on the way.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They began spreading out when about half
+way down the hill, calling to each other good-naturedly,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101'></a>101</span>
+shouting as they got farther and
+farther away. Tommy discovered the road.
+She ran out into the field waving her arms and
+crying shrilly to attract the attention of her
+companions. They hurried toward her. The
+road, as they soon learned, was a mere path and
+one not much frequented at that, as was evidenced
+by the vegetation that grew in the middle
+of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This looks to me like rather low swampy
+land,” declared Harriet. “It is my idea that
+we had better stick closely to the path, or we
+may get into trouble.” She did not say definitely
+what she feared, not wishing to needlessly
+terrorize Margery and Tommy. Miss Elting
+understood their danger, however. She nodded.
+Harriet started along the trail, leading the way,
+with the guardian following at her heels.
+They went on in this way for half an hour. The
+forest grew darker as they proceeded, the vegetation
+being thick in there. The day was waning
+rapidly. It was not very long before they
+were groping their way, rather than finding it
+by sight.
+</p>
+<p>
+A scream from Margery, who was at the rear,
+brought them up sharply. Then Tommy’s
+voice was raised in a sharp cry of alarm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” shouted Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m sinking!” screamed Margery.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102'></a>102</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet instantly knew the meaning of this.
+Her worst fears were confirmed. They were in
+the middle of a vast morass that stretched on
+each side of the trail.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me! Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Both girls were in the mud, but just how
+deeply Harriet Burrell did not know. Now
+Hazel added her cries to those of Tommy and
+Margery. She, too, had stepped off the path.
+Harriet could hear Hazel floundering in the
+mire. Miss Elting hurried back to them, regardless
+of her own safety.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be careful!” called Harriet warningly,
+groping her way to her companions who were
+crying and screaming for help.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chIX' id='chIX'></a>CHAPTER IX—THE TRAMP CLUB TO THE RESCUE</h2>
+<p>
+“Look out, Miss Elting,” warned Harriet
+again. “The girls are in the mud.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So am I,” cried the guardian in a
+voice of alarm. “Oh, it’s deep. I’m sinking.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Stand perfectly still,” advised Harriet.
+“You will get in deeper if you struggle. I’ll see
+what I can do. I may get in, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be quick, Harriet,” urged the guardian.
+“This is serious. I can’t move an inch.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103'></a>103</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll do the best I can. Oh, I wish I had some
+good sized limbs of trees to throw to you.
+Here’s one. Where are you, Miss Elting?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here. It’s no use. I can’t pull myself
+out.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Margery was screaming at the top of her
+voice. It seemed as though her cries must be
+heard throughout the woods. No amount of
+urging could induce her to be quiet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let her yell. Let her make all the noithe
+she can. Maybe thomebody will hear her,”
+wailed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+This was good logic. Miss Elting told Buster
+to shout as loudly as she could. The other
+girls now added their voices to Buster’s frantic
+screams. Harriet was moving about as rapidly
+as she dared, but she was unable to find any
+limbs large enough to be of much use to Miss
+Elting, who was nearest to the trail over which
+they had come. Harriet tried another experiment.
+Breaking down a sapling that grew beside
+the path she thrust this toward the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Take hold of it,” she commanded. “Have
+you got it, Miss Elting?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Give way loosely when I pull. I may be
+able to pull you out. Don’t resist at all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s no use, Harriet!” announced the guardian, after
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104'></a>104</span>
+several minutes of the hardest sort
+of work on Harriet’s part. “I am getting
+deeper in the mud with every move I make.
+You will have to think of something else.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls, stop your screaming for a moment,”
+called Harriet. “Tell me how you are? Are
+you sinking deeper into the mud or are you remaining
+about the same?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Whenever I make the slightest movement I
+sink in deeper. I’m keeping as still as possible,”
+answered Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m in almotht up to my waitht,” cried
+Tommy. “I’m going to be buried alive. Oh,
+thave me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“As long as you are able to scream like that
+you are all right,” comforted Harriet. “When
+you stop yelling I shall begin to believe you are
+in real trouble.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet now set to work cutting down small
+saplings with her hatchet. These she threw out
+into the space between Miss Elting and the
+three girls. They were close together, which
+somewhat simplified the work. The Meadow-Brook
+girl knew that it would take a quantity
+of the small trees and limbs to support her
+weight, but it was the only course she knew of
+to follow. Fortunately for Harriet she was an
+athletic girl, possessing great strength for one
+of her age and build. Better still, she possessed a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105'></a>105</span>
+courage and will all her own. Then,
+too, Harriet Burrell was one of those doggedly
+determined persons who never know when they
+are worsted. Her mind was working even
+more rapidly than were her hands. She had
+succeeded in piling up enough stuff to form a
+slight support for the arms of her companions.
+She now explained her plan to them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t think I shall be able to get you out
+of the morass without taking a long chance of
+getting in myself,” she began.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh-h-h-h!” cried the girls despairingly.
+They had relied implicitly on Harriet’s resourceful
+brain to find the means to release
+them from their dangerous predicament.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait until I have finished. You know that
+I’m not afraid. You know better than to think
+so,” soothed Harriet. “Don’t you see, if I
+were to get caught in the mud, your last hope
+would be gone? We might all perish here before
+any one found us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You are right as usual, Harriet,” said Miss
+Elting. She was apparently calm. If she
+were nervous no trace of it was discoverable in
+her voice. “What do you propose to do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am going to pile some more stuff on what
+I have already placed there. Each of you is to
+throw out her arms and if possible lock hands
+across the barrier. When one hand gets tired
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106'></a>106</span>
+change to the other one. That will keep you
+from sinking down much deeper. The saplings
+should keep you up, though it will be a rather
+severe strain on your arm.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What will you do, Harriet?” asked Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am going for help.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, don’t leave uth!” wailed Grace.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet is right,” agreed Hazel. “It is the
+only thing to do. But which way will you go?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will go back the way we came. I believe
+that if I am careful I shall be able to reach
+solid ground without getting off the trail. A
+short distance from here the ground rises somewhat
+and is harder. Once I reach that I shall
+be safe.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, Harriet, where will you go for help?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I saw the top of some farm buildings to the
+west of where we were just before we entered
+this horrid place. I think it will be best for me
+to hurry there. I ought to be back in a couple
+of hours at the outside.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Two <em>hourth</em>!” mourned Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That will be better than staying there all
+night, won’t it?” demanded Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should say it will,” agreed Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then hurry, dear,” urged Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is any one of you in pain?” questioned Harriet.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107'></a>107</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think not,” replied Miss Elting. “The
+ground is too soft to hurt. That’s the worst
+of it. If the ground weren’t so soft and sticky
+we should be able to get out. Do you think you
+could build a fire before you go, Harriet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wouldn’t dare to do so. Suppose it should
+spread to the trees about you after I had gone?
+There are cedars and small pine trees in here.
+The foliage of these trees is like tinder.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You are right!” exclaimed the guardian.
+“To build a fire would be the height of folly.
+Hurry, please. We will be here when you come
+back,” she added with a forced laugh.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be brave, girls. Remember, we are Meadow-Brook
+Girls,” said Harriet, as with a shouted
+“good-bye” she started back along the trail on
+her mission. Both arms were outspread so
+that she might be warned by touch when getting
+too close to the sides of the trail.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls,” began Miss Elting brightly, after
+Harriet had left them. “Harriet reminded us
+that we are Meadow-Brook Girls. Let’s show
+that we are by giving the Meadow-Brook yell.
+Now. One, two, three, go!”
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Meadow-Brook.&nbsp;&nbsp;Meadow-Brook.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Rah,&nbsp;&nbsp;rah,&nbsp;&nbsp;rah!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Meadow-Brook,&nbsp;&nbsp;Meadow-Brook,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sis,&nbsp;&nbsp;boom,&nbsp;&nbsp;ah-h-h!”<br />
+</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
+<p>
+The girls’ voices grew stronger after the second
+line. The voices of Miss Elting and Tommy
+Thompson rose above those of the other two.
+Some one laughed. It was Tommy. Her
+laugh was a trifle hysterical, but it was a laugh,
+and for the moment it relieved the strain somewhat.
+Miss Elting gave them no time to think
+about themselves.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls. Forty-nine Blue Bottles now,” she
+cried, then began the chant herself, the others
+joining in promptly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Forty-nine&nbsp;&nbsp;blue&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;were&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Forty-nine&nbsp;&nbsp;blue&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;were&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Take&nbsp;&nbsp;one&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;down&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;there’ll&nbsp;&nbsp;be&nbsp;&nbsp;forty-eight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;blue&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall,&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;wall.”<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+They continued to chant regardless of aching
+throats and hoarse voices, until every one of
+those offending blue bottles had been removed
+from the wall.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now the Meadow-Brook yell again. It will
+bring assistance to us if any one hears it,” reminded
+the guardian. They repeated the yell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Gracious!” cried Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, what is it now?” begged Margery, in
+a frightened voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, some malicious person has put all
+those forty-nine blue bottles back on the wall
+again. What shall we do?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109'></a>109</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I gueth we’ll have to take them off,” lisped
+Tommy, amid laughter from her companions
+and the guardian as well.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t,” moaned Margery. She began to
+choke and cough. “I’ve swallowed a bug.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, the poor bug. I’m tho thorry for him,”
+piped Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe we can catch him in one of those
+bottles,” suggested Miss Elting. “Come, girls,
+you aren’t going to desert me now, are you?
+Already! ‘Forty-nine blue bottles were hanging on the wall.’”
+</p>
+<p>
+Once more the girls went over the familiar refrain,
+ending finally with the Meadow-Brook
+yell. Again and again did they take the bottles
+from the wall, but as often as they removed
+them invisible hands replaced every one of the
+forty-nine blue bottles in their accustomed position
+on the wall.
+</p>
+<p>
+For the tenth time the forty-nine blue bottles
+had been taken down and hung up again. The
+voices of the girls were so hoarse that they
+could barely speak aloud, though they were
+laughing hysterically as they labored with the
+forty-ninth. They had almost forgotten that
+they were in danger, forgotten their aching
+bodies, forgotten that Harriet Burrell was
+speeding through the darkness in quest of assistance,
+when a distant but familiar cry
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110'></a>110</span>
+reached their ears. It was the long drawn out
+“hoo-e-e-e-e” of the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting heard it first. Her companions
+were laughing so immoderately that they failed
+to hear it the first time. The guardian’s voice
+failed her. A lump rose in her throat. The
+strain had been so great that several times she
+found herself on the point of giving way. Now
+the reaction had set in.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy heard it, and uttered a scream. The
+call was repeated. This time all the girls heard
+it plainly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s Harriet, it’s Harriet!” cried Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. Rescue is at hand,” replied Miss Elting
+fervently.
+</p>
+<p>
+A light twinkled far away through between
+the trees. It seemed to the anxious eyes of
+the guardian as though it were miles and miles
+distant. She raised her voice in a shout, but
+the voice was so weak that it carried but a short
+distance.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shout, girls!” she begged. “You may be
+able to make them hear. I can’t. My voice has
+completely left me. Tommy! You can always
+scream. Do so now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy let loose a thrilling, penetrating yell.
+The rescue party heard it. They answered with
+return shouts in male voices.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111'></a>111</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“That sounds to me like boys’ voices,” cried
+Miss Elting huskily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy. “My hair
+ith all tumbled down, my frock ith muddy from
+top to bottom and my fathe ith thmudged. I’m
+a thight, I know I am. I can’t retheive company
+to-day. Thend them away, pleathe.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Some one came running toward them considerably
+in advance of the light.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls! Girls!” shouted an anxious voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here!” cried the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank goodness you’re alive,” answered
+Harriet Burrell. “I’ve been terribly anxious
+about you. Here—here’s a can of fresh water.
+I know your throats must be dry.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Reaching forward, Harriet handed the can to
+the guardian. Miss Elting passed it on to
+Tommy. Each of the girls drank.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are you, folks?” shouted a boyish
+voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here. Just ahead of you,” answered Harriet.
+She had sunk down on the trail, her
+strength gone. A moment later she was on
+her feet again, hurrying down the trail to guide
+the rescuers to the spot.
+</p>
+<p>
+A tall young fellow clad in khaki, a campaign
+hat on his head, rushed up. Behind him came
+half a dozen other young men similarly clad.
+They were bearing fence rails on their shoulders, fairly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112'></a>112</span>
+staggering under the weight of their
+burdens.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I’m so glad!” cried Miss Elting, now
+on the verge of tears after the strain. “Who
+are they, Harriet, my brave girl?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’re the Tramp Club,” answered the
+first boy. “We’ll introduce ourselves after we
+get you girls out of the morass. You’re in a
+fine mess and you certainly do need help.”
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chX' id='chX'></a>CHAPTER X—IN THE HANDS OF THE RESCUERS</h2>
+<p>
+“Now, keep perfectly quiet. Don’t move
+an inch. We’ll have you out of it in
+a few moments. Here, Dill, give me
+the rope. Now the end of a rail. The young
+lady over there with the flaxen hair——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It ithn’t flaxen. It ith blonde,” protested
+Tommy indignantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I stand corrected,” laughed the young man.
+“Please grab the rope and pull on it. I don’t
+dare throw a rail out there for fear of hitting
+one of you. Being the farthest out, you will
+be able to pull the rail right up to you. Never
+mind if you do settle down an inch or two. I’ll
+have you out at any rate. Do you understand?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113'></a>113</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then here goes.” The boy tossed a coil of
+rope so accurately that the coil dropped directly
+over Grace Thompson’s head. She uttered
+a little scream as the rope slipped over
+her head, then clawed frantically at it. “That’s
+right,” cried her rescuer. “Now pull.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy pulled desperately drawing the rail
+towards her, but sinking deeper and deeper into
+the mud until she was nearly up to her armpits.
+The little lisping girl took fresh alarm.
+She began to cry, “Thave me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t be frightened. Here’s another rail!”
+encouraged the youth. “We’ve got to build up
+a bridge. Those limbs and saplings you have
+out there will make an excellent foundation.
+Hurry them up here, Dill! The young ladies
+will grow impatient and refuse to wait for us
+longer.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls declined to laugh at this pleasantry.
+They were in too much distress. Harriet stood
+holding a lantern above her head so that the
+boys might see to work to the best advantage.
+The rails were drawn out by Tommy in each
+instance, assisted by the girls between herself
+and the path. Then the leader set his boys at
+work felling the largest trees they could find
+along the trail. The lads went at their work
+with a will. As soon as the trees and brush
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114'></a>114</span>
+were cut down they were carried over and
+dumped in on the rail and brush foundation,
+forming a rude bridge. The leader then advanced
+cautiously over it until he reached a
+point near to the guardian and the girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now we will see what we can do.”
+</p>
+<p>
+A rope was passed about the waist of the
+guardian despite her protests that the others
+should be gotten out of the morass first. Three
+boys were put at the shore end of the rope with
+orders to pull when their leader gave the word.
+He, on his part, took firm hold of Miss Elting
+under the arms, then shouted “now!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Those on shore began to pull. The leader,
+at the same time, began to lift with all his might,
+moving the guardian’s shoulders from left to
+right.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tell me if the rope hurts you,” gasped the
+muscular young fellow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting came up so suddenly that her
+rescuer fell over, narrowly escaping a plunge
+into the morass. The guardian was finally
+dragged to the path. The rescuers then turned
+their attention to the other girls. Their wooden
+raft was slowly sinking under the weight that
+had been put upon it, but fresh stuff was being
+constantly piled on it to keep it above the mud.
+One by one the Meadow-Brook Girls were
+hauled out.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115'></a>115</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet had helped Miss Elting aside into the
+shadows, where she assisted the guardian in
+scraping the mud from her clothing. At first
+Miss Elting was barely able to stand. She
+found herself trembling from head to foot now
+that the strain, mental and physical, was removed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here’s another one!” cried the cheery
+voice of the leader
+</p>
+<p>
+“What wonderful boys!” breathed Miss Elting,
+starting to go to Tommy’s assistance.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please lie down on the ground and rest,
+Miss Elting. Don’t try to get up until we are
+ready to start. I can take care of the others
+as they are dragged out,” directed Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+She assisted Tommy to a place beside Miss
+Elting, the latter insisting upon trying to help
+the unfortunate and humiliated Tommy in her
+distressing condition.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I withh I had thome clotheth fit to be
+theen,” complained the little girl. “Thith dreth
+ith a thight.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be thankful that you are alive,” answered
+Harriet sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We should have perished, had it not been
+for you,” answered the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Considering that I was the only one who
+didn’t get into the mud, I simply had to be the
+one to go for help. I don’t deserve any credit,”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116'></a>116</span>
+flung back Harriet, hurrying over to assist the
+suffering Buster. After Buster, came Hazel,
+the last to be rescued.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have we got them all?” questioned the
+young man.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, thank goodness,” answered Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are under great obligations to you,
+young gentlemen. We are in no condition to
+properly express our appreciation this evening.
+I hope we may have an opportunity to do
+so in the morning,” said Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are very glad to have been able to help
+you. We needed a little exercise,” laughed the
+young man. “Yes, we shall see you again, but
+we haven’t finished our work yet. What do
+you say? Shall we fix up some litters and carry
+the young ladies out?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know. We shall see in a few moments.
+Give them a chance to rest. They are
+completely exhausted.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly. We fellows are going on ahead
+to examine this path. We'll return presently.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys trudged off down the trail.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We shan’t go far,” called back the leader,
+then strode off after his companions. Harriet
+and Miss Elting made the girls as comfortable
+and presentable as possible, though it was apparent
+that both girls and clothes needed a
+thorough scrubbing.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117'></a>117</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know how we are going to reach
+camp,” pondered the guardian, while waiting
+for Grace, Margery and Hazel to rest.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I forgot to tell you,” exclaimed Harriet;
+“Jane met these boys this afternoon. Two
+of them are acquaintances of hers. They are
+high school boys from the town of Proctor.
+Like ourselves they are out on a long tramp,
+and they are camped right near where we are
+to camp for the night. They assisted Jane to
+put up the camp and get everything in order.
+Then, when night came, Jane began to grow
+worried. She declared that something had happened
+to us. One of the boys wanted to know
+which way we were to come and Jane told them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“‘Then they have gotten into the swamp and
+they’re in trouble,’ declared one of the boys.
+It seems that these boys passed through here
+yesterday, and two of them got into the morass
+in broad daylight. No wonder we floundered
+into it trying to get through there in the dark.
+Of course Jane was wild with anxiety. She
+said they must help her find us. This they were
+willing and glad to do. They decided to come
+to this end of the swamp and begin their search
+from the point where we were supposed to
+have entered.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you meet them?” interrupted Miss Elting.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118'></a>118</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. Jane rushed them, in her car, to the
+nearest point on the road, then ran across the
+field with them to the place where we took the
+swamp trail. I met them just as I came out
+into the field. Jane was wild with delight, then
+she cried when I told her where you were. She
+wanted to come here with me. I told her to
+hurry back to camp and prepare hot water, get
+everything ready, then come for us. She will
+be back long before we get out of the swamp
+I think. The boys told me all that I have told
+you, as we were hurrying in here. It is very
+fortunate for us that we met them,” declared
+Harriet in a matter-of-fact tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think you are a very brave and resourceful
+girl, Harriet. You will get some honor
+beads for this. Girls, shall we sing ‘Forty-nine
+Blue Bottles’ now?” questioned Miss Elting
+quizzically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No!” shouted Tommy, so loudly that the
+Tramp Club, who had gone a short distance
+down the trail, heard and thought that the girls
+were calling them back.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you call us?” hailed the leader, running
+back toward the girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” returned Miss Elting. “We are all
+right, thank you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys continued on down the trail. Half
+an hour later they returned to find the girls
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119'></a>119</span>
+somewhat rested and ready to proceed on their
+journey.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you think you feel strong enough to
+go on?” asked the leader of the Tramp Club
+solicitously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” replied Miss Elting. “We are anxious
+to meet Jane and get settled for the night.
+You have not told us yet to whom we are indebted
+for our rescue.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“My name is George Baker. I’m the captain
+of the Tramp Club. They’re a fine lot of
+fellows, but full of mischief.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“As I said before, we haven’t words with
+which to express our gratitude to you for what
+you have done for us,” said Miss Elting. “Ah!
+There are your friends. Won’t you introduce
+us to them? I’ll first introduce my Meadow-Brook
+Girls.” Miss Elting introduced the girls
+to the Tramp Club as a body, after which the
+captain did the same with his friends. The
+names of the members of the club as given by
+the captain in his introduction, were Dill Dodd,
+Fred Avery, Sam Crocker, Charles Mabie, Will
+Burgess and Davy Dockrill.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Taken altogether, ladies,” remarked the
+captain, “we are a choice band of ruffians on
+the road, though sometimes gentlemen when we
+are at home.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I disagree with you,” laughed the guardian.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120'></a>120</span>
+“I shall never meet any finer gentlemen than
+I have met to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The captain doffed his hat. Tommy was regarding
+him out of the corners of her eyes.
+She seemed about to say something; then, apparently
+changing her mind, smiled impishly to
+herself and remained silent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I told your friend, Miss McCarthy, to set
+the boys at work getting things ready for the
+ladies when they reached camp,” said the captain.
+“My, but I got some thrills riding out
+here with Miss McCarthy. We must have
+driven out here at the rate of about a hundred
+miles an hour. I never before rode so fast in
+my life. Here, fellows, what’s the matter with
+you! This is no marathon. The young ladies
+can’t hit up that pace and keep on their feet.
+Slow down.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We can walk jutht ath fatht ath any boy in
+bootth,” retorted Tommy indignantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Captain Baker touched the rim of his hat.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll argue it out with you some other time,
+Miss Thompson,” he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh!” moaned Margery, staggering a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+The head tramp immediately sprang to Margery’s
+assistance. “Let me help you,” he insisted,
+taking Margery by the arm. Miss Elting
+stepped up on the other side of Margery,
+taking the latter’s free arm.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121'></a>121</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, you will be all right, dear,” encouraged
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet, in the meantime, was assisting
+Tommy along. The boys ahead began to sing.
+In this way the party followed the trail out to
+the field. The girls breathed sighs of relief as
+they emerged into the open.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just then, out of the darkness, rushed a figure,
+throwing itself upon Tommy and Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, you dear girls!” cried Jane, flinging
+an arm about the neck of each. “I nearly cried
+my eyes out over you. But, when the boys
+started out to find you, I knew it would be all
+right. Everything is ready for you. Nice
+warm baths, and there will be a pot of hot coffee
+for you. I’ll whisk you to camp in short order.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind the whisking,” spoke up the
+guardian. “Captain Baker has told us about
+your whisking him out here this evening.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane threw back her head and laughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How about going back? I’ll tell you what,
+boys. I’ll take the girls and one of you, then
+I’ll come back and get the rest.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No thank you, we will walk it,” answered
+the chief tramp promptly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never,” insisted Jane. “You come with
+us, young man. I’ll be back here in half an
+hour for the rest of these brave boys.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122'></a>122</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The captain declined to desert his men.
+Jane therefore urged him no further. The
+boys assisted in helping the Meadow-Brook
+Girls into the car, then Jane drove away at a
+rapid rate. She let the girls out at their camp,
+located in a very pretty and now moonlit valley.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll find everything ready. I’m going
+back for those unruly boys,” Jane announced,
+turning her car about and racing back over the
+road, her hair streaming over one shoulder,
+her eyes sparkling with the excitement of it all.
+The tramps had another lively ride to camp.
+Jane did not spare them. She took an almost
+savage delight in trying to frighten them, but
+did not succeed very well in this attempt. If
+they were afraid they failed to show it.
+</p>
+<p>
+On reaching camp the tired wayfarers lost
+no time in making for their tent where hot water
+for their baths awaited them. By the time
+Jane returned with the members of the Tramp
+Club the Meadow-Brook Girls, clad in dry, fresh
+clothing, were ready to receive their guests.
+They presented a wholly different appearance,
+now, and the boys gazed at them admiringly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane, the boys must join us at supper,” declared
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+George shook his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There are too many of us. We’ll eat you
+out of house and home.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123'></a>123</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s lots more stuff to eat in the automobile,”
+declared Jane hospitably. “You wait
+till I unload the real supplies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She dragged out a hamper. It was filled with
+good things to eat, and what particularly
+pleased the boys, was the unexpected invitation
+to eat with their new found friends.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the girls were tired and exhausted
+from their trying experiences in the swamp, it
+proved a happy evening. It was decided to
+remain in camp all next day to rest. Strangely
+enough Captain Baker announced that they too
+had already concluded that they needed a rest.
+He said they would do some foraging next day,
+and bring the girls some good things to eat to
+pay them back for what they had eaten and
+for the exciting ride Jane had given them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting smiled knowingly. The tramps
+appeared to be gentlemanly boys, however
+“full of mischief” they might be.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was ten o’clock when the Tramp Club said
+good night and set out for their own camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, children, go to bed at once,” directed
+the guardian. “We have had excitement enough
+for one day at least.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls agreed with her, and half an hour
+later the camp had settled down for the night.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124'></a>124</span><a name='chXI' id='chXI'></a>CHAPTER XI—A CONTEST OF ENDURANCE</h2>
+<p>
+“Forty-nine blue bottleth were hanging
+on the wall,” muttered Tommy
+in her sleep, as Miss Elting and Harriet
+stepped into their tent at eight o’clock the
+next morning, after having finished their inspection
+of the camp. The rest of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were still sleeping soundly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor Tommy,” smiled the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is Tommy muttering about forty-nine
+blue bottles?” questioned Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian laughed merrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I had the girls say that doggerel about the
+forty-nine blue bottles while we were stuck fast
+in the mud. You see, I wished to keep their
+minds from their troubles. We repeated the
+song until we were so hoarse we could scarcely
+speak.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I noticed that when I returned, but thought
+you had all caught cold. So it was forty-nine
+blue bottles that made you so hoarse,” laughed
+Harriet. “I think you deserve the real credit
+of the rescue. Had you not done what you did
+to keep up the spirits of the girls there might
+have been a different ending,” declared Harriet Burrell
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125'></a>125</span>
+with emphasis. She kissed the
+guardian impulsively, than stepping softly, to
+avoid waking her sleeping companions, she
+made her way outside the tent. Shading her
+eyes and gazing about she finally discovered a
+brown-clad figure sitting on a fence. He evidently
+was observing the camp, for, when he
+caught sight of Harriet, he waved his hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll wager that’s Captain Baker,” smiled
+Harriet, waving back to him. “He is a peculiar
+young man. We are under great obligations
+to them all, but those boys think girls are
+of no account. We are going to clash with
+them. I know we are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet poked the fire and built it up until a
+cloud of smoke was ascending skyward. It
+was not a skilfully made fire, but Harriet had
+a purpose in making a great smudge that morning.
+She wished to show the tramps that the
+girls had just gotten up and were not yet ready
+to receive company. She had construed Captain
+Baker’s action in watching the camp as
+being for the purpose of learning when the
+Meadow-Brook outfit was ready to see them.
+As the girl cast frequent glances across the
+fields she saw the other members of the Tramp
+Club scattered about not far from their own
+camp, though all of the boys kept a respectful
+distance from the camp occupied by the girls.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126'></a>126</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Breakfast was out of the way and the camp
+of the Meadow-Brook Girls put to rights by
+ten o’clock. The travelers felt somewhat lame
+and stiff after their experience in the swamp.
+Tommy walked with a distinct limp, which Harriet
+accused her of putting on for effect.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m not pretending,” protested Tommy indignantly.
+“I gueth you would walk like I do
+if you had been fatht in the mud motht all
+night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet laughed good-naturedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+A halloo out back of the camp cut short any
+further argument. It was Captain Baker with
+his fellow “tramps.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is it too early in the morning to make our
+party call?” shouted George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. Come right along,” called Harriet
+cordially. “We got up rather late this morning.
+Didn’t I see you sitting on the fence off
+yonder?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I was watching for a woodchuck to
+come out. Fellows, you’ve all met Miss Burrell,
+I think. And Miss Thompson.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth I met them in the thwamp,” lisped
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting came out, her face wearing a radiant
+smile of welcome for the tramps. Their
+hats were off instantly. She insisted on shaking
+hands with each of the boys in turn.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127'></a>127</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I suppose you have had your breakfast?”
+smiled the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Breakfast!” exclaimed Davy Dockrill.
+“Yes. We men eat our breakfast at six o’clock.
+We aren’t like girls, who take their breakfast
+in place of luncheon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And eat cookies between meals,” laughed
+Harriet. “How many miles do you walk a
+day?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, a lot,” answered George airily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How many?” persisted Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, maybe ten, fifteen, twenty miles,
+maybe more.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll wager that you take a ride now and
+then,” interjected Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We don’t. We walk, I tell you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We aren’t like girls, who have to stop and
+rest every half mile or so,” declared Will
+Burgess.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And get stuck in the mud,” laughed Fred
+Avery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’ll be about all, boys,” reproved Captain
+Baker, frowning. “I told you these boys
+were full of mischief. But you mustn’t mind
+them,” he added apologetically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, we don’t mind them at all,” smiled Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“When are you going to start out again?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not until some time to-morrow morning,”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128'></a>128</span>
+answered Miss Elting. “We are all a little
+lame and tired to-day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The captain nodded gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes; girls can’t stand as much as boys when
+it comes to hard work like a week or so of walking,”
+he said with an air of conviction.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth they can,” resented Tommy. “Girlth
+can walk jutht ath far in a day ath boyth can.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ve got to show us before we can believe
+that,” declared Davy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very well; we will show you,” answered
+Harriet quietly. “Name your conditions.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you mean it?” questioned George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course I mean it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re plucky, all right,” he said regarding
+her admiringly. “But I don’t like to have
+a contest with girls.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why not? Are you afraid of them?” demanded
+Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+The boy flushed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, ma’am. It isn’t manly, that’s all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mean it wouldn’t be manly to be beaten
+by girls, eh?” suggested Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, yes, I suppose that’s what I mean.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, very well. If you wish to back out,
+why, of course——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Back out? I guess not!” exclaimed Sam.
+“We’ll walk your heads off, if you say the
+word.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129'></a>129</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, mercy, no,” protested Harriet, laughingly.
+“I hope you will not do anything so terrible
+as that. You haven’t said what the conditions
+are to be. We must have some rules
+if we are to have a hiking contest. They have
+rules even in a walking contest, I understand.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Captain Baker pondered a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know about rules. I think it will
+have to be a go-as-you-please contest.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are willing to abide by whatever you
+say,” replied Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where do you go to-morrow? I mean
+where do you make your next camp?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet consulted their map.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are going to try to make Hunt’s Corners,”
+she said, scrutinizing the map.
+</p>
+<p>
+“May I see that map?” asked Davy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t think it would be quite fair,” answered
+Harriet brightly. “You see, our route
+is marked out on the map. Were I to show it
+to you, you would know which way we are going.
+That would give you an advantage. I will
+show the map to you some other time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course it would be unfair. We don’t
+want to see the map, Davy,” rebuked George.
+“How far is it to Hunt’s Corners?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ten or twelve miles.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t let that trouble you, boys. I’ll be
+on hand with the car and I’ll pick up the stragglers,”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130'></a>130</span>
+interjected Jane, joining the group.
+She had been at work cleaning her car. Her
+face was smudged and her hands blackened.
+“If any of you get tired out I’ll promise to take
+care of you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” answered the captain, flushing.
+His companions laughed at him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, Captain,” protested Harriet, “we
+haven’t decided on anything. Is this to be a
+race for one day, or for all the way home? You
+go right through Meadow-Brook, do you not?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. Just as you say. I don’t think you
+can stand it to race all the way home.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Perhaps not,” answered Harriet dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. The poor, delicate things,” mourned
+Jane. “Just think how you are going to walk
+them to death. You boys should be ashamed
+of yourselves.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t care if the girls don’t,” laughed
+George. “Yes. We’ll walk you all the way in
+to Meadow-Brook. The party that gets in first
+must give the other side something. What’ll it
+be?” asked George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll take marthhmallowth for mine,” piped
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s it. A box of candy for each of you
+if you win. What do you say, fellows?” questioned
+George, appealing to his companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+They nodded, smiling acquiescence.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131'></a>131</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Suppose we give each of you a handkerchief
+if you win,” smiled Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a go,” declared Captain George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I propose this. Each party is to go
+as it chooses. The one that gets in first wins,”
+suggested Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are tricks barred?” demanded Sam.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know what you mean by tricks.
+Strategy isn’t,” returned Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Whew! That’s a big word,” exclaimed
+Dill.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Neither party is to ride, you know,” spoke
+up George, eyeing them suspiciously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly not,” answered Harriet. “We
+shouldn’t do such a dishonest thing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I beg your pardon. Of course not. You
+girls have a car and, perhaps, you might think
+it amusing to work a trick on us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Our Meadow-Brook Girls aren’t that kind,
+Mr. Baker,” interposed Miss Elting severely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ride? You couldn’t drag them into the
+car,” declared Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“By the way, young men, have you seen anything
+of two Italians and a bear?” asked Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. We met them two days ago,” answered
+the captain. “Why?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We had some difficulty with them; that’s
+all.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132'></a>132</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wish we had known that.” The captain’s
+lips compressed, a frown appearing on his forehead.
+“What did they do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting told the boys the whole story.
+How the boys did laugh when the guardian described
+how Jane had chased the Italians about
+the field with her car!
+</p>
+<p>
+“We will keep out of the road when you are
+abroad, Miss McCarthy,” said George. “I
+don’t believe you are a safe person to be allowed
+on the highway.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You are right, she isn’t,” nodded Miss
+Elting. “Well, have you settled your plans
+for the contest?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All the plans we can make. We are to walk
+to Meadow-Brook. Neither party should actually
+walk more than ten hours a day——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“My goodneth,” interrupted Tommy. “Ten
+hourth a day. Thave me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Captain Baker smiled a superior smile and
+nodded to his companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no. We shouldn’t want to wear you
+out to that extent,” replied Harriet mildly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“In the meantime we wish you to come to
+supper with us this evening,” invited Miss Elting.
+“We will show you that Meadow-Brook
+Girls can cook as well as walk. We shan’t
+promise you much of a variety, but there will
+be plenty to eat. That will give you new
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133'></a>133</span>
+strength for the coming contest,” she added,
+with a mischievous twinkle in her eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+The captain accepted the invitation for his
+friends. He offered to bring over some provisions
+and some milk. Jane replied that she
+had arranged for the milk, which she was to go
+after in her car. It was decided that the boys
+need bring nothing with them, there being
+enough in camp for all. The Tramp Club went
+away, to return at about half past five in the
+afternoon.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young men had become very much interested
+in the Meadow-Brook Girls. As Captain
+Baker characterized them, “They aren’t
+the helpless, fainting kind. Those girls know
+how to take care of themselves. Now, what do
+you think of their fighting off two Italians and
+a bear? Fellows, we’ve got to hike some to
+beat them! They’ve got something in the back
+of their heads that we don’t know about.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Pshaw! We can walk them off the earth,”
+scoffed Sam.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134'></a>134</span><a name='chXII' id='chXII'></a>CHAPTER XII—MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS UP A TREE</h2>
+<p>
+Supper, that night, was a jolly affair.
+Miss Elting decided that, though the boys
+were full of pranks, they were lads well
+worth knowing. She, naturally, was very particular
+as to the associates of her charges, but
+she approved of the Tramp Club. The boys,
+even as their captain had averred at the first
+meeting, were “full of mischief.” Despite their
+love of fun however they were straightforward,
+manly young men.
+</p>
+<p>
+The party broke up about nine o’clock that
+evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+“To-morrow the contest begins,” reminded
+the captain.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So it does,” answered Harriet, as though
+she had overlooked that fact. “What time do
+you start?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I don’t know. What time do you
+start?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“After breakfast,” laughed Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ha, ha! That’s another joke,” chuckled
+Dill.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t as yet. Perhaps it may be to-morrow
+night,” replied Harriet. But just how
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135'></a>135</span>
+much of a joke it was to be, or on whom, Harriet
+Burrell at that moment did not know. She
+rather suspected it would be on the Tramp
+Club, but in this conjecture she was wrong.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Harriet, why did you ever get us into
+this?” groaned Margery, after the departure of
+the boys. “Here am I half dead, with swollen
+feet and aching bones, and now I’ve got to enter
+a race of I don’t know how many miles against
+a lot of athletic boys.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“As I said before, Margery, you may ride
+in the car if you prefer.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No; I’m going through with this hike if it
+kills me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the way to talk!” nodded Harriet
+briskly. “Faint heart never won strong race.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have you any plans for fooling the boys,
+Harriet?” asked Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet shook her head, but, after a gesture
+of apology, drew Jane aside, whispering with
+her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can you spare us a moment, Miss Elting?”
+asked Harriet. Soon the three were in earnest
+council.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I agree,” called Tommy ironically. “What
+ith it? I’m thtrong for it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s going to be hard work,” declared the
+guardian, “and it’ll be rough traveling during
+the last five miles, but we’ll be there by noon.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136'></a>136</span>
+We made no agreement with the boys to stop at
+any particular place?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, Miss Elting,” Harriet answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then everybody to bed!” ordered the
+guardian tersely.
+</p>
+<p>
+At three the next morning four sleepy girls
+were tumbled out of bed by a barely less
+drowsy chaperon. But swift, silent work had
+to be done. Harriet put wood on the still
+glowing coals of the fire, then prepared coffee
+and a light meal.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thtop it!” screamed Tommy, when energetic
+Jane “struck” the tent, bringing it down
+on a pair of heads, the other of which was Margery’s.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane McCarthy, heedless of their protests,
+hustled relentlessly. The girls and their guardian
+ate as best they could, under the circumstances.
+By the time the light breakfast had
+been eaten all the packing had been done, and
+everything was ready for moving, except the
+dishes and supplies. These were packed by
+Margery, Hazel and Tommy. At four o’clock
+all was in readiness for the start.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are going to travel eastward over the
+mountains, girls,” explained Harriet. “We
+shall have dense forests to go through and
+rugged paths to follow, but we shall save a
+number of miles and a great deal of time by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137'></a>137</span>
+going that way. We ought to reach Meadow-Brook
+some hours ahead of the boys if they
+take the road, as I heard Mr. Baker say they
+would. We shall touch the road occasionally,
+especially after we get over the mountains. And
+you, Jane, must leave a sign on the fence. We
+will do the same. Wherever we touch the highway
+we will make a sign, also putting down the
+time. Those boys don’t know anything about
+our secret signs, and they mustn’t.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are we all ready?” asked the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You had better start your car quietly,
+Jane,” suggested Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane nodded. She understood. The camp
+of the Tramp Club was not so far away but
+that the boys could hear the motor plainly if
+they were awake, which the girls very much
+doubted, as the Tramps had confessed that they
+sat up late nights, telling stories, playing Indian
+war games and scouting in the woods.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shoulder packs!” commanded Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+A few moments later the four girls with their
+guardian, after having put out the fire, started
+from the field. They were headed for the highway.
+Jane stood beside her car, waving to
+them until they were out of sight, then she
+calmly climbed into the vehicle and went to
+sleep. Crazy Jane had a plan of her own.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138'></a>138</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+About five o’clock the camp of the Tramp
+Club began to show signs of life. The captain
+roused his companions. It had been his intention
+to get out earlier, but he had overslept, as
+had all of his men. Still, he did not consider
+that there was any necessity for great haste.
+Of course he had not the slightest idea that the
+Meadow-Brook Girls had broken camp at any
+such early hour.
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys, while losing no time, made no effort
+at great haste. It was nearly six o’clock
+when they finished their breakfast and half an
+hour later, before they strapped on their packs
+and started down the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dill Dodd chuckled triumphantly as he
+pointed to Jane McCarthy’s automobile standing
+right where it had been since the previous
+afternoon.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All sleepy heads over there,” nodded Sam.
+“We could beat that outfit and sleep all the
+time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait a minute,” answered George. “I
+don’t see the tent, do you, fellows?”
+</p>
+<p>
+No one spoke for a moment. Then the leader
+announced that he was going down to the girls’
+camp. He returned at a trot after having
+visited the deserted camp and peered into the
+automobile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what is it?” questioned several boys.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139'></a>139</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Fellows, we’re stung. They’ve gone!” declared
+George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But—but the automobile is there?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, and that Miss McCarthy is curled up
+like a kitten on the back seat sleeping as sweetly
+as you please. There’s not another girl in
+camp.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what do you know about that?”
+drawled Davy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How long have they been gone, do you
+think?” asked Will.
+</p>
+<p>
+“From the feel of the ashes I should say
+several hours.” George did not know that
+they had smothered the fire with a damp
+blanket. “That was a fine trick to play on us
+the first day,” growled George. “That’s the
+girl of it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hold on, Cap. You know Miss Burrell,
+who seems to be the spokesman for the outfit,
+said strategy wasn’t barred. This isn’t a trick,
+it’s strategy. There’s a difference between
+tricking and strategy you know.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Boys, we’ve <em>got to</em> catch up with them,” declared
+the captain. “Are we going to let a lot
+of girls get the best of us?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No!” shouted the boys in chorus.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then hike! Don’t lose your wind at the
+start. Strike a steady clip, but after half an
+hour hit it up, and keep hitting it up till we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140'></a>140</span>
+catch up with them and take the lead once more.
+This is a fine mess, but we’ll soon be out of it
+with flying colors.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The Tramp Club walked for two hours without
+finding any trace of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls. The boys were becoming worried. By
+this time they surely ought to have found the
+tracks of the girls in the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You don’t think they have taken a short cut,
+do you?” asked Charlie.
+</p>
+<p>
+Baker shook his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They couldn’t get over those mountains.
+No; they have been following the side of the
+road, so we wouldn’t be able to pick up the trail.
+They’re sharp ones. They know something
+about trailing. That’s plain to be seen. Hark!
+what’s that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The honk, honk of an automobile horn was
+heard in the far distance to the rear of them.
+They listened a moment, then pressed on. It
+was not an unusual happening to be passed by
+a motor car. They soon realized, however, that
+this one was coming at a much higher rate of
+speed than the statute said was lawful.
+</p>
+<p>
+A cloud of dust arose a full half mile to the
+rear of them. As it bore down on the boys the
+dust rose higher and higher.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hoo-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e!” yelled a shrill
+voice from the heart of the dust cloud.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141'></a>141</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s that Miss McCarthy. They call her
+Crazy Jane,” shouted Dill. “Let’s hold her
+up.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Bent on mischief, the boys formed a chain
+across the road with clasped hands. On came
+the car careening from side to side, its horn
+honking hoarsely like the warning of a sentinel
+crow, its driver uttering her shrill “hoo-e-e-e,”
+her hair standing out almost straight behind her
+in the breeze.
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys stood firm; the car did not slacken
+its speed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jump for your lives!” yelled the captain
+of the tramps. “She’s going to run us down!”
+</p>
+<p>
+A great black object flitted past them just
+as their ranks opened. There was not even
+time to get out of the road. The most they
+could do was to make an opening large enough—and
+barely large enough at that—to permit
+the passage of the car, which went roaring past
+them. A long-drawn “hoo-e-e-e,” floated back
+to them, a choking cloud of dust and sand showered
+over them, sending the boys into severe
+coughing fits as they staggered off to the side
+of the highway and sat down on the dusty grass.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what do you think of that?” gasped
+Sam Crocker.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think it’s exceedingly lucky for us that
+we got out of the road when we did,” answered Captain
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142'></a>142</span>
+George, shaking an angry fist
+in the direction of the disappearing cloud of
+dust. “Why, she would have run right over
+us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She would,” agreed the boys in chorus.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But also she wouldn’t. She knew we would
+get out of the way,” added Sam Crocker.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on, fellows. This won’t do,” cried
+George. “We’ve got to make tracks now.”
+They scrambled to their feet and set out at a
+fast pace. In the meantime Jane McCarthy,
+chuckling over the scare she had given the
+Tramp Club, was racing along the highway in
+her mad drive to the eastward.
+</p>
+<p>
+A few miles farther on she stopped the car
+and after taking a survey of the land, got out
+and made some chalk marks on a fence. Then
+she drove on more leisurely.
+</p>
+<p>
+While all this was happening the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were traveling on, also at a fast
+pace. They had gotten over the rugged range
+of hills after having sustained some scratches
+on their hands and several rents in their frocks.
+They then came out into a corn field. A highway
+lay below them which they would have to
+cross. On the opposite side of the highway
+lay an apple orchard, the trees standing close
+together, their tops in most instances interlacing.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143'></a>143</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder if the boys have passed here?”
+questioned Hazel, shading her eyes and gazing
+up and down the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. They must still be a long way back,”
+answered Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Meadow-Brook Girls started down the
+hill, climbing the fence into the road. There
+before them, plainly discernible, were the tracks
+of an automobile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane went past here not long ago,” decided
+Margery. “These are her car tracks, I am
+sure.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, and there’s a chalk mark on the fence,”
+said Miss Elting, pointing down the road a few
+rods. They hurried over to examine the sign.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A broken arrow,” exclaimed Harriet.
+“That means danger or ‘look out.’ Now, I
+wonder what we are to look out for? I don’t
+see anything alarming.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think Jane means to inform us that the
+boys are not far from here and to look out for
+them,” suggested the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, that must be it. Half-past twelve, the
+signal says, she passed here. That is nearly
+an hour ago. Come, girls, let’s get over that
+fence in a hurry and be off. Once through the
+orchard, and they can’t see us,” urged Harriet
+Burrell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait; let’s be certain that we are right,”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144'></a>144</span>
+warned the guardian. She took a careful survey
+about them. Nothing of an alarming nature
+was to be seen. It was just an ordinary
+country scene, with the sun shining down overhead,
+the air warm and oppressive about them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Everything appears to be all right,” she
+decided finally. “Yes, go ahead, girls.” Miss
+Elting was the first to climb the roadside fence
+and drop down on the other side. She was
+quickly followed by the four girls of her party.
+“Keep on the alert, girls. If any of you
+catches sight of the boys drop down behind
+trees and don’t speak.” The guardian had entered
+into the spirit of the contest with an enthusiasm
+equal to that of the girls themselves.
+“I can’t believe that they have gotten ahead
+of us. It isn’t probable that that was what
+Jane meant when she marked the danger signal
+on the fence here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait,” called Harriet. Springing back over
+the fence she wrote the letters “O. K.” underneath
+the broken arrow and the triangle. This
+was for the purpose of informing Jane that
+her message had been read and understood in
+case she were to return that way later on, as
+she was more than likely to do.
+</p>
+<p>
+This done they started briskly in among the
+trees of the orchard. They had not gone far
+before Tommy, who was in the lead, uttered a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145'></a>145</span>
+shrill little scream of alarm. The girls had
+started to run toward her when they halted
+abruptly. Just ahead of them stood a great
+hulking bull with head lowered to the ground,
+his small eyes fixed menacingly on the girls.
+The bull uttered a deep, rumbling bellow.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me! Oh, thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Run for your lives, girls,” shouted the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+They turned and were about to flee for the
+road when they came to another abrupt stop.
+To the right and the left of them were two
+other bulls, each with lowered head, pawing the
+dirt with first one front foot then the other.
+</p>
+<p>
+All at once the girls understood the meaning
+of Jane’s danger sign. She had seen the
+bulls in passing, and knowing that her companions
+would pass that way, had halted to
+leave a warning for them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Quick! Into the trees!” shouted Miss
+Elting. She grabbed the trembling Tommy and
+helped her up into a tree, Harriet in the meantime
+performing the same service for Margery
+and Hazel. Then the guardian and Harriet began
+scrambling up, but ere they had gotten off
+the ground the bulls charged them.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146'></a>146</span><a name='chXIII' id='chXIII'></a>CHAPTER XIII—A SERIOUS PREDICAMENT</h2>
+<p>
+“Climb! Miss Elting, climb!” begged
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Margery and Tommy uttered shrill
+cries of terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian reached for the crotch of the
+tree, just above her head, and drew herself up.
+Harriet leaped into the air, catching hold of
+an overhanging limb. She intended to pull
+herself free from the ground and out of the
+reach of the angry bulls.
+</p>
+<p>
+The limb snapped. Apple tree boughs always
+are treacherous. Harriet landed on the ground
+in a heap. A gasp of horror escaped from the
+lips of the girls in the trees near at hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+There followed a bellow and a rush from
+the third bull, which was some few yards distant
+from its fellows. The girls closed their
+eyes as the lowered head and wicked-looking
+horns seemed to come into contact with Harriet
+Burrell’s body. Miss Elting, strong-nerved
+as she was, could not repress a scream. Margery,
+utterly terror-stricken, lost her balance,
+and had it not been for Hazel, who threw an
+arm about her, Margery would have fallen
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147'></a>147</span>
+from the tree and been at the mercy of the savage
+bulls.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the meantime, having heard no scream
+from Harriet, the girls opened their eyes fearfully.
+They saw Harriet leaping for a higher
+limb of the tree. The head of the bull had
+crashed against the base of the tree where Harriet
+had been but a second before.
+</p>
+<p>
+With remarkable presence of mind the girl,
+when she struck the ground, had rolled herself
+to one side, thus placing the tree between
+herself and her assailant. This gave her a few
+seconds respite. But in these few seconds Harriet
+gathered her faculties together. Springing
+to her feet she had flung herself straight
+up into the air, with arms thrown above her
+head to grasp the limb that her quick eyes had
+noted.
+</p>
+<p>
+Most girls would have fainted, but Harriet
+Burrell did not. She was not of the fainting
+kind, as Captain Baker had so truly said a few
+hours before. A few awful seconds of suspense
+followed.
+</p>
+<p>
+With feet curled under her, the girl’s hands
+reached and clasped the limb. Then she drew
+herself up to it; a feat requiring both muscle
+and practice. Once there she lay along the
+creaking limb of the apple tree just out of
+reach of the tossing horns, gazing down into
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148'></a>148</span>
+the bloodshot eyes of the ferocious beast. The
+limb bent perilously. It threatened, at any
+second, to give way beneath her weight.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Climb higher!” cried Miss Elting, “oh,
+climb higher!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t dare move. The limb may break
+if I do,” answered Harriet in a wholly calm
+voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me, thave me!” wailed Tommy
+Thompson weakly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What shall we do? Please be careful, Harriet,”
+begged the guardian in an agonized
+voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I intend to be careful. I haven’t any burning
+desire to fall on those sharp horns. I
+never saw such a fiendish expression in the
+eyes of an animal.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The limb creaked warningly. Harriet instantly
+ceased speaking. Somehow, she thought,
+the muscular effort of speaking must be putting
+a little added weight on the limb.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bull walked away a few paces. He
+stopped and began bellowing and pawing.
+</p>
+<p>
+“See if you can’t call him away. I simply
+don’t dare to move as long as he is so near,”
+said Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How shall I call him?” questioned the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Flaunt something at him.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149'></a>149</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I haven’t anything to flaunt.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait till I take off my thkirt,” piped the
+little lisping girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be careful that you don’t fall,” warned
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy quickly stripped off her skirt, then
+leaning over, swung it back and forth. Instantly
+there was a bellow and a charge from
+the enraged bull. The skirt was whisked from
+her hands on the sharp horns of the furious
+animal that had charged it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me!” cried Tommy. “Oh, thave my
+thkirt!”
+</p>
+<p>
+There was reason for alarm in Tommy’s case
+at that moment. The bull was tossing its head
+to release the skirt that had become impaled
+upon the sharp horns. Presently the skirt fell
+to the ground. The animal began stamping
+upon and prodding it. Tommy got into action
+at about the same time. Shrieking and protesting,
+she began pelting the animal with
+apples that she picked from the tree for the
+purpose. Some of the missiles reached their
+mark. Most of them did not.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, my thkirt, my thkirt!” wailed the little
+girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind, you have saved Harriet,”
+comforted Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet, the instant the bull left her, started
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150'></a>150</span>
+to wriggle backwards. The limb gave way
+with a crash, and Harriet plunged to the
+ground, but by skilfully twisting her body she
+avoided striking on her head. She was up like
+a flash and once more sprang for the tree. This
+time she did not trust to a treacherous limb,
+but scrambled hastily up the trunk and perched
+herself high and safe in the crotch of the tree
+a few seconds later.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Gracious! That was a narrow escape,”
+gasped the guardian. “How do you feel?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am all right.” Harriet smiled faintly.
+Her cheeks were pale and her eyes large and
+bright. There were no other indications that
+she was disturbed at her succession of narrow
+escapes from the bull. “Poor Tommy, you
+lost your skirt, didn’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ye—eth. Oh, what thhall I do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I guess you will have to finish the day’s
+hike in your petticoat,” answered Miss Elting.
+“However, from present indications it will be
+dark by the time we get away from here. Besides
+your petticoat is black and will easily
+pass for an outside skirt.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t, I can’t,” wailed the girl. “I won’t
+go on thith way.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t worry, Tommy. You may have my
+skirt. I don’t mind going without it at all. I
+have a black underskirt, so the absence of my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151'></a>151</span>
+outside skirt will hardly be noticed,” answered
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I won’t. The naughty old bull. I want my
+own thkirt.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You won’t need it,” said Margery, speaking
+for the first time since she had been overcome
+with terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t you think they will go away?” questioned
+Hazel anxiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not so long as we are up here,” replied
+Harriet. “I know their kind pretty well. I
+was chased by one at grandfather’s farm two
+years ago. There is only one way to save yourself
+from them when they are angry—that is
+to keep out of their way. I think——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, look! Look, girls!” cried Hazel in a
+tone of suppressed eagerness.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thave me! There they come,” moaned
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s the Tramp Club as I live,” exclaimed
+Miss Elting. “Girls, we must call to them. It
+is a humiliating position for us, but we must
+get out of here. They can at least go for the
+farmer and ask him to drive the animals off.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Miss Elting, please don’t call to them,”
+begged Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys were swinging down the road at a
+rapid but steady pace. They were walking in
+step, each with a heavy pack on his back, hat
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152'></a>152</span>
+brims tilted back, a manly looking lot of young
+men. As they reached a point opposite to the
+lower end of the orchard they began to sing,
+their voices raised in chorus:
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Forty-nine&nbsp;&nbsp;blue&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;are&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Forty-nine&nbsp;&nbsp;blue&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;are&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Take&nbsp;&nbsp;one&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;down&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;there’ll&nbsp;&nbsp;be&nbsp;&nbsp;forty-eight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;blue&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall,&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Take&nbsp;&nbsp;one&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;down&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;there’ll&nbsp;&nbsp;be&nbsp;&nbsp;forty-eight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;blue&nbsp;&nbsp;bottles&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall,&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;hanging&nbsp;&nbsp;on<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;wall.”<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, help!” moaned Margery Brown.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave me!” wailed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet and Miss Elting burst out laughing,
+but not loudly enough for their laughter to
+reach the Tramp Club, the members of which
+organization were trudging along past the
+orchard, wholly unconscious of the nearness of
+their friends.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXIV' id='chXIV'></a>CHAPTER XIV—HARRIET IS RESOURCEFUL</h2>
+<p>
+The boys were still removing blue bottles
+from the wall as they swung on out of
+sight of the girls in the apple trees.
+Harriet Burrell was shaking with laughter.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That ith right. Laugh!” jeered Tommy.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153'></a>153</span>
+“I gueth it ith funny, but I don’t thee it.
+Maybe I’ll laugh, to-morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is really the most laughable situation I
+ever heard of,” admitted the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“One side of it, yes,” agreed Harriet. “The
+other side isn’t so funny. We must think of
+getting out of here. All our plans have come
+to nothing. The boys have passed us. I am
+afraid we shan’t be able to catch up with them
+again unless we can get a start before long.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The bulls, attracted by the singing, had
+turned, now facing the road. They regarded
+the boys menacingly, but the Tramp Club did
+not see them. Now the animals once more
+turned toward the trees that held the girls.
+The beasts resumed their bellowing and pawing
+and moved up under the trees, tossing their
+heads, issuing challenge after challenge to the
+girls to come down. But the challenges were
+not accepted. Harriet regarded the beasts
+frowningly. The other girls gazed at them in
+terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, Harriet Burrell, as you wouldn’t
+allow me to call the boys, what do you propose
+to do? Remain up in a tree all night?” demanded
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“By no means.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t dare thleep up here,” complained
+Tommy. “What if I thhould fall out?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154'></a>154</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“You wouldn’t have far to fall,” answered
+Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, wouldn’t it be awful,” gasped Hazel,
+“if we were to fall out of these trees?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The animals will go to sleep themselves
+after dark, I am sure. We shall be able to get
+away then,” replied Harriet wisely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I believe you are right. I hadn’t thought
+of that,” nodded Miss Elting. “But must we
+remain in this position all the rest of the day?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, indeed,” replied Harriet. “I had
+hoped that the owner of these animals might
+come along, but there seems to be no one about.
+You see, in the autumn, the farmers are seldom
+abroad in the fields unless they chance to be
+plowing, so I think we had better move.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What have you in mind, Harriet? I know
+you have formed some plan to get us out of
+this predicament.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I have. The plan may not work, but
+it is worth trying. I wish you would call the
+beasts to your tree. I can depend upon you.
+You will not lose your head. You will have to
+use your own skirt this time, but for goodness’
+sake, don’t lose it. Some one must be presentable
+when we get to camp.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“See here, Harriet, I positively forbid your
+taking any further chances. You have had
+enough narrow escapes to-day as it is.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155'></a>155</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“There will be no particular danger for me,
+Miss Elting. You will be in more danger than
+I shall be when the plan really begins to work.
+Will you call the bulls over to your tree?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. But I warn you I shan’t be a party
+to any more foolishness.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet made no reply. She scanned the
+orchard about her, finally fixing her eyes upon
+a tree with low-hanging limbs, situated several
+rods farther down the orchard and away from
+the road. The girl nodded, as though in answer
+to some question she had asked of herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now I am ready. I have removed my
+skirt,” called the guardian. “What next?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait a moment.” Harriet clambered down
+the tree a little way, placing herself in a position
+where she could jump without loss of time.
+“Now wave your skirt, please.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting leaned down from her position
+in the tree and began swinging her skirt slowly
+back and forth. The result was immediate and
+startling. With bellows of rage, three savage
+bulls with lowered heads charged the blue
+skirt. It seems that these animals were not
+particular as to color. Blue was every bit as
+aggravating as red to them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet, the instant the beasts began charging,
+had dropped fearlessly to the ground. The
+bulls had not observed her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156'></a>156</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet!” screamed Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet gave no heed to the cry of alarm.
+Instead she ran with all speed farther down
+the orchard, casting apprehensive glances over
+her shoulder now and then. A cry of warning
+from Miss Elting told her that the bulls had
+turned and were charging her. Harriet gave
+one quick glance over her shoulder, then leaped
+for a tree, up which she clambered with agility.
+She was none too soon, for, by the time she had
+cleared the trunk, the bulls met at the tree with
+horns clashing. For a moment they turned
+their attention to each other and then backed
+away and looked up at their intended victim.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Miss Elting!” called the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am going to decoy the bulls as far away
+from you as possible. When you hear me
+scream you are all to climb down from the trees
+and run for the road fence. I’ll try to hold
+the ugly beasts here while you are making the
+dash. But run for your life. Don’t you dare
+to fall down.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All of us?” questioned the guardian apprehensively.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, please.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, Harriet—suppose that we do get
+safely away—how are you going to leave the
+orchard?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157'></a>157</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have thought of a way to do it,” Harriet
+assured the guardian. “The danger, now,
+is in so many of us being here. When I scream
+the first time you are to run. When you get
+safely over the fence you are to give me the
+signal ‘hoo-e-e-e-e.’ I will know, by that, that
+you are safe. When I give you a second call,
+after you are in the highway, try to attract the
+attention of the bulls. That will be my chance
+to make a dash for the nearest fence.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t like your plan,” objected the guardian.
+“You are taking too great a risk.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is the only way we can get away from
+here before night,” argued Harriet. “Even
+then, we should find it difficult to escape, for
+I think the beasts would camp right under
+these trees. They are determined to get us.
+I’m going to fool them. Now, call them!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian did so. The animals did not
+show any immediate inclination to move. So
+Miss Elting cautiously got down to the ground.
+That was all that was necessary. The beasts
+charged her. The guardian lost no time in
+scrambling into the tree. In the meantime Harriet
+had again dropped to the ground and was
+running at the top of her speed. She was still
+within easy reach of the voices of her companions,
+though out of their sight.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are they?” she called.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158'></a>158</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Right here,” answered the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right. Don’t try to keep them there.
+I am not afraid.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We have no desire to, I assure you, Harriet.
+But do be careful.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet was still on the ground. She moved
+a little farther down through the orchard, getting
+out where the trees were less thick, so
+as to be still within sight of the beasts she was
+hoping to lure away from the trees that held
+her companions. The bulls did not appear to
+see her, so Harriet stripped off her own skirt
+and began waving it at them. It was several
+moments later when the bulls discovered her
+and then they started for her without loss of
+time.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Run!” screamed Harriet. “Run! Don’t
+make a sound to attract their attention.” She
+adopted her own advice and started down
+through an aisle of apple trees, her feet scarcely
+seeming to touch the ground. The girl was
+flaunting her skirt over her head. She heard
+bellows of rage off toward the trees in which
+her companions were perched. The girl halted.
+A few seconds later she saw the beasts coming.
+Instead of immediately taking to a tree Harriet
+began running again, still waving the skirt
+high above her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet heard Tommy give a little scream.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159'></a>159</span>
+It was quickly suppressed. Undoubtedly Miss
+Elting had sharply rebuked the terrified little
+girl. Harriet did not pause again. This was
+her last chance to get the bulls away from the
+trees that held her companions. Their safety
+depended upon her doing so. She was determined
+to succeed, even at the imminent risk of
+losing her own safety. The animals did not
+seem to be gaining on her, but all at once they
+put on a great burst of speed. Harriet darted
+sideways, then straight ahead again. This time
+she leaped out into the open, flaunting the skirt,
+tantalizing the ugly beasts, resorting to every
+artifice she could think of to take their attention
+from Miss Elting and the other girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet succeeded beyond her expectations.
+She also succeeded in enraging the beasts far
+more than she had hoped to do.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now they were getting too close for safety,
+so Harriet darted in among the trees, followed
+by the three savage, bellowing bulls. She
+grasped the first low-hanging limb that she
+came to, and swung herself up into a tree. A
+pair of sharp horns caught the end of the skirt,
+rending it nearly to the waist. Harriet clung
+desperately to the skirt. She did not propose
+to lose it if she could help doing so. Jerking
+the skirt away she climbed higher and, bracing
+herself, gazed down triumphantly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160'></a>160</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the time I fooled you, didn’t I?” she
+taunted. Leaning forward the girl waved the
+skirt. She reached down far enough to flaunt
+the skirt full in the face of the nearest animal.
+He bellowed his rage and pawed the dirt. She
+continued to aggravate him. If she could only
+keep them all there until her companions
+reached the highway!
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e!” sounded the distant, long-drawn
+call of the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, they’re safe!” cried Harriet joyfully.
+For a moment she closed her eyes and clung
+panting to the trunk of the tree. After resting
+a few moments she cautiously drew on her
+skirt and fastened it, three pairs of red, evil
+eyes observing her threateningly. Then she
+climbed to the topmost branches of the apple
+tree, hoping to get high enough to obtain a
+glimpse of her companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I might have known that a tree with such
+low boughs would not be high enough for
+that,” she muttered. “But I’ll call.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Listening she heard the “Hoo-e-e-e!” of Miss
+Elting again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e!” answered
+Harriet Burrell.
+</p>
+<p>
+In response the others began shouting. The
+bulls did not appear to be interested. One of
+them lay down.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161'></a>161</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“My goodness! I do hope they aren’t going
+to stay here the rest of the day,” cried Harriet.
+“I don’t know what I shall do in that
+event.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She now tried Tommy’s plan and began pelting
+the animal that had lain down with apples.
+It took very little of this sort of treatment to
+bring the beast to his feet. He leaped up with
+a bellow and began pawing up the dirt, sending
+showers of it over his companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet chuckled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, if only Miss Elting will attract their
+attention. I think I had better try to hide
+myself and keep quiet.” This she did. She
+could hear the shouts and yells of her companions.
+They were setting up a great racket off
+there in the road, doing their utmost to draw
+the attention of the animals away from Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+After fully five minutes of this one of the
+bulls walked off with his head in the air. He
+stood a moment with head still erect, gazing
+off toward the highway. Suddenly he started
+on a run. The other two bulls followed him
+with their gaze for a few moments, then they,
+too, started away at a moderate trot.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The plan has worked! It has worked!”
+cried Harriet in triumph, under her breath.
+“Oh, I do hope they get far enough away. I
+must crawl down so as to be ready for my big
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162'></a>162</span>
+spring. This is almost equal to a Spanish bull
+fight, except that I haven’t any barbs to stick
+into them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girl crept cautiously to the ground. She
+stood at the foot of the tree, shielding her body
+by its trunk, peering around the tree at the
+running bulls. They were headed straight
+toward the road fence, traveling more rapidly
+now.
+</p>
+<p>
+In order to reach the fence at the side of the
+field, Harriet would be obliged to go out into
+the open, where, if the animals turned, she
+would be sure to be discovered.
+</p>
+<p>
+A cry from her companions told her that the
+time for action on her part had arrived. Without
+an instant’s hesitation Harriet Burrell
+started for a fence which stood to the eastward
+of her place of refuge. A few moments later
+she had cleared the orchard and reached the
+open field. She saw the three bulls pawing the
+ground by the roadside fence in the distance.
+Her companions were standing in the middle
+of the road waving their skirts at the animals,
+not daring to get close to the fence.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Run! Run, Harriet!” screamed Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+As though they had understood the meaning
+of the guardian’s warning, the bulls wheeled
+sharply. They saw the fleeing figure of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163'></a>163</span>
+Meadow-Brook Girl and, leaving Miss Elting
+and her party, charged straight across the field
+towards Harriet, while the latter was still some
+distance from the fence towards which she was
+running.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Run! Oh, run!” came the voice of Miss
+Elting in a terrified wail. “Run!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Suddenly, Harriet, who had turned to glance
+over her shoulder to measure the distance between
+herself and her pursuers, stumbled and
+plunged headfirst into a little depression in the
+ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+A scream rose from her horrified companions.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXV' id='chXV'></a>CHAPTER XV—A RACE FOR LIFE</h2>
+<p>
+“She’ll be killed!” wailed Hazel, covering
+her eyes to shut out the sight.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thave her!” screamed Tommy.
+The little girl sprang forward, scrambled over
+the fence and, had she, too, not fallen would
+have dashed down the field to Harriet Burrell’s
+assistance, utterly regardless of her own
+peril. The guardian climbed over the fence
+and had placed a firm grip on the little girl
+before the latter could get to her feet. Miss
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164'></a>164</span>
+Elting fairly dragged Tommy back to the fence
+and assisted her over.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She’s up again!” cried Hazel. “Oh, hurry,
+hurry!” Her voice rose to a piercing wail.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet had gotten to her feet. She cast one
+frightened look over her shoulder, then continued
+to run towards the fence. They saw
+that she limped a little. Nor was the girl running
+as fast as before her fall. The three bulls
+had gained considerably during the few seconds
+that Harriet had been down. They were
+now charging with lowered heads, bunched
+closely together, this time as though determined
+that their victim should not escape them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just ahead of her, Harriet had seen a ditch,
+deep and broad, made for the purpose of draining
+the land. Instantly a plan formed in her
+active mind. She could not hope to win the
+race for life by running straight ahead now
+that the beasts had gained so much on her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She’s tiring! They’ll get her!” moaned
+Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why didn’t you let me go?” screamed
+Tommy, beside herself with anxiety.
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian did not answer. Her eyes,
+wide and staring, were following every movement
+of the fleeing girl and the pursuing bulls.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet stopped short, bending over in a
+crouching position.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165'></a>165</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“She’s going to try to trick them! Oh, what
+courage!” breathed Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look! Thee her now!” shouted Tommy,
+with a note of triumph in her strained voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+The animals were fairly upon Harriet. When
+it seemed as though their horns were touching
+her, the girl leaped obliquely into the ditch.
+They saw her run, splashing along in it for a
+few rods, then spring to the bank on the same
+side from which she had jumped in.
+</p>
+<p>
+The watchers saw something else too. The
+bulls, so intent upon reaching their victim, had
+taken no notice of the ditch. Perhaps they had
+been charging with closed eyes, as many bulls
+do. At any rate the leading beast flung himself
+headlong into the ditch. The others braced
+themselves with their front feet and went sliding
+into the ditch on top of their leader, digging
+furrows with their hoofs in the soft dirt.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet Burrell’s ruse had been successful.
+She spoke no word, but a glint of triumph
+flashed into her eyes as she cast a quick glance
+at the floundering animals, then ran straight
+toward her companions. This time there was
+no limping, no lessening of speed. She had
+covered less than half the distance before two
+of the animals that had slid into the ditch had
+recovered themselves and began looking about
+for the prey that had eluded them.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166'></a>166</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The slender figure of the Meadow-Brook
+girl, they soon discovered, was racing across
+the field. The two bulls clambered out of the
+ditch and charged again. Now that they were
+in the open field it was a race that would go
+to the fleetest. No tricks would avail Harriet
+this time. She knew that her safety depended
+on outrunning her pursuers. Had Harriet not
+been an athletic girl she would have succumbed
+long before. As it was she ran at a wonderful
+rate of speed. The shouts of her companions,
+though heard but faintly, encouraged her,
+for Harriet’s mind was on her work.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ruse practiced by Harriet had given
+her the lead in the race. Miss Elting, however,
+saw that the bulls were gaining on the plucky
+girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls,” she said sharply, “remain where
+you are.” With that she climbed to the top
+of the fence and leaped over into the field.
+It was her idea that even though Harriet did
+succeed in reaching the fence, the girl might
+not have sufficient vitality left to enable her to
+climb over it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet, as she drew near, discovered the
+guardian on her side of the fence and divined
+the latter’s purpose. The girl motioned for
+Miss Elting to get back. The guardian shook
+her head and remained where she was.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167'></a>167</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Go back! Go back! I’m all right,” cried
+Harriet breathlessly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bulls were gaining rapidly. They were
+now but a few rods behind Harriet Burrell.
+She put on more speed after one last look over
+her shoulder while Tommy and Hazel were
+shouting their encouragement.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You will be caught. Quick!” gasped Harriet,
+as she drew rapidly near to the guardian.
+“Oh, please hurry back to the road!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting did not move. Harriet dashed
+up beside her and stopped short. Miss Elting
+grasped the girl’s arm. Harriet pulled herself
+free.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not an inch till you get over,” declared the
+girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian glanced at her questioningly,
+then vaulted the fence. Harriet followed her.
+But ere Harriet had touched the ground on
+the other side, two sharp-horned heads crashed
+into the fence. Harriet sank down at the side
+of the road breathless and exhausted.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting pulled the girl to her feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Throw your shoulders well back and inhale
+deeply!” she commanded. She then led Harriet
+slowly up and down the road for a few
+moments. Harriet’s heavy respirations soon
+moderated, and ten minutes later her breathing
+was almost normal.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168'></a>168</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think we had better wait here. Jane will
+be along looking for us if we do not get to our
+camping place by night. Do you feel exhausted?”
+asked Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A little weak in the knees, that’s all,” answered
+Harriet. “I shall be ready to move in
+a few minutes. I don’t want to stay here. We
+must try to catch up with the boys.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. I shall not allow it. Yon have done
+quite enough for one day—quite enough to tire
+out the strongest man. Do you really think
+you can stand it to walk slowly?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course I can,” answered Harriet
+brightly. “See, I still have some sprint left
+in me.” Harriet ran up and down the road,
+vaulting the fence on the opposite side of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have indeed,” laughed Miss Elting. It
+was the first laugh that had been heard in some
+time. “You are the most remarkable girl I’ve
+ever known, or ever shall know. Now we had
+better decide on which way we shall go. I think
+the shorter way will be to skirt the orchard and
+continue on across the fields. We shan’t try
+the orchard again.”
+</p>
+<p>
+All the girls agreed with the guardian. They
+had had quite enough of that particular orchard.
+Following the road for a short distance they
+came to the adjoining field, which they entered
+and continued on their journey. The afternoon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169'></a>169</span>
+was now well advanced. Miss Elting had left a
+mark on the fence to inform Jane of their route,
+in case she should come back to look for them.
+This with the time of their passing would give
+Jane an idea when to expect them at the place
+stretched for the camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+As they proceeded, Harriet’s strength returned
+to her. By the time they had walked
+two miles from the scene of their recent exciting
+experiences she had fully recovered from
+her recent exhaustion. Tommy, now that she
+had time to think about herself, was bewailing
+the loss of her skirt. She firmly declared she
+would not go to camp with only an underskirt
+on and announced her intention of sleeping out
+in the fields.
+</p>
+<p>
+Six o’clock had arrived by the time they came
+out on the crest of a hill overlooking the valley
+in which they hoped to find Jane McCarthy and
+their camp. They scanned the valley eagerly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s our tent,” cried Hazel, pointing to
+a clump of trees to the left of them. No person
+was in sight, however. This they thought
+strange.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should not be surprised if everybody had
+gone in search of us,” said Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I hope they don’t find uth,” spoke up
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It will be a good opportunity for you to get
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170'></a>170</span>
+into camp without being seen,” suggested Harriet.
+“Come, let’s hurry down before some one
+does come.”
+</p>
+<p>
+In order that their approach might be the
+more screened, they hurried over to a fence
+along which bushes and small trees grew. Sheltered
+by these they made their way down into
+the valley. But when they reached the road
+Tommy halted.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not another thtep,” she declared stubbornly.
+No amount of urging would induce
+her to go on. It was decided to leave her there
+while the rest continued on, Harriet promising
+to return to the little girl with another skirt
+as soon as possible. So Tommy hid in the
+bushes, peering out at the retreating forms of
+her companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+A fire was smouldering in the Meadow-Brook
+camp. As the party of girls approached, four
+boys sprang up. They had been sitting about
+the fire. Their hats were off instantly, and
+they tried gallantly to force down the grins
+that persisted in appearing on their faces.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, how do you do?” greeted Captain
+Baker of the Tramp Club.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where is Miss McCarthy?” questioned Miss
+Elting, pretending not to have observed the
+grins.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She and a couple of the fellows went back
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171'></a>171</span>
+to look for you,” spoke up Dill Dodd. “The
+pace was rather swift for you, even if you did
+get an early start, wasn’t it?” he chuckled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, the pace was much swifter than you
+imagine,” answered the guardian frigidly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is too bad that Miss McCarthy started
+out. She may spend a good part of the evening
+searching for you, not knowing that you have
+reached camp,” said the captain.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She will know,” replied Harriet. “Jane
+will be back here soon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How will she know?” frowned Davy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, they have a wireless telegraph system,
+you know,” chuckled Sam.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, that is it! How did you guess it?”
+smiled Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t forget Tommy,” reminded Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet flushed. She had indeed, forgotten
+all about the little lisping girl who was hiding
+in the bushes. Harriet hurried into the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s right. You are one girl short,” exclaimed
+George, suddenly discovering the absence
+of Miss Thompson. “Did she fall by the
+wayside? Was the pace too swift for her?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Young man, you talk too much,” objected
+Margery indignantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know it,” laughed George. “I can’t help
+it.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172'></a>172</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting’s face relaxed in a smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where <em>is</em> Miss Thompson?” questioned
+Dill.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Miss Thompson will be here soon,” replied
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+Unnoticed by the boys Harriet slipped away,
+a bundle under her arm. She returned, a quarter
+of an hour later, accompanied by Tommy
+clad in her outside skirt and at peace with the
+world. They had barely reached the camp before
+the sound of a motor horn was heard. A
+few moments afterward Crazy Jane came tearing
+along the road and swung up to the camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here we are darlin’s,” she cried. “I got
+your message.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Message?” questioned the captain. “Who
+gave her a message, Fred?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Blest if I know,” answered Fred Avery, getting
+down from the car, removing his hat and
+scratching his head thoughtfully. “Wireless, I
+think.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What did I tell you?” nodded Sam.
+</p>
+<p>
+The captain regarded Fred inquiringly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, don’t ask me,” said the latter. “Miss
+McCarthy got out of her car about five miles
+back, walked to the fence then back to the car.
+She said her friends had passed there about
+four o’clock in the afternoon and were in camp
+then.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173'></a>173</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what do you know about that?” wondered
+the captain. “Tell us how you did it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A little bird told me,” chuckled Jane.
+The girls burst into a merry peal of laughter.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXVI' id='chXVI'></a>CHAPTER XVI—A TREAT THAT WAS NOT A TREAT</h2>
+<p>
+“Never mind. We won’t be as mean as
+you are,” declared Sam, springing up.
+“We will return good for evil.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you see the three bulls?” interrupted
+Jane. “I knew you would cross that orchard
+and I was afraid you’d meet them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We did,” answered Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s that?” The captain was interested
+instantly. “You say you met the bulls?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. I might as well tell you,” explained
+Miss Elting. “You think we weren’t able to
+keep the pace we set for ourselves. I don’t
+want my girls to rest under that imputation, for
+I believe that they can completely outdistance
+you boys. We did meet the three bulls. Yes,
+they treed us. We were all up in apple trees
+when you boys passed singing ‘Forty-nine Blue
+Bottles.’”
+</p>
+<p>
+Some one laughed. The captain frowned at
+the boy who had done so.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174'></a>174</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“You let us pass, and never called us to come
+to your assistance?” he demanded.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We preferred to get out of our scrape without
+appealing to our rivals, Captain Baker.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Whew! That was a fix. How’d you manage
+it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Through the resourcefulness and courage of
+Harriet Burrell. Had it not been for her we
+undoubtedly should still be up in the trees in the
+apple orchard.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please tell us about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please don’t,” begged Harriet blushingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now that you have aroused our curiosity,
+it would be cruel not to tell us the whole story,”
+declared George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yeth. Cruelty to animalth,” nodded Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting, despite Harriet’s protestations,
+did tell the boys the story, giving the full credit
+for their rescue to Harriet Burrell, to whom
+it belonged. The boys listened in open-mouthed
+wonder.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Fellows, we aren’t so much as we think we
+are,” declared the chief of the Tramp Club.
+“I propose three cheers for Miss Burrell.
+Now! Altogether! One, two, three!”
+</p>
+<p>
+They gave three rousing cheers in which,
+Tommy’s shrill voice joined.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175'></a>175</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who’s all right?” demanded the captain at
+the end of the cheer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Miss Burrell’s all right!” yelled the
+Tramps. “For she’s a jolly good fel—low;
+For she’s a jolly good fellow,” sang the Tramps,
+as with hands on each other’s shoulders they
+marched through the camp, and out into the
+field on their way to their own camp, a short
+distance from that of the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting was laughing merrily. Harriet’s
+face was crimson.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I call that downright mean. They were
+making fun of me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, Harriet! You know they were not,”
+rebuked Miss Elting. “It was the highest compliment
+those lads could pay.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It hath been a day of experientheth, hathn’t
+it?” Tommy questioned.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet’s face was still flushed as she began
+to prepare the supper. Each member of the
+party now remembered that she had an appetite.
+While they were getting the meal Jane
+told them how the boys had gloated over having
+“walked the girls off their feet,” as the
+tramps expressed it. Jane announced triumphantly
+that she had been more than a match for
+them, which her companions could well believe,
+for Jane had a sharp tongue, besides being the
+possessor of a fund of Irish wit.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176'></a>176</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The smoke curling up from the other camp
+told the girls that the boys were busy getting
+their own supper. While eating, the guardian
+was obliged to go over the story of their experiences
+for the benefit of Jane, who interrupted
+now and then with humorous questions.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are the boys coming over this evening?”
+asked Margery, after they had finished supper
+and she and Tommy were washing the dishes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They did not say,” called Hazel. “It is
+safe to believe they will. I wonder if we can’t
+get rid of those boys? They make me nervous.
+It seems to me that they are perpetually
+on the scene whether one wants to see them or
+not.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t be hard on the poor Tramp Club,
+Hazel,” laughed Harriet. “Remember you
+might still be stuck fast in the swamp had they
+not come to the rescue.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s so,” responded Hazel, with a sigh.
+“I never thought of that. They’re really not
+so bad after all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have met worse,” averred Harriet solemnly.
+Whereupon there was a general laugh.
+</p>
+<p>
+The tramps had gathered the fuel for the
+Meadow-Brook Girls, stacking it up in piles of
+various lengths. The lads really were trying
+to make themselves useful to the young women.
+As yet there had been no outward evidence of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177'></a>177</span>
+Captain Baker’s assertion that some of them
+were “full of mischief.” The girls had piled
+the campfire high with wood and gathered
+about it when strains of music were heard.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, it ith a band, it ith a band,” cried
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Coming to serenade us, probably,” announced
+Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. I think it is some one playing on harmonicas,”
+answered Miss Elting after a moment
+of listening.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s those boys,” groaned Hazel. “What
+mischief are they up to now?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I told you. They are coming over to serenade
+us. I think the serenade must be for
+Harriet.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They are carrying something on their shoulders
+too,” cried Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls, by this time, had run out to the
+edge of the camp and in the faint twilight were
+trying to make out what it was that the Tramp
+Club were carrying. As the boys drew nearer,
+the girls saw that it was a burlap sack. Four
+boys were bearing the sack on their shoulders.
+It appeared to be very heavy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, boys,” exclaimed Miss Elting. “Are
+you moving?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, Miss Elting,” answered Captain Baker,
+doffing his hat. “We are moving, in a sense.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178'></a>178</span>
+We have come prepared to lay the spoils of
+our forage at the feet of beauty. Boys, dump
+the bag. You know where.”
+</p>
+<p>
+One of the boys untied the string by which
+the mouth of the sack had been secured, then
+the two lads at that end stepped from under.
+Instantly the contents began rolling out at Harriet
+Burrell’s feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Muskmelons!” gasped the girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+Great golden and green muskmelons bumped
+to the ground. Harriet’s face was full of color.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They—they aren’t all for me? Surely, you
+don’t think I am equal to eating all of those?”
+she gasped.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They are laid at your feet,” answered
+George dramatically. “For you and your
+friends.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is splendid,” declared the guardian,
+her face aglow with pleasure. “But we do not
+deserve so much. You have robbed yourselves.
+Where did you get them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of a farmer,” replied George promptly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You must take most of them for yourselves,
+boys,” urged Miss Elting. “We simply could
+not eat half of all that lot.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. They are all for you. We have plenty.
+Besides, you’ll find some of them aren’t good,
+but out of the lot you may be able to get enough
+for breakfast.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179'></a>179</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“We can eat all night if nethethary,” announced
+Tommy. “Maybe we can eat them
+all before we go on to-morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“One melon apiece will be quite enough for
+us, my dears,” reproved Miss Elting. “Won’t
+you join us in our feast, boys?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The young men shook their heads.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re yours,” replied the captain, his
+eyes on Harriet as he said it. “I brought you
+some salt, too,” he added, drawing a piece of
+newspaper from his pocket. “Perhaps you like
+salt on your melons.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You are very thoughtful,” smiled Miss
+Elting. “I think we have salt. How about it,
+Jane?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We have a whole bag of it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We will take yours, thank you,” smiled
+Harriet. “It is much finer salt than ours.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, it’s the salt the farmer over yonder
+uses to give to his sheep,” interjected Sam.
+“We borrowed some from him.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting laughed a little at this blunt
+speech.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You are very funny, boys!” she said. “But
+we are grateful to you. I don’t know how we
+shall be able to repay you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We have shared your hospitality—your
+bounteous hospitality,” answered the captain.
+“We wished to make some slight return.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180'></a>180</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“What shall we do with what melons are
+left over?” asked Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Carry them on with you. You have a car
+in which to transport your stuff.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I suppose we had better do that,” mused
+the guardian. “When we reach the next camping
+place we shall insist on entertaining you at
+our camp. We greatly appreciate this treat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” said George Baker, looking
+somewhat embarrassed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shortly afterwards Captain Baker rose from
+where he had been sitting and with an uneasy
+look on his face announced that they must go.
+With his fellows he hurriedly left the camp,
+not even taking the melon sack along. They
+were seen no more that night.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls noted Baker’s embarrassed manner
+and thought it strange that the boys should
+have left so abruptly. They were at a loss to
+understand it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am glad they have left the melons, anyway,”
+declared Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, wasn’t that lovely of the boys to bring
+the fruit to us?” nodded Miss Elting. “They
+are really nice boys. I am rather glad that we
+met them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You may change your mind before we have
+finished with them,” replied Harriet, with an
+enigmatical smile.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181'></a>181</span>
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i004' id='i004'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-181.jpg" alt="“So I&#39;ve Caught You at It?”" title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>“So I&#39;ve Caught You at It?”</span>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183'></a>183</span></div>
+<p>
+“What do you mean, dear?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t really explain. But I feel rather
+than know that those young men are ready to
+play tricks. They’d better not try any of them
+or we shall make them regret that they ever
+played tricks on the Meadow-Brook Girls.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Aren’t the melonth delithiouth?”
+breathed Tommy. She was now eating her
+second melon. The other girls were enjoying
+theirs equally well.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” agreed Miss Elting. “The finest I
+ever ate. They must have cost the boys quite
+a sum of money, even though melons are cheap
+in the country. I——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thomebody ith coming,” warned Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The boys are returning, I presume,” smiled
+Miss Elting. But instead of the boys they were
+surprised to see a strange man striding into
+camp. He was plainly a farmer. He wore his
+whiskers long and his trousers were tucked in
+the tops of his boots. His face did not bear a
+pleasant expression.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So I’ve caught you at it, eh?” he said sarcastically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you mean?” demanded the guardian
+rising hastily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You know well enough what I mean. In
+the first place, you are trespassing on my premises.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184'></a>184</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“We have permission to camp here,” interjected
+Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who gave it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The farmer who owns this land.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I happen to own this land, and I haven’t
+given any tramps permission to camp on it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then some one must have played a trick
+on me,” declared Crazy Jane. “Wait till I
+get sight of that man again.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are very sorry, sir, but we are wholly
+innocent of trespassing. We are not tramps,
+either. Of course we are willing to pay you
+for the privilege of camping here to-night.
+What do you consider a fair price?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wal, I reckon about seventy-five cents will
+be all right for the camping.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting handed the money over to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am sorry to have put you to all this
+trouble, but we supposed we had permission
+to stay here over night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thay,” questioned Tommy. “You are a
+rich man, aren’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. Why?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, you thhould be.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“By the way, ladies, there is another little
+matter that you’ll have to fix up before we go
+any further.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian and the girls glanced inquiringly
+at their mercenary visitor.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185'></a>185</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you mean?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Them melons,” answered the farmer, indicating
+the fruit with a nod.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t understand you, sir.” The guardian
+was plainly perplexed. Harriet was smiling
+broadly. She thought she understood now.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The melons you stole from my field.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Stole from your field?” gasped Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sir, you insult us! We have stolen neither
+melons nor anything else. I demand that you
+leave this camp instantly. We shall not endure
+such accusations.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You didn’t steal them, eh?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, we didn’t,” answered Jane, who had
+stepped forward.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then where did you get them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls looked at one another. No one
+spoke. None wished to place the blame on the
+Tramp Club. The girls now began to understand
+the hurried departure of Captain Baker
+and his friends. Miss Elting saw that there
+was only one course to pursue under the circumstances.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t tell you where we got the melons,
+sir, but we didn’t steal them. How much are
+the melons worth?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why?” queried the farmer, scenting a bargain.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186'></a>186</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“We intend to pay for them,” answered Harriet
+coldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How many melons were there?” asked the
+farmer, more blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Two dozen,” Harriet replied.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’ll be about four-eighty,” nodded the
+farmer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But that’s——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s cheaper than the risk of going to jail,”
+broke in the farmer meaningly.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXVII' id='chXVII'></a>CHAPTER XVII—TRYING OUT THE GIPSY TRAIL</h2>
+<p>
+The farmer pocketed the money that Miss
+Elting handed him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve my own opinion of you!” flared
+Crazy Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe you have,” chuckled the farmer,
+“but——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re quite right,” Jane McCarthy
+taunted. “You wouldn’t feel highly complimented
+if I were to express that opinion!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If it’s that kind of an opinion——” muttered
+the farmer, turning red under the coat
+of tan on his face.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s <em>worse</em>!” retorted Crazy Jane incisively.
+</p>
+<p>
+Muttering under his breath, but failing to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187'></a>187</span>
+speak clearly, the abashed farmer turned on
+his heel, striding away.
+</p>
+<p>
+The humor of the situation now appealing
+to them, the girls and their guardian began to
+laugh heartily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet, I believe you suspected this all the
+time,” declared Miss Elting finally.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Those boys looked mischievous. I didn’t
+know what it was all about, but after a while,
+I confess, I did suspect them. Never mind, I’ll
+be even with them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, you leave it to me,” interjected Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am glad that none of you girls betrayed
+the boys,” declared Miss Elting approvingly.
+“I would suggest that you say nothing to them
+when we next see them. Let them introduce
+the subject if it is introduced at all. They may
+betray themselves. Tommy, don’t you lisp a
+word of it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t lithp,” retorted the little girl indignantly.
+“I thpeak jutht like other folkth.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I did not mean it that way, dear,” laughed
+the guardian. “I meant that you shouldn’t
+mention our experience to any one. Now that
+we have bought and paid for the melons I think
+we had better stow them in the car. Come, let
+us get ready for bed.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are we to make an early start in the morning?”
+asked Hazel.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188'></a>188</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. We must not delay if we expect to
+remain in the contest.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls had no intention of giving up the
+contest. They thought it possible that they
+might have the company of the Tramp Club
+on the morrow, as a good part of the Meadow-Brook
+course lay over a highway, this being
+the most direct route for the day’s tramping.
+</p>
+<p>
+Rather to their surprise they discovered no
+trace of the Tramp Club next day. The smoke
+from the latter’s campfire was no longer visible
+when the girls left their own camp in the morning,
+nor was there any indication on the road
+that the boys had passed over it. What the
+girls did not know was that the boys had
+slipped off into a ravine when the word had been
+brought to them that the irate farmer was out
+looking for the people who had visited his
+melon patch. From there they had moved inland
+and made a new camp. In the morning
+they took a roundabout course, avoiding the
+highway. It were better to be beaten by the
+girls that day than to be caught by the angry
+farmer. It was because of this longer route
+that the Meadow-Brook Girls were again able
+to get ahead of their rivals.
+</p>
+<p>
+The tracks of Jane’s car had long since been
+obliterated when the party neared the end of
+the day’s journey. This did not trouble them,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189'></a>189</span>
+for a certain definite stopping place had been
+agreed upon, and as was customary, when following
+the highway, the girls now and then
+dropped a handful of grass in the road. Especially
+was this done when they came to forks
+in the road, so that in case Jane McCarthy returned
+that way to look for them she might
+see which direction they had taken. In doing
+this, though the girls were unaware of the fact,
+they were following a gipsy practice as old as
+gipsies themselves. It was the gipsies’ way of
+marking their trail for the benefit of others
+of their kind who had straggled behind.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think this is the place,” decided Miss
+Elting, halting, pointing down a narrow lane
+that extended through a field of stunted bushes
+and brush. The gate that had once shut off
+this byway from the main road lay broken at
+one side of it and a ridge of grass had grown
+knee high in the middle of the lane. It was
+a lane that had once led down to a cider mill
+that now lay a heap of ruins.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It ith thpooky-looking,” observed Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane is here,” exclaimed Harriet. “I see
+her car tracks, but I don’t see her car.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No; the car has come out onto the highway
+and gone on,” Miss Elting declared. “Jane
+must have driven to the next town to get something.
+We will go down that lane.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190'></a>190</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet dropped some grass in the road,
+marking a trail into the byway to notify Jane
+that they had arrived. They then made their
+way down the lane. The girls were tired and
+footsore. Walking in the road had been more
+wearisome than tramping over the hills and
+fields, perhaps because the former was less interesting
+and more monotonous. It was therefore
+a welcome sight when they espied the tent
+that they called home, even though it was a now
+weather-beaten and dingy-looking piece of canvas.
+But Jane was nowhere in sight. Neither
+was her car.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where can Jane be?” exclaimed Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Perhaps this will explain matters,” replied
+Miss Elting, taking down a sheet of writing
+paper that had been pinned to the flap of the
+tent. “Ah! Jane says she has gone on to the
+town of Granite to meet her father, from whom
+she got a letter this morning. She says she
+may not be back until late, and that we shall
+find the melons in the bushes to the west of
+the tent.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t want any of those old melons,”
+pouted Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do,” retorted Tommy. “I’ll eat all I can
+get.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“At least, we have a right to eat them now
+that we have paid for them,” smiled the guardian. “The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191'></a>191</span>
+first thing to do will be to heat
+some water and bathe. We are all very dusty.
+Tommy, you and Margery take your baths
+first. In the meantime we will build the fire
+and get the supper going. This is going to be
+a pleasant camp. I wonder if we shall see our
+friends, the boys, this evening?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not if they see us first,” chuckled Harriet.
+“Oh, what we won’t do to them when we get
+the opportunity.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane must have had quite a time putting
+up the tent without assistance,” remarked Miss
+Elting. “She did it very well, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet was making the fire with Hazel’s
+assistance, Tommy and Margery were preparing
+for their baths. Twilight was upon them
+before they realized it. By that time the supper
+was cooking, the coffee steaming, the savory
+odor of food filling the air about them. The
+melons were reserved for the dessert. These
+had ripened and were now soft, sweet and delicious.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls, it is worth four dollars and eighty
+cents to have such melons, isn’t it?” smiled
+the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, indeed,” chorused the girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder what has become of the Tramp
+Club,” mused Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You will not see any more of the Tramps
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192'></a>192</span>
+for a while,” laughed Hazel. “It is a wonder
+to me that we haven’t seen any real tramps
+since we have been out on this trip. At potato-digging
+time one usually sees a great many of
+them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We haven’t been on the road much, or perhaps
+we should have seen more of them. That
+is one advantage in keeping away from the
+highways. One meets few live things in the
+fields except the birds and occasionally sheep
+and cattle.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not to mention bulls,” finished Harriet
+laughingly. “Speaking of tramps, I believe
+I just saw one over yonder,” added the girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are you joking?” questioned the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+For answer Harriet sprang up and ran toward
+the tent. She did not reach it. She halted
+sharply as a man stepped in front of her. He
+was a typical follower of the road, dirty, unkempt
+and evil looking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you want here?” demanded Harriet,
+with a calmness that she was far from
+feeling.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not much. We want some money and something
+to eat,” leered the intruder.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You will get neither here. What were you
+doing in that tent? You came here to rob us.
+Go away before we give you something you
+won’t like.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193'></a>193</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting and Hazel sprang up, scattering
+the tin dishes far and wide as they ran to Harriet’s
+assistance, when three other men stepped
+into view from the far side of the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you folks will hand out your valuables,
+and make no racket about it, we won’t hurt
+you,” announced one of the newcomers. “What
+we want is a little help, that’s all. We’re poor
+fellows in distress. We ain’t the kind that rob
+women. We ask for assistance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting’s revolver was in the tent where
+she could not reach it now. Had she had it with
+her she would have assisted the men in a way
+that they would not have liked. What to do
+under the circumstances she did not know.
+Neither Tommy nor Margery appeared able to
+do anything. They were frightened nearly out
+of their wits.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have a peculiar way of asking for assistance.
+Had you come to us in the proper
+manner we should have been glad to give you
+something to eat. Now we shall not. Neither
+have we money for you. I order you to go
+away from here. If you refuse the consequences
+will be on your own heads. We are
+not quite so defenseless as you might think.
+Will you go?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The spokesman laughed. The spirit of the
+girls appeared to amuse him. The fellow had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194'></a>194</span>
+not the least idea that there was any other person
+about. He, with his companions, had seen
+the Meadow-Brook Girls come into the camp
+alone. Not another person so far as they knew,
+was within some miles of the place. They had
+watched the camp and waited until dark to carry
+out their plan of robbing the five women.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can you get it, do you think, Harriet?”
+questioned Miss Elting in a low tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll try,” she answered. She knew what
+the guardian meant. “It” meant Miss Elting’s
+revolver. All at once the girl darted past the
+man who stood directly in front of her. She
+had almost reached the tent, when one of the
+tramps caught hold of her by the shoulder.
+Harriet was lithe and quick. She slipped from
+his detaining clutch and sprang back. But her
+opportunity was gone. The men partly divining
+her purpose, had quickly blocked the entrance
+to the tent. The leader nodded to one
+of them to watch Tommy and Margery. Three
+others directed their attention to Miss Elting,
+Harriet and Hazel. They placed themselves in
+such positions that the girls were hedged in.
+To try to run would be to fall into the clutches
+of one or another of the three ruffians who
+were guarding them.
+</p>
+<p>
+One of the men uttered a shrill whistle. Still
+another tramp came running into the camp.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195'></a>195</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Turn out the tent in a hurry. Don’t take
+anything that ain’t good. There’s money in
+there somewhere. Now turn your pockets out,
+ladies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+His words were cut short by a long wailing
+cry uttered by Harriet Burrell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Help, help!”
+It was the call of the Meadow-Brook Girls, with
+the warning cry for assistance added.
+</p>
+<p>
+The man who had made the demand sprang
+at her. Harriet leaped back. In doing so she
+felt her arms pinioned by a second man. She
+had forgotten for the moment that there were
+guards behind her. Miss Elting suddenly found
+her arms gripped from behind. She struggled
+with all her strength. So did Harriet. Hazel
+screamed as she felt her own arms pinioned.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Herd the other two in the tent, then git all
+the swag you can find,” commanded the
+spokesman breathlessly, for he was having his
+hands full helping his assistant to hold Miss
+Elting and the two girls. One grasped Tommy
+and Margery by their arms, and fairly dragging
+them over, flung them into the tent. “Get
+the stuff! Never mind those two. They’re too
+scared to bother. It’s these that we’ve got to
+look out for,” he directed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Help, help!”
+screamed Harriet.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196'></a>196</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yell, Hazel!” gasped Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I can’t! Oh, I can’t!” wailed Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy found her voice at this juncture and
+raised it in a piercing scream. A moment later
+a blanket was twisted about her head and she
+was flung into a corner, clawing and kicking.
+Margery cowered at one side of the tent, too
+frightened to move.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just then a new note was sounded. From
+behind the tent rose a shrill cry in a voice unfamiliar
+to either the girls or to the thieving
+tramps, a voice that caused the tramps to release
+their prisoners and turn to face the owner
+of the voice prepared for trouble.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXVIII' id='chXVIII'></a>CHAPTER XVIII—THE QUEEN TAKES A HAND</h2>
+<p>
+A strange figure stepped into the light
+of the campfire. It was the figure of an
+old woman, bent with age. Her face
+was yellow and wrinkled, her eyes, black and
+piercing. She hobbled a few steps toward
+them, using a long stick as though for support.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Out with you, villains!” she screamed,
+brandishing the stick threateningly. “My
+curses be upon your vile heads! Rob, would
+you? You shall burn in the fire from the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197'></a>197</span>
+clouds,” she hissed, pointing to the spokesman.
+“And you,” pointing to another, “shall wither
+in the pit with the iron doors, where all evil
+doers shall come sooner or later. You shall
+perish as you deserve. Sybarina says it. So
+it shall be. Out with you!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s the Gipsy Queen,” screamed Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+For a moment the tramps stood utterly
+dumbfounded. They realized that the old
+Gipsy was laying a curse upon them. More
+or less superstitious, they stood in considerable
+awe of Sybarina and her supposedly supernatural
+powers. The tramp who had pinioned
+Harriet’s arms behind her back involuntarily
+relaxed his hold. Harriet made a dash for freedom.
+In an instant her captor was at her heels.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t pay any attention to that old lunatic,”
+he shouted to his companions. “She can’t hurt
+you. Get the stuff and be quick about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+But he had reckoned without his host. Raising
+her head, Sybarina sent a long shrill call
+echoing across the fields. Even in the excitement
+of the moment Harriet realized that it was
+a signal. A second later the call was answered.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Skip!” warned the leader of the tramps.
+“It’s Gipsies. We’ll have the whole lot to fight
+if we don’t light out!”
+</p>
+<p>
+At this juncture five dark swarthy men came
+running across the fields. With one accord the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198'></a>198</span>
+tramps took to their heels. The Gipsies started
+in pursuit of them, but the tramps had a lead
+of several yards and fear lending wings to their
+feet, they soon outdistanced their pursuers who
+finally abandoned the chase and returned to
+where Sybarina stood, surrounded by the
+Meadow-Brook Girls and their guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet sprang eagerly forward to thank
+their rescuers, but Sybarina waved her aside.
+Turning to the Gipsy men she spoke a few sharp
+words in the Romany tongue. The men nodded,
+talked among themselves for a moment then
+turned and strolled off in the direction whence
+they had come.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Sybarina!” cried Harriet disappointedly.
+“Why didn’t you let me thank them for
+chasing those tramps away?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I, their queen, have commended them. That
+is sufficient,” returned Sybarina proudly.
+“They need no thanks for obeying my commands.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then we must thank you doubly,” smiled
+Harriet, holding out her hand to the old Gipsy.
+“What would we have done if you had not been
+near?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is well,” replied Sybarina earnestly, taking
+Harriet’s hand in both of hers. “But you
+must come with Sybarina. You must not stay
+here alone this night. The bad men will return
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199'></a>199</span>
+again. But Sybarina’s men will stay here and
+watch for them. You and your kind friends
+will go with Sybarina to her camp.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But how did you happen to find us?” questioned
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sybarina has eyes. Did those eyes not see
+the patteran (trail of grass)? Did she not read
+the message of the patteran that all of her tribe
+know? Where did you learn to make the patteran
+that leads the Gipsy toward the land
+where the sun goes down?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She means the grass that we dropped in the
+road,” explained Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old woman nodded.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The patteran,” she reiterated.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why,” laughed Harriet. “We did that so
+that our friend Jane McCarthy would know
+where we had gone.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then there is Romany in your blood. None
+but the people of the Romany would think of
+such a thing. Where is the other princess?”
+questioned the queen, glancing about.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Miss McCarthy has gone to meet her
+father,” Miss Elting informed the old woman.
+“But we have not thanked you enough for the
+great service that you have done us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is nothing. Did not the princess save
+Sybarina’s miserable life? The debt is still unpaid.
+Many summers will come, and many
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200'></a>200</span>
+summers will go, ere the debt is paid. Sybarina
+never will live to pay it. Her people will remember.
+The Romany has a long memory,
+princess. Come, pretty ladies, come to the
+camp of the Gipsy. It is not good that you
+should stay the night here. To-morrow night,
+yes, but not this night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you say, girls?” questioned Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Spend a night in a Gipsy camp?” asked
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think that would be fine.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, Sybarina, what of our own camp? Will
+not the men return and rob us?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have told you. Sybarina’s people will be
+on guard. You need have no fear. And when
+the princess with the fair hair returns, she shall
+be led to the Gipsy camp. Come.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait please, until we fix our camp and leave
+a message for Miss McCarthy,” said Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+So excited were the Meadow-Brook Girls at
+the prospect of spending a night in a Gipsy
+camp that they almost forgot the thrilling experiences
+through which they had passed.
+There were few preparations to be made. Miss
+Elting pocketed her revolver, though she had
+no idea that she would need it. She knew that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201'></a>201</span>
+the old Gipsy woman might be trusted; that a
+Gipsy never forgets a favor—nor a wrong.
+Sybarina felt under deep obligations to them
+for what they had done for her. By inviting
+them to her camp she was conferring upon them
+the highest possible mark of her regard, as the
+guardian who knew something of the wandering
+tribes of Gipsies was well aware.
+</p>
+<p>
+The camp was some little distance from
+where the Meadow-Brook tent was pitched. A
+note for Jane was pinned to the tent flap on
+the same spot where she had pinned hers; then
+the party set out through the darkness. Not a
+man of the tribe was to be seen. The guardian
+asked no questions. She knew that Sybarina’s
+word was law and that keen eyes were upon the
+Meadow-Brook camp, that no marauders would
+be permitted to enter there that night. Sybarina
+led the way as if it were a familiar path, calling
+out now and then to warn the travelers of
+a root or a stone that lay unseen in the path
+they were following. How she was aware of
+the presence of the obstacles the girls could
+not imagine.
+</p>
+<p>
+They came in sight of the dull glow of the
+Gipsy campfire after a quarter of an hour’s
+walking. Then as they stepped into the circle
+of light, many inquiring eyes were fixed upon
+them. There were dark-eyed, olive-complexioned women
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202'></a>202</span>
+of various ages, children clad in
+bright colors, some sitting under wagons eating
+bread and butter, others peering from the
+gaudily painted wagons, and still others lying
+asleep upon the ground just outside the circle.
+Horses might have been heard munching
+at the foliage out in the bushes, occasionally
+neighing or stamping. The fire crackled merrily.
+It was a bright but unfamiliar scene to
+the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy and Margery were a trifle apprehensive.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are we going to thleep?” questioned
+Tommy cautiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know, dear,” returned Miss Elting.
+“Sybarina will provide a place when the time
+comes. We have our own blankets. I think we
+may sleep out of doors if we wish to do so. But
+we have a long evening before us yet. It is
+your opportunity to learn something of the life
+and habits of the Gipsies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thay, Mith Elting do—do you think it thafe
+to thtay here?” questioned Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Perfectly so. Much more so than in our
+own camp this evening.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Sybarina was brewing the tea with her own
+hands. Miss Elting stepped over to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“May I assist you?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Gipsy queen shook her head.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203'></a>203</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sybarina will make the tea for her friends,
+her good friends, the pretty ladies. Sybarina
+will have other guests this evening.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, will you?” questioned the guardian, in
+a surprised tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. Pretty ladies will come to cross the
+Gipsy’s palm with silver. Sybarina will read
+the future and the past for them. Sybarina will
+read your future too, but you and your friends
+need not cross her palm with silver. Sybarina is
+your friend.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet had been an interested listener to the
+brief dialogue. She drew a little closer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should like to learn to read the past and
+future, Sybarina. Will you teach me?” asked
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old woman fixed her piercing eyes upon
+the eager face before her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The princess shall be taught to read the future
+this very night. The stars have said it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m afraid I never could learn to read palms
+in one night,” laughed Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The stars and the voices of the air will help
+you. Be not afraid. But you must be a Gipsy
+true.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How do you mean?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You must be like other Gipsies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh! You mean dress like them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. After the tea you shall see.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204'></a>204</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Tea was a most formal affair. Sybarina first
+took a sip from her own cup then passed the
+cup to the others, each girl taking a sip in turn,
+after which cups were served to each member
+of the party. By this time the other members
+of the tribe appeared to have lost interest in
+the visitors.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My girls would know something of your people,
+Sybarina,” suggested Miss Elting after the
+formalities of the tea drinking had been finished
+and the girls had settled down to their own cups
+of tea.
+</p>
+<p>
+She regarded her teacup frowningly, as
+though she were seeking light in the amber fluid.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My daughters,” said the old woman. “It
+takes many years to earn the confidence of a
+Romany. You have done so in a hour. All are
+Gorgios to the Gipsy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What ith a Gorgio?” piped Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Any one not Romany is a Gorgio. Forever
+has the Gorgio hounded the Gipsy. The Gorgio
+thinks the Gipsy a thief, but the Gipsy is not a
+thief. The Gipsy has little history, my
+daughters, but the Gipsy dates back to antiquity,
+to the famed Kings of Egypt. He keeps
+his sacred tongue—the Romany. It is his secret
+language. Through it he can hold converse
+with the Romanys of the world. Ages and ages
+ago, the Romany was called a Jat. That was in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205'></a>205</span>
+far off India. Then came a bad king from Persia
+who stole ten thousand of them to make
+music for him. There they remained until nine
+hundred years after the Son of Man came, when
+they were taken captive again and held in bondage
+until at last they separated and journeyed
+to the far places of the world. To-day the
+Gipsy is the only free man who wanders the
+earth. He pays no tithes, he has no cares.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But you have a ruler, a head of all the Gipsies,
+have you not?” interjected Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There is the queen of all,” answered the
+old woman softly. “She now is one hundred
+years old. She lives in Roumania. Each year
+are her commands received by all her peoples
+throughout the world. How, I cannot tell you.
+It is a secret of the Romanys. We love, we
+hate, but not as do the Gorgios. But see! The
+princess has returned. She seeks her friends.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You—you mean Miss McCarthy?” questioned
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Gipsy nodded gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good grathiouth,” exclaimed Tommy.
+“Thhe’th got eyeth in the top of her head. How
+doeth thhe know that Jane hath come back?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I read the message in the teacup,” answered
+Sybarina. “It is time, fair daughter to begin,
+if you would read the secrets of the stars. Come
+with me and you shall be prepared.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206'></a>206</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet rose and followed the old woman
+to one of the gaudily painted wagons, without
+the slightest hesitancy.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXIX' id='chXIX'></a>CHAPTER XIX—DELVING INTO THE MYSTERIES</h2>
+<p>
+“Oh, good gracious! Where are they?”
+cried Crazy Jane, as she walked into
+the Gipsy camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls glanced at each other wonderingly.
+Had not the Gipsy queen just told them that
+Jane had arrived at the Meadow-Brook camp?
+The mystery was too great for them to solve.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But darlin’s, what does it mean? The Gipsy
+girl who came for me, said you were staying
+here for the night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We have been invited to be the guests of
+the tribe for this night, Jane. Sybarina is the
+queen of these Gipsies, you know. She is the
+one we rescued from the burning barn.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course. Why are you here?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The guardian explained how they had been
+attacked by tramps and how the Gipsy woman
+and her companions had come to their rescue.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane was amazed, then her face flushed with
+anger. She wanted to know if the Tramp Club
+had been seen. Miss Elting said they had not.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207'></a>207</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“But where is my darlin’ Harriet?” questioned
+Jane, gazing at her inquiringly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She has gone with the queen into one of the
+wagons. You will see her soon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Won’t it be jolly, Jane, to spend a night in
+a Gipsy camp?” cried Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, that depends. I’ve heard the tribes
+weren’t overly clean.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sh-h-h!” warned Miss Elting. “You
+mustn’t say such things here. Remember we are
+guests.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m not likely to forget it. Oh, look at that
+pretty Gipsy girl! What a beauty!” cried Jane
+delightedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Gipsy girl who had emerged from one of
+the wagons was indeed pretty. Her hands were
+demurely folded, her head lowered, and her eyes
+veiled by drooping lashes, as she moved slowly
+toward the group. She came to a halt directly
+in front of Crazy Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Cross my palm with silver and I’ll read
+your past and your future,” invited the pretty
+Gipsy girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+Crazy Jane leaned forward regarding the
+Gipsy girl with keen, searching eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Indeed I will. Yes, darlin’, you can read my
+future and my past. How much silver shall I
+cross your palm with?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What you will, pretty lady.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208'></a>208</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane placed a shining fifty cent piece on the
+open palm. Something about the palm appeared
+to interest her very much. Just at this
+juncture, the Gipsy girl chanced to look up. The
+eyes of the two girls met. Jane uttered a whoop
+and embraced the girl in a bearlike hug.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If it isn’t my own darlin’ Harriet,” she
+cried. “But who would have thought it. Hurrah
+for Harriet, the Gipsy!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ah, daughter, she is the true Romany,” interrupted
+Sybarina, suddenly appearing behind
+Harriet. “None but a true daughter of
+Romany could have said those words so well.”
+The old woman’s eyes gleamed with pride.
+Then she exclaimed: “I see strangers coming to
+the camp of the Gipsy! Would you have them
+see you, or would you watch them from the
+wagons?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“From the wagons,” chorused the girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The Romany princess, she of the brown
+eyes, may wander at will. The strangers will
+not think her a Gorgio. She is a true Romany.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you, Sybarina, I will go with my
+friends. Perhaps I may come out later,” answered
+Harriet. She was dressed in Gipsy
+costume, and her face, already dark, had been
+slightly stained with herbs which the old woman
+had rubbed on both her face and hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+The young men and women from nearby
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209'></a>209</span>
+farms began to stroll into the camp to have their
+fortunes told. With them came several keen-eyed
+farmers, leading horses which they had
+brought in for a chance at a trade. The Gipsy
+men quickly gathered about the animals, then
+began the incessant talk of the horse trader,
+the Gipsies being particularly shrewd in that
+line of business. In the meantime Sybarina
+and several other women of the tribe were reading
+the futures of the giggling country girls.
+It was all very interesting to the girls in the
+nearby wagon. They were peering out from
+the darkened interior, unseen. Never before
+had they experienced anything so romantic or
+so picturesque.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet finally wandered out into the field.
+She attracted attention only because of her
+slender figure and pretty face. She had no fear
+of being recognized, for no one there ever had
+seen her before.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t she a typical Gipsy, though?”
+chuckled Jane, gazing admiringly at Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Unless one knew she were not, one couldn’t
+tell the difference,” answered Miss Elting.
+“Just look at that girl for whom the queen is
+telling a fortune. See how eagerly she drinks
+in every word. Every word is true to her. She
+believes it all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So does Sybarina,” replied Hazel.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210'></a>210</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I think she does. Do you know, Jane,
+she told us when you arrived at the tent. I
+think it must have been at the moment when you
+reached there. I can’t imagine how she knew.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe she heard the car,” suggested Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No she didn’t,” declared Jane. “I drove
+into the camp without making a sound. I
+wanted to give you a surprise. I wonder how
+she knew I was near.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Neither Jane nor any of her companions had
+thought of the big headlights on the car, the
+glint of which had flashed on the foliage of
+a tree near the gipsy camp just as Jane was
+swinging into the byway that led down to the
+Meadow-Brook camp. Perhaps the old gipsy’s
+keen eyes had caught this flash and read it
+aright. But this the girls were never to know.
+Their attention, just now, was attracted by the
+sound of loud talking. Voices were heard approaching
+the camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I guess we are going to have quite a party
+this evening,” said Harriet, stepping into the
+wagon. “Oh, this is simply great! What a
+pity we aren’t all made up to look like Gipsies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look, girls!” exclaimed the guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+They did look, with widening eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My grathiouth, if it ithn’t thothe Tramp
+boyth,” breathed Tommy.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211'></a>211</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly is the Tramp Club. There’s
+Captain Baker and Sammy and Dill and Davy.
+Where could they have come from?” wondered
+Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, let’s go out and call to them,” suggested
+Margery enthusiastically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait,” warned Harriet. “I have a plan
+that I think will work to perfection. If it does,
+we’ll have some fun with the Tramp Club this
+evening.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it, darlin’?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet whispered in Jane’s ear. Crazy Jane
+uttered a loud laugh.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sh-h-h!” warned the guardian. “You will
+betray our hiding place to those boys.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I must get word to Sybarina. I wish she
+would come over here,” mused Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+As though in answer to her wish, Sybarina
+rose and hobbled toward the wagon. She halted
+at the step without looking up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The friends of the pretty ladies are here.
+What do the pretty ladies wish to do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Sybarina! I want to read the future
+for that boy yonder on the right, the one with
+the reddish hair. May I? Please let me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It shall be as the Romany girl wishes, but
+she must be grave, she must not make her real
+self known to the laughing boy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, no, no! I promise not to betray my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212'></a>212</span>
+identity. But what shall I say? I don’t know
+what to say,” begged Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The words will come unbidden to the lips
+of the Romany girl. Fear not. Come.” There
+was a suspicion of a twinkle in the piercing
+black eyes as Sybarina stretched forth her hand
+to Harriet Burrell. Harriet’s heart thumped
+violently as she stepped down from the wagon.
+“If I get a chance to read George Baker’s palm
+I will make him stand as near to the wagon as
+possible, so you girls can hear what I say to
+him, but don’t you dare make a sound.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t she the clever darlin’?” chuckled
+Crazy Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Harriet is a very resourceful girl,” answered
+Hazel admiringly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes; Harriet has added a good many honor
+beads to her string during this hike,” replied
+the guardian. “I think, too, that she is going
+to pay those boys the debt that we owe them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Listen!” commanded Jane. Sybarina was
+speaking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Behold before you the Star of the East.
+Behold one who has come out of the East to
+read the future true. Cross her palm with
+silver and the Oracle will speak, revealing the
+past and foretelling the future.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The Gipsy queen had not led Harriet into
+the bright light. Instead the girl, in the fainter
+light at the outer edge of the circle, stood with
+downcast eyes, hands folded before her.
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i005' id='i005'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-213.jpg" alt="“Cross My Hand With Silver.”" title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>“Cross My Hand With Silver.”</span>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215'></a>215</span></div>
+<p>
+“Who shall be the first to hear the future
+and the past from the Star of the East?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Say, fellows, now is the time to find out a
+few things,” laughed Captain George Baker.
+“Here’s where I consult the Star of the East.
+Here, young woman, read my palm. I don’t
+know anything about this fortune-telling business,
+and I don’t believe in it, but I’m willing
+to take a chance on it. How much does it cost
+to consult the stars?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“For a silver quarter I will reveal the past
+only. Cross my hand with a silver dollar and
+both the past and future shall be as an open
+book,” answered Harriet, speaking in a low
+tone, disguising her voice as much as possible.
+</p>
+<p>
+George uttered a low whistle.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A dollar! Whew! Isn’t that pretty high?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The stars are higher,” was the curt reply
+of the Star of the East.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was an audible giggle from the interior
+of the nearby wagon. Harriet heard it,
+but Captain Baker was too much interested in
+the prospect of having his fortune told to give
+heed to the sound.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t she the clever darlin’?” reiterated
+Crazy Jane, restraining herself from shouting
+only by a great effort of will.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216'></a>216</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right. Here’s your money. But, mind
+you, I’ll expect a lot of information for a dollar.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The past and future are not measured by
+silver,” retorted Harriet. “That which is past
+the Oracle has revealed to me. That which is
+to be, I alone can tell. I am but the mouthpiece
+of the Oracle, but the Oracle cannot lie.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m glad to be assured of hearing the truth,
+at any rate,” replied George flippantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be at rest. You shall hear the truth,”
+promised the Star of the East dryly. Then
+taking George’s hand in hers she gravely scrutinized
+the lines of his palm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The lines of your hand tell me many
+things,” she began.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then be sure that you tell me all about
+them. I want my money’s worth,” urged the
+captain.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The past and future shall be fully revealed
+to you,” promised the supposed Gipsy. Captain
+George Baker of the Tramp Club then listened
+to a fortune that, though it did not wholly
+please, amazed him beyond measure.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217'></a>217</span><a name='chXX' id='chXX'></a>CHAPTER XX—GETTING EVEN WITH GEORGE</h2>
+<p>
+“Your hand tells me that you travel not
+alone,” continued Harriet. “Other
+youths are with you. Together you
+have journeyed for many days along the highway.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well? That’s nothing. Anybody could
+see that,” jeered George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you would listen to the word of the
+Oracle, be silent. On your journey, maidens
+have crossed your path. They, too, are wayfarers
+along the trail. You have held out the
+hand of fellowship to them, but your friendship
+is false and your hearts are full of guile.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s just where you’re wrong,” interrupted
+George. “Those girls are all right and
+we like them a lot. I’d like to know how you
+know so much about them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The Gipsy knows many things,” replied
+Harriet enigmatically. “Your hand reveals to
+her the grievous wrong you have done these
+trusting maidens.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s not so,” contradicted George.
+</p>
+<p>
+“None can deceive the Oracle,” was the stern
+answer. “I see here a camp. The campfire
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218'></a>218</span>
+burns brightly. About it sit the maidens.
+Look! Six youths approach. With them they
+bear a sack filled with the melons of the field.
+The maidens welcome them with smiles and
+pleasant words. They little know whence came
+these melons. They little know that before
+them lies the bitter fruit of lawless thievery.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s putting it altogether too strong,”
+expostulated George. “How can you tell anything
+about where those melons came from by
+the lines of my hand?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“To the Prophet of the Oracle all things are
+plain,” replied the Star of the East. “In the
+early darkness of the night, ere the moon rose,
+the evildoers stole forth, and robbed the farmer
+of his melons.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is becoming too personal,” gasped
+George, mopping his forehead.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Word was brought to the farmer of this
+wicked deed and he hurried forth to catch the
+thieves,” continued Harriet. “Long did he
+search for them. Then seeing the camp of the
+maidens he approached, and finding them innocently
+eating his melons, he poured forth the
+vials of his wrath upon their defenseless heads.
+He branded them as thieves and demanded settlement.
+They crossed the farmer’s palm with
+much silver to pay for the stolen melons. They
+were too noble to betray the real thieves.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219'></a>219</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Captain George shifted uneasily. “That’s
+really too bad. I’m sorry they got into such
+a mess,” he muttered. “I wonder what they
+think of us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Their hearts are filled with shame and sorrow
+at the deceitfulness of those whom they
+supposed were their friends.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But—but the boys didn’t intend to make
+trouble for the girls,” protested the captain.
+“They thought it would be great fun to forage
+for melons, and at the same time to give the
+girls a treat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The supposed gipsy shook her head slowly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It makes no difference what they thought.
+The deed is done. There is only one way in
+which the wrong can be righted.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How can these boys square themselves with
+the girls?” questioned George eagerly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will consult the Oracle.” The Gipsy girl
+stood with head bent as though in deep thought.
+Then she said solemnly: “If the wicked boys
+will go to those whom they have so cruelly
+wronged and ask pardon for their unmanly behavior
+perhaps forgiveness may be theirs.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I guess I’d better,” returned George earnestly.
+At this juncture a smothered giggle
+from the darkened Gipsy wagon came near
+breaking up the seance. He glanced up suspiciously.
+Harriet’s face was grave.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220'></a>220</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have chosen wisely. Will you obey the
+command of the Oracle?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, ye—es. I’ll apologize. I’ll do it. It’s
+wonderful. I never thought there was so much
+to fortune telling.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“There is more to it than you dream,” answered
+Harriet Burrell, and with much truth
+on her side. There was indeed more to it than
+Captain George Baker dreamed. In the Gipsy
+wagon four girls and their guardian were making
+desperate efforts to control their laughter
+that the sounds of their merriment might not
+be heard by the young man outside.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can you answer any question I ask you?”
+queried George, after thinking deeply.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The Oracle knows all things, if it will but
+speak,” answered the Gipsy girl, leaving an
+avenue of escape if he should ask her something
+that she was unable to answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are the girls now?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They are near at hand. Would you see
+them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, no. Not to-night,” hastily interposed
+Captain Baker. “What I wish to know is
+where they are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You would know if they have outwitted
+you in the race?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, yes. But how do you know what I am
+thinking about?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221'></a>221</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“The mouthpiece of the Oracle knows all
+things,” crooned the fortune teller. “No, they
+have not yet won the race. You shall see them
+on the morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where? Tell me where?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A short span of twelve miles hence there
+is a spring. The spring is known as Granite
+Spring.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, yes? Will they be there?” he asked
+eagerly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, not there,” replied the Gipsy. “But you
+will find them near at hand. Seek and you shall
+find, but go with humble spirit, else disaster
+may overtake you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you, I’ll do as you say. This is wonderful.
+I want my friends to have their fortunes
+told by you. You are the right kind. I
+wonder if you can tell me just what these girls
+are going to do to get ahead of us in the race.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will consult the Oracle once more,” replied
+the fortune teller.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was fully two minutes before Harriet
+raised her head. George stood eagerly awaiting
+her answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The Oracle knows but will not say,” replied
+Harriet coldly. “The Oracle is ever fair and
+just. It will not reveal the plans of the maidens
+to their enemies. The Star of the East is weary.
+She cannot read the palms of your friends.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222'></a>222</span>
+Your way lies yonder. Your companions await
+you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Captain George, very red of face, a sheepish
+expression in his eyes, got up hastily and
+walked over to his companions who were sitting
+on the ground awaiting him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on, fellows. Let’s get out of here.
+This place gives me the creeps.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You seemed mighty interested in what that
+Gipsy girl had to say. Did she tell you anything
+remarkable?” asked Dill laughingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did she? I should say she did.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then you did better than the rest of us.
+That other young Gipsy woman didn’t tell me
+a single thing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The old Gipsy woman gave it to me red
+hot!” exclaimed Sam. “She told me some
+things I’d just as soon not have heard. She
+said I was started on the road to thievery. Now
+what do you think of that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s nothing,” replied George. “The
+young one told me all about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“About what?” questioned Davy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That melon business.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You don’t mean it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I do. She told me about the whole
+affair.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what do you think of that?” wondered
+Fred.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223'></a>223</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I didn’t think much of it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How do you suppose she found out about
+it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t ask me,” replied George gloomily.
+“She said that the Oracle told her.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You don’t believe such nonsense as that,
+do you?” asked Davy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know what to think about it. Gipsies
+are queer folks. They’re too mysterious to suit
+me. I’ve got all I want of them. They know
+too much,” declared the captain. “Why, they
+can read one’s thoughts.”
+</p>
+<p>
+In the meantime, Harriet gleefully watched
+the departure of the boys from the camp.
+There was laughter in her eyes. She turned
+to the wagon where her companions were now
+giving expression to uncontrolled merriment.
+Few visitors remained in the camp, and these
+were some distance away.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I think I have evened up matters with
+that young man,” declared Harriet. “What
+do you say, girls?” she asked, thrusting a laughing
+face into the wagon.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Harriet!” gasped Miss Elting. “It
+was the funniest thing I ever heard. And he
+believed every word of it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why shouldn’t he? It was the truth. By
+the way, Miss Elting—I have collected one dollar
+of that four dollars and eighty cents that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224'></a>224</span>
+you paid for the melons,” said Harriet, extending
+a hand in the palm of which lay Captain
+Baker’s silver dollar.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no, no,” protested the guardian, drawing
+back. “I could not think of accepting the
+money.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why not? I can collect the whole amount in
+a very short time at this rate,” laughed Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, darlin’! What a girl, what a girl!”
+laughed Crazy Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. You must not keep it. It does not
+rightfully belong to you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then if you refuse to accept the money I
+shall give it to Sybarina. She’ll take it. Trust
+a Gipsy to take everything that is offered.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Sybarina graciously accepted the money. Her
+eyes shone as she hobbled over to Harriet Burrell
+and exclaimed earnestly: “I said you were
+the true Romany. Now I know it. Did I not
+tell you the power to foretell both the past and
+future would come to you unbidden?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” laughed Harriet, “but I happened to
+know considerable about the Tramp Club’s affairs
+particularly since they visited a certain
+melon patch. Is there any danger of those boys
+returning to-night?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Sybarina shook her head. “They have returned
+to their camp.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225'></a>225</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are they camping?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“On yonder hillside. Even now you can catch
+the glow of their campfire. But you shall see
+them again and you shall make them red of face
+for the trick which they played on you and your
+friends, my Romany girls. You would outwit
+them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are trying to get home ahead of them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The old woman nodded.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The way shall be made clear to you. Sybarina
+will tell the Romany girl how to defeat
+her rivals, to show them that the Romany tribes
+know the secret bypaths as the birds know the
+trail to the sunny land when the frost is in the
+air. Come, child. Come, sit by the fire, while
+Sybarina tells you that which shall make the
+way clear.”
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXXI' id='chXXI'></a>CHAPTER XXI—HARRIET PLANS TO OUTWIT THE TRAMP CLUB</h2>
+<p>
+A long conversation was held between
+Harriet and the Gipsy queen, the latter
+drawing a map on the ground with a
+willow wand to show the girl the route that she
+was to travel after the Meadow-Brook Girls had
+gone on for another day.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet’s eyes were sparkling. She thought
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226'></a>226</span>
+she saw a way to outwit the Tramp Club. Harriet
+was chuckling gleefully when she joined
+her companions. She declined to tell them that
+night, however, just what the Gipsy had communicated
+to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where shall we sleep to-night?” asked Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sybarina says we may have the wagon to
+sleep in,” answered Harriet. “Shall we use
+it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No. I think I prefer to sleep in the open,”
+answered the guardian. “It is not a cool night.
+Suppose we roll up in our blankets and sleep
+by the campfire? What do you say, girls?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thay yeth,” spoke up Tommy. “I’ll put
+my feet againtht the fire; then I won’t have cold
+feet any more.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They were sound asleep in a few moments
+after turning in. Even the Gipsy dogs that had
+been barking most of the evening, and the crying
+babies, to whom none of the tribe had given
+the slightest heed, were now quietly asleep.
+Sybarina watched her guests roll up in their
+blankets and nodded approvingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The true Romany,” she muttered. For a
+long time the old woman sat by the fire, sat until
+the embers fell together and the sticks began to
+blacken, when she rose and peered into each
+sleeping face of the Meadow-Brook Girls. Sybarina
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227'></a>227</span>
+then hobbled to her own wagon and disappeared
+within.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Meadow-Brook Girls awakened next
+morning with the sun in their eyes. Miss Elting
+sat up and called softly to Harriet. The
+guardian and Harriet rubbed their eyes and
+blinked dazedly about them. There was something
+strange about their surroundings, but just
+what that strangeness was they for the moment
+did not know. All at once they discovered what
+had happened. They were absolutely alone,
+save for their sleeping companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, they’ve gone!” cried Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Gone and we never woke up,” laughed Miss
+Elting. “How strange.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who hath gone?” mumbled Tommy, sitting
+up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The Gipsies,” answered Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They must have left in a great hurry, for
+some reason,” suggested the guardian. “I
+don’t understand it. Nor do I understand how
+they managed to slip away so quietly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The wagon tracks were plainly outlined in the
+soft earth and the remnants of the campfire
+were there, but that was all. Yet it was not all.
+As Harriet sought to draw on her shoe she felt
+something hard in the toe. Groping in the shoe
+with her fingers she drew forth a tightly
+wrapped paper. Opening this she found a tiny
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228'></a>228</span>
+brass triangle. On it were crudely cut several
+strange characters.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How curious,” breathed Harriet. “But how
+did it get in my shoe?” she wondered.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look on the wrapping paper,” suggested
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet did so. As she looked the puzzled
+expression on her face gave place to a smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is from Sybarina,” she exclaimed. “This
+is what she writes: ‘A charm for the Romany
+girl. No harm shall come to her who wears it.
+Happiness and prosperity shall be hers forever
+and always. It is the Gipsy good luck charm.
+Who knows but that, some day, you may wear
+it as a queen? Farewell until we meet again.’”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How strange!” murmured Harriet, holding
+up the trinket that her companions might see.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder if it ith a charm againtht bullth?”
+piped Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I would suggest, girls, that we return to our
+own camp. It may not be there by this time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Upon reaching their own camp they were
+much relieved to find everything as it should
+be. Nothing had been disturbed. But, ere they
+had finished their breakfast, three farmers came
+striding in to know if anything had been seen
+of the Gipsies.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They left early this morning,” answered
+Miss Elting. “Why?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229'></a>229</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wal, nothing only one of them traded off
+on me a ring-boned, spavined old hoss, which
+he said was sound. I’ll catch them when they
+come this way again.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think I understand why the Gipsies took
+such an early departure,” said Harriet after
+the men had gone. “But I do not believe Sybarina
+had anything to do with such dishonest
+dealing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The day’s route was laid out after breakfast.
+The boys undoubtedly had gone on, for nothing
+was to be seen of their campfire. Miss Elting
+rather thought they would see no more of the
+Tramp Club after the fortune-telling that Harriet
+had given the chief the night before. But
+with the route that Sybarina had laid out for the
+girls, the guardian believed they could make
+some time and gain the advantage over the boys.
+</p>
+<p>
+Camp was hurriedly struck after breakfast.
+Their route that day lay across lots and their
+camping place was to be on the edge of a forest
+easily accessible to Jane with her motor car.
+Using government maps, as they were doing,
+they were able to locate every little rise of
+ground, every hollow and almost every clump
+of bushes along their way. These government
+maps Miss Elting had purchased at a comparatively
+small cost, as any one may do. They are
+very useful to one who is taking a tramp
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230'></a>230</span>
+through the country, and the Meadow-Brook
+Girls found them so.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane accompanied her companions out to the
+highway and followed along behind them in her
+car for the first mile. Then their ways parted,
+the tramping girls to climb a hill, Crazy Jane
+to follow the highway on to the point where she
+too was to leave the road and make camp for
+them. But there was always a long wait for
+Jane, so the girl occupied the time in driving
+to the nearest village to make a number of purchases
+at the stores.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXXII' id='chXXII'></a>CHAPTER XXII—A COMBIETTA CONCERT</h2>
+<p>
+Her shopping done Jane lost no time in
+cranking up her car, hopped in and
+with a wave of her hand swung down
+the road and went honking through the village
+on the way to the place chosen for the Meadow-Brook
+Girls’ camp for that night. Jane had
+avoided all questions about herself and her
+party, except to say that they were camping.
+The girl did not propose to leave a trail for the
+Tramp Club if she could avoid it. As the girls
+were nearing the end of their journey it behooved
+them to cloak their movements with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231'></a>231</span>
+secrecy if they hoped to outwit their young rivals
+and win the race, which they were determined
+to do.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane had pitched the tent just within the edge
+of the woods and had started a small cook-fire
+when the welcome “hoo-e-e-e” of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls first reached her ears. She ran out
+into the open waving her apron and shouting a
+welcome.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There she is,” cried Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Dear old Jane!” exclaimed Hazel. “She has
+gotten everything ready for us and started a
+fire.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I propose three cheers for Jane McCarthy,”
+cried Harriet. The cheers were given in the
+shrillest tones of the Meadow-Brook Girls. Jane
+bowed in exaggerated fashion at this ovation.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have you seen the boys to-day, Jane?” was
+Harriet’s first question.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a sign of them, the rascals,” replied
+Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I imagine that they are at Granite Spring,
+half a dozen miles back,” laughed Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What makes you think so?” asked Hazel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Because, when I read Captain Baker’s fortune,
+I told him that our next camping place
+was to be not far from that place. He will make
+straight for Granite Spring, you see if he
+doesn’t.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232'></a>232</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I don’t think we’ll see the lads again
+this trip,” concluded Jane. “But, girls,
+you’ve got to get busy if you hope to win this
+contest. Three more days of hiking will bring
+you to Meadow-Brook. If the boys once get
+ahead of you, you can’t expect to catch up with
+them and win in that length of time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We simply must win, Jane,” returned Harriet
+determinedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then you’d better begin to think about how
+you’re going to do it,” advised Jane dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane is right,” agreed the guardian. “We
+must plan to-night. And I think we shall have
+to put in one big day’s walk, perhaps more than
+that. I should first like to know where the boys
+are. Jane, will you make an effort to locate
+them to-morrow?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, indeed, Miss Elting.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“When we have definite information on that
+point we ought to be able to map out a plan of
+campaign that will win the contest for us. I
+believe we have gotten ahead of them now and
+that we shall be able to keep our lead.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course we are going to win,” reiterated
+Harriet Burrell.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If it is all settled that we are to win the race,
+I propose that we celebrate to-night,” suggested
+Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How?” asked Margery.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233'></a>233</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve got a bag of fruit in the car. We’ll
+make fruit lemonade, then we’ll have a combietta
+concert.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What ith a combietta conthert?” interrupted
+Tommy curiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait and see,” teased Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, Jane, be good and tell us about this
+combietta affair?” coaxed Hazel. “What is
+it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“An instrumental concert,” giggled Jane.
+“I got the musical instruments when I was in
+town doing some shopping. Oh, don’t worry,
+darlin’s. You all know to play them. The
+first thing to do is to decide upon the tune.
+How about the ‘Marching Through Georgia’
+for a starter?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane spread out six squares of thin white
+paper. She then produced the same number of
+small packages.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, we’ll wake the squirrels and the chipmunks
+and the weasles,” promised Jane, with
+a grin of anticipation.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy picked at the wrapping on the end
+of one of the small packages and uttered an exclamation
+of disappointment.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It ithn’t a musical inthrument at all,” she
+declared indignantly. “It ith nothing but a common
+old black comb.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s just where you’re wrong,” answered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234'></a>234</span>
+Jane. “These combs are new. I bought them
+in the village store this very day. Listen,
+dears. This is the combietta. It makes music
+through its teeth, and plays any tune you call
+for.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wonderful,” laughed Miss Elting. “There
+is something very familiar about this marvelous
+musical instrument. Combietta, do you call it,
+Jane?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure I do. But the name is my own invention.
+The music is as old as the combs themselves
+and I don’t know how old they are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I remember having made music with combs
+when I was a girl in short frocks,” nodded the
+guardian. “Play, Jane, and show the girls how
+to make music.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Crazy Jane folded one of the square slips of
+paper over the teeth of one of the combs, then
+placed the comb’s teeth between her own.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Zu—zu—zu-zee-zee-zah,” she breathed
+through paper and comb, which strange sounds
+were instantly interpreted by Jane’s companions,
+as “Come Back to Erin.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Each girl with a cry of delight, now snatched
+up a comb, wrapped it in the thin paper and
+joined enthusiastically in the chorus of “Come
+Back to Erin.” Tommy Thompson, fully as
+delighted as her companions, leaned against a
+tree making hideous noises on her comb; Miss
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235'></a>235</span>
+Elting, sitting on a stump, eyes fixed on the
+foliage far above her, was an enthusiastic
+performer in the combietta concert.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, ‘Marching Through Georgia,’” she
+cried.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t play fast enough to play that,” complained
+Buster.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then play anything you like,” answered
+Harriet, with a merry laugh.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. Make a noise. You don’t all have to
+play the same tune. This is a celebration,”
+shouted Jane. “What we want is noise and lots
+of it to celebrate the victory we are going to
+win.”
+</p>
+<p>
+And noise there was, a perfect pandemonium
+of sounds, principally inharmonious.
+</p>
+<p>
+A sudden, startling chorus of yells and a
+burst of music from the forest, brought the
+girls’ concert to a sudden stop. Lights flashed
+from the bushes near at hand, whirling about
+them in giddy circles like great pinwheels. The
+Meadow-Brook Girls were surrounded by wildly
+yelling figures, strange flaring lights—and
+music.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Indianth!” screamed Tommy. “We’ll all
+be thcalped. Oh, thave me!” Then the little
+lisping girl ran like a frightened deer, for the
+protection of the Meadow-Brook Girls’ tent.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236'></a>236</span><a name='chXXIII' id='chXXIII'></a>CHAPTER XXIII—THE HARMONICA SERENADE</h2>
+<p>
+“Oh, what is it?” wailed Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+No one was able to answer the question
+for the moment. It was a startling
+interruption. Even Harriet, though unafraid,
+could not make up her mind what was
+the meaning of the outbreak.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now she saw what the lights were. They
+were flaring torches made from cat-tails. Then
+all at once she recalled that the Tramp Club
+boys played harmonicas. She had heard them
+play once before.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t be afraid, girls. It is the boys,” said
+Harriet in a relieved tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The boys?” questioned Miss Elting. Then
+her face lighted up understandingly. “Oh the
+rascals!” she exclaimed.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls now that they knew no danger
+threatened them stood perfectly still, waiting
+for the concert to come to an end.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You may come in, boys, when you have finished
+your concert,” called the guardian. “We
+have enjoyed the serenade very much.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The music and shouting ceased abruptly. A
+moment later Captain Baker stepped into the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237'></a>237</span>
+camp. His face was flushed, but there was a
+certain sheepishness about him that made Harriet
+Burrell’s eyes twinkle.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, Captain! We did not look for you
+this evening,” greeted Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thought you had given us the slip, did
+you?” grinned George. “You’ll have to get up
+earlier in the morning, to do that.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, won’t you though!” chorused his companions
+trooping in after their captain.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But how did you find us?” questioned Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Easiest thing in the world. We followed
+Miss McCarthy’s car tracks.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where to?” twinkled Jane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All over the country. You surely led us a
+fine chase. But we found you, just the same.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tommy now ventured from the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thay, you nearly thcared me to death,” she
+chided. “What do you boyth want?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, Tommy, they came to serenade us,”
+reproved Miss Elting. “We enjoyed the music
+very much,” she said, turning toward the boys.
+“If you will sit down and play another selection,
+we will serve refreshments afterwards. Jane!
+Will you get the things ready?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. But the boys don’t deserve it. However,
+so long as we are going to win the race
+we can afford to treat them well,” teased Jane.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238'></a>238</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The captain smiled a superior smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We could have gone right on to the end of
+the route to-day without stopping, if we had
+wished to do so. But we didn’t want to take
+an unfair advantage of you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no. You boys never do take an unfair
+advantage, do you?” chuckled Crazy Jane.
+Miss Elting gave her a warning glance. The
+captain did not observe it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Give them another tune, boys,” George ordered.
+</p>
+<p>
+“First please extinguish those cat-tail
+torches,” requested Harriet. “You will set the
+woods on fire, if you are not careful. Everything
+is so dry now that a fire would start very
+easily.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The torches were ground out under foot, after
+which the Tramp Club played “Home Sweet
+Home” on the harmonicas. At a nod from the
+guardian the girls got out their combs and
+joined in the tune. The woodland inhabitants
+probably never had heard a concert like this.
+It sent the birds hopping from limb to limb in
+great alarm. Fortunately there were no neighbors
+near at hand, so only the inhabitants of the
+forest were disturbed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane that day had purchased a large chocolate
+cake at a baker shop in the village. She
+brought this out then disappeared into the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239'></a>239</span>
+tent, emerging a few minutes later with a pail
+of fruit lemonade, while Hazel, who had accompanied
+Jane, followed her, bearing cups and
+glasses. Miss Elting busied herself with cutting
+the cake and Harriet served the lemonade.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, boys, here’s to the candy we’re going
+to have when we get to our journey’s end,”
+teased Jane McCarthy, raising her glass of
+lemonade.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And here,” returned the captain, raising his
+glass with a flourish, “is to those beautiful
+handkerchiefs that we’re going to wear next to
+our hearts for years and years to come.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“To the stars that hold our future,” teased
+Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+The captain paused with the glass of lemonade
+in his hand. He glanced quickly at Harriet
+Burrell, but the innocent expression on her face
+told him nothing. Miss Elting saw that George
+had something on his mind. She suspected
+what it was. An amused smile played about
+the corners of the guardian’s mouth. There
+was a smile in Harriet’s eyes, too, as she caught
+and read the thought in the mind of Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+After the cake and lemonade had been disposed
+of, the party of young people chatted for
+the better part of an hour. Captain Baker,
+however, appeared uneasy. Twice he essayed
+to speak then checked himself abruptly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240'></a>240</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s coming now,” whispered Harriet.
+“He’s trying to think of a way to begin.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Elting nodded.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have a confession to make,” began the
+captain, in an embarrassed manner.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A confession!” exclaimed Harriet in a surprised
+tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I have. Oh, it isn’t for myself alone,
+but for my friends as well,” continued the captain
+doggedly. The other boys exhibited signs
+of uneasiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about, Mr. Baker?” asked the guardian
+sweetly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is about those melons.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, my dear boy, you need not apologize
+for them. They were simply delicious. I can’t
+tell you how much we enjoyed them.” Miss
+Elting was making it as hard for George as
+possible.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It—it isn’t that. Oh, what’s the use? I
+don’t know how to say it. We hadn’t any right
+to give you those melons, Miss Elting.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No right? Please explain yourself, Mr.
+Baker.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll tell you all about it. We took those melons
+from the farmer’s field without leave. We
+didn’t mean to play a mean trick on you, but we
+did. We didn’t think the farmer would accuse
+you girls of stealing the melons. We’re awfully sorry
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241'></a>241</span>
+he made such a fuss about it and
+that you had to pay for them. Will you please
+let us return to you the money that you paid
+him. It was our treat, you know.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hm-m-m! This is a serious matter,” replied
+the guardian slowly. The girls sat with
+lowered heads so that the boys might not discover
+the laughter in their eyes. “I cannot accept
+the money for the melons. We had better
+consider the incident closed. It is very manly
+of you, however, to come and tell us about it.
+But what induced you to do so?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I gueth hith conthcience troubled him,” suggested
+Tommy wisely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I think so. But there was something
+else,” admitted the boy. “It wasn’t wholly
+conscience. We didn’t realize how very wrong
+it was until——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Until the Oracle told you,” nodded Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What!” exclaimed George. The eyes of the
+Tramp Club were fixed on Tommy. “What do
+you mean by that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Harriet got up and with crossed hands before
+her, chin lowered, eyelids half veiling her eyes,
+moved demurely toward the captain.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Cross my palm with silver and the past and
+future shall be revealed to you,” she mumbled.
+</p>
+<p>
+George Baker gazed at her, with suspicious,
+puzzled eyes. All at once he sprang up.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242'></a>242</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know you now! I knew I had seen you before,
+but I couldn’t place you. You were the
+Star of the East!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” admitted Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And thhe told your fortune,” chuckled
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Margery and Hazel giggled. Crazy Jane exclaimed
+derisively:
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, boys, boys! That’s the time you got your
+desserts! We paid you back with interest!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was a mean trick,” flared George. “We
+never would have thought it of you. It was the
+meanest trick I ever heard of. I’m sorry I
+made a fool of myself by coming here and
+apologizing to you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mr. Baker, don’t lose your temper,” begged
+Miss Elting, scarcely able to control her voice
+for laughter. “We have evened our score so
+let’s shake hands and be friends.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, thank you. I’m sorry to refuse, but you
+have made fools of us,” retorted George angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no. That ith not pothible,” piped
+Tommy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on, fellows. We will get out of here
+before they make us angry,” urged Captain
+Baker, snatching up his hat and starting away.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please wait,” begged Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+George shook his head.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243'></a>243</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about our compact?” called Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’re going on and win the race. We’ll
+show you that you aren’t such athletes as you
+think. At least you shan’t make fools of us
+at that. Good night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Captain Baker and his friends strode angrily
+from the camp. They did not so much as look
+back. Perhaps the boys were really not so angry
+as they pretended to be.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s too bad. I didn’t think they would
+take it that way,” cried Harriet. “I surely
+thought they would be able to take a joke. Well,
+what’s done can’t be undone. There’s nothing
+more to be done except to go on and try to win
+the race.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Jane had disappeared. Where she had gone
+the girls did not know. It was some time before
+she returned and when she did she was
+excited. Her hair was awry and her face
+flushed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jane, where have you been?” demanded the
+guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve been scouting. Girls, those miserable
+boys are planning to play another trick on you.
+They’re going to start to-night and go on without
+stopping until they get home. What shall
+we do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls gazed solemnly into each other’s
+eyes.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244'></a>244</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“That seems to settle it,” spoke up Margery
+finally. “Well, let them have the race. Who
+cares?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We all care,” answered Harriet, springing
+to her feet. “We simply must win that race
+now. Everybody will laugh at us if we don’t,
+and I just couldn’t stand it to see those boys
+grinning triumphantly at us afterwards. I don’t
+care so much about the others.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What would you suggest, Harriet?” inquired
+Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Suggest? Why, there is only one thing to
+suggest. Checkmate them at their own game.
+We’ll start for Meadow-Brook this very night
+and we’ll keep going until we get there. Are
+you with me, girls?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes!” shouted the girls.
+</p>
+<h2><a name='chXXIV' id='chXXIV'></a>CHAPTER XXIV—CONCLUSION</h2>
+<p>
+“Not quite so fast, girls,” warned Miss
+Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+They turned toward her questioningly.
+Their eyes were sparkling, their faces
+flushed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What would you suggest, Miss Elting?”
+asked Harriet.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245'></a>245</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Remember, that, if we take the route suggested
+by the Gipsy, we shall have to travel
+some of the roughest country in the state. Are
+you equal to the hike?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We shall have to walk all night and a good
+part of the day to-morrow, and even then the
+boys may win the contest. Are you willing to
+try it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then we will make our plans and get
+started. According to my calculations, it will
+be a twenty mile hike to Meadow-Brook by the
+way we propose to go. The boys will have a
+good ten miles further to travel if they go by
+way of the road. But having better going they
+will naturally travel much faster than we. Listen!
+We must travel light, with nothing in our
+packs except just sufficient food to carry us
+through. Jane, you will have to spend the night
+at the nearest farm house and come back for
+the tent and supplies in the morning. I hardly
+believe any one will disturb them over night.
+You must go at once or the people of the house
+will have retired. Go quietly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Ten minutes later Jane was on her way to
+the farm house in her car, undetected by the
+members of the Tramp Club.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now we will get ready at once. Let us be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246'></a>246</span>
+certain that none of the boys are watching. I
+would suggest that you girls lie down for an
+hour or so, while Harriet and myself get the
+packs together.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Hazel obediently led the way into the tent,
+Margery and Tommy following.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t thleep. I’m too exthited,” protested
+Tommy. She and her companions did sleep
+however. They were allowed to rest for two
+hours. When they awakened Harriet informed
+them that the Tramp Club already had started.
+Half an hour later the girls themselves had
+taken the trail to Meadow-Brook.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Pathfinders made straight for a blue
+range of mountains that stood out dark and forbidding
+in the bright moonlight. The girls were
+full of enthusiasm, and would have walked
+much faster had not their guardian insisted on
+their saving their strength for the more difficult
+traveling after they reached the hills.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was three o’clock in the morning when
+finally they dropped down a sharp incline into
+the gloomy depths of a rocky canyon. A trickling
+stream flowed through the canyon and the
+walls stood high on either side, rising sheer for
+a hundred feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You will have to wade, girls. But I think
+we are all sufficiently hardened so that we shall
+not suffer more than temporary discomfort
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247'></a>247</span>
+from getting our feet wet,” said the guardian,
+with an encouraging smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls plunged into the brook without
+hesitation. The water was only ankle deep, but
+the stones on the bottom of the creek were moss-covered
+and slippery. Still, they made good
+progress, really traveling faster than before
+they had entered the canyon.
+</p>
+<p>
+At daylight Miss Elting called a halt. She
+had chosen a place where a dry shelf of rock
+offered a resting place. The girls threw themselves
+down flat on their backs. There was no
+wood with which to build a fire, but Miss Elting
+produced a small alcohol stove from her pack
+and made coffee. This with biscuits they had
+brought proved very refreshing. The guardian
+did not permit them to remain on the shelf of
+rock for a long time, fearing that their muscles
+might become stiffened. Then the journey was
+taken up again. So full of enthusiasm and determination
+were the Meadow-Brook Girls that
+not one of them offered a word of complaint;
+but when at two o’clock that afternoon, they
+emerged from the canyon into the open country,
+Tommy and Margery were limping a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+Beyond in the haze of a distant valley lay
+Meadow-Brook. The girls eager to get to their
+journey’s end pushed on again. After half an
+hour’s walking, Miss Elting called a halt. She
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248'></a>248</span>
+shaded her eyes and gazed off to the west. A
+thin brown line was crawling slowly along the
+road.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s the boys!” cried Harriet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re going to win,” groaned Margery.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They are not. We must run for it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” agreed Miss Elting. “But don’t get
+excited. Keep your lips tightly closed. Breathe
+through your nostrils and keep your shoulders
+well back. Don’t keep yourselves rigid, but
+just trudge along with every muscle relaxed.
+They don’t see us. Ready! Go!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls crossed the field at a trot. It was
+a good two miles to the village. They ran
+slowly, but steadily. At the end of a mile the
+guardian again ordered a halt, directing the
+girls to lie down in the field flat on their backs.
+A few moments later they were up and off again.
+They saw the boys a long distance to the rear,
+still trudging doggedly along. And half an
+hour later the girls stepped from the field out
+into the road. They heard the chug of a motor
+car. It swept on and overtook them. It was
+Jane. She was howling like a wild Indian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re coming! They’re coming. Run for
+it!” she yelled.
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time the boys had discovered the
+girls. They, too, began to run. The race was
+on in earnest. Never had those girls run and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249'></a>249</span>
+stumbled and lurched along as they did that
+afternoon. The boys gained slowly. The girls
+were nearing home. Jane was leading the procession,
+standing up in her car, steering as she
+stood, setting the pace for the Meadow-Brook
+Girls. She was shouting and yelling to keep up
+their courage, but it was an almost killing pace
+that she was making for them.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls staggered over the line that marked
+the village limits.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Home!” cried Miss Elting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ve won!” screamed Jane almost beside
+herself with joy.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls walked unsteadily to one side of
+the road and sat down gasping. They had won
+the race, but by a slender margin. The boys
+were still forging ahead, running at top speed.
+They had thrown away their packs and were
+racing into the village in light order. Five minutes
+later a crowd of weary, humiliated boys
+came hurrying up to where the girls sat. They
+were much more fatigued than were their opponents,
+besides which, they were chagrined beyond
+words.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did we win?” jeered Jane triumphantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. You won,” admitted Captain Baker
+sourly. “I take off my hat to you.” He suited
+the action to the word. “You beat us at our
+own game. I don’t know how you did it, but
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250'></a>250</span>
+you did and that’s all there is about it, and we
+aren’t going to whine. We’ll take our medicine.
+We’re going to stay in town the rest of the day,
+and we’ll see you later on. Good-bye until
+to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls’ weariness left them almost magically.
+They hopped into Jane’s car and were
+swiftly whirled home. Later in the afternoon
+a box of marshmallows for each of the girls was
+delivered to Miss Elting. But the fun was not
+yet ended.
+</p>
+<p>
+That night the Tramp Club and the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were the guests of Tommy Thompson’s
+father and mother at dinner. Tommy’s
+parents, as well as the parents of the other
+girls, were delighted with the splendid physical
+condition of their daughters. Before each
+girl’s plate at the table that stretched the length
+of the big dining room, was a box of marshmallows,
+before each boy’s plate a handkerchief.
+</p>
+<p>
+The marshmallow boxes were tied with pink
+ribbon, the color chosen by the Meadow-Brook
+Girls for their organization.
+</p>
+<p>
+“On Hallowe’en,” declared Dill Dodd
+solemnly, “you shall hear from the tramps
+again, and the message will have a bearing on
+the question of melons.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Nor did Baker’s Tramp Club forget. Surely
+enough, on Hallowe’en
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251'></a>251</span>
+Harriet received for herself and her friends two great, ripe, luscious
+watermelons with a most cordially worded note
+from the boys.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We must see to it that the Tramp Club
+never do anything like this again,” said Miss
+Elting, as she and the Meadow-Brook Girls cut
+up and enjoyed the watermelons. “At this season
+of the year fruit of this kind comes only
+from hot houses and is very expensive. The
+boys, to show their contrition, have mortgaged
+their pocket money, I fear.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Soon after their return the Meadow-Brook
+Girls entered upon the duties and pleasures
+of the new school year. We may be assured
+also that at the proper time, Miss Elting would
+see to it that the beads which the girls had won
+by their deeds of daring and other achievements
+during their recent trip, would be
+awarded. But we shall hear from them again.
+</p>
+<p>
+They had ahead of them many happy days of
+outdoor life and adventure, as will be learned
+in the next volume of this series, which is published
+under the title, “<span class='sc'>The Meadow-Brook
+Girls Afloat</span>; Or, The Stormy Cruise of the
+Red Rover.”
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>THE END</p>
+</div>
+<hr style='margin:30px auto; border:none; border-bottom:1px solid black; width:80%' />
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY’S CATALOGUE OF</span></p>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Best and Least Expensive</span></p>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Books for Real Boys and Girls</span></p>
+</div>
+<p>
+Really good and new stories for boys and girls are not
+plentiful. Many stories, too, are so highly improbable as
+to bring a grin of derision to the young reader’s face before
+he has gone far. The name of ALTEMUS is a distinctive
+brand on the cover of a book, always ensuring
+the buyer of having a book that is up-to-date and fine
+throughout. No buyer of an ALTEMUS book is ever
+disappointed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many are the claims made as to the inexpensiveness
+of books. Go into any bookstore and ask for an Altemus
+book. Compare the price charged you for Altemus
+books with the price demanded for other juvenile books.
+You will at once discover that a given outlay of money
+will buy more of the ALTEMUS books than of those
+published by other houses.
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Every dealer in books carries the ALTEMUS books.</p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>Sold by all booksellers or sent postpaid on receipt of price</p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>Henry Altemus Company</p>
+<p>507-513 Cherry Street, Philadelphia</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Motor Boat Club Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+The keynote of these books is manliness. The stories are wonderfully
+entertaining, and they are at the same time sound and wholesome.
+No boy will willingly lay down an unfinished book in this
+series.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTOR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOAT&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB&nbsp;&nbsp;OF&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;KENNEBEC;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Secret&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Smugglers’&nbsp;&nbsp;Island.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTOR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOAT&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;NANTUCKET;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Mystery&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Dunstan&nbsp;&nbsp;Heir.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTOR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOAT&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB&nbsp;&nbsp;OFF&nbsp;&nbsp;LONG&nbsp;&nbsp;ISLAND;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A&nbsp;&nbsp;Daring&nbsp;&nbsp;Marine&nbsp;&nbsp;Game&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;Racing&nbsp;&nbsp;Speed.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTOR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOAT&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;WIRELESS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Dot,&nbsp;&nbsp;Dash&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;Dare&nbsp;&nbsp;Cruise.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTOR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOAT&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;FLORIDA;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laying&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Ghost&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Alligator&nbsp;&nbsp;Swamp.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTOR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOAT&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;GOLDEN&nbsp;&nbsp;GATE;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A&nbsp;&nbsp;Thrilling&nbsp;&nbsp;Capture&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Great&nbsp;&nbsp;Fog.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MOTOR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOAT&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;GREAT&nbsp;&nbsp;LAKES;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Flying&nbsp;&nbsp;Dutchman&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Big&nbsp;&nbsp;Fresh&nbsp;&nbsp;Water.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Range and Grange Hustlers</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By FRANK GEE PATCHIN</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life on great
+ranches in the West? Any bright boy will “devour” the books of
+this series, once he has made a start with the first volume.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;RANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;GRANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;HUSTLERS&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;RANCH;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Boy&nbsp;&nbsp;Shepherds&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Great&nbsp;&nbsp;Divide.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;RANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;GRANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;HUSTLERS’&nbsp;&nbsp;GREATEST&nbsp;&nbsp;ROUND-UP;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pitting&nbsp;&nbsp;Their&nbsp;&nbsp;Wits&nbsp;&nbsp;Against&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;Packers’&nbsp;&nbsp;Combine.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;RANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;GRANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;HUSTLERS&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PLAINS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Following&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Steam&nbsp;&nbsp;Plows&nbsp;&nbsp;Across&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Prairie.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;RANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;GRANGE&nbsp;&nbsp;HUSTLERS&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;CHICAGO;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Conspiracy&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Wheat&nbsp;&nbsp;Pit.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Submarine Boys Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By VICTOR G. DURHAM</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+These splendid books for boys and girls deal with life aboard submarine
+torpedo boats, and with the adventures of the young crew,
+and possess, in addition to the author’s surpassing knack of storytelling,
+a great educational value for all young readers.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SUBMARINE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;DUTY;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Life&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;Diving&nbsp;&nbsp;Torpedo&nbsp;&nbsp;Boat.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SUBMARINE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS’&nbsp;&nbsp;TRIAL&nbsp;&nbsp;TRIP;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Making&nbsp;&nbsp;Good”&nbsp;&nbsp;as&nbsp;&nbsp;Young&nbsp;&nbsp;Experts.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SUBMARINE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MIDDIES;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Prize&nbsp;&nbsp;Detail&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;Annapolis.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SUBMARINE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SPIES;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dodging&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Sharks&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Deep.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SUBMARINE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS’&nbsp;&nbsp;LIGHTNING&nbsp;&nbsp;CRUISE;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Young&nbsp;&nbsp;Kings&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Deep.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SUBMARINE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;FOR&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;FLAG;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Deeding&nbsp;&nbsp;Their&nbsp;&nbsp;Lives&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;Uncle&nbsp;&nbsp;Sam.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SUBMARINE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SMUGGLERS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Breaking&nbsp;&nbsp;Up&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;New&nbsp;&nbsp;Jersey&nbsp;&nbsp;Customs&nbsp;&nbsp;Frauds.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Square Dollar Boys Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+The reading boy will be a voter within a few years; these books
+are bound to make him think, and when he casts his vote he will
+do it more intelligently for having read these volumes.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SQUARE&nbsp;&nbsp;DOLLAR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;WAKE&nbsp;&nbsp;UP;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fighting&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Trolley&nbsp;&nbsp;Franchise&nbsp;&nbsp;Steal.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;SQUARE&nbsp;&nbsp;DOLLAR&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;SMASH&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;RING;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Lists&nbsp;&nbsp;Against&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Crooked&nbsp;&nbsp;Land&nbsp;&nbsp;Deal.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Ben Lightbody Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By WALTER BENHAM</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;BEN&nbsp;&nbsp;LIGHTBODY,&nbsp;&nbsp;SPECIAL;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Seizing&nbsp;&nbsp;His&nbsp;&nbsp;First&nbsp;&nbsp;Chance&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;Make&nbsp;&nbsp;Good.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;BEN&nbsp;&nbsp;LIGHTBODY’S&nbsp;&nbsp;BIGGEST&nbsp;&nbsp;PUZZLE;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Running&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Double&nbsp;&nbsp;Ghost&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;Earth.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Pony Rider Boys Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By FRANK GEE PATCHIN</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+These tales may be aptly described as those of a new Cooper. In
+every sense they belong to the best class of books for boys and girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PONY&nbsp;&nbsp;RIDER&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;ROCKIES;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Secret&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Lost&nbsp;&nbsp;Claim.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PONY&nbsp;&nbsp;RIDER&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;TEXAS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Veiled&nbsp;&nbsp;Riddle&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Plains.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PONY&nbsp;&nbsp;RIDER&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;MONTANA;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Mystery&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Old&nbsp;&nbsp;Custer&nbsp;&nbsp;Trail.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PONY&nbsp;&nbsp;RIDER&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;OZARKS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Secret&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Ruby&nbsp;&nbsp;Mountain.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PONY&nbsp;&nbsp;RIDER&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;ALKALI;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Finding&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;Key&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Desert&nbsp;&nbsp;Maze.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PONY&nbsp;&nbsp;RIDER&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW&nbsp;&nbsp;MEXICO;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;End&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Silver&nbsp;&nbsp;Trail.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PONY&nbsp;&nbsp;RIDER&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;GRAND&nbsp;&nbsp;CANYON;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Mystery&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Bright&nbsp;&nbsp;Angel&nbsp;&nbsp;Gulch.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Boys of Steel Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By JAMES R. MEARS</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+The author has made of these volumes a series of romances with
+scenes laid in the iron and steel world. Each book presents a vivid
+picture of some phase of this great industry. The information given
+is exact and truthful; above all, each story is full of adventure and
+fascination.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;IRON&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MINES;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Starting&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Bottom&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Shaft.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;IRON&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;AS&nbsp;&nbsp;FOREMEN;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Heading&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Diamond&nbsp;&nbsp;Drill&nbsp;&nbsp;Shift.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;IRON&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;ORE&nbsp;&nbsp;BOATS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Roughing&nbsp;&nbsp;It&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Great&nbsp;&nbsp;Lakes.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;IRON&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;STEEL&nbsp;&nbsp;MILLS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beginning&nbsp;&nbsp;Anew&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Cinder&nbsp;&nbsp;Pits.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>West Point Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+The principal characters in these narratives are manly, young
+Americans whose doings will inspire all boy readers.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;DICK&nbsp;&nbsp;PRESCOTT’S&nbsp;&nbsp;FIRST&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;WEST&nbsp;&nbsp;POINT;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two&nbsp;&nbsp;Chums&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Cadet&nbsp;&nbsp;Gray.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;DICK&nbsp;&nbsp;PRESCOTT’S&nbsp;&nbsp;SECOND&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;WEST&nbsp;&nbsp;POINT;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Finding&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Glory&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Soldier’s&nbsp;&nbsp;Life.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;DICK&nbsp;&nbsp;PRESCOTT’S&nbsp;&nbsp;THIRD&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;WEST&nbsp;&nbsp;POINT;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Standing&nbsp;&nbsp;Firm&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;Flag&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;Honor.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;DICK&nbsp;&nbsp;PRESCOTT’S&nbsp;&nbsp;FOURTH&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;WEST&nbsp;&nbsp;POINT;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ready&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;Drop&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Gray&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;Shoulder&nbsp;&nbsp;Straps.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Annapolis Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+The Spirit of the new Navy is delightfully and truthfully depicted
+in these volumes.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;DAVE&nbsp;&nbsp;DARRIN’S&nbsp;&nbsp;FIRST&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;ANNAPOLIS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two&nbsp;&nbsp;Plebe&nbsp;&nbsp;Midshipmen&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;U.&nbsp;&nbsp;S.&nbsp;&nbsp;Naval&nbsp;&nbsp;Academy.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;DAVE&nbsp;&nbsp;DARRIN’S&nbsp;&nbsp;SECOND&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;ANNAPOLIS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two&nbsp;&nbsp;Midshipmen&nbsp;&nbsp;as&nbsp;&nbsp;Naval&nbsp;&nbsp;Academy&nbsp;&nbsp;“Youngsters.”<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;DAVE&nbsp;&nbsp;DARRIN’S&nbsp;&nbsp;THIRD&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;ANNAPOLIS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leaders&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Second&nbsp;&nbsp;Class&nbsp;&nbsp;Midshipmen.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;DAVE&nbsp;&nbsp;DARRIN’S&nbsp;&nbsp;FOURTH&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;ANNAPOLIS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Headed&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;Graduation&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Big&nbsp;&nbsp;Cruise.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Young Engineers Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+The heroes of these stories are known to readers of the High
+School Boys Series. In this new series Tom Reade and Harry
+Hazelton prove worthy of all the traditions of Dick &amp; Co.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;YOUNG&nbsp;&nbsp;ENGINEERS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;COLORADO;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At&nbsp;&nbsp;Railroad&nbsp;&nbsp;Building&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;Earnest.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;YOUNG&nbsp;&nbsp;ENGINEERS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;ARIZONA;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laying&nbsp;&nbsp;Tracks&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;“Man-Killer”&nbsp;&nbsp;Quicksand.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;YOUNG&nbsp;&nbsp;ENGINEERS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;NEVADA;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Seeking&nbsp;&nbsp;Fortune&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Turn&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;Pick.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;YOUNG&nbsp;&nbsp;ENGINEERS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;MEXICO;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fighting&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Mine&nbsp;&nbsp;Swindlers.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Boys of the Army Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+These books breathe the life and spirit of the United States Army
+of to-day, and the life, just as it is, is described by a master pen.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;UNCLE&nbsp;&nbsp;SAM’S&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;RANKS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two&nbsp;&nbsp;Recruits&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;United&nbsp;&nbsp;States&nbsp;&nbsp;Army.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;UNCLE&nbsp;&nbsp;SAM’S&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;FIELD&nbsp;&nbsp;DUTY;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Winning&nbsp;&nbsp;Corporal’s&nbsp;&nbsp;Chevrons.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;UNCLE&nbsp;&nbsp;SAM’S&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;AS&nbsp;&nbsp;SERGEANTS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Handling&nbsp;&nbsp;Their&nbsp;&nbsp;First&nbsp;&nbsp;Real&nbsp;&nbsp;Commands.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;UNCLE&nbsp;&nbsp;SAM’S&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;PHILIPPINES;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Following&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Flag&nbsp;&nbsp;Against&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Moros.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>(<i>Other volumes to follow rapidly.</i>)</p>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Battleship Boys Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By FRANK GEE PATCHIN</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+These stories throb with the life of young Americans on to-day’s
+huge drab Dreadnaughts.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;BATTLESHIP&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;SEA;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two&nbsp;&nbsp;Apprentices&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;Uncle&nbsp;&nbsp;Sam’s&nbsp;&nbsp;Navy.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;BATTLESHIP&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;FIRST&nbsp;&nbsp;STEP&nbsp;&nbsp;UPWARD;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Winning&nbsp;&nbsp;Their&nbsp;&nbsp;Grades&nbsp;&nbsp;as&nbsp;&nbsp;Petty&nbsp;&nbsp;Officers.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;BATTLESHIP&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;FOREIGN&nbsp;&nbsp;SERVICE;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Earning&nbsp;&nbsp;New&nbsp;&nbsp;Ratings&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;European&nbsp;&nbsp;Seas.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;BATTLESHIP&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;TROPICS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Upholding&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;American&nbsp;&nbsp;Flag&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;Honduras&nbsp;&nbsp;Revolution.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+(<i>Other volumes to follow rapidly.</i>)
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Meadow-Brook Girls Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By JANET ALDRIDGE</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+Real live stories pulsing with the vibrant atmosphere of outdoor
+life.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MEADOW-BROOK&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;UNDER&nbsp;&nbsp;CANVAS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fun&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;Frolic&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Summer&nbsp;&nbsp;Camp.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MEADOW-BROOK&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;ACROSS&nbsp;&nbsp;COUNTRY;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Young&nbsp;&nbsp;Pathfinders&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;Summer&nbsp;&nbsp;Hike.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MEADOW-BROOK&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;AFLOAT;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Stormy&nbsp;&nbsp;Cruise&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Red&nbsp;&nbsp;Rover.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>High School Boys Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+In this series of bright, crisp books a new note has been struck.
+</p>
+<p>
+Boys of every age under sixty will be interested in these fascinating
+volumes.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;FRESHMEN;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.’s&nbsp;&nbsp;First&nbsp;&nbsp;Year&nbsp;&nbsp;Pranks&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;Sports.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;PITCHER;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Gridley&nbsp;&nbsp;Diamond.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;LEFT&nbsp;&nbsp;END;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;Grilling&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Football&nbsp;&nbsp;Gridiron.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;CAPTAIN&nbsp;&nbsp;OF&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;TEAM;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;Leading&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Athletic&nbsp;&nbsp;Vanguard.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>Grammar School Boys Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+This series of stories, based on the actual doings of grammar
+school boys, comes near to the heart of the average American boy.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;GRAMMAR&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;OF&nbsp;&nbsp;GRIDLEY;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;Start&nbsp;&nbsp;Things&nbsp;&nbsp;Moving.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;GRAMMAR&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;SNOWBOUND;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;Winter&nbsp;&nbsp;Sports.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;GRAMMAR&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;WOODS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;Trail&nbsp;&nbsp;Fun&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;Knowledge.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;GRAMMAR&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;SUMMER&nbsp;&nbsp;ATHLETICS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;Make&nbsp;&nbsp;Their&nbsp;&nbsp;Fame&nbsp;&nbsp;Secure.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>High School Boys’ Vacation Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By H. IRVING HANCOCK</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+“Give us more Dick Prescott books!”
+</p>
+<p>
+This has been the burden of the cry from young readers of the
+country over. Almost numberless letters have been received by the
+publishers, making this eager demand; for Dick Prescott, Dave Darrin,
+Tom Reade, and the other members of Dick &amp; Co. are the most
+popular high school boys in the land. Boys will alternately thrill
+and chuckle when reading these splendid narratives.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS’&nbsp;&nbsp;CANOE&nbsp;&nbsp;CLUB;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.‘s&nbsp;&nbsp;Rivals&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;Lake&nbsp;&nbsp;Pleasant.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;SUMMER&nbsp;&nbsp;CAMP;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;Prescott&nbsp;&nbsp;Six&nbsp;&nbsp;Training&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Gridley&nbsp;&nbsp;Eleven.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS’&nbsp;&nbsp;FISHING&nbsp;&nbsp;TRIP;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Wilderness.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS’&nbsp;&nbsp;TRAINING&nbsp;&nbsp;HIKE;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dick&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Co.&nbsp;&nbsp;Making&nbsp;&nbsp;Themselves&nbsp;&nbsp;“Hard&nbsp;&nbsp;as&nbsp;&nbsp;Nails.”<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Circus Boys Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By EDGAR B. P. DARLINGTON</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+Mr. Darlington’s books breathe forth every phase of an intensely
+interesting and exciting life.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;CIRCUS&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;FLYING&nbsp;&nbsp;RINGS;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Making&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Start&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Sawdust&nbsp;&nbsp;Life.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;CIRCUS&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;ACROSS&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINENT;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Winning&nbsp;&nbsp;New&nbsp;&nbsp;Laurels&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Tanbark.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;CIRCUS&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;DIXIE&nbsp;&nbsp;LAND;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Winning&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Plaudits&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Sunny&nbsp;&nbsp;South.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;CIRCUS&nbsp;&nbsp;BOYS&nbsp;&nbsp;ON&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;MISSISSIPPI;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Afloat&nbsp;&nbsp;with&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Big&nbsp;&nbsp;Show&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Big&nbsp;&nbsp;River.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The High School Girls Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By JESSIE GRAHAM FLOWER, A. M.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+These breezy stories of the American High School Girl take the
+reader fairly by storm.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;GRACE&nbsp;&nbsp;HARLOWE’S&nbsp;&nbsp;PLEBE&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Merry&nbsp;&nbsp;Doings&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Oakdale&nbsp;&nbsp;Freshman&nbsp;&nbsp;Girls.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;GRACE&nbsp;&nbsp;HARLOWE’S&nbsp;&nbsp;SOPHOMORE&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Record&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Girl&nbsp;&nbsp;Chums&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;Work&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;Athletics.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;GRACE&nbsp;&nbsp;HARLOWE’S&nbsp;&nbsp;JUNIOR&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fast&nbsp;&nbsp;Friends&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Sororities.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;GRACE&nbsp;&nbsp;HARLOWE’S&nbsp;&nbsp;SENIOR&nbsp;&nbsp;YEAR&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;HIGH&nbsp;&nbsp;SCHOOL;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Parting&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Ways.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:larger;font-weight:bold;'>The Automobile Girls Series</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p>By LAURA DENT CRANE</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+No girl’s library—no family book-case can be considered at all
+complete unless it contains these sparkling twentieth-century books.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;AUTOMOBILE&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;NEWPORT;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Watching&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Summer&nbsp;&nbsp;Parade.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;AUTOMOBILE&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;IN&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;BERKSHIRES;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;Ghost&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Lost&nbsp;&nbsp;Man’s&nbsp;&nbsp;Trail.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;AUTOMOBILE&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;ALONG&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;HUDSON;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fighting&nbsp;&nbsp;Fire&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;Sleepy&nbsp;&nbsp;Hollow.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;AUTOMOBILE&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;CHICAGO;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Winning&nbsp;&nbsp;Out&nbsp;&nbsp;Against&nbsp;&nbsp;Heavy&nbsp;&nbsp;Odds.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5&nbsp;&nbsp;THE&nbsp;&nbsp;AUTOMOBILE&nbsp;&nbsp;GIRLS&nbsp;&nbsp;AT&nbsp;&nbsp;PALM&nbsp;&nbsp;BEACH;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Proving&nbsp;&nbsp;Their&nbsp;&nbsp;Mettle&nbsp;&nbsp;Under&nbsp;&nbsp;Southern&nbsp;&nbsp;Skies.<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>Cloth, Illustrated—Price, per Volume, 50c.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country, by
+Janet Aldridge
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY ***
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+Project Gutenberg's The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country, by Janet Aldridge
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country
+ The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike
+
+Author: Janet Aldridge
+
+Release Date: June 12, 2011 [EBook #36391]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: The Girls Made Camp and Ate Supper.]
+
+
+
+
+ The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country
+
+ OR
+
+ The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike
+
+ By
+
+ JANET ALDRIDGE
+
+ Author of The Meadow-Brook Girls Under Canvas,
+ The Meadow-Brook Girls Afloat, etc.
+
+ Illustrated
+
+ PHILADELPHIA
+ HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1913, by
+ Howard E. Altemus
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. A Night of Excitement 7
+ II. The Red Eye in the Dark 30
+ III. A Blessing and a Threat 39
+ IV. The Coming of Crazy Jane 50
+ V. Catching the Speckled Beauties 62
+ VI. The Call of the Dancing Bear 69
+ VII. Discovering Midnight Prowlers 79
+ VIII. Caught in a Morass 90
+ IX. The Tramp Club to the Rescue 102
+ X. In the Hands of the Rescuers 112
+ XI. A Contest of Endurance 124
+ XII. Meadow-Brook Girls up a Tree 134
+ XIII. A Serious Predicament 146
+ XIV. Harriet Is Resourceful 152
+ XV. A Race for Life 163
+ XVI. A Treat That Was Not a Treat 173
+ XVII. Trying out the Gipsy Trail 186
+ XVIII. The Queen Takes a Hand 196
+ XIX. Delving Into the Mysteries 206
+ XX. Getting Even With George 217
+ XXI. Harriet Plans to Outwit the Tramp Club 225
+ XXII. A Combietta Concert 230
+ XXIII. The Harmonica Serenade 236
+ XXIV. Conclusion 244
+
+
+
+
+THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--A NIGHT OF EXCITEMENT
+
+
+"Oh, where can Crazy Jane be!" wailed Margery Brown.
+
+"It isn't so much a question of where Jane may be as where we ourselves
+are, Buster," answered Harriet Burrell, laughingly. "However, if she
+doesn't come, why, we will make the best of it. This will not be the
+first time we have spent the night out of doors."
+
+"Are we lost?" gasped Hazel Holland.
+
+"It looks very much as though we had gone astray," replied Miss Elting,
+who was acting as guardian and chaperon to the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+"Oh, thave me!" wailed Grace Thompson, her impish little face appearing
+to grow several degrees smaller.
+
+"Girls! Please do not become excited," urged the guardian. "There is no
+cause for alarm. Even if we have lost our way we shall find it again on
+the morrow. Harriet, you have the map. Suppose we examine it again and
+see if we can find out where we are. We surely must be near human
+habitation, and the country is so open that really getting lost is quite
+impossible."
+
+Harriet Burrell unslung the pack that she carried over her shoulder,
+then felt about in it until she found that for which she was looking.
+She spread the map out on the ground at one side of the road, her
+companions gathering about and gazing down over her shoulder. Miss
+Elting sat down beside the map.
+
+"Here! Trace our day's route with the pencil," she said. "This should be
+Harmon's Valley. That being the case, the village of Harmon should be
+not more than a mile farther on."
+
+"There is no village anywhere near us, according to the route we have
+traveled since this morning," answered Harriet.
+
+"Oh, that can't be possible," exclaimed Miss Elting.
+
+"Please look for yourself, Miss Elting," Harriet replied earnestly.
+"After leaving Granite Mountain we swung to the left as you will see by
+the line I have marked."
+
+"Hm-m-m," murmured the guardian as she scanned the map.
+
+"It looks to me very much as though we had taken the wrong valley," said
+Harriet, as she paused in her scrutiny of the map to glance up at the
+hills that shut in the valley where they now were. "See! There isn't a
+town marked on this map anywhere in this valley."
+
+"I believe you are right. In order to get to our stopping place for the
+night we shall have to cross those hills to the right. How far is it
+across?"
+
+"Five miles," answered Harriet, after making some brief measurements.
+
+"Five mileth?" wailed Grace. "Oh, thave me!"
+
+"Tommy, will you be quiet?" begged Margery. "You make me nervous. Miss
+Elting, you aren't going on, to-night, are you? I simply can't walk
+another mile. My feet are so numb that I can't feel them."
+
+"I can feel mine. They are ath big ath elephantth," declared Tommy.
+
+"What do you say, girls? Shall we go on or make camp for the night?"
+questioned the guardian. "Remember, Jane McCarthy is no doubt waiting
+with her car for us over in the other valley. She will not know where to
+go if we do not get in touch with her to-night."
+
+Grace, Hazel and Margery begged Miss Elting to go no farther. They
+already had made ten miles that day, which they declared was quite
+enough.
+
+"What do you say, Harriet?" asked Miss Elting.
+
+"Of course I am a little footsore, but I could walk another ten miles if
+necessary. However, the other girls do not wish to go farther, so I vote
+with them to remain here for the night. But won't Jane be puzzled where
+to go in the morning!"
+
+"She will find us, my dear," smiled the guardian.
+
+"If you think best I will cross the ridge, after supper, and see if I
+can find her," suggested Harriet Burrell.
+
+"No. I could not think of permitting you to do that, Harriet. Jane will
+be sure to wait at the meeting place we agreed upon until noon to-morrow
+before starting on to the next stopping place."
+
+"But we haven't any plathe to thleep," protested the lisping Tommy. "I
+can't thleep on the ground, can I?"
+
+"No. You are going to sleep standing up like a horse," answered Margery
+petulantly.
+
+"No, I'm not. I'm going to lie down jutht like I alwayth do," lisped the
+little girl.
+
+"Girls, stop your disputing. We have other things to think of," rebuked
+Harriet. "Let's try to make the best of our unpleasant situation."
+
+Miss Elting, shading her eyes with her hand, gazed inquiringly at the
+surrounding country. It was barren of buildings except for a large barn
+and a number of stacks and sheds, some distance away in a field to the
+west. Still beyond this was a clump of trees and bushes. There was
+nothing else--no house, no human beings other than themselves in sight.
+
+"Girls, let's investigate that miniature forest over yonder," called the
+guardian. "It looks as though it might be an excellent place in which to
+cook supper, provided we are able to find water."
+
+"Supper!" cried the girls in chorus. They realized all at once that they
+were hungry. With one accord they snatched up their packs, heavy as they
+were, slung them over their shoulders and laboriously climbed the
+roadside fence. Tommy caught her foot on the top rail in attempting to
+jump to the ground on the other side.
+
+"Look out!" warned Miss Elting sharply.
+
+"Thave me!" wailed the lisping Tommy and sprawled on all fours on the
+other side of the fence, kicking frantically as she fell.
+
+"Are you hurt, dear?" cried Harriet, springing over to her companion.
+
+"Hurt? I gueth I am. Don't you thee, I've thkinned my nothe. Oh, I withh
+I were home!"
+
+"No, you don't. Think what a lot of fun you are having," comforted
+Harriet. "There! You are all right now."
+
+"Am I all right?"
+
+"Of course you are."
+
+"All right, if you thay tho," nodded Tommy, gathering up her pack and
+moving away with Harriet Burrell's arm about her. Miss Elting and the
+other girls had started for the clump of trees. Arriving, they quickly
+flung down their packs. The guardian began hunting for water. She found
+a stream of cold water just inside the clump of trees beyond the field,
+as she had anticipated. The greenness of the foliage about the spot had
+told her that water was near. In other parts of the valley the leaves
+were turning. There was a strong suggestion of Autumn in the air, which
+at night was crisp and bracing, though the days thus far on their long
+tramp, had been unusually warm for so late in the Fall.
+
+It was Harriet's duty to build the fire. She went about this task at
+once. There was some difficulty in finding wood that would burn. After
+searching she found some pieces of old fence rails. These were of pine,
+and as they were too long for a fire over which to cook food, Harriet
+got out her hatchet and began to chop them into smaller pieces. It was a
+hard task to chop through a rail, sharp though the hatchet was. However,
+within fifteen minutes, the girl had accomplished the task and the fire
+was burning.
+
+"I am afraid I can't promise a great variety or quantity of edibles for
+supper," announced Miss Elting, "though what there is to eat will be
+appetizing."
+
+"If there is enough, it will answer," Margery declared.
+
+"Enough?" repeated Tommy wisely. "Buthter, you thurely ought to diet--a
+girl ath thtout ath you are."
+
+"I think I've heard you remark something of the sort before," sighed
+Margery wearily. "I wish you would forget that I weigh--well, never mind
+how much! The subject is a distressing one. I'm almost too hungry
+to-night to think of anything except eating."
+
+Tommy's mischievous glance roved about, resting first on Harriet, who
+with flushed face was bending over the fire, then on Miss Elting, who
+was slicing bacon. In addition to the bacon there was to be coffee,
+supplemented by a few biscuits. There was nothing very hearty about that
+repast for healthy girls who had tramped for hours under a warm
+September sun. Still, there were no complaints, save as Tommy and
+Margery had voiced their disgust with their present life.
+
+Though none of these young women could guess it, they were destined,
+before morning, to encounter enough excitement to make them all wish
+they had never started on this long walk from Camp Wau-Wau, where they
+had spent the summer, to their homes in Meadow-Brook.
+
+Surely the Meadow-Brook Girls need no introduction to the readers of
+this series who will recall how, under the chaperonage of Miss Elting,
+the four girls had gone to the summer camp in the Pocono Woods, where,
+somehow, each day of their life had grown increasingly exciting. All of
+the things that happened to Harriet and her friends at that time are set
+forth in the first volume of this series, under the title of "The
+Meadow-Brook Girls Under Canvas." While in the summer camp the
+Meadow-Brook Girls had passed through many varied and exciting
+experiences. The mischievous initiation of Harriet Burrell and Grace
+Thompson by the older girls, the arrival in the camp of Jane McCarthy,
+known to her friends as "Crazy Jane" and the series of lively happenings
+that followed her coming; the nocturnal visit of a bear, and Harriet's
+spirited chase of the animal were incidents that contributed to the
+interest of the narrative.
+
+Harriet's brave rescue of her companions during a severe storm and her
+subsequent generous treatment of the two Camp Girls, Patricia Scott and
+Cora Kidder, who had plotted against her, won for her the warm
+admiration of her associates at Camp Wau-Wau.
+
+When it had come time to leave the camp in the great forest it had been
+agreed by the Meadow-Brook Girls and their guardian that, instead of
+returning by train they would walk all the way home, disdaining any
+"lifts" or other helps that prevented them from making their way
+strictly on foot.
+
+So endeared had "Crazy Jane" McCarthy become to them all during her stay
+in camp that she had been voted as one of their number. Crazy Jane,
+however, would hear of but little walking. She sent for her automobile,
+a present from her father, and insisted on using this in "scouting" and
+in carrying the tent and provisions for the Pathfinders, as the
+Meadow-Brook Girls now elected to call themselves.
+
+Each night Jane would meet the girls at a place agreed upon in advance.
+Then the tent would be pitched at some distance from the highway, and
+there the girls would spend the night. But now, on the third day, the
+Meadow-Brook Girls had failed to meet their supply car. What they were
+to do for the night, Miss Elting did not know. Her first move was to see
+to the preparation of the little food that they had with them.
+
+Jane McCarthy, with a full purse and a wealthy, indulgent father, had
+claimed the right of being purveyor of food on that long journey. The
+speed at which that young woman traveled permitted of her foraging far
+and wide. Whereever she went she was likely to be remembered, for it was
+her reckless driving that had given her the name of "Crazy Jane." Yet
+this light-hearted, impulsive girl had wonderful control of her machine.
+With all her reckless driving she had never yet injured any one, though
+her friends often remonstrated with her for her haphazard style of
+running her car.
+
+Supper finished, Margery and Hazel were left to attend to the dishes,
+and to put them in the packs, which were ordinary hunters' bags, made to
+strap over the shoulders.
+
+"After you have finished the work, girls," directed Miss Elting, "be
+sure to extinguish the last spark of the fire. Harriet, will you come
+with me?"
+
+"Thay, where are you going?" cried Grace. "Pleathe don't go away and
+leave uth here alone. It ith going to be dark, pretty thoon."
+
+"Don't you want a place to sleep?" smiled the guardian.
+
+"Yeth, but it'th getting dark," Tommy insisted.
+
+"All the more reason for finding sleeping quarters," smiled Miss Elting.
+
+"Are you thinking of trying the barns?" asked Harriet, as she and the
+guardian stepped away.
+
+"Yes. I don't see anything else to do."
+
+"We're going to have a storm," Harriet went on thoughtfully, "so of
+course we shall do well to secure more shelter than we could get by
+making a brush lean-to."
+
+"I don't believe we are in the least danger of being disturbed in the
+barn," the guardian continued. "I don't imagine there are any other
+human beings within several miles of this place. This is certainly a
+very lonesome bit of country. It is the first day since we have been out
+that we haven't met some one. That may be because we have kept away from
+the roads to-day. We haven't been on a highway more than an hour all day
+long."
+
+"This is what I like," answered Harriet. "I just love to strike out
+across country and blaze new trails. It's ever so much more interesting.
+But, Miss Elting, are you certain there is no one about?"
+
+The guardian halted sharply and faced her companion. She knew Harriet
+Burrell too well not to understand that the girl's question was
+significant.
+
+"What is it?" she asked.
+
+"I saw some one not far from camp when we were eating our supper," was
+Harriet's quiet announcement.
+
+"You are sure of that?"
+
+"Yes; it was just beyond the woods there. At first I thought it a fence
+post; then all at once the post moved. I saw it was a person."
+
+"What was the person doing, Harriet?"
+
+"The person appeared to be watching us. I also discovered something
+else. The person was a _woman_."
+
+Miss Elting threw back her head and laughed merrily.
+
+"I don't think we need to be very much alarmed at that. So long as it
+wasn't a tramp you saw, we won't disturb ourselves."
+
+"She was a strange looking creature," continued Harriet. "I couldn't
+make her out very well. All at once she disappeared in the most
+mysterious fashion. You said something. I glanced up, then back to the
+place where the woman had been standing and she had gone. It happened in
+less than half a dozen seconds. She would have to be a pretty lively
+person to get out of sight in that time, wouldn't she, Miss Elting?"
+
+The guardian nodded. They had now reached the big barn. Like its
+surroundings, it was deserted so far as they were able to observe. Miss
+Elting wished to examine the place while there was still light, so they
+hurried in, the doors being wide open. The scent of hay was strong on
+the air as they entered. There were little heaps of hay on the barn
+floor, and on either side in the mows the hay was piled up high. Ladders
+led up to the top of the mows from the barn floor.
+
+"This looks nice and comfy, doesn't it?" smiled the guardian.
+
+"The best sort of bedroom," agreed Harriet. "I hope there are no mice
+here?"
+
+"Mice? Gracious! I hope not, too. I think we can do no better than to
+climb the ladder to the top of one of the mows, roll up in our blankets
+and go to sleep. Which bedroom will you take, the north or the south?"
+
+"I think I should prefer the room on the south side. One is more likely
+to get the morning sun there," answered Harriet gravely.
+
+Miss Elting laughed.
+
+"Thank you. I hadn't thought of it in that light. The south side bedroom
+will be best for the Meadow-Brook Girls. I know Jane McCarthy would
+enjoy this sort of camping out. As it is, she will have to sleep at a
+farm house to-night. She will never be able to find us here. Suppose you
+climb the ladder and see how the land lies."
+
+"You mean the hay," chuckled Harriet, running up the ladder with
+agility. "Oh, it is fine up here, and just as warm as can be. Won't it
+be splendid to sleep on the hay?" she called down, peering over the edge
+of the mow.
+
+After gazing over the mows for some moments Harriet finally descended to
+the floor. Next she and Miss Elting made a survey of the yard back of
+the barn. The yard was surrounded by empty sheds and great stacks of hay
+and straw. It was evident that the owners intended to winter
+considerable stock in this remote place.
+
+"Well, what do you think of it, Harriet?" inquired Miss Elting.
+
+"Glorious! It is as clean and sweet here as in our own bedrooms at home.
+I'll tell you what I will do. I'll run back and get the girls," said
+Harriet.
+
+Miss Elting nodded acquiescence and Harriet hurried across the field,
+the teacher remaining at the barn to investigate the place further while
+Harriet went for her companions. This she did, and decided that they
+were most fortunate in finding so comfortable a place in which to spend
+the night.
+
+Half an hour later she heard them coming. Tommy's chatter sounded louder
+than the conversation of all the rest of the party. Twilight had settled
+over the interior of the barn by the time the girls came trooping in.
+
+"Br-r-r-r! This place looks spooky," cried Margery. "We aren't going to
+stay in here all night, are we, Miss Elting?"
+
+"Yes, Margery. You are not afraid of the dark, are you?"
+
+"No-o-o. But----"
+
+"There is nothing to alarm you. As we are all rather tired, I propose
+that we go upstairs and get to bed at once. I am sorry we shall not be
+able to get our baths this evening. This hotel isn't provided with bath
+tubs. By the way. There are matches in our packs, so we will leave them
+below. One of the first things a Camp Girl learns, you know, is to be
+careful of fire both indoors and out. Strap your blanket rolls over your
+shoulders. You know it is quite a climb to your bedrooms."
+
+"Up there is where we sleep," Harriet informed them. The top of the mow
+was not discernible from the barn floor now.
+
+"What! Away up there?" demanded Margery. "How do we get up?"
+
+"We shall have to climb the ladder," answered Miss Elting.
+
+Margery groaned.
+
+"I'm glad it's dark. If it were daylight I know I should fall," declared
+Hazel. "Let me go first. I don't want to stand here and think about what
+is before me. If I stop to think I'll never have the courage to climb."
+
+"Don't look down," cautioned the guardian. "There. That's fine."
+
+Hazel was going up rapidly. Margery, with many a groan, next essayed the
+climb. Harriet was directly behind her. Margery had not gone far before
+the wisdom of Harriet's action became apparent. A wail from Margery
+brought a chorus of "ohs!" from her companions.
+
+"I can't go another step," gasped Margery. "I'm going to fall. Catch me
+somebody."
+
+"Margery, keep on climbing. I'm right below you here. Go on," urged
+Harriet.
+
+"Oh, I--I can't. I'm dizzy."
+
+"Buthter ith theathick," observed Tommy from the barn floor. Harriet
+began lightly, tapping Buster with a switch that she had brought with
+her.
+
+"Oh! Ouch! Stop it! I tell you stop it!" howled Margery.
+
+"Climb!"
+
+Margery _did_ climb. She went up the ladder faster than she ever had
+climbed before, wailing and threatening every foot of the way. Tommy was
+delightedly dancing about on the barn floor during all this time,
+uttering a perfect volley of unintelligible lisps and jeering cries.
+Margery reached the top of the ladder and flung herself panting on the
+hay.
+
+"Be careful not to come too near the edge," warned Harriet, hurriedly
+clambering down. Buster made no reply. She was too much out of breath to
+say a word. "Now, let's see what _you_ can do, Tommy. See if you can do
+any better," chuckled Harriet.
+
+"You jutht thee me climb. I'll thhow you. I gueth I know how to climb.
+Buthter ith too fat to climb a ladder. Don't you hit me. I'll kick you
+if you do," was her parting admonition as she began running up the
+ladder. Rather to the amazement of her companions, Grace made the climb
+to the haymow without the least difficulty. Only once did her foot slip
+from a rung of the ladder. Grace recovered it with no more than a
+smothered little exclamation.
+
+"You next, Miss Elting," nodded Harriet.
+
+"I will wait until you get up. I wish to look after the packs first.
+What would we do were we to lose them? We shouldn't have a thing to eat
+for breakfast, and goodness knows when we will reach a store to purchase
+food."
+
+It was not long afterwards that the party of young women were fussing
+about in the hay, making their beds for the night. This consisted in
+leveling off the hay and spreading their blankets. Some little time was
+occupied in working out the uneven spots, but after a time they lay down
+with piled-up hay for pillows, and rolled themselves in their blankets.
+
+The girls went to sleep almost at once. Miss Elting, however, remained
+awake until her charges had finally settled down, as she supposed, for
+the night. She was just about to doze off when she was awakened by a
+scream and a commotion at one end of the mow. The guardian sprang up in
+alarm.
+
+"For mercy's sake! What is it?" she cried.
+
+"Oh, thave me!" wailed Tommy.
+
+Miss Elting and Harriet groped their way to Grace.
+
+"I got a bug in my ear. Yeth I did. It bit me. I won't thtay here
+another minute. I'll----"
+
+"I'll go out doors and sleep," declared Margery in disgust. "The idea of
+being kept awake all night by that crazy girl."
+
+"Margery!" rebuked the guardian. "Now, Tommy, you must lie down and go
+to sleep. This will not do at all."
+
+"I will drag my blanket over and keep her company, Miss Elting," offered
+Harriet. "Perhaps she did get bitten. I felt some sort of insect
+crawling over my face a moment ago. There now, Tommy, you just snuggle
+down and forget all about it."
+
+"I don't like bugth," complained Tommy, somewhat mollified. A few
+moments later she was sound asleep. Harriet, after making sure that
+Grace was slumbering, once more permitted herself to doze off. She had
+been asleep but a few moments when a wild scream of terror awakened them
+all. Harriet felt the blanket jerked violently from her and heard a
+floundering and threshing on all sides that filled her with alarm.
+Stretching out her hand she found that Tommy was no longer beside her.
+Tommy's voice rose in a loud wail of terror.
+
+"Oh, Tommy!" cried Harriet.
+
+"Girls, girls! What _is_ the matter?" exclaimed Miss Elting.
+
+"A mouthe, a mouthe!" shrieked Tommy.
+
+"This isn't a hay barn, it's a lunatic asylum," scoffed Margery. "Oh,
+mercy! Help, help!" she shrieked. The mouse had found Margery too. In
+the darkness of the haymow the Meadow-Brook Girls were now floundering
+about in great alarm. Out of the disorder Miss Elting quickly brought
+order. She spoke sharply to Tommy, insisted that Margery should return
+to her blanket and commanded the girls to make no further disturbance.
+
+"The idea that Meadow-Brook Girls should be so timid," she rebuked.
+"Harriet, I am glad to know that you are not."
+
+"I--I think I should have screamed too if a mouse had--how do you know it
+was a mouse, Tommy?"
+
+"It ran right over my fathe. I gueth I know what it wath. I gueth I will
+thleep thanding up. May I, Miss Elting?"
+
+"If you prefer to do so. I am going back to bed. I must insist on the
+others doing the same, or at least keeping quiet. We shall be in no
+shape to go on with our journey in the morning at this rate."
+
+Tommy decided that she, too, would lie down and soon their regular
+breathing told the guardian that most, if not all, of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were sound asleep. Harriet, however, now that she had been
+awakened, found it difficult to go to sleep again. She lay staring up
+into the darkness for some time.
+
+A sound down on the barn floor put her instantly on the alert. At first
+she thought some farm animal had wandered into the barn; then the
+distinct sound of human footsteps, reached her ears.
+
+Harriet Burrell listened intently, as yet unafraid. She crawled
+cautiously to the edge of the mow and peered over. A human form was
+faintly outlined down there. The figure was groping along the edge of
+the mow and muttering. The listener was unable to make out the words. At
+last the intruder uttered a sharp little exclamation of satisfaction,
+then began to climb the ladder on the opposite side of the barn floor.
+
+"It's a woman!" gasped Harriet. "Who can it be, and what does she want
+here?" With straining ears and closed eyes the Meadow-Brook girl
+listened. She heard the woman reach the top of the ladder and step off
+into the hay. A few moments later Harriet heard her mumbling at the far
+side of the mow, over near the opposite end of the hay barn. "How
+strange!" muttered the girl.
+
+A low, distant rumble of thunder attracted her attention in another
+direction. A moment later a faint flash of lightning dispelled the gloom
+a little.
+
+"The storm is coming. I hope the girls won't wake up." The darkness now
+seemed to be more intense than before. Harriet was unable to distinguish
+one object from another. She crawled back toward her bed and was about
+to wrap herself in her blanket again when a second time she heard
+footsteps on the barn floor. This time she scrambled back to the edge
+more hastily than before. At first she thought the woman had climbed
+down and was going away from the mow. The girl leaned far over. She
+could see no one this time, but she plainly heard some one climbing up
+the opposite ladder again. Harriet wondered if it were tramps; then she
+recalled that the first visitor, being a woman, would be unlikely to be
+a tramp.
+
+"It must be some one seeking shelter from the coming storm," Harriet
+finally decided, now wondering if it would not be advisable to wake up
+Miss Elting. Upon second thought the girl decided not to do so. Instead,
+she leaned farther out over the edge of the mow and peered down
+anxiously.
+
+A flash of lightning, more brilliant than the first, lighted up the barn
+from end to end. By the light of the flash Harriet Burrell saw that
+which set her nerves to tingling and caused her to utter a suppressed
+gasp.
+
+Below her on the barn floor stood a man. He was swarthy; his coal black
+hair hung down in long, glistening locks. His eyes, large and very black
+were gazing right up into the girl's face. She shrank back trembling.
+
+"Oh!" gasped the Meadow-Brook girl. "Oh! He saw me. Oh, what shall I
+do!"
+
+The man began climbing the ladder on her side of the barn. Harriet could
+hear him plainly. She began crawling back into the mow on her hands and
+knees. Her first inclination, on reaching her blanket, was to burrow
+under the hay so as to be out of sight. But it occurred to her that her
+companions would still be in plain sight were another flash of lightning
+to illumine the mow. Harriet promptly decided to lie still and await
+developments. She knew that Miss Elting carried a revolver, and that the
+guardian was proficient in its use. This thought gave Harriet comfort.
+Besides, what was there to fear?
+
+To add to the excitement a second man entered the barn at this juncture.
+But instead of climbing up after the other man he took the opposite
+ladder up which the woman had gone a few moments before. The man on the
+girls' side was rapidly nearing the top. Harriet lay trembling, hoping
+there would be no more lightning. Suddenly a brilliant flash lighted up
+the barn from end to end. It revealed the man clinging to the ladder,
+his head on a level with the top of the mow, glancing over it keenly,
+searchingly. Harriet's left hand stole toward Miss Elting who lay within
+easy reach. It was Harriet's intention to awaken her as quietly as
+possible as soon as the light died away. But ere her hand descended on
+Miss Elting's arm, something occurred that made this move on Harriet
+Burrell's part, unnecessary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--THE RED EYE IN THE DARK
+
+
+There was an ominous snapping sound; then the rung of the ladder gave
+way and the man fell backward to the floor.
+
+"Oh! He has fallen!" gasped Harriet, in dismay, as she scrambled hastily
+toward the edge of the mow. "He must be seriously injured."
+
+"What ith that noithe?" demanded Grace.
+
+"Sh-h-h!" warned Harriet softly.
+
+Nothing more was heard from Grace for the time being. She had dropped to
+sleep again. Fortunately none of the others had been awakened by the
+racket, but Harriet's heart was beating rapidly. She leaned over the
+edge of the mow. What the next flash of lightning revealed relieved her
+anxiety somewhat. She saw the man get up and rub his back. She saw, too,
+that he had fallen on a heap of hay, the latter undoubtedly having saved
+him from severe injury. A moment later he limped across the floor and
+began climbing up the ladder on the other side of the barn.
+
+"Thank goodness!" muttered Harriet. "I hope no more of them come in here
+to-night. I shall scream if they do. I know I shall."
+
+The man threw himself, grumbling, on the hay; silence once more settled
+over the barn so far as the occupants were concerned. The thunder was
+now growing louder, the lightning flashes became more frequent. Harriet,
+however, felt no particular alarm. She was unafraid of thunder storms,
+and gave no thought to the fact that barns are more frequently struck by
+lightning than are dwelling houses.
+
+By this time her companions had begun to stir restlessly. Miss Elting
+sat up.
+
+"Harriet, is that you?" she asked in a low tone.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What are you doing?"
+
+"Just looking about a little," replied Harriet in a whisper, not deeming
+it advisable to alarm the guardian by telling her what she had just
+discovered.
+
+"How long has it been storming?" asked the guardian.
+
+"Only a little while. I do not believe it is going to amount to
+anything. I hope this old barn doesn't leak."
+
+"No, I do not believe it will. There is too much valuable hay here. The
+owner undoubtedly has seen to it that the roof is sound. Are you going
+to try to sleep?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Harriet lay down, but she did not sleep. The memory of the old woman and
+the two men over in the other mow, banished all thought of sleep from
+her mind. She did not know whether the woman knew the men were there or
+not. Perhaps they might belong to the same party. However, there had
+been no conversation between them and while the two men were near the
+outer edge of the mow, the woman was at the far end of the barn as
+nearly as Harriet was able to determine.
+
+Soon after that, rain drops began to patter on the barn roof. Then it
+began to rain heavily. Harriet nestled deeper into the blanket and lay
+listening. There was no sound from their neighbors on the other side.
+
+At last the listening girl closed her eyes. No sooner had she done so
+than she opened them again. A flash of lightning, more brilliant than
+any she had yet seen, was playing along the rafters of the barn. The
+thunder followed the flash just as Harriet threw an arm over her eyes to
+shut out the light. It was not a particularly heavy clap of thunder,
+just a quick, sharp report. Above the report a shrill scream of terror
+rang out. Then all was silent.
+
+Instantly every one of the Meadow-Brook Girls sat up wide awake.
+
+"What--what is it?" cried Margery.
+
+"Girls! Girls! are you all right?" called the guardian.
+
+"Oh, what ith it? Did the barn fall down?" wailed Tommy in great alarm.
+
+"What has happened?" questioned Hazel Holland excitedly.
+
+Harriet did not speak. She was listening to what the others of her party
+had not noticed, a sudden sound of voices in the other mow, and the
+hasty clambering down the ladder of the two men she had seen go to the
+opposite mow. At least she believed it to be the two men. Evidently they
+had become alarmed, either by the lightning, the scream of the woman, or
+by the cries of the Meadow-Brook Girls. They ran out of the barn, making
+no attempt to go quietly. Once on the outside she heard one of them
+shout.
+
+"I heard thome one!" exclaimed Tommy.
+
+"So did I," agreed Hazel.
+
+"I thought I, too, heard some one cry out," said Miss Elting. "Perhaps
+it was a night bird fleeing from the storm."
+
+"It was no night bird, Miss Elting," said Harriet in a low tone. "Did
+you hear that scream? Some one is in trouble. There is a woman on the
+other side of the mow. What shall we do?"
+
+"A woman?"
+
+"Yes, yes. She climbed up to the mow a long time ago. Oh, look, look!"
+
+A tiny red eye had suddenly appeared at the far end of the hay barn. It
+appeared to have risen out of the hay at the extreme end of the opposite
+mow. The girls gazed at it in silence. They did not understand the
+meaning of the strange dull red spot. Even Harriet was for the moment,
+puzzled. Then all at once she understood.
+
+"Quick! Get down to the floor! Don't waste a minute! Miss Elting please
+look after the girls. There's a rung on the ladder broken. Watch that no
+one falls. I'm going."
+
+"Harriet! Harriet! What do you mean?"
+
+"The woman! I must get her. I may want you to help me. If I call you,
+come at once. Oh, I must hurry, Miss Elting."
+
+"Thee! That red eye ith getting bigger," cried Tommy.
+
+"It is fire, Miss Elting," whispered Harriet. "The barn is on fire. The
+last bolt of lightning must have set fire to the hay. Don't tell the
+girls now, but get them down to the barn floor as quickly as possible.
+There is going to be an awful fire."
+
+Harriet bounded toward the ladder.
+
+"Harriet! Don't go. I will go," shouted the guardian.
+
+"I know where she is," cried Harriet, swinging herself to the ladder
+using care not to lose her footing on the broken rung.
+
+"The broken rung is the fifth one down," she called. Grasping the sides
+of the ladder she permitted herself to slide all the way to the bottom,
+wholly unconscious of the fact that the skin was being scraped from the
+palms of her hands.
+
+Reaching the barn floor the girl dashed across it to the opposite side.
+A few precious seconds were lost in groping for the ladder there. She
+found it, ran up with the speed of a squirrel, then went stumbling and
+falling across the mow toward the red eye that was now growing into a
+great red glare.
+
+"Where are you?" she cried, raising her voice to a high pitch.
+
+There was no response from her side. From the other mow came the answer
+from Margery, who did not understand: "We're here."
+
+The red eye was now lighting up the far end of the mow so that Harriet
+was able to see much more clearly. Little piles of hay formed deceiving
+shadows. She ran first to one, then to another, in this way losing
+precious seconds.
+
+All at once the girl caught sight of a dark object lying on the hay. She
+ran toward it. It was the huddled form of an old woman, her eyes wide
+and staring. Harriet feared she was dead. The fire had already crept
+perilously near to the woman. The flames at one point had communicated
+with the roof and were eating their way through it. The girls on the
+other mow now realized that the barn was on fire. A chorus of wails
+reached Harriet. But she knew her companions were in good hands, that
+Miss Elting would get them out safely.
+
+Harriet grasped the old woman under the arms and began dragging her
+toward the edge of the mow.
+
+"I've got her!" she screamed. "Come and help me as soon as you can, Miss
+Elting. Get the girls down and make them go outside. You will have to
+hurry. The roof may fall in. Make a rope of the blankets. We shall have
+to lower her to the ground. She is helpless."
+
+"I'll be with you in a moment," called the calm, confident voice of the
+guardian. Miss Elting was always to be depended upon in an emergency.
+She had gotten the other girls safely down before Harriet had called out
+to her, thinking that Harriet might need her undivided assistance in
+rescuing the woman from her perilous position.
+
+"Outdoors, girls, every one of you," she commanded. "Don't you dare come
+near the barn! Harriet is rescuing some one from the other mow. I am
+going to help her. Leave the blankets, but take the packs with you." She
+gave the protesting Tommy a push toward the door. Hazel grasped Grace by
+the arm and hurried her out of the barn. Margery needed no assistance.
+She was in as great a hurry to leave the barn as Miss Elting was to have
+her do so.
+
+The guardian climbed the ladder as rapidly as possible, after having
+knotted the five blankets into a kind of rope. She tested each knot with
+her full strength; then being satisfied that the rope would stand a
+heavy strain, she began climbing the ladder holding one end of the
+blanket rope. At the top of the ladder the heat was suffocating, the
+smoke blinding. Harriet was coughing and choking. She was on the verge
+of collapse, having inhaled a great deal of smoke.
+
+"Will--will it reach?" Miss Elting gasped.
+
+"I think so."
+
+"Ti--ie it under her arms. Go below to catch her if she falls. I'll let
+her down," promised Harriet.
+
+"Get down yourself as fast as you can," commanded the guardian.
+
+Harriet did not move. She buried her head in her skirt and crouched down
+close to the edge of the mow in an effort to get some fresh air, but
+without very great success.
+
+"Now go, please," urged Harriet. "You are strong enough to catch her if
+the rope breaks. I'm not. I know how to handle it at this end. Hurry,
+Miss Elting. We haven't a second to lose."
+
+Miss Elting hesitated, glanced quickly at her companion, then started
+down the ladder. Harriet took a quick turn of the rope about a beam.
+Without the least hesitation, she slid the unconscious woman over the
+edge of the mow feet first. The girl prayed fervently that the rope
+might hold. It did. Little by little, though as rapidly as she dared,
+the girl lowered her burden. Sparks were flying all about her. She stood
+enveloped in a cloud of smoke, but not for an instant did the girl give
+thought to her own perilous position.
+
+"I've got her," screamed Miss Elting. "Come down. Be quick, oh do be
+quick."
+
+Harriet's fingers released the rope. She staggered toward the ladder
+groping blindly for it. Reaching it she sank down choking.
+
+"Can you make it?" called the guardian.
+
+"Yes," was the faint reply. "Get--get her out."
+
+Miss Elting seeing that Harriet was coming down the ladder, hastily
+dragged the unconscious woman out into the open air. The way seemed
+endless to the descending girl. About half way down her fingers relaxed.
+Harriet fell, landing heavily in a heap on the barn floor. She lay where
+she had fallen, with the flames crackling overhead as they leaped across
+the intervening space and began devouring the mow on the opposite side.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--A BLESSING AND A THREAT
+
+
+From end to end of the great hay barn the roof was now wrapped in
+flames. Now the stacks at the rear began blazing. The entire building
+was doomed to destruction. In the meantime, Miss Elting, having dragged
+the woman to a point of safety, was working to revive her. So engrossed
+was she that, for the moment, all thought of Harriet Burrell escaped her
+until she was reminded of Harriet by Tommy.
+
+"Where ith Harriet?" piped Tommy.
+
+"Harriet? Oh!" gasped the guardian.
+
+Tommy understood without further explanation and darted toward the barn,
+with Miss Elting running after her to bring her back. But there was no
+stopping Tommy when once she had started to carry out a resolve. She ran
+to the barn on winged feet and plunged into the dense cloud of smoke
+that issued from the burning barn. The little girl had no idea what she
+would do when she got there, and perhaps she might have been injured
+before Miss Elting reached her, had Tommy not fallen accidently over
+Harriet. The latter was unconscious from the smoke she had inhaled.
+Tommy grabbed her by the arms and began dragging her out. The little
+girl had gotten to the door with her burden as Miss Elting reached the
+scene.
+
+"Brave Tommy!" cried the guardian. "You shall have a whole string of
+Camp Girls' beads for this. Let Harriet lie where she is for the
+present. Place her on her back so the rain may beat in her face. She
+will be all right in a few moments."
+
+Miss Elting did not know that Harriet had fallen, and that it was not
+only the smoke but the shock of the fall as well that had overcome her.
+
+"But, thuppothe the barn fallth down!" exclaimed Tommy.
+
+"Yes, you are right. We must get her farther away." Together they
+carried Harriet out to the place where the old woman lay. When they
+reached there the old woman was sitting up looking about her in a dazed
+manner. Shouts and cries off toward the highway told the little company
+that men were hastening to the scene of the fire.
+
+Harriet became conscious in a short time, but she had frequent coughing
+spells for some minutes.
+
+"That ith right. Cough up all the thmoke," suggested Tommy wisely.
+"You'll feel better after you get the thmoke out of your thythtem. I
+know, for I thwallowed a lot of thmoke once."
+
+The men ran past the party of women, shouting and gesticulating. There
+were a dozen of them. Others could be heard approaching the scene of the
+fire. Harriet, as soon as she was able to talk, and the coughing spells
+became less frequent, went over to the woman she had rescued. The
+swarthy complexion, straight black hair, and piercing black eyes of the
+woman were the same characteristics that Harriet had observed in the man
+who had fallen from the ladder.
+
+"Do you feel better?" questioned Harriet, smiling a little.
+
+The old woman nodded, her eyes never leaving the face of her questioner
+for an instant.
+
+"You have this young woman to thank for being alive," Miss Elting
+informed the old woman, stepping up to her and nodding toward Harriet.
+
+"You saved me, eh?" questioned the stranger, looking searchingly at the
+girl.
+
+Harriet did not reply, but Miss Elting answered for her.
+
+"You saved Sybarina from fire from the skies?" insisted the woman.
+
+"She means the lightning," suggested Hazel.
+
+"Yes, she did," repeated Miss Elting. "She climbed the ladder to the hay
+loft and let you down with blankets tied together. Our blankets are
+there yet."
+
+"Oh, I forgot them," cried Harriet. "How thoughtless of me! Now we shall
+have nothing to sleep in."
+
+"Never mind the blankets. We have others in the car."
+
+"You saved Sybarina?" repeated the old woman, staggering to her feet.
+She had been temporarily paralyzed from the electric bolt, and was as
+yet barely able to stand on her feet.
+
+"Please don't mention it," urged Harriet, flushing.
+
+The old woman seized Harriet's hand and gazed deeply into it by the
+light of the burning barn. As she gazed she swayed her body from side to
+side with quick, nervous movements.
+
+"Ah! Sybarina sees that which pleases her," crooned the old woman. "She
+sees a noble girl whom the fires from the skies cannot frighten. And she
+sees more. She sees wealth and happiness and a great future for her who
+fears not the fire from above. Sybarina gives you her blessing."
+
+A heavy hand was laid on the old woman's shoulder.
+
+"Here, you Gipsy woman. Were you sleeping in that barn?" demanded a
+gruff voice.
+
+"I met two Gipsy men running across the fields to the west as I came
+down," answered another male voice. "The Gipsies are camped about a mile
+and a half from here. I think we ought to arrest the old woman, don't
+you, Squire?"
+
+"Sybarina was asleep in the barn," admitted the Gipsy woman.
+
+"And you set the barn on fire, too," declared the squire. "I'll have to
+arrest you."
+
+"She didn't set the barn on fire, sir," defended Harriet Burrell.
+
+"The fires from the skies made the barn burn," announced the Gipsy
+woman.
+
+"Who are you?" demanded the man, turning sharply to Harriet. "I suppose
+you will tell me _you_ weren't sleeping in my barn?"
+
+"On the contrary, we were," interjected Miss Elting.
+
+"Then I arrest the whole parcel of you."
+
+"Thave me!" wailed Tommy Thompson. "We didn't thet your old barn on
+fire. We were jutht thleeping there, that wath all."
+
+"You will all stay here till I get through with this fire; then I'll
+hold court on you and if you don't answer to suit me I'll have you all
+over to the county seat to-morrow."
+
+"No one set your barn on fire, sir," declared Harriet, with emphasis.
+"The barn was struck by lightning."
+
+"Did you see it?"
+
+"I can't say that I saw the lightning strike, but I saw the flash, then
+saw the fire start up directly afterwards. I heard this woman scream and
+we hurried to her rescue. She was unconscious. The bolt had nearly
+killed her. That proves that it was lightning, not matches, that set
+your barn on fire."
+
+"What were you doing in my barn?"
+
+"Thleeping with the mithe and the bugth," volunteered Tommy.
+
+"Who be you? You ain't Gipsies?"
+
+"No. We are from Meadow-Brook, and we are walking home from the Pocono
+Woods, where we have been spending the summer in camp," Miss Elting
+informed the man.
+
+"So, that's it, hey?"
+
+"Yes, sir. A young woman friend of ours usually meets us at night. She
+has our equipment in her automobile, but we took the wrong trail to-day,
+and have lost her. She is over in the other valley waiting for us, I
+think."
+
+"Is she a crazy woman with light hair that streams over her shoulders,
+and does she drive her car as though she was running a race?"
+
+"From your description I think you must have met Miss McCarthy,"
+answered the guardian, smiling a little. "Have you seen her to-day?"
+
+"I should say I had. She nigh killed a calf of mine this afternoon. I'd
+just like to get my grip on her once. I'd make her answer to the law."
+
+"Was your calf in the road, sir?" questioned Harriet.
+
+"Yes. What of it?"
+
+"I don't believe the law would do anything to Miss McCarthy in that
+case. Of course I am sorry for the calf," said Harriet.
+
+"Oh, the calf ain't hurt. Jest lost a little hair off her tail, shaved
+off as close as ye could do it with a razor. But that don't matter. It's
+the barn and nigh onto a hundred tons of hay gone up in smoke that
+bothers me. I wisht I was sure you was telling the truth. If I thought
+you weren't I'd have you all in the lock-up afore morning."
+
+"Are--are there any mithe in the lock-up?" questioned Tommy
+apprehensively.
+
+"Eh? Stacks all gone, too?" This in answer to a word from a farmer who
+came from the rear of the burning barn. "Well, let 'em go. There'll be
+another crop of hay next year. Mebby the price'll be better then."
+
+The loss of his barn did not appear to trouble the "Squire" greatly. All
+the time he was talking he was regarding the women out of the corners of
+his eyes. He saw that they were drenched through and through. Tommy and
+Margery were shivering. He decided that they were persons of some
+consequence, even if they had been sleeping in his barn. His reflections
+were interrupted by Miss Elting.
+
+"Can you tell me which way the young woman and the car went?"
+
+"Can I? I guess I can. She went east. The calf could tell ye, too, if
+she could talk, but she wouldn't say it quite so easy like as I'm
+tellin' you now."
+
+"Jane was looking for us," nodded Miss Elting. "She must have reasoned
+that we had gotten into this valley by mistake."
+
+"Where you going to stay the rest of the night?" questioned the squire
+gruffly.
+
+"I am afraid we shall have to stay out in the rain if we don't succeed
+in finding another barn," laughed the guardian. "My girls are pretty
+well used to roughing it, though they never before passed quite such a
+night as this has been. Do you know of a farm house nearby where we may
+get lodgings? We are perfectly willing to sleep on the floor in the
+kitchen, provided we can have the room to dry out our clothes, and we
+shall be glad and willing to pay for the trouble."
+
+"You may come home with me," answered the man, after a brief hesitation.
+
+"What is your name, sir?" questioned Miss Elting.
+
+"Squire Olney, Miss. You see I ain't a squire by appointment. The
+neighbors jest call me that because I settle their difficulties. I've
+got more land in this township than all the rest of them put together.
+That's why I ain't takin' the burnin' of the barn to heart so much as
+you think I ought to," he added, with a broad smile.
+
+"Have you a family at home?" questioned Miss Elting.
+
+"My wife and I are alone. Children all married."
+
+"How far is it from here to your home, sir?"
+
+"About a mile right over the hill. What do you say?"
+
+"We will go with you. We thank you for your kindness. I am very sorry,
+indeed, that you have lost your barn and your hay," said the guardian in
+a sympathetic tone.
+
+The squire leaned toward her.
+
+"I ain't lost anything," he said, with a wink. "Insured. Insured plumb
+up to the muzzle, and then some more. Boys, I'm going home to show the
+ladies the way. You can have all the hay that's left. I want the ashes
+for fertilizer. Ashes is good for the cut worms in the cabbage patch.
+Come on, ladies."
+
+Squire Olney nodded to them and started away. He halted sharply.
+
+"Where's that old Gipsy woman? She ain't included in the invitation."
+
+"Why, she has gone," exclaimed Hazel. "I didn't see her go. Did you,
+Harriet?"
+
+Harriet Burrell shook her head. She was puzzled at the mysterious
+disappearance of Sybarina, who had given her rescuer her blessing, then
+so strangely slipped away.
+
+The walk over the hill did not add to the comfort of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls. They splashed through deep puddles of water in the little
+hollows, slipped and stumbled over bare clay spots, fell over stones and
+roots until they were not only soaked to the skin, but badly bruised as
+well. Margery wailed and groaned all the way. Tommy made fun of her
+until they came in sight of the lights in the farm house.
+
+"That's the old shack that has covered us for nigh onto fifty years," he
+said, nodding toward the light in the window.
+
+The light and the comfortable looking old farm house made the
+Meadow-Brook Girls almost forget their sodden condition. Mrs. Olney was
+standing on the front porch, gazing down across the field. She
+recognized the squire's voice, but she was at a loss to understand who
+his companions were.
+
+"Hello, Martha," he sang out, as he crossed the road with his party.
+
+"That you, Squire?"
+
+"Yep. Me and the girls. Barn all burned down, but I've brought the
+leavings. Me and the girls is all right, Martha. But they're wetter than
+Old Sixty. Poke up the kitchen fire and let them dry their clothing."
+
+Miss Elting stepped forward and shook hands with Mrs. Olney, briefly
+explaining how they came to be there at that time of the night.
+
+"Female tramps. Got fired from sleepin' in the squire's hay barn,"
+chuckled the old man.
+
+Mrs. Olney led the way into the house, where she turned and surveyed her
+callers critically.
+
+"Why, you poor things!" she cried, when she had gotten a good look at
+the Meadow-Brook Girls. "And you sleepin' in the barn. It's a shame,"
+she exclaimed, bustling about. "Squire, you tend to that fire yerself.
+I'll git out some dry clothing for these girls. Then I'll see about
+making some coffee and getting them something to eat. Come into my
+bedroom, my dears and change your wet clothes."
+
+"I am afraid that we are putting you to a great deal of trouble,"
+demurred Miss Elting.
+
+"Not a bit of it," rejoined Mrs. Olney. "Come right along with me."
+
+Half an hour later, Miss Elting and the Meadow-Brook Girls clothed in
+dressing gowns and wrappers belonging to the hospitable Mrs. Olney sat
+in the big farm house kitchen doing full justice to the luncheon
+provided by the farmer's wife. After their exciting experiences of the
+night the girls were tired enough to gladly welcome the opportunity of
+sleeping in a real bed, and in spite of their late repast the five
+wayworn travelers slept peacefully, unvisited by nightmares.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--THE COMING OF CRAZY JANE
+
+
+After bidding good-bye to the hospitable squire and his good wife, next
+morning, the girls started over the fields on their way down the valley
+on the other side of the ridge. Before leaving they had pressed their
+camp dresses and the girls now looked very neat in their dark blue
+uniforms that they had worn at Camp Wau-Wau. They wore also the official
+hat of the Camp Girls, to which organization they belonged. The hat was
+of blue cloth with the letters "C. G." in white embroidered on the
+front.
+
+About their necks the girls wore a few brightly colored beads which to
+them meant more than precious stones, for each girl had won her beads by
+achievements as a Camp Girl. They hoped to win more on the long tramp
+across country. Harriet and Tommy had won several beads apiece, already,
+by their bravery at the barn fire, though of course the beads had not
+been awarded as yet. That would not be until after Miss Elting had made
+her report to the Chief Guardian at the completion of the trip.
+
+The girls were now well on their way hoping soon to find Jane McCarthy
+and her car awaiting them. It was a five mile tramp over rough and steep
+hills, through woods and ravines. By this time however the Meadow-Brook
+Girls were becoming accustomed to rough traveling. The only one who made
+any really serious complaints was Margery Brown. She was usually in
+distress, but it was observed that the stout girl was beginning to lose
+considerable flesh. Her freckles were more pronounced, however, and her
+face was redder than it ever had been before.
+
+The party, after a trying hike, reached the top of the range of hills
+about eleven o'clock in the morning. A long, sloping meadow stretched
+away from them until it met the highway.
+
+"There is the road," cried Harriet.
+
+"But Crazy Jane ith nowhere in thight," observed Tommy solemnly.
+
+"This is where we should have been last night," nodded Miss Elting. "But
+we should have missed all of our exciting experiences of last night had
+we taken the right trail."
+
+"Missed them!" exclaimed Margery. "I wish we had. I never shall get over
+thinking about that awful fire and that horrid old Gipsy woman."
+
+Harriet smiled to herself thinking that it was well that Margery had not
+seen the dark-faced men enter the barn that night.
+
+"Shall we wait, or go on?" questioned Harriet.
+
+Miss Elting decided that they should go on after reaching the highway.
+She told the girls to keep a sharp lookout for "signs." The sign of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls was a triangle. It might be found chalked on a fence
+or elsewhere by the roadside. An arrow pointing away from the triangle
+indicated the direction in which a Meadow-Brook girl had traveled. An
+arrow pointing straight up indicated, "I will return." An arrow pointing
+toward the ground meant, "wait here." A broken arrow, pointing in any
+direction indicated, "danger."
+
+Reaching the highway the girls scanned the fences. Most of these being
+wire fences there was no space for any of the signs that they had agreed
+upon before starting out on their tramp. Occasionally they halted to
+examine a sign board at the junction of two or more roads, but nowhere
+did they find any trace of Jane and her car. There were not even tire
+tracks in the road. The pedestrians had almost made up their minds that
+Crazy Jane herself had missed her way when Harriet suddenly held up her
+hand.
+
+"I hear the honk of a motor horn," she said.
+
+"And there's the sign on that hog pen," laughed Miss Elting, pointing to
+a pig sty close to where they were standing. "That's just like Jane. The
+arrow says we are to wait here."
+
+"A pig pen ith thertainly a nithe plathe to wait," observed Tommy
+sarcastically.
+
+"We don't have to wait in the pen, you goose," jeered Margery.
+
+"Tho I thee," answered Tommy imperturbably.
+
+"There she comes!" shouted Hazel.
+
+Crazy Jane McCarthy, her blonde hair streaming over her shoulders,
+rounded a bend in the road, the rear wheels of her car skidding nearly
+to the ditch on the outside of the curve. Jane was shouting and waving
+one hand. She brought the car up sliding and leaped to the ground.
+
+"You dears! Where have you been?" she cried, embracing each of the girls
+in turn, not forgetting Miss Elting.
+
+"The question, is where have you been?" laughed the guardian.
+
+"Racing up and down the road looking for you," returned Jane.
+
+"Where did you sleep?" questioned Harriet.
+
+"At a farm house over in the valley," chuckled Jane. "Where did you
+sleep?"
+
+"We were in a barn part of the night. Regular tramps, aren't we,"
+answered Harriet, her eyes sparkling.
+
+"Yeth, and--and the barn burned down," explained Grace.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Grace is right," Miss Elting informed Jane. "Lightning struck the barn,
+burning it to the ground. Harriet saved an old Gipsy woman from being
+burned to death. She had been stunned by the bolt of lightning and for
+the time being was paralyzed."
+
+"Oh, what a shame!" exclaimed Jane. "I always have to be absent when the
+fun is going on. Think of poor me tearing up and down the road, half
+crazy because I'd lost you and you having so much fun all the time," she
+complained. "Who was the woman you saved, darlin'?" she questioned,
+turning admiring eyes on Harriet Burrell.
+
+"A Gipsy. She called herself Sybarina," answered Harriet.
+
+"And did the Gipsy tell your fortune, Harriet?"
+
+"Yes, she did," cried Margery. "She said Harriet was going to be a great
+lady, rich and some other things that I didn't understand. Then Sybarina
+gave Harriet her blessing."
+
+"Now, Jane," said Harriet mischievously. "Tell us about the way you ran
+down the farmer's calf."
+
+Jane gazed at Harriet frowningly, then burst into laughter.
+
+"What do you know about that? Who has been telling tales?"
+
+"The farmer said you shaved the hair off the calf's tail with your car."
+
+"I was sorry for the calf, but you ought to have seen the farmer wave
+his arms and run after me. He was fairly pulling the hair out of his
+head with rage," chuckled Crazy Jane. "Well, dears, what have you in
+mind? Want to take a nice ride in the car?"
+
+Harriet shook her head with emphasis.
+
+"When we started on this tramp we agreed that we wouldn't ride in your
+car at all. I, for one, am going to keep to that agreement."
+
+"Don't tempt me," said Hazel, chancing to catch the merry eye of Jane
+McCarthy.
+
+"We didn't agree not to eat in the car, did we?" questioned Tommy. "That
+latht gully I fell into gave me an awful appetite."
+
+"Wait! I'll set the table," cried Jane, dashing to the car and unlocking
+the luggage trunk at the rear. From under the rear seat she took a
+board, which she laid across the rear compartment. Over this she spread
+a white cloth and on it began placing a cold luncheon that was
+sufficiently appetizing in looks to excite the poorest appetite. Tommy
+eyed it longingly.
+
+"Get in, girls," commanded Jane. They made a rush for the car. "I have a
+can of milk in the locker, if the jolting of this old wagon hasn't
+soured it. You see, I drove rather fast this morning. I wanted to find
+you. I didn't know what had become of you. Yes; the milk is all right."
+
+There in Jane's car by the side of the road they ate their luncheon,
+giving no heed to the curious glances of passers-by.
+
+"Did the farmer really tell you about that calf?" questioned Jane, when
+the girls had nearly finished their meal.
+
+"Yes. It was in his barn we slept until it caught fire," explained the
+guardian. "He then took us to his home and he and his wife were
+perfectly lovely to us. I wish you had been with us. He is a quaint
+character."
+
+"If he is anything like his calf, he must be," observed Crazy Jane. "It
+didn't know enough to get out of the road when it saw an automobile
+coming at forty-five miles an hour. Where are you going from here?"
+
+"We must consult the map. Are there any good camping places beyond here,
+or were you going so fast you couldn't see?"
+
+"I never drive so fast that I can't see," reproved Jane. "Yes. I know of
+a place, and it's a fine place for a camp too. It's called the Willow
+Ponds. It is just far enough back from the road, and there isn't a house
+in sight."
+
+"How far is it from here?" asked Hazel.
+
+"Five miles."
+
+"Five mileth!" repeated Tommy wearily.
+
+"Oh, help!" wailed Margery. "My feet won't hold out."
+
+"Then ride with me," suggested Jane.
+
+"Thank you," returned Margery, "but I consider walking the lesser of the
+two evils."
+
+"I fear it will make too short a hike for us, for one day," reflected
+Miss Elting.
+
+"It will make a ten mile hike," answered Harriet.
+
+"Yes. But only five miles of walking on the main trail. We shall have
+advanced only five miles. However, perhaps it will be enough for one
+day."
+
+"That latht gully I fell into gave me an awful appetite," reiterated
+Tommy apologetically, as she helped herself to another slice of cold
+roast beef.
+
+"Tommy's appetite doesn't need that kind of stimulant," laughed Hazel.
+"Nor does mine. I think I shall have to have another slice of roast
+beef."
+
+The luncheon ended, the girls reclined on the soft cushions of the car
+for half an hour, after which Harriet and Jane put away the dishes and
+the rest of the food.
+
+"Are we ready to hike?" asked Harriet.
+
+Margery's face took on a pained expression.
+
+"Oh, I suppose so," she complained. "The sooner we start the sooner we
+shall get there. Then a long night's rest in our own tent. Oh, joy, oh,
+joy!"
+
+"It may not be so very joyous, after all," retorted Miss Elting. "In
+this topsy-turvy bit of country _anything_ may happen, at _any_ moment,
+to keep us awake, or even to banish the wish for sleep."
+
+"What we need," said Tommy soberly, "ith a nithe, good-natured dog that
+will bite folkth."
+
+Miss Elting decided that it was time to start. So shouldering their
+packs the girls moved on.
+
+"I'll be driving behind you," said Crazy Jane. "I'll be pace-maker. If
+you lag I'll remonstrate by riding over you! How will you like that?"
+
+Miss Elting and Harriet set a good stride. The other girls straggled
+after them, Margery being last of all. Behind them all Jane drove the
+car slowly, the engine making no noise.
+
+"We must walk faster, girls!" cried Miss Elting, looking back. "You,
+especially, Margery. Faster!"
+
+"I couldn't move any faster," protested Margery wearily "even if I were
+paid for it."
+
+Honk! Honk! Honk! sounded an automobile horn behind her. There was a
+whirr of fast-moving wheels.
+
+HONK!
+
+Turning, Margery saw the car bearing down upon her at full speed.
+
+"O-o-o-h!" screamed Margery. Picking up her skirts a trifle she fled
+down the road, while Jane stopped the car just behind her.
+
+"I'm sorry you can't move fast!" Jane called, teasingly.
+
+Twice after that Crazy Jane forced Margery to quicken her lagging steps
+until at length poor Margery stepped aside, out of the road.
+
+"Not another step for me, Jane McCarthy, unless you keep ahead of the
+whole party," declared the persecuted Camp Girl.
+
+"Get in and ride," teased Jane.
+
+"I--I believe I will," faltered Margery, who was limping now.
+
+"Margery!" exclaimed Harriet rebukingly, "if you ride, then you will
+have to drop out of the hike, and we'll send you home."
+
+"I--I think I'll keep on walking," Margery decided meekly.
+
+The rest of the journey was accomplished without further complaints from
+either Tommy or Margery. Arriving at a place where they left the road
+and set off across a field, Jane explained that earlier in the day she
+had asked the permission of the owner of the field to camp there. She
+thought it would make an excellent camp site, the ponds being screened
+from the road by a heavy growth of willows, and there was plenty of dry
+wood to be had from the ruins of an old saw mill that stood near the
+ponds. The willows, also, would serve to hide the camp from the gaze of
+curious outsiders, a condition to be desired by young women tramping
+through the country.
+
+The car was driven in among the willows, after which Harriet and Miss
+Elting began hauling the sections of their tent from the rear of the
+car. They went at the pitching of the tent like veterans, and placed the
+sections together, then raised the canvas, staking it down with the
+expertness of circusmen.
+
+Harriet left the final staking-down to Tommy and Margery while she
+gathered the wood for the campfire. Jane and Miss Elting, in the
+meantime had begun getting out the supplies for supper. Two folding
+tables were set up in the tent, covered by fresh table cloths, on which
+were placed the dishes and the silver knives, forks and spoons that Jane
+had brought along. She said silver was none too good for the
+Meadow-Brook Girls. The water in the pond, being from nearby springs,
+was cool and refreshing. The girls decided to take a swim late in the
+evening after their suppers had been well digested.
+
+It was a merry party of happy, brown-faced girls that sat down to the
+evening meal with the cheerful campfire blazing just outside, and the
+cool, fragrant autumn breezes drifting through the tent. Everything was
+charmingly peaceful, but the peace of the night was to be rudely
+disturbed later in the evening, and the girls were to have another
+exciting time of it ere they finally got to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V--CATCHING THE SPECKLED BEAUTIES
+
+
+"Oh, girls, let's stay here the rest of the fall. Let's not walk any
+more," begged Margery.
+
+"Oh, thee the fithh jump!" cried Tommy, pointing to the pond.
+
+"Trout, too. If I only had a rod and line!" exclaimed Harriet.
+
+"You shall have them, darlin'," answered Jane. "If you want anything you
+don't see, just ask for it. You'll find the whole fisherman's outfit
+strapped under the car--under the left mudguard. What about bait?"
+
+"I think the trout will take flies. That is what they are jumping for,"
+replied Harriet. "Where will I find the flies?"
+
+"In the box under the rear seat."
+
+"Thay, Harriet!" piped Tommy.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Catch me an oythter for breakfatht."
+
+Harriet paused from jointing Jane's rod long enough to join in the
+merriment at Tommy's expense.
+
+"Have you a dusty miller, Jane?" she asked, glancing up with flushed
+face.
+
+"I don't know whether or not he's dusty, but there's an insect in there
+that they call a miller. Dad says it's a killer. I never saw it show its
+teeth. It's my opinion that it would be a fool fish that would bite a
+thing like that."
+
+"You wait and see," chuckled Harriet, fixing the leader of the fly to
+the silk line, then balancing the rod by its butt, swinging the line
+this way and that through the air to see how the reel worked.
+
+"It will be too late by the time you get ready to fish," reminded Miss
+Elting.
+
+"It isn't sunset yet, Miss Elting. There should be good fishing for half
+an hour yet."
+
+"Well, are you going to fish, or are you going to talk all the time
+during that half hour?" demanded Margery.
+
+For answer Harriet swung the pole above her head. With a swish the dusty
+miller described a long curve in the air, then dived for the water,
+which it took with the faintest possible disturbance.
+
+There followed a swish and a splash. The rod bent until it seemed to the
+spectators as though it would break under the strain. A flashing,
+scintillating body jumped through the air, then plunged down deep into
+the clear waters of the pond.
+
+"A fithh! A fithh!" screamed Tommy. "Harriet hath got a fithh. Oh,
+goodie, goodie, goodie!"
+
+"Pull him in. You'll lose him!" shouted Margery.
+
+"Now will you look at our Harriet?" cried Crazy Jane, hugging herself
+gleefully, swaying her body from side to side in the ecstasy of her
+delight.
+
+The trout that Harriet Burrell had hooked was a lively fish. It was
+darting and diving with wonderful strength and quickness. The line cut
+the water with a swish, swish, swish that was plainly heard by all.
+
+"Get it, Harriet! Oh, do get it," begged Hazel, in an agony of
+apprehension lest the trout succeed in freeing itself.
+
+"The real fun of catching a fish is 'playing' it, just as Harriet is
+doing," answered Miss Elting.
+
+Tommy had run out on one of the beams of the old mill race, where she
+was dancing up and down at the imminent risk of a ducking.
+
+"Now, look out, girls," warned Harriet. "I'm going to try to land him."
+There was a lively scurrying on the part of the girls. The trout came up
+protesting and fighting every inch of the way. Then Harriet, having
+reeled in the line, pulled the trout in toward the bank.
+
+Unfortunately for Harriet, but fortunately for the fish, Tommy Thompson
+was in the way. The trout slapped her squarely in the face ere Harriet
+had discovered her companion's location. There was a shrill scream from
+Tommy, a light splash as the trout dropped into the pond, then a mighty
+splash as Tommy, losing her balance, went sprawling into the cold water.
+
+"Oh, I have lost my fish!" wailed Harriet.
+
+"Catch Tommy!" yelled Margery.
+
+Harriet threw down her rod and ran out on the beam where Tommy had been
+standing before the disaster. Tommy was splashing and coughing, making
+frantic efforts to reach shore. Harriet knew the little blonde girl
+could swim, else she would have gone in after her. But Tommy wished to
+attract all the sympathy and attention of her companions in her
+direction, so she kept up a continuous screaming. Harriet reached down
+and gave her a hand.
+
+"How's the water, Tommy?" questioned Harriet, mischievously.
+
+"Co-o-o-old," chattered Tommy. "I'm fr-r-r-r-eezing. What did you knock
+me in for?"
+
+"Why, I didn't realize that you were standing there. Why did you make me
+lose my fish?"
+
+"There, there, girls! Tommy go into the tent at once and take off your
+wet clothing. Put on dry clothes unless you wish to go to bed now."
+
+"I don't want to go to bed, I want to watch Harriet catch fithh."
+
+"Oh, you've scared them all out of the pond," complained Margery.
+
+"I hope you fall in, too, Buthter," was Tommy's parting salute, as she
+ran shivering to the tent. Fifteen minutes later, she emerged clad in
+dry clothing and apparently none the worse for her recent wetting.
+
+In the meantime Harriet had returned to her fishing, laughing softly
+over her companion's mishap and their argument following the plunge.
+There were screams of delight when finally she landed a trout. Nor did
+she stop until the sun dipped behind the western hills and the speckled
+beauties went down into the depths of the stream, or skulked under the
+edge of its banks for the night. The result of the fishing was a dozen
+fine trout, the smallest weighing only a little under a half pound and
+the largest weighing nearly two pounds, according to the guardian's
+estimate.
+
+Harriet insisted on dressing the fish that night, something she knew
+better how to do than did any of her companions. The fish were then put
+in a pail, the cover tightly fitted and the pail hung in the old mill
+race, where the cold water would flow over the receptacle all night
+long.
+
+"There," exclaimed Harriet after her work was finished. "We shall have a
+breakfast fit for a king. Now I'm going in bathing. I am so covered with
+dust and grime that I'm ashamed of myself. Come, girls, aren't you going
+in with me?"
+
+"What! Go into that ice cold water?" demanded Margery. "No, thank you.
+I'll heat some water and take my bath in the tent."
+
+"I will go in with you, Harriet," offered Hazel.
+
+"So will I," added the guardian. "Come, let's get ready before the air
+gets colder. Tommy already has had her bath."
+
+Had they not been inured to cold water and exposure, the experiment
+might have been followed by severe colds if nothing worse. But the
+Meadow-Brook Girls were well seasoned from living out of doors for the
+greater part of the summer and from bathing in the cold stream at Camp
+Wau-Wau. The first plunge into the pond brought gasps and shivers, then
+they splashed about in the water, swimming across the pond and back,
+again and again, while Margery stood on the bank shivering out of pure
+sympathy for them.
+
+"That is what I call great," cried Harriet, rising dripping to the bank
+after Miss Elting had called to the two girls to come out of the water.
+"I could almost eat another meal after that bath."
+
+"Tho could I," piped Tommy, thrusting her head out from the tent flap.
+
+The two girls and the guardian ran laughing to the tent, where, greatly
+refreshed by their cold plunge, they changed their wet bathing suits for
+dry clothing.
+
+Now fresh fuel was piled on the camp fire. The flames blazed high and
+the smoke curled skyward in the still, clear evening air. Harriet and
+Hazel were capering about the fire, holding an impromptu war dance.
+Tommy was standing near one corner of the tent watching the performance,
+when, thinking she had heard a sound behind her, she turned
+apprehensively.
+
+For one horrified moment Tommy Thompson gazed, then with a yell of
+terror sprang for the tent.
+
+"Thave me! Oh, thave me!" she screamed.
+
+"What is it?" cried Harriet and Miss Elting, rushing toward her. Then
+they, too, halted, gazing into the deepening shadows that enveloped the
+rear of the tent. Margery had caught sight of the object that had sent
+Tommy into an agony of terror. Margery had thrown herself headlong into
+the tent screaming wildly. Hazel, Miss Elting and Harriet stood their
+ground.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI--THE CALL OF THE DANCING BEAR
+
+
+"A bear! A bear! Thave me!" came Tommy's wailing voice from the interior
+of the tent.
+
+"Be quiet!" commanded Miss Elting.
+
+"It's on a chain. There are two men with it," said Harriet somewhat
+unsteadily.
+
+Miss Elting stepped forward to obtain a better view of the two men. She
+saw the swarthy faces of two Italians. One was leading the bear by a
+chain, the other carried a long pole. The animal was a huge, ambling,
+cinnamon bear. He wore a muzzle, and the sight of this gave the woman
+and the two girls a greater sense of security.
+
+"What do you wish here?" demanded the guardian.
+
+"We maka da bear dance," said the man, with the pole, touching his hat
+politely. "You giva mea twent-five cent I maka da bear dance."
+
+"We do not wish to see the bear dance. You will please go away, or I
+shall call for assistance to drive you off," returned Miss Elting
+boldly.
+
+"Oh, let the bear dance. It would be great fun," urged Hazel.
+
+"Twent-five cent to maka da bear dance."
+
+At this juncture Margery came timidly out of the tent. Tommy,
+white-faced, ready to run at the slightest sign of alarm, crept out
+after her.
+
+"Will--will he bite?" stammered Margery.
+
+"He will hurt his teeth on the muzzle if he does," answered Harriet
+Burrell laughingly.
+
+The leader gave a sharp command. The bear rose on its hind feet and
+began pawing the air. It fixed its beady eyes on the face of Tommy
+Thompson. Tommy uttered a little cry and shrank back.
+
+"He lika da littla girl," grinned the Italian.
+
+"Never mind being personal. If you will keep your distance we will pay
+you a quarter to see the bear dance." Miss Elting drew a coin from her
+pocket, and stepping forward, without the least hesitation, handed it to
+the man with the pole. "Keep him over on that side of the fire. You two
+men remain over there also. Remember, we are quite well prepared to
+assert our rights if you do not do as you are told. Watch that neither
+of them gets into the tent, Harriet," she added in a whisper.
+
+Harriet Burrell nodded understandingly. The bear, in response to
+frequent prods of the pole, ambled about, dancing awkwardly, now and
+then uttering a growl of resentment at the treatment he was receiving.
+His master put the animal through its paces. At this juncture, Jane
+McCarthy, who, some time before, had driven off to a farm house in quest
+of milk for breakfast, drove in with a great rattle and honking. At
+first the Italians were for dragging their bear away. But, upon
+discovering that the newcomer was only another young woman, they grinned
+and went on with the performance.
+
+"Hello! what have we here?" cried Jane. "Where did you catch that beast?
+Hey, you men! Didn't I pass you on the road this afternoon? Yes, I did.
+I recognize your friend, the bear. Better look out for those fellows. I
+don't like the looks of them," declared Crazy Jane to Miss Elting in a
+low voice. "I'd a heap sooner trust the bear than the men, and I
+wouldn't care to turn my back on either for very long at one time." Then
+turning to the men she said: "Make your bear do his tricks over again. I
+haven't seen the show, you know."
+
+"Twent-five cent," answered the man.
+
+Jane looked at him for a few seconds, then, throwing back her head,
+laughed loudly.
+
+"Twent-five cents, eh? I guess not! Does he dance, or does he not?" she
+demanded.
+
+For answer the man with the pole gave the bear a vicious poke, the other
+led the animal to a small tree, to which he tied him.
+
+"My gracious, are they going to camp here?" gasped Margery.
+
+"Don't be afraid. We will send them on their way soon enough," answered
+Harriet in a low voice. "I wouldn't make them angry, Miss Elting."
+
+"I don't intend to."
+
+"Leave them to me. See here, men, what do you propose to do now?"
+demanded Jane briskly.
+
+"We lika somathing to eat."
+
+"All right. You shall have somathing. Twent-five cent please," mimicked
+Crazy Jane, holding out a hand. She was so droll about it that the girls
+burst out laughing.
+
+"Oh, you shouldn't have done that. See, you have made them angry,"
+whispered Hazel.
+
+"I don't care if I have. I'll be getting angry myself, pretty
+soon--maybe."
+
+[Illustration: "Twent-five Cent, Please," mimicked Jane.]
+
+"Shall I get something for them, Miss Elting?" questioned Harriet.
+
+The guardian nodded. Harriet ran into the tent, where she quickly
+prepared some roast beef sandwiches. These she carried out and handed to
+the leader of the bear. He divided with his companion. The two men sat
+down by the fire and began eating voraciously.
+
+"You gotta coffee?" asked the leader, his mouth so full of the sandwich
+he was eating that he was barely understandable.
+
+"No. We have no coffee made," replied Miss Elting. "You will have to get
+along with what you have."
+
+"You maka coffee. You maka now!"
+
+"What?" cried Crazy Jane belligerently. "You order us to make coffee for
+you, you lazy good-for-nothings? Get out of here before I lose my temper
+with you."
+
+"Easy, Jane!" warned Miss Elting.
+
+"You no giva coffee, I letta out da bear," threatened the leader,
+scrambling up and running to the tree where the cinnamon bear was
+secured. The second Italian also had risen to his feet. He was edging
+toward the rear of the tent, evidently thinking that he was not
+observed. But Harriet, though not appearing to notice, was watching him
+narrowly. Tommy and Margery were trembling with fear. Harriet and Jane
+were unafraid. They were getting a little angry, however. Miss Elting
+slipped into the tent and getting her revolver, secreted it in a fold of
+her skirt. Just as she emerged the second Italian ducked in under the
+edge of the tent. The tent had been staked down firmly and as the man
+was somewhat stout he stuck when half way under the side wall.
+
+"Come out of that," commanded Harriet.
+
+Instead of obeying her the man tried to wriggle in.
+
+"I see I've got to attack him from inside the tent," decided the girl.
+Wheeling about she ran into the tent where, in the light from the
+campfire, she could see the tousled head and rolling black eyes of the
+man underneath the side wall. Without speaking she seized a pail of
+water that stood near the entrance of the tent and dashed it full into
+the man's face.
+
+"Hurrah for Harriet!" cried Crazy Jane from the tent door, where she
+stood waving her arms now and hopping about gleefully.
+
+Choking and sputtering the man wriggled out from under the tent uttering
+a perfect torrent of abuse in his native tongue. It was about this time
+that Miss Elting discovered that she had forgotten to load the revolver
+before taking it from the tent. Meanwhile the leader had untied the
+chain of the bear and was urging it forward, evidently intending to
+frighten the women.
+
+"You giva me mon. I then-a go way with da bear. You giva me mon," he
+demanded angrily.
+
+Tommy Thompson, at this juncture, found her courage. Snatching up a
+burning fire brand she charged the man leading the bear. He leaped back
+to avoid the thrust of the fiery club. The bear swung a giant paw at
+her. Tommy hit him over the nose with the firebrand. In the meantime
+Hazel Holland, following Harriet's example, appeared on the scene with
+another pail of water, which she dashed over the leader and the bear.
+
+Fire and water were a little more than the man or the bear had bargained
+for, so they made haste to get out of the danger zone. Crazy Jane, in
+the meantime pursued them shouting and brandishing a stout stick that
+she had picked up in the field. Jane chased the men all the way to the
+road, with Tommy and her fiery club in close pursuit.
+
+"Oh, those rascals!" cried the guardian, when the girls returned. "And
+that miserable bear! I'll warrant the three of them got the fright of
+their lives. They won't bother the Meadow-Brook Girls soon again."
+
+"I am not so certain of that," answered Harriet, smiling. "We did give
+them a scare, though. But I'm sorry I had almost to drown that one man.
+He was determined to get into the tent. What do you suppose he wanted?"
+
+"To steal something, of course," answered Miss Elting.
+
+"And Tommy. Did you see Tommy and her torch, girls? Oh, wasn't it a
+sight?"
+
+"Yes. And Hazel and Harriet with their pails of water," chuckled the
+guardian.
+
+"Tommy, dear," exclaimed Miss Elting, as the little girl sat down beside
+her, flushed and triumphant. "You have earned a bead this evening. I
+think each one of you is entitled to a bright red bead. Now pile on the
+wood, girls, so we shall have plenty of light. I don't apprehend further
+trouble, but it is well to be prepared."
+
+"I will see to that," spoke up Harriet. "I have a plan that will make it
+unnecessary for any one to sit up and keep watch."
+
+Harriet explained her plan, which met with the approval of the others.
+That plan was destined to fulfill its purpose later in the night, for
+their excitement was not yet ended, and before the dawning of another
+day, the Meadow-Brook Girls were once more to distinguish themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII--DISCOVERING MIDNIGHT PROWLERS
+
+
+"Have you a ball of strong twine in your kit, Jane?" asked Harriet. "You
+told me to ask for anything I wanted but did not see."
+
+"Sure, I have. In the tool box. Wait. I'll get it for you."
+
+While Jane went for the twine, Harriet hurried out, returning a few
+moments later with two sticks, each stick being about five feet long.
+Next she got a tin pail and stood the pail bottom-side-up on the sticks.
+Her companions watched her wonderingly.
+
+"What _are_ you trying to do?" demanded Miss Elting.
+
+"Fixing a burglar alarm. You'll agree that it is all right after I have
+it finished. Now, I want to run this twine all the way around the camp.
+I shall need some round sticks. Help me find some, Tommy. You have sharp
+eyes."
+
+All hands set out to hunt for the desired sticks. Harriet began
+thrusting them into the soft ground at more or less regular intervals.
+
+When the stakes had been placed loops of string were tied near the tops
+of them, and through these loops was threaded the long twine until the
+camp was entirely surrounded by it. It formed a thread-like barrier that
+seemed too slender a thing to be of much use. One end of the string was
+secured to the two sticks on which the pail had been placed. The slack
+in the string was taken up until the sticks and the pail tilted from the
+wall of the tent at a sharp angle.
+
+"Hurrah!" cried the guardian. "That is a most ingenious contrivance. How
+did you come to think of it?"
+
+"Nethethity ith the mother of invention, tho my father thayth," spoke up
+Grace.
+
+Harriet nodded approvingly. The others laughed.
+
+"Tommy is becoming quite a philosopher," averred the guardian. "Aren't
+you going to give us a demonstration of your invention, Harriet?"
+
+"Very well," laughed Harriet. "Hazel, will you go out and stumble
+against the string? Don't you dare to break it for--Oh!"
+
+The two sticks had come down with a crash, the tin pail rattling as it
+rolled over the floor. Tommy screamed and so did Margery.
+
+"There's your demonstration," announced Harriet. "Some one is coming. I
+hope it isn't those Italians again."
+
+Miss Elting with her loaded revolver, Jane with her club, Harriet armed
+this time with a stout stick, sauntered forth to meet the newcomer. Jane
+had run to the dark side of the tent, thrusting her club across the
+corner ready to use it at the first indication of trouble. To her
+disgust, the farmer from whom she had obtained permission to make camp,
+now appeared on the scene.
+
+"It's all right, girls. This is the gentleman who let us make camp
+here," called Jane.
+
+"I just came over to tell you to take care of your fire. If it runs
+it'll burn off the meadow, it being all fresh seeding there. I wouldn't
+want to lose it," hailed their visitor.
+
+"Thank you for calling our attention to it. We are always careful of
+fire," Miss Elting made reply.
+
+"What was it I fell over when I came in here?" he asked, glancing about
+him. "You certainly look mighty comfortable here."
+
+The girls looked at each other and giggled.
+
+"It was a little contrivance of one of our young women, so that we might
+be warned of the approach of strangers," the guardian informed him. "You
+see, it warned us that some one was coming."
+
+"I guess you can take care of yourselves, all right. Is there anything
+you want? If there is, come over to the house. My wife is curious to see
+this outfit. Maybe she will come over in the morning."
+
+"Thank you very kindly for your interest," answered the guardian. "We
+shall be breaking camp early in the morning."
+
+The farmer left. Harriet nodded to her companions.
+
+"Was the demonstration satisfactory?" she questioned.
+
+"I should say it was," answered Margery. "It nearly scared me out of my
+wits."
+
+"I suppose we shall have to mend the string now. The farmer's big boots
+broke it in two places. However, we needn't worry about any person
+getting into this camp to-night without giving us warning of his
+approach," said Harriet. She repaired the broken "burglar alarm," then
+returning to the tent adjusted the sticks and the pail, placing several
+other pieces of tinware with it. The girls then gathered about the
+campfire, where they chatted, told stories and exchanged experiences
+until a late hour.
+
+Harriet got out the map just before they retired. After consulting with
+Miss Elting for some time, it was decided that they should take a short
+cut across a rugged country, using their compass to guide them, meeting
+Jane some twelve miles further on. She would have to drive more than
+twenty miles to make the point. The girls did not enjoy the highways
+very much. In the first place, the roads were dusty; many curious people
+were to be met with on the roads; then again they thoroughly enjoyed
+breaking new paths through the forests and over fields and hills. Now
+that all the crops had been garnered there was no danger of doing damage
+to the farmers' fields by tramping across them. Jane was instructed to
+wait for them after driving into the next town for fresh supplies.
+
+"It's curious that we don't run across any melon fields. The first one I
+catch sight of I'm going to raid," she declared.
+
+"No, Jane, you mustn't do that," objected the guardian. "What we get we
+must pay for."
+
+"Certainly," agreed Jane. "But there isn't any sport in just walking up
+and paying for melons. It's a heap more fun to forage for them."
+
+"But, Jane, think what it means to take an object of value that doesn't
+belong to you. It is stealing!"
+
+"That's true. It surely is," agreed Jane. "I won't ever mention any such
+thing again."
+
+"Thank you," returned Miss Elting with a smile that amply repaid Crazy
+Jane for her decision.
+
+At last all hands began making preparations for bed. Folding cots were
+opened and made up, fresh fuel was heaped on the campfire, then Harriet
+and Miss Elting made a round of the camp to see that all was in shape
+for the night. Jane lighted the big headlights on her car, turning them
+on the darkest part of the camp, after which they drew the flap to the
+tent and began preparing for bed. Half an hour later the camp was
+silent, save for the occasional crackling of the fire. All the dead
+leaves and inflammable stuff had been raked away and the ground dug up
+immediately about the fire to prevent it from spreading. The moon now
+silvered the landscape, and a faint mist was rising from about the
+Willow Ponds, adding to the beauty of the night.
+
+Midnight came, then the silence became more marked than before. About
+one o'clock in the morning two men might have been observed skulking
+about the farther side of the pond nearest to the camp. They took care
+not to come within range of the headlights of Crazy Jane's motor car.
+Had one looked closely at them the men might have been recognized as the
+same pair that had visited the camp with the bear earlier in the
+evening. What their purpose was in returning could only be surmised.
+
+It might be revenge or robbery. In either event it was bad enough, and
+the Meadow-Brook Girls, sleeping soundly, were blissfully unconscious of
+the danger that menaced them. Their faith in Harriet Burrell's burglar
+alarm permitted them to sleep without fear.
+
+All at once there was a mighty crash in the tent. As Tommy Thompson
+described it afterwards, "it thounded ath if lightning had thtruck a tin
+thhop." The tin pail and the other kitchen utensils that had been hung
+on the long sticks in the tent came down with a clatter and a bang. The
+tin pail rolled clear across the tent, landed on Margery Brown, bringing
+from her a scream of terror.
+
+"Quick! Put on your bathrobes!" called Miss Elting. "There is trouble
+here."
+
+No need to tell them that. The tin pail already had conveyed this
+information to the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+"Oh, thave me!" wailed Tommy.
+
+Harriet was the first one to run outside the tent.
+
+"There they are!" she cried, having caught sight of two skulking figures
+near the automobile. "It's the same Italians. Let's call for help as
+loudly as we can. Perhaps that will make them take to their heels."
+
+It had the desired effect. Seeing that the camp was fully aroused the
+intruders fled. Then a daring plan suggested itself to Crazy Jane
+McCarthy. Leaving her companions she started on a run for her car.
+
+"Come back! Where are you going?" cried the guardian.
+
+"I'll show you, I'll show them! Just watch and you'll see more fun than
+a barrel of monkeys eating cayenne pepper."
+
+Dashing up to the car, she advanced the spark control, and gave the
+crank a quick turn. The car began a sputtering that quickly grew into a
+roar from the exhaust. Crazy Jane leaped in. She was clad in a bathrobe
+that reached to her ankles; her tangle of hair fell about her face and
+shoulders giving her face a wilder and more weird expression than ever.
+
+Jane threw in the high speed lever. The car leaped forward. Harriet
+Burrell, who had divined something of Jane's purpose, made a running
+leap and landed on the step, grasping one of the cover braces for
+support.
+
+"Jane, Jane! For goodness' sake, what are you going to do?"
+
+"I'm going to give the rascals the scare of their lives. They haven't
+had enough. Get in!"
+
+Harriet did so, but only to prevent being thrown off the car. She had
+little desire to participate in the drive that she well knew would be an
+exciting one. Miss Elting was shouting to Jane to come back. Jane did
+not or would not hear. Uttering a shrill little cry of triumph she drove
+the car ahead at a perilous rate of speed. Over the rough field the
+automobile lurched and careened imperiling the safety of its occupants
+and threatening momentarily to upset and wreck the car.
+
+The two men were fleeing across the field. Seeing the car bearing down
+upon them, they began to dodge. The big white eyes of the headlights
+followed them wherever they went. It was maddening. Now the fugitives
+began zig-zagging. So did Crazy Jane. Once she nearly ran them down. The
+Italians sprang out of the way just in time and began running back
+toward the camp. Jane pursued them as soon as she could get the car
+turned about and facing the other way. By this time the men had gotten a
+long start.
+
+"They're making for the camp, the villains," breathed Jane.
+
+"It is because they are trying to get out of your way," answered Harriet
+almost breathlessly. "You will have to head them off."
+
+"Head them off nothing!" exploded Jane. "Rather will I take their heads
+off, the miserable rascals."
+
+"Jane, Jane! You mustn't run them down. You simply _must not_. You might
+kill them. Please, please don't try to do that, dear!" begged Harriet.
+
+"All right, darlin'. But you're making me lose a lot of fun. I don't get
+an opportunity like this every day in the week. They deserve all I can
+give them."
+
+"You mustn't harm a human being, no matter how bad he is. There, they
+have turned toward the road."
+
+"I won't hurt them," promised Jane. "I'll just scare them a little."
+
+"Oh!" cried Harriet as the car rose on two wheels, nearly turning over.
+"Do be careful!"
+
+"Don't be afraid. As long as I've got two wheels on the ground I'm all
+right. Now if I had only one wheel on the old sod you might worry, but
+you wouldn't worry for long. See 'em go. They know I've got them now!"
+
+Just then the men plunged headlong into a ditch that extended all the
+way across the field. The girls had not discovered it until that moment.
+Jane checked her car just in time to prevent it also from going into the
+ditch.
+
+"There's a bridge to the right," Harriet informed her, then was sorry
+she had made the suggestion. Crazy Jane charged the bridge at full
+speed. All four wheels seemed to strike the planking at the same
+instant.
+
+Jane turned sharply. They were now chasing the two men obliquely across
+the field. The men were lagging.
+
+"They're getting winded," shouted Crazy Jane triumphantly.
+
+"Please go back now," begged Harriet "You have frightened them enough.
+They never will trouble us again."
+
+"Not till I get the wretches on a run down the road. I've not finished
+with them yet."
+
+"They have nearly finished themselves," answered Harriet. She was no
+longer apprehensive that Jane would injure the men intentionally, though
+Harriet feared that one of them might stumble and be crushed underneath
+the car. Still her pulses were beating high, the color in her cheeks had
+mounted to her forehead. She was entering into the spirit of the wild
+chase almost with the enthusiasm of Crazy Jane herself.
+
+The voices of their companions in the camp no longer reached them. The
+two girls were too far away to hear now, even had the car not been
+making such a din.
+
+The two men were making for the roadside fence, a board structure, which
+in the haze of the damp night, the girls did not see. They had forgotten
+that the fence was there.
+
+All at once the men reached the fence. Grasping the top board they flung
+themselves over, landing heavily on the ground on the other side.
+
+"Look out!" cried Harriet warningly.
+
+"Hold fast!" yelled Jane.
+
+Crash!
+
+The car struck the fence with a mighty crash accompanied by the sound of
+splintering woodwork. The headlights went out, and Jane brought her car
+to a stop in the midst of the wreck at the roadside.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII--CAUGHT IN A MORASS
+
+
+"Well, here we are," announced Crazy Jane calmly.
+
+"Oh, see those fellows run!" cried Harriet, gaspingly. "There they go!"
+she cried, in almost hysterical amusement, after she had picked herself
+up from the bottom of the car, where the collision had hurled her.
+
+"I've a good notion to send the car straight through the fence, and
+chase that pair of skulkers out of the state!" Jane McCarthy proposed
+vindictively.
+
+"Don't you try to do it," protested Harriet, now sobered by the
+realization of how reckless her companion might easily become. "Jane,
+_some day_ you'll really hit some one--that would be awful!"
+
+"But I didn't half frighten that pair of rascals," returned Jane.
+
+"If the men weren't frightened, then they'll never know fear," insisted
+Harriet Burrell. "How badly is the car damaged?"
+
+"A blow on the nose, but the nose is not even out of joint," Jane
+answered coolly.
+
+"Then let us get back to Miss Elting. How she'll scold!"
+
+Miss Elting did scold when they reached camp with the car. It is to be
+feared, however, that Jane heard but little of the rebuke, for she was
+busy examining the damage done to her beloved car. She found that she
+could put the lamps in condition again. The guard rod in front of the
+radiator was also injured. Jane decided that this could be easily fixed.
+
+"Girls, girls! What do you mean by such actions. Jane, I am amazed at
+you. Harriet, how could you?" Miss Elting rebuked them roundly.
+
+"I--I guess it was impulse," answered Harriet, her face crimsoning under
+the reproachful words of the guardian. "Please don't scold us. We drove
+the men off. They will not trouble us again, I am quite sure."
+
+"But they might have been run down, girls."
+
+"Served them right if they had, bad luck to them!" retorted Jane
+mischievously. "However, 'all's well that ends well.' I'm for bed. What
+do you say?"
+
+"Thay, why didn't you take me along?" demanded Tommy.
+
+"It was quite bad enough without your assistance," replied the guardian.
+"Yes, we had better retire at once. Do you wish to put up your burglar
+alarm again, Harriet?"
+
+"I do not think it will be necessary. The men won't prowl about the camp
+again to-night."
+
+"No, they won't," agreed Jane, laughing uproariously. "They're running
+yet and they'll be running as long as their wind holds out. I wonder
+where they left the bear? Wouldn't it be fun if we could find the bear
+and let him loose?"
+
+"Oh-h-h!" cried Margery. "How can you talk so, Jane?"
+
+"Most certainly not," rebuked Miss Elting. "You have done quite enough
+as it is, without turning a bear loose on the community. You had better
+all go back to bed. What did you do to your car, Jane?"
+
+"Bumped its nose, that's all. My only regret is that I didn't bump it
+against one of the Italians. I shouldn't have minded giving the bear a
+smash, too. Good night. Sweet dreams, darlin's!" Jane flounced into the
+tent and throwing off her bathrobe tumbled into bed, where she was soon
+sound asleep. The others did not quiet down quite so quickly. Harriet,
+especially, lay thinking over the experiences of the evening, and each
+time the thought of the pursuit of the Italians by Crazy Jane and her
+motor car occurred to her, Harriet would laugh softly to herself. She
+finally laughed herself to sleep, to be awakened in what seemed but a
+few moments later, by the blowing of a fish horn at the lips of Crazy
+Jane McCarthy. Day had dawned. The sun was just peeping over the eastern
+hills, the campfire was blazing and Miss Elting was getting breakfast.
+
+Harriet quickly drew on her bathing suit, then, running out of the tent,
+plunged into the pond, uttering a little scream as the cold water
+enveloped her. None of the others had the courage to take a cold plunge
+that morning, as the air was rather cool. As for Harriet, she remained
+in the pond until Miss Elting insisted that she come ashore.
+
+Camp was struck immediately after breakfast as the girls wished to make
+as much progress on their journey in the cool of the morning as
+possible. They struck camp with the skill of veterans, and within half
+an hour from the time they began the operation, everything was packed
+and stowed in the car.
+
+"Now, don't you girls try to play me any more tricks to-day. I've got
+the food. If you don't find Jane, you get no supper. Understand?"
+laughed Jane.
+
+"I've got thome bithcuit in my pack," piped Tommy.
+
+"She won't have them for long," laughed Margery. "Tommy will have eaten
+the biscuits before she has gone a mile."
+
+"Well, I don't eat tho much that I get fat," protested Tommy. "I gueth I
+know when to thtop."
+
+Miss Elting was giving Jane final directions as to when and where to
+look for them, after which the four girls and their guardian, with their
+packs slung over their backs, stout sticks in their hands to assist them
+over rough places and also to frighten away troublesome dogs, started
+out on their journey of ten miles or more. They crossed the road,
+traveled up a hill and headed straight across country. The unmarked
+trail was rough and following it fatigued them considerably during the
+first two miles of their journey.
+
+Shortly after eleven o'clock they came in sight of a remote farm house
+tucked away in a valley. Miss Elting decided to call there to get some
+milk. The woman of the house at first regarded them with suspicion, but
+she soon thawed under Miss Elting's gentle voice and winning smile.
+
+The milk had not been skimmed. All the old milk had been churned that
+day. There was nothing left but buttermilk, the woman told them.
+
+"Buttermilk!" cried the girls in chorus.
+
+"I jutht love buttermilk!" declared Tommy. "Do you have buttermilk
+cowth? Ithn't that fine? I'm going to make my father buy me a buttermilk
+cow."
+
+"Well, I was going to feed that buttermilk to the hogs, but seeing as
+you want it I suppose you may have it," decided the woman with some
+reluctance. "Do you like it cold?"
+
+The party answered in the affirmative. The housewife lowered a pail of
+buttermilk into the well to cool, the party sitting down under an apple
+tree in the yard to rest themselves in the meantime. Margery lay down
+and went to sleep. Tommy amused herself by tickling Buster's ear with a
+long, dead stalk of timothy grass. Margery in her sleep thought it a
+fly. She fought the fly for some time, then finally opening her eyes,
+she caught Tommy red handed. Tommy fled into the farm house, where she
+pretended to be much interested in the housewife's work. She soon won
+her way into the good graces of the woman, and when, finally, the little
+lisping girl emerged from the house she was carrying a tin tray of food.
+
+"Jutht thee what I've got," she cried. "It taketh Tommy Thompthon to get
+thingth to eat."
+
+There were sandwiches, ginger cookies--great fat brown fellows--and a
+large dish of apple sauce.
+
+"Oh, girls!" cried Margery her eyes glistening at the prospect of a
+feast. "I could die eating that food."
+
+"Tommy, did you beg for this?" demanded the guardian.
+
+"I gueth not. I jutht athked for it," returned Tommy calmly. "When you
+want thomething you want, jutht athk for it, and if you don't get it you
+haven't wasted anything but your breath."
+
+"Madam, we are very grateful to you for this kindness, and will pay you
+before leaving," called Miss Elting to the housewife, who came out at
+this juncture to draw up the bucket of buttermilk from the cool depths
+of the well.
+
+"You're welcome, I'm sure. I just baked to-day. Hope the cookies are all
+right. They didn't rise to suit me."
+
+"They'd have burthted if they'd rithen any more," observed Tommy. She
+was rebuked by a look from Harriet.
+
+"I hope you like them," smiled the woman.
+
+"Oh, they are simply delicious," answered Harriet, with glowing eyes.
+"And that buttermilk! I never drank any that tasted better."
+
+The party ate their fill of the good things, Margery doing even more
+than her share in disposing of both buttermilk and food. When they had
+finished, the tray was empty. The woman offered to bring them more food,
+but Miss Elting said "no." She gave the woman fifty cents despite the
+protests of the latter; then, after a brief rest, they started on again,
+first having expressed their thanks to the housewife, who stood in the
+door of her home watching the little party until it had passed out of
+sight.
+
+About the middle of the afternoon the girls halted for another rest
+because of Margery's complaints that she was feeling ill.
+
+"You ate too much," declared Harriet. "It doesn't do to eat so much when
+one is taking exercise as we are."
+
+"Yeth. Buthter alwayth eatth too much," averred Tommy wisely.
+
+"Oh!" moaned Margery Brown, sitting down all in a heap. "I can't walk
+another step to-day."
+
+"Do you think we should leave her here?" asked Harriet, with solemn face
+but twinkling eyes.
+
+"We shall see how she feels after I have given her something to settle
+her stomach," answered Miss Elting gravely.
+
+"No, no, no!" wailed Margery. "Don't leave me. I'll go. Let me lie still
+and rest myself a little first."
+
+"You thee Buthter, it doethn't pay to be tho greedy," admonished Tommy.
+
+"Will you please make her stop?" begged Buster. "I can't stand it."
+
+"Tommy!" rebuked Harriet. "Haven't you any consideration for Margery?"
+
+"Yeth. Of courthe I have. But thhe doethn't detherve any thympathy."
+
+"I'm ashamed of you, Tommy, dear. Wait. You, too, will be ill one of
+these days, then we shall make unpleasant remarks to you," warned
+Harriet.
+
+Grace Thompson flushed guiltily.
+
+"That ith too bad, Buthter. I didn't mean to make you feel worthe.
+Honetht I didn't. I hope you will be better pretty thoon." Tommy kissed
+her. "There. Ithn't that better?"
+
+"Yes," admitted Margery. She already had taken some peppermint drops
+that Miss Elting had administered. After a further rest the girls
+assisted her to her feet and walked her slowly up and down the road. She
+was then permitted to sit down and rest again. Tommy, an expression of
+concern on her impish face, crouched before the now pale-faced Buster,
+munching a hard biscuit.
+
+"Come, girls," said Miss Elting finally. "It is nearly five o'clock. We
+were to meet Jane at five, and we must have a good two hours' walk ahead
+of us still. Now that Margery is feeling so ill we shall not be able to
+make nearly as good time as that. I wonder if we hadn't better find the
+highway and finish the day's tramp on that?"
+
+Margery protested that they must not change their plans on her account.
+She declared that she could walk as well as any of them.
+
+"Margery will repent her rash assertions before she has gone a mile,"
+laughed Hazel.
+
+"No. I think she will be all right, now," replied the guardian.
+"Margery, if you find that you are feeling worse, at any time, you must
+be sure to tell me at once. Now, girls, march!"
+
+The little company plodded along. Harriet linked one arm within
+Margery's. The latter, while feeling much improved, was still a little
+weak and Harriet Burrell's sturdy arm was appreciated.
+
+About six o'clock they came to a long hill that sloped gently down into
+a valley. The greater part of the valley was covered with trees. It
+appeared to be a dense forest of second growth, the trees not being very
+large. The guardian consulted the map.
+
+"Yes. We are on the right trail. We must keep straight on through the
+woods. According to this map there should be a trail that leads directly
+to the other side of the valley, and when we reach that point we shall
+have finished our day's journey."
+
+"I am afraid we are going to be caught in the dark, Miss Elting," said
+Harriet.
+
+"If we find the trail we do not need to worry about that. We can't very
+well go astray. I would suggest that, when we get down farther into the
+valley, we spread out and look for the wood trail. The one who first
+discovers it will shout. By taking this open formation we shall be
+saving time. It certainly seems to me that the distance to be covered
+to-day is more than ten miles."
+
+"It does seem so," agreed Hazel. "But we have lost considerable time on
+the way."
+
+They began spreading out when about half way down the hill, calling to
+each other good-naturedly, shouting as they got farther and farther
+away. Tommy discovered the road. She ran out into the field waving her
+arms and crying shrilly to attract the attention of her companions. They
+hurried toward her. The road, as they soon learned, was a mere path and
+one not much frequented at that, as was evidenced by the vegetation that
+grew in the middle of it.
+
+"This looks to me like rather low swampy land," declared Harriet. "It is
+my idea that we had better stick closely to the path, or we may get into
+trouble." She did not say definitely what she feared, not wishing to
+needlessly terrorize Margery and Tommy. Miss Elting understood their
+danger, however. She nodded. Harriet started along the trail, leading
+the way, with the guardian following at her heels. They went on in this
+way for half an hour. The forest grew darker as they proceeded, the
+vegetation being thick in there. The day was waning rapidly. It was not
+very long before they were groping their way, rather than finding it by
+sight.
+
+A scream from Margery, who was at the rear, brought them up sharply.
+Then Tommy's voice was raised in a sharp cry of alarm.
+
+"What is it?" shouted Harriet.
+
+"I'm sinking!" screamed Margery.
+
+Harriet instantly knew the meaning of this. Her worst fears were
+confirmed. They were in the middle of a vast morass that stretched on
+each side of the trail.
+
+"Thave me! Oh, thave me!" wailed Tommy.
+
+Both girls were in the mud, but just how deeply Harriet Burrell did not
+know. Now Hazel added her cries to those of Tommy and Margery. She, too,
+had stepped off the path. Harriet could hear Hazel floundering in the
+mire. Miss Elting hurried back to them, regardless of her own safety.
+
+"Be careful!" called Harriet warningly, groping her way to her
+companions who were crying and screaming for help.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX--THE TRAMP CLUB TO THE RESCUE
+
+
+"Look out, Miss Elting," warned Harriet again. "The girls are in the
+mud."
+
+"So am I," cried the guardian in a voice of alarm. "Oh, it's deep. I'm
+sinking."
+
+"Stand perfectly still," advised Harriet. "You will get in deeper if you
+struggle. I'll see what I can do. I may get in, too."
+
+"Be quick, Harriet," urged the guardian. "This is serious. I can't move
+an inch."
+
+"I'll do the best I can. Oh, I wish I had some good sized limbs of trees
+to throw to you. Here's one. Where are you, Miss Elting?"
+
+"Here. It's no use. I can't pull myself out."
+
+Margery was screaming at the top of her voice. It seemed as though her
+cries must be heard throughout the woods. No amount of urging could
+induce her to be quiet.
+
+"Let her yell. Let her make all the noithe she can. Maybe thomebody will
+hear her," wailed Tommy.
+
+This was good logic. Miss Elting told Buster to shout as loudly as she
+could. The other girls now added their voices to Buster's frantic
+screams. Harriet was moving about as rapidly as she dared, but she was
+unable to find any limbs large enough to be of much use to Miss Elting,
+who was nearest to the trail over which they had come. Harriet tried
+another experiment. Breaking down a sapling that grew beside the path
+she thrust this toward the guardian.
+
+"Take hold of it," she commanded. "Have you got it, Miss Elting?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Give way loosely when I pull. I may be able to pull you out. Don't
+resist at all."
+
+"It's no use, Harriet!" announced the guardian, after several minutes of
+the hardest sort of work on Harriet's part. "I am getting deeper in the
+mud with every move I make. You will have to think of something else."
+
+"Girls, stop your screaming for a moment," called Harriet. "Tell me how
+you are? Are you sinking deeper into the mud or are you remaining about
+the same?"
+
+"Whenever I make the slightest movement I sink in deeper. I'm keeping as
+still as possible," answered Hazel.
+
+"I'm in almotht up to my waitht," cried Tommy. "I'm going to be buried
+alive. Oh, thave me!"
+
+"As long as you are able to scream like that you are all right,"
+comforted Harriet. "When you stop yelling I shall begin to believe you
+are in real trouble."
+
+Harriet now set to work cutting down small saplings with her hatchet.
+These she threw out into the space between Miss Elting and the three
+girls. They were close together, which somewhat simplified the work. The
+Meadow-Brook girl knew that it would take a quantity of the small trees
+and limbs to support her weight, but it was the only course she knew of
+to follow. Fortunately for Harriet she was an athletic girl, possessing
+great strength for one of her age and build. Better still, she possessed
+a courage and will all her own. Then, too, Harriet Burrell was one of
+those doggedly determined persons who never know when they are worsted.
+Her mind was working even more rapidly than were her hands. She had
+succeeded in piling up enough stuff to form a slight support for the
+arms of her companions. She now explained her plan to them.
+
+"I don't think I shall be able to get you out of the morass without
+taking a long chance of getting in myself," she began.
+
+"Oh-h-h-h!" cried the girls despairingly. They had relied implicitly on
+Harriet's resourceful brain to find the means to release them from their
+dangerous predicament.
+
+"Wait until I have finished. You know that I'm not afraid. You know
+better than to think so," soothed Harriet. "Don't you see, if I were to
+get caught in the mud, your last hope would be gone? We might all perish
+here before any one found us."
+
+"You are right as usual, Harriet," said Miss Elting. She was apparently
+calm. If she were nervous no trace of it was discoverable in her voice.
+"What do you propose to do?"
+
+"I am going to pile some more stuff on what I have already placed there.
+Each of you is to throw out her arms and if possible lock hands across
+the barrier. When one hand gets tired change to the other one. That will
+keep you from sinking down much deeper. The saplings should keep you up,
+though it will be a rather severe strain on your arm."
+
+"What will you do, Harriet?" asked Miss Elting.
+
+"I am going for help."
+
+"Oh, don't leave uth!" wailed Grace.
+
+"Harriet is right," agreed Hazel. "It is the only thing to do. But which
+way will you go?"
+
+"I will go back the way we came. I believe that if I am careful I shall
+be able to reach solid ground without getting off the trail. A short
+distance from here the ground rises somewhat and is harder. Once I reach
+that I shall be safe."
+
+"But, Harriet, where will you go for help?"
+
+"I saw the top of some farm buildings to the west of where we were just
+before we entered this horrid place. I think it will be best for me to
+hurry there. I ought to be back in a couple of hours at the outside."
+
+"Two _hourth_!" mourned Tommy.
+
+"That will be better than staying there all night, won't it?" demanded
+Harriet.
+
+"I should say it will," agreed Hazel.
+
+"Then hurry, dear," urged Miss Elting.
+
+"Is any one of you in pain?" questioned Harriet.
+
+"I think not," replied Miss Elting. "The ground is too soft to hurt.
+That's the worst of it. If the ground weren't so soft and sticky we
+should be able to get out. Do you think you could build a fire before
+you go, Harriet?"
+
+"I wouldn't dare to do so. Suppose it should spread to the trees about
+you after I had gone? There are cedars and small pine trees in here. The
+foliage of these trees is like tinder."
+
+"You are right!" exclaimed the guardian. "To build a fire would be the
+height of folly. Hurry, please. We will be here when you come back," she
+added with a forced laugh.
+
+"Be brave, girls. Remember, we are Meadow-Brook Girls," said Harriet, as
+with a shouted "good-bye" she started back along the trail on her
+mission. Both arms were outspread so that she might be warned by touch
+when getting too close to the sides of the trail.
+
+"Girls," began Miss Elting brightly, after Harriet had left them.
+"Harriet reminded us that we are Meadow-Brook Girls. Let's show that we
+are by giving the Meadow-Brook yell. Now. One, two, three, go!"
+
+ "Meadow-Brook. Meadow-Brook.
+ Rah, rah, rah!
+ Meadow-Brook, Meadow-Brook,
+ Sis, boom, ah-h-h!"
+
+The girls' voices grew stronger after the second line. The voices of
+Miss Elting and Tommy Thompson rose above those of the other two. Some
+one laughed. It was Tommy. Her laugh was a trifle hysterical, but it was
+a laugh, and for the moment it relieved the strain somewhat. Miss Elting
+gave them no time to think about themselves.
+
+"Girls. Forty-nine Blue Bottles now," she cried, then began the chant
+herself, the others joining in promptly.
+
+ "Forty-nine blue bottles were hanging on the wall,
+ Forty-nine blue bottles were hanging on the wall.
+ Take one of the bottles down and there'll be forty-eight
+ blue bottles a hanging on the wall, a hanging on the
+ wall."
+
+They continued to chant regardless of aching throats and hoarse voices,
+until every one of those offending blue bottles had been removed from
+the wall.
+
+"Now the Meadow-Brook yell again. It will bring assistance to us if any
+one hears it," reminded the guardian. They repeated the yell.
+
+"Gracious!" cried Miss Elting.
+
+"Oh, what is it now?" begged Margery, in a frightened voice.
+
+"Why, some malicious person has put all those forty-nine blue bottles
+back on the wall again. What shall we do?"
+
+"I gueth we'll have to take them off," lisped Tommy, amid laughter from
+her companions and the guardian as well.
+
+"I can't," moaned Margery. She began to choke and cough. "I've swallowed
+a bug."
+
+"Oh, the poor bug. I'm tho thorry for him," piped Tommy.
+
+"Maybe we can catch him in one of those bottles," suggested Miss Elting.
+"Come, girls, you aren't going to desert me now, are you? Already!
+'Forty-nine blue bottles were hanging on the wall.'"
+
+Once more the girls went over the familiar refrain, ending finally with
+the Meadow-Brook yell. Again and again did they take the bottles from
+the wall, but as often as they removed them invisible hands replaced
+every one of the forty-nine blue bottles in their accustomed position on
+the wall.
+
+For the tenth time the forty-nine blue bottles had been taken down and
+hung up again. The voices of the girls were so hoarse that they could
+barely speak aloud, though they were laughing hysterically as they
+labored with the forty-ninth. They had almost forgotten that they were
+in danger, forgotten their aching bodies, forgotten that Harriet Burrell
+was speeding through the darkness in quest of assistance, when a distant
+but familiar cry reached their ears. It was the long drawn out
+"hoo-e-e-e-e" of the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+Miss Elting heard it first. Her companions were laughing so immoderately
+that they failed to hear it the first time. The guardian's voice failed
+her. A lump rose in her throat. The strain had been so great that
+several times she found herself on the point of giving way. Now the
+reaction had set in.
+
+"Hoo-e-e-e-e!"
+
+Tommy heard it, and uttered a scream. The call was repeated. This time
+all the girls heard it plainly.
+
+"It's Harriet, it's Harriet!" cried Hazel.
+
+"Yes. Rescue is at hand," replied Miss Elting fervently.
+
+A light twinkled far away through between the trees. It seemed to the
+anxious eyes of the guardian as though it were miles and miles distant.
+She raised her voice in a shout, but the voice was so weak that it
+carried but a short distance.
+
+"Shout, girls!" she begged. "You may be able to make them hear. I can't.
+My voice has completely left me. Tommy! You can always scream. Do so
+now."
+
+Tommy let loose a thrilling, penetrating yell. The rescue party heard
+it. They answered with return shouts in male voices.
+
+"That sounds to me like boys' voices," cried Miss Elting huskily.
+
+"Oh, thave me!" wailed Tommy. "My hair ith all tumbled down, my frock
+ith muddy from top to bottom and my fathe ith thmudged. I'm a thight, I
+know I am. I can't retheive company to-day. Thend them away, pleathe."
+
+Some one came running toward them considerably in advance of the light.
+
+"Girls! Girls!" shouted an anxious voice.
+
+"Here!" cried the guardian.
+
+"Thank goodness you're alive," answered Harriet Burrell. "I've been
+terribly anxious about you. Here--here's a can of fresh water. I know
+your throats must be dry."
+
+Reaching forward, Harriet handed the can to the guardian. Miss Elting
+passed it on to Tommy. Each of the girls drank.
+
+"Where are you, folks?" shouted a boyish voice.
+
+"Here. Just ahead of you," answered Harriet. She had sunk down on the
+trail, her strength gone. A moment later she was on her feet again,
+hurrying down the trail to guide the rescuers to the spot.
+
+A tall young fellow clad in khaki, a campaign hat on his head, rushed
+up. Behind him came half a dozen other young men similarly clad. They
+were bearing fence rails on their shoulders, fairly staggering under the
+weight of their burdens.
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad!" cried Miss Elting, now on the verge of tears after
+the strain. "Who are they, Harriet, my brave girl?"
+
+"We're the Tramp Club," answered the first boy. "We'll introduce
+ourselves after we get you girls out of the morass. You're in a fine
+mess and you certainly do need help."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X--IN THE HANDS OF THE RESCUERS
+
+
+"Now, keep perfectly quiet. Don't move an inch. We'll have you out of it
+in a few moments. Here, Dill, give me the rope. Now the end of a rail.
+The young lady over there with the flaxen hair----"
+
+"It ithn't flaxen. It ith blonde," protested Tommy indignantly.
+
+"I stand corrected," laughed the young man. "Please grab the rope and
+pull on it. I don't dare throw a rail out there for fear of hitting one
+of you. Being the farthest out, you will be able to pull the rail right
+up to you. Never mind if you do settle down an inch or two. I'll have
+you out at any rate. Do you understand?"
+
+"Yeth."
+
+"Then here goes." The boy tossed a coil of rope so accurately that the
+coil dropped directly over Grace Thompson's head. She uttered a little
+scream as the rope slipped over her head, then clawed frantically at it.
+"That's right," cried her rescuer. "Now pull."
+
+Tommy pulled desperately drawing the rail towards her, but sinking
+deeper and deeper into the mud until she was nearly up to her armpits.
+The little lisping girl took fresh alarm. She began to cry, "Thave me!"
+
+"Don't be frightened. Here's another rail!" encouraged the youth. "We've
+got to build up a bridge. Those limbs and saplings you have out there
+will make an excellent foundation. Hurry them up here, Dill! The young
+ladies will grow impatient and refuse to wait for us longer."
+
+The girls declined to laugh at this pleasantry. They were in too much
+distress. Harriet stood holding a lantern above her head so that the
+boys might see to work to the best advantage. The rails were drawn out
+by Tommy in each instance, assisted by the girls between herself and the
+path. Then the leader set his boys at work felling the largest trees
+they could find along the trail. The lads went at their work with a
+will. As soon as the trees and brush were cut down they were carried
+over and dumped in on the rail and brush foundation, forming a rude
+bridge. The leader then advanced cautiously over it until he reached a
+point near to the guardian and the girls.
+
+"Now we will see what we can do."
+
+A rope was passed about the waist of the guardian despite her protests
+that the others should be gotten out of the morass first. Three boys
+were put at the shore end of the rope with orders to pull when their
+leader gave the word. He, on his part, took firm hold of Miss Elting
+under the arms, then shouted "now!"
+
+Those on shore began to pull. The leader, at the same time, began to
+lift with all his might, moving the guardian's shoulders from left to
+right.
+
+"Tell me if the rope hurts you," gasped the muscular young fellow.
+
+Miss Elting came up so suddenly that her rescuer fell over, narrowly
+escaping a plunge into the morass. The guardian was finally dragged to
+the path. The rescuers then turned their attention to the other girls.
+Their wooden raft was slowly sinking under the weight that had been put
+upon it, but fresh stuff was being constantly piled on it to keep it
+above the mud. One by one the Meadow-Brook Girls were hauled out.
+
+Harriet had helped Miss Elting aside into the shadows, where she
+assisted the guardian in scraping the mud from her clothing. At first
+Miss Elting was barely able to stand. She found herself trembling from
+head to foot now that the strain, mental and physical, was removed.
+
+"Here's another one!" cried the cheery voice of the leader
+
+"What wonderful boys!" breathed Miss Elting, starting to go to Tommy's
+assistance.
+
+"Please lie down on the ground and rest, Miss Elting. Don't try to get
+up until we are ready to start. I can take care of the others as they
+are dragged out," directed Harriet.
+
+She assisted Tommy to a place beside Miss Elting, the latter insisting
+upon trying to help the unfortunate and humiliated Tommy in her
+distressing condition.
+
+"I withh I had thome clotheth fit to be theen," complained the little
+girl. "Thith dreth ith a thight."
+
+"Be thankful that you are alive," answered Harriet sharply.
+
+"We should have perished, had it not been for you," answered the
+guardian.
+
+"Considering that I was the only one who didn't get into the mud, I
+simply had to be the one to go for help. I don't deserve any credit,"
+flung back Harriet, hurrying over to assist the suffering Buster. After
+Buster, came Hazel, the last to be rescued.
+
+"Have we got them all?" questioned the young man.
+
+"Yes, thank goodness," answered Harriet.
+
+"We are under great obligations to you, young gentlemen. We are in no
+condition to properly express our appreciation this evening. I hope we
+may have an opportunity to do so in the morning," said Miss Elting.
+
+"We are very glad to have been able to help you. We needed a little
+exercise," laughed the young man. "Yes, we shall see you again, but we
+haven't finished our work yet. What do you say? Shall we fix up some
+litters and carry the young ladies out?"
+
+"I don't know. We shall see in a few moments. Give them a chance to
+rest. They are completely exhausted."
+
+"Certainly. We fellows are going on ahead to examine this path. We'll
+return presently."
+
+The boys trudged off down the trail.
+
+"We shan't go far," called back the leader, then strode off after his
+companions. Harriet and Miss Elting made the girls as comfortable and
+presentable as possible, though it was apparent that both girls and
+clothes needed a thorough scrubbing.
+
+"I don't know how we are going to reach camp," pondered the guardian,
+while waiting for Grace, Margery and Hazel to rest.
+
+"Oh, I forgot to tell you," exclaimed Harriet; "Jane met these boys this
+afternoon. Two of them are acquaintances of hers. They are high school
+boys from the town of Proctor. Like ourselves they are out on a long
+tramp, and they are camped right near where we are to camp for the
+night. They assisted Jane to put up the camp and get everything in
+order. Then, when night came, Jane began to grow worried. She declared
+that something had happened to us. One of the boys wanted to know which
+way we were to come and Jane told them."
+
+"'Then they have gotten into the swamp and they're in trouble,' declared
+one of the boys. It seems that these boys passed through here yesterday,
+and two of them got into the morass in broad daylight. No wonder we
+floundered into it trying to get through there in the dark. Of course
+Jane was wild with anxiety. She said they must help her find us. This
+they were willing and glad to do. They decided to come to this end of
+the swamp and begin their search from the point where we were supposed
+to have entered."
+
+"Did you meet them?" interrupted Miss Elting.
+
+"Yes. Jane rushed them, in her car, to the nearest point on the road,
+then ran across the field with them to the place where we took the swamp
+trail. I met them just as I came out into the field. Jane was wild with
+delight, then she cried when I told her where you were. She wanted to
+come here with me. I told her to hurry back to camp and prepare hot
+water, get everything ready, then come for us. She will be back long
+before we get out of the swamp I think. The boys told me all that I have
+told you, as we were hurrying in here. It is very fortunate for us that
+we met them," declared Harriet in a matter-of-fact tone.
+
+"I think you are a very brave and resourceful girl, Harriet. You will
+get some honor beads for this. Girls, shall we sing 'Forty-nine Blue
+Bottles' now?" questioned Miss Elting quizzically.
+
+"No!" shouted Tommy, so loudly that the Tramp Club, who had gone a short
+distance down the trail, heard and thought that the girls were calling
+them back.
+
+"Did you call us?" hailed the leader, running back toward the girls.
+
+"No," returned Miss Elting. "We are all right, thank you."
+
+The boys continued on down the trail. Half an hour later they returned
+to find the girls somewhat rested and ready to proceed on their journey.
+
+"Do you think you feel strong enough to go on?" asked the leader of the
+Tramp Club solicitously.
+
+"Yes," replied Miss Elting. "We are anxious to meet Jane and get settled
+for the night. You have not told us yet to whom we are indebted for our
+rescue."
+
+"My name is George Baker. I'm the captain of the Tramp Club. They're a
+fine lot of fellows, but full of mischief."
+
+"As I said before, we haven't words with which to express our gratitude
+to you for what you have done for us," said Miss Elting. "Ah! There are
+your friends. Won't you introduce us to them? I'll first introduce my
+Meadow-Brook Girls." Miss Elting introduced the girls to the Tramp Club
+as a body, after which the captain did the same with his friends. The
+names of the members of the club as given by the captain in his
+introduction, were Dill Dodd, Fred Avery, Sam Crocker, Charles Mabie,
+Will Burgess and Davy Dockrill.
+
+"Taken altogether, ladies," remarked the captain, "we are a choice band
+of ruffians on the road, though sometimes gentlemen when we are at
+home."
+
+"I disagree with you," laughed the guardian. "I shall never meet any
+finer gentlemen than I have met to-night."
+
+The captain doffed his hat. Tommy was regarding him out of the corners
+of her eyes. She seemed about to say something; then, apparently
+changing her mind, smiled impishly to herself and remained silent.
+
+"I told your friend, Miss McCarthy, to set the boys at work getting
+things ready for the ladies when they reached camp," said the captain.
+"My, but I got some thrills riding out here with Miss McCarthy. We must
+have driven out here at the rate of about a hundred miles an hour. I
+never before rode so fast in my life. Here, fellows, what's the matter
+with you! This is no marathon. The young ladies can't hit up that pace
+and keep on their feet. Slow down."
+
+"We can walk jutht ath fatht ath any boy in bootth," retorted Tommy
+indignantly.
+
+Captain Baker touched the rim of his hat.
+
+"I'll argue it out with you some other time, Miss Thompson," he said.
+
+"Oh!" moaned Margery, staggering a little.
+
+The head tramp immediately sprang to Margery's assistance. "Let me help
+you," he insisted, taking Margery by the arm. Miss Elting stepped up on
+the other side of Margery, taking the latter's free arm.
+
+"Now, you will be all right, dear," encouraged the guardian.
+
+Harriet, in the meantime, was assisting Tommy along. The boys ahead
+began to sing. In this way the party followed the trail out to the
+field. The girls breathed sighs of relief as they emerged into the open.
+
+Just then, out of the darkness, rushed a figure, throwing itself upon
+Tommy and Harriet.
+
+"Oh, you dear girls!" cried Jane, flinging an arm about the neck of
+each. "I nearly cried my eyes out over you. But, when the boys started
+out to find you, I knew it would be all right. Everything is ready for
+you. Nice warm baths, and there will be a pot of hot coffee for you.
+I'll whisk you to camp in short order."
+
+"Never mind the whisking," spoke up the guardian. "Captain Baker has
+told us about your whisking him out here this evening."
+
+Jane threw back her head and laughed.
+
+"How about going back? I'll tell you what, boys. I'll take the girls and
+one of you, then I'll come back and get the rest."
+
+"No thank you, we will walk it," answered the chief tramp promptly.
+
+"Never," insisted Jane. "You come with us, young man. I'll be back here
+in half an hour for the rest of these brave boys."
+
+The captain declined to desert his men. Jane therefore urged him no
+further. The boys assisted in helping the Meadow-Brook Girls into the
+car, then Jane drove away at a rapid rate. She let the girls out at
+their camp, located in a very pretty and now moonlit valley.
+
+"You'll find everything ready. I'm going back for those unruly boys,"
+Jane announced, turning her car about and racing back over the road, her
+hair streaming over one shoulder, her eyes sparkling with the excitement
+of it all. The tramps had another lively ride to camp. Jane did not
+spare them. She took an almost savage delight in trying to frighten
+them, but did not succeed very well in this attempt. If they were afraid
+they failed to show it.
+
+On reaching camp the tired wayfarers lost no time in making for their
+tent where hot water for their baths awaited them. By the time Jane
+returned with the members of the Tramp Club the Meadow-Brook Girls, clad
+in dry, fresh clothing, were ready to receive their guests. They
+presented a wholly different appearance, now, and the boys gazed at them
+admiringly.
+
+"Jane, the boys must join us at supper," declared Miss Elting.
+
+George shook his head.
+
+"There are too many of us. We'll eat you out of house and home."
+
+"There's lots more stuff to eat in the automobile," declared Jane
+hospitably. "You wait till I unload the real supplies."
+
+She dragged out a hamper. It was filled with good things to eat, and
+what particularly pleased the boys, was the unexpected invitation to eat
+with their new found friends.
+
+Though the girls were tired and exhausted from their trying experiences
+in the swamp, it proved a happy evening. It was decided to remain in
+camp all next day to rest. Strangely enough Captain Baker announced that
+they too had already concluded that they needed a rest. He said they
+would do some foraging next day, and bring the girls some good things to
+eat to pay them back for what they had eaten and for the exciting ride
+Jane had given them.
+
+Miss Elting smiled knowingly. The tramps appeared to be gentlemanly
+boys, however "full of mischief" they might be.
+
+It was ten o'clock when the Tramp Club said good night and set out for
+their own camp.
+
+"Now, children, go to bed at once," directed the guardian. "We have had
+excitement enough for one day at least."
+
+The girls agreed with her, and half an hour later the camp had settled
+down for the night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI--A CONTEST OF ENDURANCE
+
+
+"Forty-nine blue bottleth were hanging on the wall," muttered Tommy in
+her sleep, as Miss Elting and Harriet stepped into their tent at eight
+o'clock the next morning, after having finished their inspection of the
+camp. The rest of the Meadow-Brook Girls were still sleeping soundly.
+
+"Poor Tommy," smiled the guardian.
+
+"What is Tommy muttering about forty-nine blue bottles?" questioned
+Harriet.
+
+The guardian laughed merrily.
+
+"I had the girls say that doggerel about the forty-nine blue bottles
+while we were stuck fast in the mud. You see, I wished to keep their
+minds from their troubles. We repeated the song until we were so hoarse
+we could scarcely speak."
+
+"I noticed that when I returned, but thought you had all caught cold. So
+it was forty-nine blue bottles that made you so hoarse," laughed
+Harriet. "I think you deserve the real credit of the rescue. Had you not
+done what you did to keep up the spirits of the girls there might have
+been a different ending," declared Harriet Burrell with emphasis. She
+kissed the guardian impulsively, than stepping softly, to avoid waking
+her sleeping companions, she made her way outside the tent. Shading her
+eyes and gazing about she finally discovered a brown-clad figure sitting
+on a fence. He evidently was observing the camp, for, when he caught
+sight of Harriet, he waved his hand.
+
+"I'll wager that's Captain Baker," smiled Harriet, waving back to him.
+"He is a peculiar young man. We are under great obligations to them all,
+but those boys think girls are of no account. We are going to clash with
+them. I know we are."
+
+Harriet poked the fire and built it up until a cloud of smoke was
+ascending skyward. It was not a skilfully made fire, but Harriet had a
+purpose in making a great smudge that morning. She wished to show the
+tramps that the girls had just gotten up and were not yet ready to
+receive company. She had construed Captain Baker's action in watching
+the camp as being for the purpose of learning when the Meadow-Brook
+outfit was ready to see them. As the girl cast frequent glances across
+the fields she saw the other members of the Tramp Club scattered about
+not far from their own camp, though all of the boys kept a respectful
+distance from the camp occupied by the girls.
+
+Breakfast was out of the way and the camp of the Meadow-Brook Girls put
+to rights by ten o'clock. The travelers felt somewhat lame and stiff
+after their experience in the swamp. Tommy walked with a distinct limp,
+which Harriet accused her of putting on for effect.
+
+"I'm not pretending," protested Tommy indignantly. "I gueth you would
+walk like I do if you had been fatht in the mud motht all night."
+
+Harriet laughed good-naturedly.
+
+A halloo out back of the camp cut short any further argument. It was
+Captain Baker with his fellow "tramps."
+
+"Is it too early in the morning to make our party call?" shouted George.
+
+"No. Come right along," called Harriet cordially. "We got up rather late
+this morning. Didn't I see you sitting on the fence off yonder?"
+
+"Yes, I was watching for a woodchuck to come out. Fellows, you've all
+met Miss Burrell, I think. And Miss Thompson."
+
+"Yeth I met them in the thwamp," lisped Tommy.
+
+Miss Elting came out, her face wearing a radiant smile of welcome for
+the tramps. Their hats were off instantly. She insisted on shaking hands
+with each of the boys in turn.
+
+"I suppose you have had your breakfast?" smiled the guardian.
+
+"Breakfast!" exclaimed Davy Dockrill. "Yes. We men eat our breakfast at
+six o'clock. We aren't like girls, who take their breakfast in place of
+luncheon."
+
+"And eat cookies between meals," laughed Harriet. "How many miles do you
+walk a day?"
+
+"Oh, a lot," answered George airily.
+
+"How many?" persisted Harriet.
+
+"Well, maybe ten, fifteen, twenty miles, maybe more."
+
+"I'll wager that you take a ride now and then," interjected Tommy.
+
+"We don't. We walk, I tell you."
+
+"We aren't like girls, who have to stop and rest every half mile or so,"
+declared Will Burgess.
+
+"And get stuck in the mud," laughed Fred Avery.
+
+"That'll be about all, boys," reproved Captain Baker, frowning. "I told
+you these boys were full of mischief. But you mustn't mind them," he
+added apologetically.
+
+"Oh, we don't mind them at all," smiled Harriet.
+
+"When are you going to start out again?"
+
+"Not until some time to-morrow morning," answered Miss Elting. "We are
+all a little lame and tired to-day."
+
+The captain nodded gravely.
+
+"Yes; girls can't stand as much as boys when it comes to hard work like
+a week or so of walking," he said with an air of conviction.
+
+"Yeth they can," resented Tommy. "Girlth can walk jutht ath far in a day
+ath boyth can."
+
+"You've got to show us before we can believe that," declared Davy.
+
+"Very well; we will show you," answered Harriet quietly. "Name your
+conditions."
+
+"Do you mean it?" questioned George.
+
+"Of course I mean it."
+
+"You're plucky, all right," he said regarding her admiringly. "But I
+don't like to have a contest with girls."
+
+"Why not? Are you afraid of them?" demanded Margery.
+
+The boy flushed.
+
+"No, ma'am. It isn't manly, that's all."
+
+"You mean it wouldn't be manly to be beaten by girls, eh?" suggested
+Harriet.
+
+"Well, yes, I suppose that's what I mean."
+
+"Oh, very well. If you wish to back out, why, of course----"
+
+"Back out? I guess not!" exclaimed Sam. "We'll walk your heads off, if
+you say the word."
+
+"Oh, mercy, no," protested Harriet, laughingly. "I hope you will not do
+anything so terrible as that. You haven't said what the conditions are
+to be. We must have some rules if we are to have a hiking contest. They
+have rules even in a walking contest, I understand."
+
+Captain Baker pondered a moment.
+
+"I don't know about rules. I think it will have to be a go-as-you-please
+contest."
+
+"We are willing to abide by whatever you say," replied Harriet.
+
+"Where do you go to-morrow? I mean where do you make your next camp?"
+
+Harriet consulted their map.
+
+"We are going to try to make Hunt's Corners," she said, scrutinizing the
+map.
+
+"May I see that map?" asked Davy.
+
+"I don't think it would be quite fair," answered Harriet brightly. "You
+see, our route is marked out on the map. Were I to show it to you, you
+would know which way we are going. That would give you an advantage. I
+will show the map to you some other time."
+
+"Of course it would be unfair. We don't want to see the map, Davy,"
+rebuked George. "How far is it to Hunt's Corners?"
+
+"Ten or twelve miles."
+
+"Don't let that trouble you, boys. I'll be on hand with the car and I'll
+pick up the stragglers," interjected Jane, joining the group. She had
+been at work cleaning her car. Her face was smudged and her hands
+blackened. "If any of you get tired out I'll promise to take care of
+you."
+
+"Thank you," answered the captain, flushing. His companions laughed at
+him.
+
+"But, Captain," protested Harriet, "we haven't decided on anything. Is
+this to be a race for one day, or for all the way home? You go right
+through Meadow-Brook, do you not?"
+
+"Yes. Just as you say. I don't think you can stand it to race all the
+way home."
+
+"Perhaps not," answered Harriet dryly.
+
+"No. The poor, delicate things," mourned Jane. "Just think how you are
+going to walk them to death. You boys should be ashamed of yourselves."
+
+"I don't care if the girls don't," laughed George. "Yes. We'll walk you
+all the way in to Meadow-Brook. The party that gets in first must give
+the other side something. What'll it be?" asked George.
+
+"I'll take marthhmallowth for mine," piped Tommy.
+
+"That's it. A box of candy for each of you if you win. What do you say,
+fellows?" questioned George, appealing to his companions.
+
+They nodded, smiling acquiescence.
+
+"Suppose we give each of you a handkerchief if you win," smiled Harriet.
+
+"It's a go," declared Captain George.
+
+"Then I propose this. Each party is to go as it chooses. The one that
+gets in first wins," suggested Harriet.
+
+"Are tricks barred?" demanded Sam.
+
+"I don't know what you mean by tricks. Strategy isn't," returned
+Harriet.
+
+"Whew! That's a big word," exclaimed Dill.
+
+"Neither party is to ride, you know," spoke up George, eyeing them
+suspiciously.
+
+"Certainly not," answered Harriet. "We shouldn't do such a dishonest
+thing."
+
+"I beg your pardon. Of course not. You girls have a car and, perhaps,
+you might think it amusing to work a trick on us."
+
+"Our Meadow-Brook Girls aren't that kind, Mr. Baker," interposed Miss
+Elting severely.
+
+"Ride? You couldn't drag them into the car," declared Jane.
+
+"By the way, young men, have you seen anything of two Italians and a
+bear?" asked Miss Elting.
+
+"Yes. We met them two days ago," answered the captain. "Why?"
+
+"We had some difficulty with them; that's all."
+
+"I wish we had known that." The captain's lips compressed, a frown
+appearing on his forehead. "What did they do?"
+
+Miss Elting told the boys the whole story. How the boys did laugh when
+the guardian described how Jane had chased the Italians about the field
+with her car!
+
+"We will keep out of the road when you are abroad, Miss McCarthy," said
+George. "I don't believe you are a safe person to be allowed on the
+highway."
+
+"You are right, she isn't," nodded Miss Elting. "Well, have you settled
+your plans for the contest?"
+
+"All the plans we can make. We are to walk to Meadow-Brook. Neither
+party should actually walk more than ten hours a day----"
+
+"My goodneth," interrupted Tommy. "Ten hourth a day. Thave me!"
+
+Captain Baker smiled a superior smile and nodded to his companions.
+
+"Oh, no. We shouldn't want to wear you out to that extent," replied
+Harriet mildly.
+
+"In the meantime we wish you to come to supper with us this evening,"
+invited Miss Elting. "We will show you that Meadow-Brook Girls can cook
+as well as walk. We shan't promise you much of a variety, but there will
+be plenty to eat. That will give you new strength for the coming
+contest," she added, with a mischievous twinkle in her eyes.
+
+The captain accepted the invitation for his friends. He offered to bring
+over some provisions and some milk. Jane replied that she had arranged
+for the milk, which she was to go after in her car. It was decided that
+the boys need bring nothing with them, there being enough in camp for
+all. The Tramp Club went away, to return at about half past five in the
+afternoon.
+
+The young men had become very much interested in the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+As Captain Baker characterized them, "They aren't the helpless, fainting
+kind. Those girls know how to take care of themselves. Now, what do you
+think of their fighting off two Italians and a bear? Fellows, we've got
+to hike some to beat them! They've got something in the back of their
+heads that we don't know about."
+
+"Pshaw! We can walk them off the earth," scoffed Sam.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII--MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS UP A TREE
+
+
+Supper, that night, was a jolly affair. Miss Elting decided that, though
+the boys were full of pranks, they were lads well worth knowing. She,
+naturally, was very particular as to the associates of her charges, but
+she approved of the Tramp Club. The boys, even as their captain had
+averred at the first meeting, were "full of mischief." Despite their
+love of fun however they were straightforward, manly young men.
+
+The party broke up about nine o'clock that evening.
+
+"To-morrow the contest begins," reminded the captain.
+
+"So it does," answered Harriet, as though she had overlooked that fact.
+"What time do you start?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know. What time do you start?"
+
+"After breakfast," laughed Harriet.
+
+"Ha, ha! That's another joke," chuckled Dill.
+
+"It isn't as yet. Perhaps it may be to-morrow night," replied Harriet.
+But just how much of a joke it was to be, or on whom, Harriet Burrell at
+that moment did not know. She rather suspected it would be on the Tramp
+Club, but in this conjecture she was wrong.
+
+"Oh, Harriet, why did you ever get us into this?" groaned Margery, after
+the departure of the boys. "Here am I half dead, with swollen feet and
+aching bones, and now I've got to enter a race of I don't know how many
+miles against a lot of athletic boys."
+
+"As I said before, Margery, you may ride in the car if you prefer."
+
+"No; I'm going through with this hike if it kills me."
+
+"That's the way to talk!" nodded Harriet briskly. "Faint heart never won
+strong race."
+
+"Have you any plans for fooling the boys, Harriet?" asked Jane.
+
+Harriet shook her head, but, after a gesture of apology, drew Jane
+aside, whispering with her.
+
+"Can you spare us a moment, Miss Elting?" asked Harriet. Soon the three
+were in earnest council.
+
+"I agree," called Tommy ironically. "What ith it? I'm thtrong for it!"
+
+"It's going to be hard work," declared the guardian, "and it'll be rough
+traveling during the last five miles, but we'll be there by noon. We
+made no agreement with the boys to stop at any particular place?"
+
+"No, Miss Elting," Harriet answered.
+
+"Then everybody to bed!" ordered the guardian tersely.
+
+At three the next morning four sleepy girls were tumbled out of bed by a
+barely less drowsy chaperon. But swift, silent work had to be done.
+Harriet put wood on the still glowing coals of the fire, then prepared
+coffee and a light meal.
+
+"Thtop it!" screamed Tommy, when energetic Jane "struck" the tent,
+bringing it down on a pair of heads, the other of which was Margery's.
+
+Jane McCarthy, heedless of their protests, hustled relentlessly. The
+girls and their guardian ate as best they could, under the
+circumstances. By the time the light breakfast had been eaten all the
+packing had been done, and everything was ready for moving, except the
+dishes and supplies. These were packed by Margery, Hazel and Tommy. At
+four o'clock all was in readiness for the start.
+
+"We are going to travel eastward over the mountains, girls," explained
+Harriet. "We shall have dense forests to go through and rugged paths to
+follow, but we shall save a number of miles and a great deal of time by
+going that way. We ought to reach Meadow-Brook some hours ahead of the
+boys if they take the road, as I heard Mr. Baker say they would. We
+shall touch the road occasionally, especially after we get over the
+mountains. And you, Jane, must leave a sign on the fence. We will do the
+same. Wherever we touch the highway we will make a sign, also putting
+down the time. Those boys don't know anything about our secret signs,
+and they mustn't."
+
+"Are we all ready?" asked the guardian.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You had better start your car quietly, Jane," suggested Miss Elting.
+
+Jane nodded. She understood. The camp of the Tramp Club was not so far
+away but that the boys could hear the motor plainly if they were awake,
+which the girls very much doubted, as the Tramps had confessed that they
+sat up late nights, telling stories, playing Indian war games and
+scouting in the woods.
+
+"Shoulder packs!" commanded Harriet.
+
+A few moments later the four girls with their guardian, after having put
+out the fire, started from the field. They were headed for the highway.
+Jane stood beside her car, waving to them until they were out of sight,
+then she calmly climbed into the vehicle and went to sleep. Crazy Jane
+had a plan of her own.
+
+About five o'clock the camp of the Tramp Club began to show signs of
+life. The captain roused his companions. It had been his intention to
+get out earlier, but he had overslept, as had all of his men. Still, he
+did not consider that there was any necessity for great haste. Of course
+he had not the slightest idea that the Meadow-Brook Girls had broken
+camp at any such early hour.
+
+The boys, while losing no time, made no effort at great haste. It was
+nearly six o'clock when they finished their breakfast and half an hour
+later, before they strapped on their packs and started down the road.
+
+Dill Dodd chuckled triumphantly as he pointed to Jane McCarthy's
+automobile standing right where it had been since the previous
+afternoon.
+
+"All sleepy heads over there," nodded Sam. "We could beat that outfit
+and sleep all the time."
+
+"Wait a minute," answered George. "I don't see the tent, do you,
+fellows?"
+
+No one spoke for a moment. Then the leader announced that he was going
+down to the girls' camp. He returned at a trot after having visited the
+deserted camp and peered into the automobile.
+
+"Well, what is it?" questioned several boys.
+
+"Fellows, we're stung. They've gone!" declared George.
+
+"But--but the automobile is there?"
+
+"Yes, and that Miss McCarthy is curled up like a kitten on the back seat
+sleeping as sweetly as you please. There's not another girl in camp."
+
+"Well, what do you know about that?" drawled Davy.
+
+"How long have they been gone, do you think?" asked Will.
+
+"From the feel of the ashes I should say several hours." George did not
+know that they had smothered the fire with a damp blanket. "That was a
+fine trick to play on us the first day," growled George. "That's the
+girl of it."
+
+"Hold on, Cap. You know Miss Burrell, who seems to be the spokesman for
+the outfit, said strategy wasn't barred. This isn't a trick, it's
+strategy. There's a difference between tricking and strategy you know."
+
+"Boys, we've _got to_ catch up with them," declared the captain. "Are we
+going to let a lot of girls get the best of us?"
+
+"No!" shouted the boys in chorus.
+
+"Then hike! Don't lose your wind at the start. Strike a steady clip, but
+after half an hour hit it up, and keep hitting it up till we catch up
+with them and take the lead once more. This is a fine mess, but we'll
+soon be out of it with flying colors."
+
+The Tramp Club walked for two hours without finding any trace of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls. The boys were becoming worried. By this time they
+surely ought to have found the tracks of the girls in the road.
+
+"You don't think they have taken a short cut, do you?" asked Charlie.
+
+Baker shook his head.
+
+"They couldn't get over those mountains. No; they have been following
+the side of the road, so we wouldn't be able to pick up the trail.
+They're sharp ones. They know something about trailing. That's plain to
+be seen. Hark! what's that?"
+
+The honk, honk of an automobile horn was heard in the far distance to
+the rear of them. They listened a moment, then pressed on. It was not an
+unusual happening to be passed by a motor car. They soon realized,
+however, that this one was coming at a much higher rate of speed than
+the statute said was lawful.
+
+A cloud of dust arose a full half mile to the rear of them. As it bore
+down on the boys the dust rose higher and higher.
+
+"Hoo-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e!" yelled a shrill voice from the heart of the dust
+cloud.
+
+"It's that Miss McCarthy. They call her Crazy Jane," shouted Dill.
+"Let's hold her up."
+
+Bent on mischief, the boys formed a chain across the road with clasped
+hands. On came the car careening from side to side, its horn honking
+hoarsely like the warning of a sentinel crow, its driver uttering her
+shrill "hoo-e-e-e," her hair standing out almost straight behind her in
+the breeze.
+
+The boys stood firm; the car did not slacken its speed.
+
+"Jump for your lives!" yelled the captain of the tramps. "She's going to
+run us down!"
+
+A great black object flitted past them just as their ranks opened. There
+was not even time to get out of the road. The most they could do was to
+make an opening large enough--and barely large enough at that--to permit
+the passage of the car, which went roaring past them. A long-drawn
+"hoo-e-e-e," floated back to them, a choking cloud of dust and sand
+showered over them, sending the boys into severe coughing fits as they
+staggered off to the side of the highway and sat down on the dusty
+grass.
+
+"Well, what do you think of that?" gasped Sam Crocker.
+
+"I think it's exceedingly lucky for us that we got out of the road when
+we did," answered Captain George, shaking an angry fist in the direction
+of the disappearing cloud of dust. "Why, she would have run right over
+us."
+
+"She would," agreed the boys in chorus.
+
+"But also she wouldn't. She knew we would get out of the way," added Sam
+Crocker.
+
+"Come on, fellows. This won't do," cried George. "We've got to make
+tracks now." They scrambled to their feet and set out at a fast pace. In
+the meantime Jane McCarthy, chuckling over the scare she had given the
+Tramp Club, was racing along the highway in her mad drive to the
+eastward.
+
+A few miles farther on she stopped the car and after taking a survey of
+the land, got out and made some chalk marks on a fence. Then she drove
+on more leisurely.
+
+While all this was happening the Meadow-Brook Girls were traveling on,
+also at a fast pace. They had gotten over the rugged range of hills
+after having sustained some scratches on their hands and several rents
+in their frocks. They then came out into a corn field. A highway lay
+below them which they would have to cross. On the opposite side of the
+highway lay an apple orchard, the trees standing close together, their
+tops in most instances interlacing.
+
+"I wonder if the boys have passed here?" questioned Hazel, shading her
+eyes and gazing up and down the road.
+
+"No. They must still be a long way back," answered Harriet.
+
+The Meadow-Brook Girls started down the hill, climbing the fence into
+the road. There before them, plainly discernible, were the tracks of an
+automobile.
+
+"Jane went past here not long ago," decided Margery. "These are her car
+tracks, I am sure."
+
+"Yes, and there's a chalk mark on the fence," said Miss Elting, pointing
+down the road a few rods. They hurried over to examine the sign.
+
+"A broken arrow," exclaimed Harriet. "That means danger or 'look out.'
+Now, I wonder what we are to look out for? I don't see anything
+alarming."
+
+"I think Jane means to inform us that the boys are not far from here and
+to look out for them," suggested the guardian.
+
+"Yes, that must be it. Half-past twelve, the signal says, she passed
+here. That is nearly an hour ago. Come, girls, let's get over that fence
+in a hurry and be off. Once through the orchard, and they can't see us,"
+urged Harriet Burrell.
+
+"Wait; let's be certain that we are right," warned the guardian. She
+took a careful survey about them. Nothing of an alarming nature was to
+be seen. It was just an ordinary country scene, with the sun shining
+down overhead, the air warm and oppressive about them.
+
+"Everything appears to be all right," she decided finally. "Yes, go
+ahead, girls." Miss Elting was the first to climb the roadside fence and
+drop down on the other side. She was quickly followed by the four girls
+of her party. "Keep on the alert, girls. If any of you catches sight of
+the boys drop down behind trees and don't speak." The guardian had
+entered into the spirit of the contest with an enthusiasm equal to that
+of the girls themselves. "I can't believe that they have gotten ahead of
+us. It isn't probable that that was what Jane meant when she marked the
+danger signal on the fence here."
+
+"Wait," called Harriet. Springing back over the fence she wrote the
+letters "O. K." underneath the broken arrow and the triangle. This was
+for the purpose of informing Jane that her message had been read and
+understood in case she were to return that way later on, as she was more
+than likely to do.
+
+This done they started briskly in among the trees of the orchard. They
+had not gone far before Tommy, who was in the lead, uttered a shrill
+little scream of alarm. The girls had started to run toward her when
+they halted abruptly. Just ahead of them stood a great hulking bull with
+head lowered to the ground, his small eyes fixed menacingly on the
+girls. The bull uttered a deep, rumbling bellow.
+
+"Thave me! Oh, thave me!" wailed Tommy.
+
+"Run for your lives, girls," shouted the guardian.
+
+They turned and were about to flee for the road when they came to
+another abrupt stop. To the right and the left of them were two other
+bulls, each with lowered head, pawing the dirt with first one front foot
+then the other.
+
+All at once the girls understood the meaning of Jane's danger sign. She
+had seen the bulls in passing, and knowing that her companions would
+pass that way, had halted to leave a warning for them.
+
+"Quick! Into the trees!" shouted Miss Elting. She grabbed the trembling
+Tommy and helped her up into a tree, Harriet in the meantime performing
+the same service for Margery and Hazel. Then the guardian and Harriet
+began scrambling up, but ere they had gotten off the ground the bulls
+charged them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII--A SERIOUS PREDICAMENT
+
+
+"Climb! Miss Elting, climb!" begged Harriet.
+
+Margery and Tommy uttered shrill cries of terror.
+
+The guardian reached for the crotch of the tree, just above her head,
+and drew herself up. Harriet leaped into the air, catching hold of an
+overhanging limb. She intended to pull herself free from the ground and
+out of the reach of the angry bulls.
+
+The limb snapped. Apple tree boughs always are treacherous. Harriet
+landed on the ground in a heap. A gasp of horror escaped from the lips
+of the girls in the trees near at hand.
+
+There followed a bellow and a rush from the third bull, which was some
+few yards distant from its fellows. The girls closed their eyes as the
+lowered head and wicked-looking horns seemed to come into contact with
+Harriet Burrell's body. Miss Elting, strong-nerved as she was, could not
+repress a scream. Margery, utterly terror-stricken, lost her balance,
+and had it not been for Hazel, who threw an arm about her, Margery would
+have fallen from the tree and been at the mercy of the savage bulls.
+
+In the meantime, having heard no scream from Harriet, the girls opened
+their eyes fearfully. They saw Harriet leaping for a higher limb of the
+tree. The head of the bull had crashed against the base of the tree
+where Harriet had been but a second before.
+
+With remarkable presence of mind the girl, when she struck the ground,
+had rolled herself to one side, thus placing the tree between herself
+and her assailant. This gave her a few seconds respite. But in these few
+seconds Harriet gathered her faculties together. Springing to her feet
+she had flung herself straight up into the air, with arms thrown above
+her head to grasp the limb that her quick eyes had noted.
+
+Most girls would have fainted, but Harriet Burrell did not. She was not
+of the fainting kind, as Captain Baker had so truly said a few hours
+before. A few awful seconds of suspense followed.
+
+With feet curled under her, the girl's hands reached and clasped the
+limb. Then she drew herself up to it; a feat requiring both muscle and
+practice. Once there she lay along the creaking limb of the apple tree
+just out of reach of the tossing horns, gazing down into the bloodshot
+eyes of the ferocious beast. The limb bent perilously. It threatened, at
+any second, to give way beneath her weight.
+
+"Climb higher!" cried Miss Elting, "oh, climb higher!"
+
+"I don't dare move. The limb may break if I do," answered Harriet in a
+wholly calm voice.
+
+"Thave me, thave me!" wailed Tommy Thompson weakly.
+
+"What shall we do? Please be careful, Harriet," begged the guardian in
+an agonized voice.
+
+"I intend to be careful. I haven't any burning desire to fall on those
+sharp horns. I never saw such a fiendish expression in the eyes of an
+animal."
+
+The limb creaked warningly. Harriet instantly ceased speaking. Somehow,
+she thought, the muscular effort of speaking must be putting a little
+added weight on the limb.
+
+The bull walked away a few paces. He stopped and began bellowing and
+pawing.
+
+"See if you can't call him away. I simply don't dare to move as long as
+he is so near," said Harriet.
+
+"How shall I call him?" questioned the guardian.
+
+"Flaunt something at him."
+
+"I haven't anything to flaunt."
+
+"Wait till I take off my thkirt," piped the little lisping girl.
+
+"Be careful that you don't fall," warned Harriet.
+
+Tommy quickly stripped off her skirt, then leaning over, swung it back
+and forth. Instantly there was a bellow and a charge from the enraged
+bull. The skirt was whisked from her hands on the sharp horns of the
+furious animal that had charged it.
+
+"Thave me!" cried Tommy. "Oh, thave my thkirt!"
+
+There was reason for alarm in Tommy's case at that moment. The bull was
+tossing its head to release the skirt that had become impaled upon the
+sharp horns. Presently the skirt fell to the ground. The animal began
+stamping upon and prodding it. Tommy got into action at about the same
+time. Shrieking and protesting, she began pelting the animal with apples
+that she picked from the tree for the purpose. Some of the missiles
+reached their mark. Most of them did not.
+
+"Oh, my thkirt, my thkirt!" wailed the little girl.
+
+"Never mind, you have saved Harriet," comforted Miss Elting.
+
+Harriet, the instant the bull left her, started to wriggle backwards.
+The limb gave way with a crash, and Harriet plunged to the ground, but
+by skilfully twisting her body she avoided striking on her head. She was
+up like a flash and once more sprang for the tree. This time she did not
+trust to a treacherous limb, but scrambled hastily up the trunk and
+perched herself high and safe in the crotch of the tree a few seconds
+later.
+
+"Gracious! That was a narrow escape," gasped the guardian. "How do you
+feel?"
+
+"I am all right." Harriet smiled faintly. Her cheeks were pale and her
+eyes large and bright. There were no other indications that she was
+disturbed at her succession of narrow escapes from the bull. "Poor
+Tommy, you lost your skirt, didn't you?"
+
+"Ye--eth. Oh, what thhall I do?"
+
+"I guess you will have to finish the day's hike in your petticoat,"
+answered Miss Elting. "However, from present indications it will be dark
+by the time we get away from here. Besides your petticoat is black and
+will easily pass for an outside skirt."
+
+"I can't, I can't," wailed the girl. "I won't go on thith way."
+
+"Don't worry, Tommy. You may have my skirt. I don't mind going without
+it at all. I have a black underskirt, so the absence of my outside skirt
+will hardly be noticed," answered Harriet.
+
+"I won't. The naughty old bull. I want my own thkirt."
+
+"You won't need it," said Margery, speaking for the first time since she
+had been overcome with terror.
+
+"Don't you think they will go away?" questioned Hazel anxiously.
+
+"Not so long as we are up here," replied Harriet. "I know their kind
+pretty well. I was chased by one at grandfather's farm two years ago.
+There is only one way to save yourself from them when they are
+angry--that is to keep out of their way. I think----"
+
+"Oh, look! Look, girls!" cried Hazel in a tone of suppressed eagerness.
+
+"Oh, thave me! There they come," moaned Tommy.
+
+"It's the Tramp Club as I live," exclaimed Miss Elting. "Girls, we must
+call to them. It is a humiliating position for us, but we must get out
+of here. They can at least go for the farmer and ask him to drive the
+animals off."
+
+"Oh, Miss Elting, please don't call to them," begged Harriet.
+
+The boys were swinging down the road at a rapid but steady pace. They
+were walking in step, each with a heavy pack on his back, hat brims
+tilted back, a manly looking lot of young men. As they reached a point
+opposite to the lower end of the orchard they began to sing, their
+voices raised in chorus:
+
+ "Forty-nine blue bottles are hanging on the wall,
+ Forty-nine blue bottles are hanging on the wall.
+ Take one of the bottles down and there'll be forty-eight
+ blue bottles a hanging on the wall, a hanging on
+ the wall.
+ Take one of the bottles down and there'll be forty-eight
+ blue bottles a hanging on the wall, a hanging on
+ the wall."
+
+"Oh, help!" moaned Margery Brown.
+
+"Thave me!" wailed Tommy.
+
+Harriet and Miss Elting burst out laughing, but not loudly enough for
+their laughter to reach the Tramp Club, the members of which
+organization were trudging along past the orchard, wholly unconscious of
+the nearness of their friends.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV--HARRIET IS RESOURCEFUL
+
+
+The boys were still removing blue bottles from the wall as they swung on
+out of sight of the girls in the apple trees. Harriet Burrell was
+shaking with laughter.
+
+"That ith right. Laugh!" jeered Tommy. "I gueth it ith funny, but I
+don't thee it. Maybe I'll laugh, to-morrow."
+
+"It is really the most laughable situation I ever heard of," admitted
+the guardian.
+
+"One side of it, yes," agreed Harriet. "The other side isn't so funny.
+We must think of getting out of here. All our plans have come to
+nothing. The boys have passed us. I am afraid we shan't be able to catch
+up with them again unless we can get a start before long."
+
+The bulls, attracted by the singing, had turned, now facing the road.
+They regarded the boys menacingly, but the Tramp Club did not see them.
+Now the animals once more turned toward the trees that held the girls.
+The beasts resumed their bellowing and pawing and moved up under the
+trees, tossing their heads, issuing challenge after challenge to the
+girls to come down. But the challenges were not accepted. Harriet
+regarded the beasts frowningly. The other girls gazed at them in terror.
+
+"Now, Harriet Burrell, as you wouldn't allow me to call the boys, what
+do you propose to do? Remain up in a tree all night?" demanded the
+guardian.
+
+"By no means."
+
+"I don't dare thleep up here," complained Tommy. "What if I thhould fall
+out?"
+
+"You wouldn't have far to fall," answered Margery.
+
+"Oh, wouldn't it be awful," gasped Hazel, "if we were to fall out of
+these trees?"
+
+"The animals will go to sleep themselves after dark, I am sure. We shall
+be able to get away then," replied Harriet wisely.
+
+"I believe you are right. I hadn't thought of that," nodded Miss Elting.
+"But must we remain in this position all the rest of the day?"
+
+"No, indeed," replied Harriet. "I had hoped that the owner of these
+animals might come along, but there seems to be no one about. You see,
+in the autumn, the farmers are seldom abroad in the fields unless they
+chance to be plowing, so I think we had better move."
+
+"What have you in mind, Harriet? I know you have formed some plan to get
+us out of this predicament."
+
+"Yes, I have. The plan may not work, but it is worth trying. I wish you
+would call the beasts to your tree. I can depend upon you. You will not
+lose your head. You will have to use your own skirt this time, but for
+goodness' sake, don't lose it. Some one must be presentable when we get
+to camp."
+
+"See here, Harriet, I positively forbid your taking any further chances.
+You have had enough narrow escapes to-day as it is."
+
+"There will be no particular danger for me, Miss Elting. You will be in
+more danger than I shall be when the plan really begins to work. Will
+you call the bulls over to your tree?"
+
+"Yes. But I warn you I shan't be a party to any more foolishness."
+
+Harriet made no reply. She scanned the orchard about her, finally fixing
+her eyes upon a tree with low-hanging limbs, situated several rods
+farther down the orchard and away from the road. The girl nodded, as
+though in answer to some question she had asked of herself.
+
+"Now I am ready. I have removed my skirt," called the guardian. "What
+next?"
+
+"Wait a moment." Harriet clambered down the tree a little way, placing
+herself in a position where she could jump without loss of time. "Now
+wave your skirt, please."
+
+Miss Elting leaned down from her position in the tree and began swinging
+her skirt slowly back and forth. The result was immediate and startling.
+With bellows of rage, three savage bulls with lowered heads charged the
+blue skirt. It seems that these animals were not particular as to color.
+Blue was every bit as aggravating as red to them.
+
+Harriet, the instant the beasts began charging, had dropped fearlessly
+to the ground. The bulls had not observed her.
+
+"Harriet!" screamed Margery.
+
+Harriet gave no heed to the cry of alarm. Instead she ran with all speed
+farther down the orchard, casting apprehensive glances over her shoulder
+now and then. A cry of warning from Miss Elting told her that the bulls
+had turned and were charging her. Harriet gave one quick glance over her
+shoulder, then leaped for a tree, up which she clambered with agility.
+She was none too soon, for, by the time she had cleared the trunk, the
+bulls met at the tree with horns clashing. For a moment they turned
+their attention to each other and then backed away and looked up at
+their intended victim.
+
+"Miss Elting!" called the girl.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"I am going to decoy the bulls as far away from you as possible. When
+you hear me scream you are all to climb down from the trees and run for
+the road fence. I'll try to hold the ugly beasts here while you are
+making the dash. But run for your life. Don't you dare to fall down."
+
+"All of us?" questioned the guardian apprehensively.
+
+"Yes, please."
+
+"But, Harriet--suppose that we do get safely away--how are you going to
+leave the orchard?"
+
+"I have thought of a way to do it," Harriet assured the guardian. "The
+danger, now, is in so many of us being here. When I scream the first
+time you are to run. When you get safely over the fence you are to give
+me the signal 'hoo-e-e-e-e.' I will know, by that, that you are safe.
+When I give you a second call, after you are in the highway, try to
+attract the attention of the bulls. That will be my chance to make a
+dash for the nearest fence."
+
+"I don't like your plan," objected the guardian. "You are taking too
+great a risk."
+
+"It is the only way we can get away from here before night," argued
+Harriet. "Even then, we should find it difficult to escape, for I think
+the beasts would camp right under these trees. They are determined to
+get us. I'm going to fool them. Now, call them!"
+
+The guardian did so. The animals did not show any immediate inclination
+to move. So Miss Elting cautiously got down to the ground. That was all
+that was necessary. The beasts charged her. The guardian lost no time in
+scrambling into the tree. In the meantime Harriet had again dropped to
+the ground and was running at the top of her speed. She was still within
+easy reach of the voices of her companions, though out of their sight.
+
+"Where are they?" she called.
+
+"Right here," answered the guardian.
+
+"All right. Don't try to keep them there. I am not afraid."
+
+"We have no desire to, I assure you, Harriet. But do be careful."
+
+Harriet was still on the ground. She moved a little farther down through
+the orchard, getting out where the trees were less thick, so as to be
+still within sight of the beasts she was hoping to lure away from the
+trees that held her companions. The bulls did not appear to see her, so
+Harriet stripped off her own skirt and began waving it at them. It was
+several moments later when the bulls discovered her and then they
+started for her without loss of time.
+
+"Run!" screamed Harriet. "Run! Don't make a sound to attract their
+attention." She adopted her own advice and started down through an aisle
+of apple trees, her feet scarcely seeming to touch the ground. The girl
+was flaunting her skirt over her head. She heard bellows of rage off
+toward the trees in which her companions were perched. The girl halted.
+A few seconds later she saw the beasts coming. Instead of immediately
+taking to a tree Harriet began running again, still waving the skirt
+high above her head.
+
+Harriet heard Tommy give a little scream. It was quickly suppressed.
+Undoubtedly Miss Elting had sharply rebuked the terrified little girl.
+Harriet did not pause again. This was her last chance to get the bulls
+away from the trees that held her companions. Their safety depended upon
+her doing so. She was determined to succeed, even at the imminent risk
+of losing her own safety. The animals did not seem to be gaining on her,
+but all at once they put on a great burst of speed. Harriet darted
+sideways, then straight ahead again. This time she leaped out into the
+open, flaunting the skirt, tantalizing the ugly beasts, resorting to
+every artifice she could think of to take their attention from Miss
+Elting and the other girls.
+
+Harriet succeeded beyond her expectations. She also succeeded in
+enraging the beasts far more than she had hoped to do.
+
+Now they were getting too close for safety, so Harriet darted in among
+the trees, followed by the three savage, bellowing bulls. She grasped
+the first low-hanging limb that she came to, and swung herself up into a
+tree. A pair of sharp horns caught the end of the skirt, rending it
+nearly to the waist. Harriet clung desperately to the skirt. She did not
+propose to lose it if she could help doing so. Jerking the skirt away
+she climbed higher and, bracing herself, gazed down triumphantly.
+
+"That's the time I fooled you, didn't I?" she taunted. Leaning forward
+the girl waved the skirt. She reached down far enough to flaunt the
+skirt full in the face of the nearest animal. He bellowed his rage and
+pawed the dirt. She continued to aggravate him. If she could only keep
+them all there until her companions reached the highway!
+
+"Hoo-e-e-e-e!" sounded the distant, long-drawn call of the Meadow-Brook
+Girls.
+
+"Oh, they're safe!" cried Harriet joyfully. For a moment she closed her
+eyes and clung panting to the trunk of the tree. After resting a few
+moments she cautiously drew on her skirt and fastened it, three pairs of
+red, evil eyes observing her threateningly. Then she climbed to the
+topmost branches of the apple tree, hoping to get high enough to obtain
+a glimpse of her companions.
+
+"I might have known that a tree with such low boughs would not be high
+enough for that," she muttered. "But I'll call."
+
+Listening she heard the "Hoo-e-e-e!" of Miss Elting again.
+
+"Hoo-e-e-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e!" answered Harriet Burrell.
+
+In response the others began shouting. The bulls did not appear to be
+interested. One of them lay down.
+
+"My goodness! I do hope they aren't going to stay here the rest of the
+day," cried Harriet. "I don't know what I shall do in that event."
+
+She now tried Tommy's plan and began pelting the animal that had lain
+down with apples. It took very little of this sort of treatment to bring
+the beast to his feet. He leaped up with a bellow and began pawing up
+the dirt, sending showers of it over his companions.
+
+Harriet chuckled.
+
+"Now, if only Miss Elting will attract their attention. I think I had
+better try to hide myself and keep quiet." This she did. She could hear
+the shouts and yells of her companions. They were setting up a great
+racket off there in the road, doing their utmost to draw the attention
+of the animals away from Harriet.
+
+After fully five minutes of this one of the bulls walked off with his
+head in the air. He stood a moment with head still erect, gazing off
+toward the highway. Suddenly he started on a run. The other two bulls
+followed him with their gaze for a few moments, then they, too, started
+away at a moderate trot.
+
+"The plan has worked! It has worked!" cried Harriet in triumph, under
+her breath. "Oh, I do hope they get far enough away. I must crawl down
+so as to be ready for my big spring. This is almost equal to a Spanish
+bull fight, except that I haven't any barbs to stick into them."
+
+The girl crept cautiously to the ground. She stood at the foot of the
+tree, shielding her body by its trunk, peering around the tree at the
+running bulls. They were headed straight toward the road fence,
+traveling more rapidly now.
+
+In order to reach the fence at the side of the field, Harriet would be
+obliged to go out into the open, where, if the animals turned, she would
+be sure to be discovered.
+
+A cry from her companions told her that the time for action on her part
+had arrived. Without an instant's hesitation Harriet Burrell started for
+a fence which stood to the eastward of her place of refuge. A few
+moments later she had cleared the orchard and reached the open field.
+She saw the three bulls pawing the ground by the roadside fence in the
+distance. Her companions were standing in the middle of the road waving
+their skirts at the animals, not daring to get close to the fence.
+
+"Run! Run, Harriet!" screamed Miss Elting.
+
+As though they had understood the meaning of the guardian's warning, the
+bulls wheeled sharply. They saw the fleeing figure of the Meadow-Brook
+Girl and, leaving Miss Elting and her party, charged straight across the
+field towards Harriet, while the latter was still some distance from the
+fence towards which she was running.
+
+"Run! Oh, run!" came the voice of Miss Elting in a terrified wail.
+"Run!"
+
+Suddenly, Harriet, who had turned to glance over her shoulder to measure
+the distance between herself and her pursuers, stumbled and plunged
+headfirst into a little depression in the ground.
+
+A scream rose from her horrified companions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV--A RACE FOR LIFE
+
+
+"She'll be killed!" wailed Hazel, covering her eyes to shut out the
+sight.
+
+"Thave her!" screamed Tommy. The little girl sprang forward, scrambled
+over the fence and, had she, too, not fallen would have dashed down the
+field to Harriet Burrell's assistance, utterly regardless of her own
+peril. The guardian climbed over the fence and had placed a firm grip on
+the little girl before the latter could get to her feet. Miss Elting
+fairly dragged Tommy back to the fence and assisted her over.
+
+"She's up again!" cried Hazel. "Oh, hurry, hurry!" Her voice rose to a
+piercing wail.
+
+Harriet had gotten to her feet. She cast one frightened look over her
+shoulder, then continued to run towards the fence. They saw that she
+limped a little. Nor was the girl running as fast as before her fall.
+The three bulls had gained considerably during the few seconds that
+Harriet had been down. They were now charging with lowered heads,
+bunched closely together, this time as though determined that their
+victim should not escape them.
+
+Just ahead of her, Harriet had seen a ditch, deep and broad, made for
+the purpose of draining the land. Instantly a plan formed in her active
+mind. She could not hope to win the race for life by running straight
+ahead now that the beasts had gained so much on her.
+
+"She's tiring! They'll get her!" moaned Hazel.
+
+"Why didn't you let me go?" screamed Tommy, beside herself with anxiety.
+
+The guardian did not answer. Her eyes, wide and staring, were following
+every movement of the fleeing girl and the pursuing bulls.
+
+Harriet stopped short, bending over in a crouching position.
+
+"She's going to try to trick them! Oh, what courage!" breathed Miss
+Elting.
+
+"Look! Thee her now!" shouted Tommy, with a note of triumph in her
+strained voice.
+
+The animals were fairly upon Harriet. When it seemed as though their
+horns were touching her, the girl leaped obliquely into the ditch. They
+saw her run, splashing along in it for a few rods, then spring to the
+bank on the same side from which she had jumped in.
+
+The watchers saw something else too. The bulls, so intent upon reaching
+their victim, had taken no notice of the ditch. Perhaps they had been
+charging with closed eyes, as many bulls do. At any rate the leading
+beast flung himself headlong into the ditch. The others braced
+themselves with their front feet and went sliding into the ditch on top
+of their leader, digging furrows with their hoofs in the soft dirt.
+
+Harriet Burrell's ruse had been successful. She spoke no word, but a
+glint of triumph flashed into her eyes as she cast a quick glance at the
+floundering animals, then ran straight toward her companions. This time
+there was no limping, no lessening of speed. She had covered less than
+half the distance before two of the animals that had slid into the ditch
+had recovered themselves and began looking about for the prey that had
+eluded them.
+
+The slender figure of the Meadow-Brook girl, they soon discovered, was
+racing across the field. The two bulls clambered out of the ditch and
+charged again. Now that they were in the open field it was a race that
+would go to the fleetest. No tricks would avail Harriet this time. She
+knew that her safety depended on outrunning her pursuers. Had Harriet
+not been an athletic girl she would have succumbed long before. As it
+was she ran at a wonderful rate of speed. The shouts of her companions,
+though heard but faintly, encouraged her, for Harriet's mind was on her
+work.
+
+The ruse practiced by Harriet had given her the lead in the race. Miss
+Elting, however, saw that the bulls were gaining on the plucky girl.
+
+"Girls," she said sharply, "remain where you are." With that she climbed
+to the top of the fence and leaped over into the field. It was her idea
+that even though Harriet did succeed in reaching the fence, the girl
+might not have sufficient vitality left to enable her to climb over it.
+
+Harriet, as she drew near, discovered the guardian on her side of the
+fence and divined the latter's purpose. The girl motioned for Miss
+Elting to get back. The guardian shook her head and remained where she
+was.
+
+"Go back! Go back! I'm all right," cried Harriet breathlessly.
+
+The bulls were gaining rapidly. They were now but a few rods behind
+Harriet Burrell. She put on more speed after one last look over her
+shoulder while Tommy and Hazel were shouting their encouragement.
+
+"You will be caught. Quick!" gasped Harriet, as she drew rapidly near to
+the guardian. "Oh, please hurry back to the road!"
+
+Miss Elting did not move. Harriet dashed up beside her and stopped
+short. Miss Elting grasped the girl's arm. Harriet pulled herself free.
+
+"Not an inch till you get over," declared the girl.
+
+The guardian glanced at her questioningly, then vaulted the fence.
+Harriet followed her. But ere Harriet had touched the ground on the
+other side, two sharp-horned heads crashed into the fence. Harriet sank
+down at the side of the road breathless and exhausted.
+
+Miss Elting pulled the girl to her feet.
+
+"Throw your shoulders well back and inhale deeply!" she commanded. She
+then led Harriet slowly up and down the road for a few moments.
+Harriet's heavy respirations soon moderated, and ten minutes later her
+breathing was almost normal.
+
+"I think we had better wait here. Jane will be along looking for us if
+we do not get to our camping place by night. Do you feel exhausted?"
+asked Miss Elting.
+
+"A little weak in the knees, that's all," answered Harriet. "I shall be
+ready to move in a few minutes. I don't want to stay here. We must try
+to catch up with the boys."
+
+"No. I shall not allow it. Yon have done quite enough for one day--quite
+enough to tire out the strongest man. Do you really think you can stand
+it to walk slowly?"
+
+"Of course I can," answered Harriet brightly. "See, I still have some
+sprint left in me." Harriet ran up and down the road, vaulting the fence
+on the opposite side of it.
+
+"You have indeed," laughed Miss Elting. It was the first laugh that had
+been heard in some time. "You are the most remarkable girl I've ever
+known, or ever shall know. Now we had better decide on which way we
+shall go. I think the shorter way will be to skirt the orchard and
+continue on across the fields. We shan't try the orchard again."
+
+All the girls agreed with the guardian. They had had quite enough of
+that particular orchard. Following the road for a short distance they
+came to the adjoining field, which they entered and continued on their
+journey. The afternoon was now well advanced. Miss Elting had left a
+mark on the fence to inform Jane of their route, in case she should come
+back to look for them. This with the time of their passing would give
+Jane an idea when to expect them at the place stretched for the camp.
+
+As they proceeded, Harriet's strength returned to her. By the time they
+had walked two miles from the scene of their recent exciting experiences
+she had fully recovered from her recent exhaustion. Tommy, now that she
+had time to think about herself, was bewailing the loss of her skirt.
+She firmly declared she would not go to camp with only an underskirt on
+and announced her intention of sleeping out in the fields.
+
+Six o'clock had arrived by the time they came out on the crest of a hill
+overlooking the valley in which they hoped to find Jane McCarthy and
+their camp. They scanned the valley eagerly.
+
+"There's our tent," cried Hazel, pointing to a clump of trees to the
+left of them. No person was in sight, however. This they thought
+strange.
+
+"I should not be surprised if everybody had gone in search of us," said
+Miss Elting.
+
+"I hope they don't find uth," spoke up Tommy.
+
+"It will be a good opportunity for you to get into camp without being
+seen," suggested Harriet. "Come, let's hurry down before some one does
+come."
+
+In order that their approach might be the more screened, they hurried
+over to a fence along which bushes and small trees grew. Sheltered by
+these they made their way down into the valley. But when they reached
+the road Tommy halted.
+
+"Not another thtep," she declared stubbornly. No amount of urging would
+induce her to go on. It was decided to leave her there while the rest
+continued on, Harriet promising to return to the little girl with
+another skirt as soon as possible. So Tommy hid in the bushes, peering
+out at the retreating forms of her companions.
+
+A fire was smouldering in the Meadow-Brook camp. As the party of girls
+approached, four boys sprang up. They had been sitting about the fire.
+Their hats were off instantly, and they tried gallantly to force down
+the grins that persisted in appearing on their faces.
+
+"Why, how do you do?" greeted Captain Baker of the Tramp Club.
+
+"Where is Miss McCarthy?" questioned Miss Elting, pretending not to have
+observed the grins.
+
+"She and a couple of the fellows went back to look for you," spoke up
+Dill Dodd. "The pace was rather swift for you, even if you did get an
+early start, wasn't it?" he chuckled.
+
+"Yes, the pace was much swifter than you imagine," answered the guardian
+frigidly.
+
+"It is too bad that Miss McCarthy started out. She may spend a good part
+of the evening searching for you, not knowing that you have reached
+camp," said the captain.
+
+"She will know," replied Harriet. "Jane will be back here soon."
+
+"How will she know?" frowned Davy.
+
+"Oh, they have a wireless telegraph system, you know," chuckled Sam.
+
+"Yes, that is it! How did you guess it?" smiled Harriet.
+
+"Don't forget Tommy," reminded Miss Elting.
+
+Harriet flushed. She had indeed, forgotten all about the little lisping
+girl who was hiding in the bushes. Harriet hurried into the tent.
+
+"That's right. You are one girl short," exclaimed George, suddenly
+discovering the absence of Miss Thompson. "Did she fall by the wayside?
+Was the pace too swift for her?"
+
+"Young man, you talk too much," objected Margery indignantly.
+
+"I know it," laughed George. "I can't help it."
+
+Miss Elting's face relaxed in a smile.
+
+"Where _is_ Miss Thompson?" questioned Dill.
+
+"Miss Thompson will be here soon," replied the guardian.
+
+Unnoticed by the boys Harriet slipped away, a bundle under her arm. She
+returned, a quarter of an hour later, accompanied by Tommy clad in her
+outside skirt and at peace with the world. They had barely reached the
+camp before the sound of a motor horn was heard. A few moments afterward
+Crazy Jane came tearing along the road and swung up to the camp.
+
+"Here we are darlin's," she cried. "I got your message."
+
+"Message?" questioned the captain. "Who gave her a message, Fred?"
+
+"Blest if I know," answered Fred Avery, getting down from the car,
+removing his hat and scratching his head thoughtfully. "Wireless, I
+think."
+
+"What did I tell you?" nodded Sam.
+
+The captain regarded Fred inquiringly.
+
+"Oh, don't ask me," said the latter. "Miss McCarthy got out of her car
+about five miles back, walked to the fence then back to the car. She
+said her friends had passed there about four o'clock in the afternoon
+and were in camp then."
+
+"Well, what do you know about that?" wondered the captain. "Tell us how
+you did it?"
+
+"A little bird told me," chuckled Jane. The girls burst into a merry
+peal of laughter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI--A TREAT THAT WAS NOT A TREAT
+
+
+"Never mind. We won't be as mean as you are," declared Sam, springing
+up. "We will return good for evil."
+
+"Did you see the three bulls?" interrupted Jane. "I knew you would cross
+that orchard and I was afraid you'd meet them."
+
+"We did," answered Miss Elting.
+
+"What's that?" The captain was interested instantly. "You say you met
+the bulls?"
+
+"Yes. I might as well tell you," explained Miss Elting. "You think we
+weren't able to keep the pace we set for ourselves. I don't want my
+girls to rest under that imputation, for I believe that they can
+completely outdistance you boys. We did meet the three bulls. Yes, they
+treed us. We were all up in apple trees when you boys passed singing
+'Forty-nine Blue Bottles.'"
+
+Some one laughed. The captain frowned at the boy who had done so.
+
+"You let us pass, and never called us to come to your assistance?" he
+demanded.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"We preferred to get out of our scrape without appealing to our rivals,
+Captain Baker."
+
+"Whew! That was a fix. How'd you manage it?"
+
+"Through the resourcefulness and courage of Harriet Burrell. Had it not
+been for her we undoubtedly should still be up in the trees in the apple
+orchard."
+
+"Please tell us about it."
+
+"Please don't," begged Harriet blushingly.
+
+"Now that you have aroused our curiosity, it would be cruel not to tell
+us the whole story," declared George.
+
+"Yeth. Cruelty to animalth," nodded Tommy.
+
+Miss Elting, despite Harriet's protestations, did tell the boys the
+story, giving the full credit for their rescue to Harriet Burrell, to
+whom it belonged. The boys listened in open-mouthed wonder.
+
+"Fellows, we aren't so much as we think we are," declared the chief of
+the Tramp Club. "I propose three cheers for Miss Burrell. Now!
+Altogether! One, two, three!"
+
+They gave three rousing cheers in which, Tommy's shrill voice joined.
+
+"Who's all right?" demanded the captain at the end of the cheer.
+
+"Miss Burrell's all right!" yelled the Tramps. "For she's a jolly good
+fel--low; For she's a jolly good fellow," sang the Tramps, as with hands
+on each other's shoulders they marched through the camp, and out into
+the field on their way to their own camp, a short distance from that of
+the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+Miss Elting was laughing merrily. Harriet's face was crimson.
+
+"I call that downright mean. They were making fun of me."
+
+"Why, Harriet! You know they were not," rebuked Miss Elting. "It was the
+highest compliment those lads could pay."
+
+"It hath been a day of experientheth, hathn't it?" Tommy questioned.
+
+Harriet's face was still flushed as she began to prepare the supper.
+Each member of the party now remembered that she had an appetite. While
+they were getting the meal Jane told them how the boys had gloated over
+having "walked the girls off their feet," as the tramps expressed it.
+Jane announced triumphantly that she had been more than a match for
+them, which her companions could well believe, for Jane had a sharp
+tongue, besides being the possessor of a fund of Irish wit.
+
+The smoke curling up from the other camp told the girls that the boys
+were busy getting their own supper. While eating, the guardian was
+obliged to go over the story of their experiences for the benefit of
+Jane, who interrupted now and then with humorous questions.
+
+"Are the boys coming over this evening?" asked Margery, after they had
+finished supper and she and Tommy were washing the dishes.
+
+"They did not say," called Hazel. "It is safe to believe they will. I
+wonder if we can't get rid of those boys? They make me nervous. It seems
+to me that they are perpetually on the scene whether one wants to see
+them or not."
+
+"Don't be hard on the poor Tramp Club, Hazel," laughed Harriet.
+"Remember you might still be stuck fast in the swamp had they not come
+to the rescue."
+
+"That's so," responded Hazel, with a sigh. "I never thought of that.
+They're really not so bad after all."
+
+"I have met worse," averred Harriet solemnly. Whereupon there was a
+general laugh.
+
+The tramps had gathered the fuel for the Meadow-Brook Girls, stacking it
+up in piles of various lengths. The lads really were trying to make
+themselves useful to the young women. As yet there had been no outward
+evidence of Captain Baker's assertion that some of them were "full of
+mischief." The girls had piled the campfire high with wood and gathered
+about it when strains of music were heard.
+
+"Oh, it ith a band, it ith a band," cried Tommy.
+
+"Coming to serenade us, probably," announced Margery.
+
+"No. I think it is some one playing on harmonicas," answered Miss Elting
+after a moment of listening.
+
+"It's those boys," groaned Hazel. "What mischief are they up to now?"
+
+"I told you. They are coming over to serenade us. I think the serenade
+must be for Harriet."
+
+"They are carrying something on their shoulders too," cried Harriet.
+
+The girls, by this time, had run out to the edge of the camp and in the
+faint twilight were trying to make out what it was that the Tramp Club
+were carrying. As the boys drew nearer, the girls saw that it was a
+burlap sack. Four boys were bearing the sack on their shoulders. It
+appeared to be very heavy.
+
+"Why, boys," exclaimed Miss Elting. "Are you moving?"
+
+"Yes, Miss Elting," answered Captain Baker, doffing his hat. "We are
+moving, in a sense. We have come prepared to lay the spoils of our
+forage at the feet of beauty. Boys, dump the bag. You know where."
+
+One of the boys untied the string by which the mouth of the sack had
+been secured, then the two lads at that end stepped from under.
+Instantly the contents began rolling out at Harriet Burrell's feet.
+
+"Muskmelons!" gasped the girls.
+
+Great golden and green muskmelons bumped to the ground. Harriet's face
+was full of color.
+
+"They--they aren't all for me? Surely, you don't think I am equal to
+eating all of those?" she gasped.
+
+"They are laid at your feet," answered George dramatically. "For you and
+your friends."
+
+"This is splendid," declared the guardian, her face aglow with pleasure.
+"But we do not deserve so much. You have robbed yourselves. Where did
+you get them?"
+
+"Of a farmer," replied George promptly.
+
+"You must take most of them for yourselves, boys," urged Miss Elting.
+"We simply could not eat half of all that lot."
+
+"No. They are all for you. We have plenty. Besides, you'll find some of
+them aren't good, but out of the lot you may be able to get enough for
+breakfast."
+
+"We can eat all night if nethethary," announced Tommy. "Maybe we can eat
+them all before we go on to-morrow."
+
+"One melon apiece will be quite enough for us, my dears," reproved Miss
+Elting. "Won't you join us in our feast, boys?"
+
+The young men shook their heads.
+
+"They're yours," replied the captain, his eyes on Harriet as he said it.
+"I brought you some salt, too," he added, drawing a piece of newspaper
+from his pocket. "Perhaps you like salt on your melons."
+
+"You are very thoughtful," smiled Miss Elting. "I think we have salt.
+How about it, Jane?"
+
+"We have a whole bag of it."
+
+"We will take yours, thank you," smiled Harriet. "It is much finer salt
+than ours."
+
+"Yes, it's the salt the farmer over yonder uses to give to his sheep,"
+interjected Sam. "We borrowed some from him."
+
+Miss Elting laughed a little at this blunt speech.
+
+"You are very funny, boys!" she said. "But we are grateful to you. I
+don't know how we shall be able to repay you."
+
+"We have shared your hospitality--your bounteous hospitality," answered
+the captain. "We wished to make some slight return."
+
+"What shall we do with what melons are left over?" asked Miss Elting.
+
+"Carry them on with you. You have a car in which to transport your
+stuff."
+
+"I suppose we had better do that," mused the guardian. "When we reach
+the next camping place we shall insist on entertaining you at our camp.
+We greatly appreciate this treat."
+
+"Thank you," said George Baker, looking somewhat embarrassed.
+
+Shortly afterwards Captain Baker rose from where he had been sitting and
+with an uneasy look on his face announced that they must go. With his
+fellows he hurriedly left the camp, not even taking the melon sack
+along. They were seen no more that night.
+
+The girls noted Baker's embarrassed manner and thought it strange that
+the boys should have left so abruptly. They were at a loss to understand
+it.
+
+"I am glad they have left the melons, anyway," declared Harriet.
+
+"Yes, wasn't that lovely of the boys to bring the fruit to us?" nodded
+Miss Elting. "They are really nice boys. I am rather glad that we met
+them."
+
+"You may change your mind before we have finished with them," replied
+Harriet, with an enigmatical smile.
+
+[Illustration: "So I've Caught You at It?"]
+
+"What do you mean, dear?"
+
+"I can't really explain. But I feel rather than know that those young
+men are ready to play tricks. They'd better not try any of them or we
+shall make them regret that they ever played tricks on the Meadow-Brook
+Girls."
+
+"Aren't the melonth delithiouth?" breathed Tommy. She was now eating her
+second melon. The other girls were enjoying theirs equally well.
+
+"Yes," agreed Miss Elting. "The finest I ever ate. They must have cost
+the boys quite a sum of money, even though melons are cheap in the
+country. I----"
+
+"Thomebody ith coming," warned Tommy.
+
+"The boys are returning, I presume," smiled Miss Elting. But instead of
+the boys they were surprised to see a strange man striding into camp. He
+was plainly a farmer. He wore his whiskers long and his trousers were
+tucked in the tops of his boots. His face did not bear a pleasant
+expression.
+
+"So I've caught you at it, eh?" he said sarcastically.
+
+"What do you mean?" demanded the guardian rising hastily.
+
+"You know well enough what I mean. In the first place, you are
+trespassing on my premises."
+
+"We have permission to camp here," interjected Jane.
+
+"Who gave it?"
+
+"The farmer who owns this land."
+
+"I happen to own this land, and I haven't given any tramps permission to
+camp on it."
+
+"Then some one must have played a trick on me," declared Crazy Jane.
+"Wait till I get sight of that man again."
+
+"We are very sorry, sir, but we are wholly innocent of trespassing. We
+are not tramps, either. Of course we are willing to pay you for the
+privilege of camping here to-night. What do you consider a fair price?"
+
+"Wal, I reckon about seventy-five cents will be all right for the
+camping."
+
+Miss Elting handed the money over to him.
+
+"I am sorry to have put you to all this trouble, but we supposed we had
+permission to stay here over night."
+
+"Thay," questioned Tommy. "You are a rich man, aren't you?"
+
+"No. Why?"
+
+"Well, you thhould be."
+
+"By the way, ladies, there is another little matter that you'll have to
+fix up before we go any further."
+
+The guardian and the girls glanced inquiringly at their mercenary
+visitor.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Them melons," answered the farmer, indicating the fruit with a nod.
+
+"I don't understand you, sir." The guardian was plainly perplexed.
+Harriet was smiling broadly. She thought she understood now.
+
+"The melons you stole from my field."
+
+"Stole from your field?" gasped Miss Elting.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Sir, you insult us! We have stolen neither melons nor anything else. I
+demand that you leave this camp instantly. We shall not endure such
+accusations."
+
+"You didn't steal them, eh?"
+
+"No, we didn't," answered Jane, who had stepped forward.
+
+"Then where did you get them?"
+
+The girls looked at one another. No one spoke. None wished to place the
+blame on the Tramp Club. The girls now began to understand the hurried
+departure of Captain Baker and his friends. Miss Elting saw that there
+was only one course to pursue under the circumstances.
+
+"I can't tell you where we got the melons, sir, but we didn't steal
+them. How much are the melons worth?"
+
+"Why?" queried the farmer, scenting a bargain.
+
+"We intend to pay for them," answered Harriet coldly.
+
+"How many melons were there?" asked the farmer, more blandly.
+
+"Two dozen," Harriet replied.
+
+"That'll be about four-eighty," nodded the farmer.
+
+"But that's----"
+
+"It's cheaper than the risk of going to jail," broke in the farmer
+meaningly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII--TRYING OUT THE GIPSY TRAIL
+
+
+The farmer pocketed the money that Miss Elting handed him.
+
+"I've my own opinion of you!" flared Crazy Jane.
+
+"Maybe you have," chuckled the farmer, "but----"
+
+"You're quite right," Jane McCarthy taunted. "You wouldn't feel highly
+complimented if I were to express that opinion!"
+
+"If it's that kind of an opinion----" muttered the farmer, turning red
+under the coat of tan on his face.
+
+"It's _worse_!" retorted Crazy Jane incisively.
+
+Muttering under his breath, but failing to speak clearly, the abashed
+farmer turned on his heel, striding away.
+
+The humor of the situation now appealing to them, the girls and their
+guardian began to laugh heartily.
+
+"Harriet, I believe you suspected this all the time," declared Miss
+Elting finally.
+
+"Those boys looked mischievous. I didn't know what it was all about, but
+after a while, I confess, I did suspect them. Never mind, I'll be even
+with them."
+
+"No, you leave it to me," interjected Jane.
+
+"I am glad that none of you girls betrayed the boys," declared Miss
+Elting approvingly. "I would suggest that you say nothing to them when
+we next see them. Let them introduce the subject if it is introduced at
+all. They may betray themselves. Tommy, don't you lisp a word of it."
+
+"I don't lithp," retorted the little girl indignantly. "I thpeak jutht
+like other folkth."
+
+"I did not mean it that way, dear," laughed the guardian. "I meant that
+you shouldn't mention our experience to any one. Now that we have bought
+and paid for the melons I think we had better stow them in the car.
+Come, let us get ready for bed."
+
+"Are we to make an early start in the morning?" asked Hazel.
+
+"Yes. We must not delay if we expect to remain in the contest."
+
+The girls had no intention of giving up the contest. They thought it
+possible that they might have the company of the Tramp Club on the
+morrow, as a good part of the Meadow-Brook course lay over a highway,
+this being the most direct route for the day's tramping.
+
+Rather to their surprise they discovered no trace of the Tramp Club next
+day. The smoke from the latter's campfire was no longer visible when the
+girls left their own camp in the morning, nor was there any indication
+on the road that the boys had passed over it. What the girls did not
+know was that the boys had slipped off into a ravine when the word had
+been brought to them that the irate farmer was out looking for the
+people who had visited his melon patch. From there they had moved inland
+and made a new camp. In the morning they took a roundabout course,
+avoiding the highway. It were better to be beaten by the girls that day
+than to be caught by the angry farmer. It was because of this longer
+route that the Meadow-Brook Girls were again able to get ahead of their
+rivals.
+
+The tracks of Jane's car had long since been obliterated when the party
+neared the end of the day's journey. This did not trouble them, for a
+certain definite stopping place had been agreed upon, and as was
+customary, when following the highway, the girls now and then dropped a
+handful of grass in the road. Especially was this done when they came to
+forks in the road, so that in case Jane McCarthy returned that way to
+look for them she might see which direction they had taken. In doing
+this, though the girls were unaware of the fact, they were following a
+gipsy practice as old as gipsies themselves. It was the gipsies' way of
+marking their trail for the benefit of others of their kind who had
+straggled behind.
+
+"I think this is the place," decided Miss Elting, halting, pointing down
+a narrow lane that extended through a field of stunted bushes and brush.
+The gate that had once shut off this byway from the main road lay broken
+at one side of it and a ridge of grass had grown knee high in the middle
+of the lane. It was a lane that had once led down to a cider mill that
+now lay a heap of ruins.
+
+"It ith thpooky-looking," observed Tommy.
+
+"Jane is here," exclaimed Harriet. "I see her car tracks, but I don't
+see her car."
+
+"No; the car has come out onto the highway and gone on," Miss Elting
+declared. "Jane must have driven to the next town to get something. We
+will go down that lane."
+
+Harriet dropped some grass in the road, marking a trail into the byway
+to notify Jane that they had arrived. They then made their way down the
+lane. The girls were tired and footsore. Walking in the road had been
+more wearisome than tramping over the hills and fields, perhaps because
+the former was less interesting and more monotonous. It was therefore a
+welcome sight when they espied the tent that they called home, even
+though it was a now weather-beaten and dingy-looking piece of canvas.
+But Jane was nowhere in sight. Neither was her car.
+
+"Where can Jane be?" exclaimed Margery.
+
+"Perhaps this will explain matters," replied Miss Elting, taking down a
+sheet of writing paper that had been pinned to the flap of the tent.
+"Ah! Jane says she has gone on to the town of Granite to meet her
+father, from whom she got a letter this morning. She says she may not be
+back until late, and that we shall find the melons in the bushes to the
+west of the tent."
+
+"I don't want any of those old melons," pouted Margery.
+
+"I do," retorted Tommy. "I'll eat all I can get."
+
+"At least, we have a right to eat them now that we have paid for them,"
+smiled the guardian. "The first thing to do will be to heat some water
+and bathe. We are all very dusty. Tommy, you and Margery take your baths
+first. In the meantime we will build the fire and get the supper going.
+This is going to be a pleasant camp. I wonder if we shall see our
+friends, the boys, this evening?"
+
+"Not if they see us first," chuckled Harriet. "Oh, what we won't do to
+them when we get the opportunity."
+
+"Jane must have had quite a time putting up the tent without
+assistance," remarked Miss Elting. "She did it very well, too."
+
+Harriet was making the fire with Hazel's assistance, Tommy and Margery
+were preparing for their baths. Twilight was upon them before they
+realized it. By that time the supper was cooking, the coffee steaming,
+the savory odor of food filling the air about them. The melons were
+reserved for the dessert. These had ripened and were now soft, sweet and
+delicious.
+
+"Girls, it is worth four dollars and eighty cents to have such melons,
+isn't it?" smiled the guardian.
+
+"Yes, indeed," chorused the girls.
+
+"I wonder what has become of the Tramp Club," mused Harriet.
+
+"You will not see any more of the Tramps for a while," laughed Hazel.
+"It is a wonder to me that we haven't seen any real tramps since we have
+been out on this trip. At potato-digging time one usually sees a great
+many of them."
+
+"We haven't been on the road much, or perhaps we should have seen more
+of them. That is one advantage in keeping away from the highways. One
+meets few live things in the fields except the birds and occasionally
+sheep and cattle."
+
+"Not to mention bulls," finished Harriet laughingly. "Speaking of
+tramps, I believe I just saw one over yonder," added the girl.
+
+"Are you joking?" questioned the guardian.
+
+For answer Harriet sprang up and ran toward the tent. She did not reach
+it. She halted sharply as a man stepped in front of her. He was a
+typical follower of the road, dirty, unkempt and evil looking.
+
+"What do you want here?" demanded Harriet, with a calmness that she was
+far from feeling.
+
+"Not much. We want some money and something to eat," leered the
+intruder.
+
+"You will get neither here. What were you doing in that tent? You came
+here to rob us. Go away before we give you something you won't like."
+
+Miss Elting and Hazel sprang up, scattering the tin dishes far and wide
+as they ran to Harriet's assistance, when three other men stepped into
+view from the far side of the tent.
+
+"If you folks will hand out your valuables, and make no racket about it,
+we won't hurt you," announced one of the newcomers. "What we want is a
+little help, that's all. We're poor fellows in distress. We ain't the
+kind that rob women. We ask for assistance."
+
+Miss Elting's revolver was in the tent where she could not reach it now.
+Had she had it with her she would have assisted the men in a way that
+they would not have liked. What to do under the circumstances she did
+not know. Neither Tommy nor Margery appeared able to do anything. They
+were frightened nearly out of their wits.
+
+"You have a peculiar way of asking for assistance. Had you come to us in
+the proper manner we should have been glad to give you something to eat.
+Now we shall not. Neither have we money for you. I order you to go away
+from here. If you refuse the consequences will be on your own heads. We
+are not quite so defenseless as you might think. Will you go?"
+
+The spokesman laughed. The spirit of the girls appeared to amuse him.
+The fellow had not the least idea that there was any other person about.
+He, with his companions, had seen the Meadow-Brook Girls come into the
+camp alone. Not another person so far as they knew, was within some
+miles of the place. They had watched the camp and waited until dark to
+carry out their plan of robbing the five women.
+
+"Can you get it, do you think, Harriet?" questioned Miss Elting in a low
+tone.
+
+"I'll try," she answered. She knew what the guardian meant. "It" meant
+Miss Elting's revolver. All at once the girl darted past the man who
+stood directly in front of her. She had almost reached the tent, when
+one of the tramps caught hold of her by the shoulder. Harriet was lithe
+and quick. She slipped from his detaining clutch and sprang back. But
+her opportunity was gone. The men partly divining her purpose, had
+quickly blocked the entrance to the tent. The leader nodded to one of
+them to watch Tommy and Margery. Three others directed their attention
+to Miss Elting, Harriet and Hazel. They placed themselves in such
+positions that the girls were hedged in. To try to run would be to fall
+into the clutches of one or another of the three ruffians who were
+guarding them.
+
+One of the men uttered a shrill whistle. Still another tramp came
+running into the camp.
+
+"Turn out the tent in a hurry. Don't take anything that ain't good.
+There's money in there somewhere. Now turn your pockets out, ladies."
+
+His words were cut short by a long wailing cry uttered by Harriet
+Burrell.
+
+"Hoo-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Help, help!" It was the call of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls, with the warning cry for assistance added.
+
+The man who had made the demand sprang at her. Harriet leaped back. In
+doing so she felt her arms pinioned by a second man. She had forgotten
+for the moment that there were guards behind her. Miss Elting suddenly
+found her arms gripped from behind. She struggled with all her strength.
+So did Harriet. Hazel screamed as she felt her own arms pinioned.
+
+"Herd the other two in the tent, then git all the swag you can find,"
+commanded the spokesman breathlessly, for he was having his hands full
+helping his assistant to hold Miss Elting and the two girls. One grasped
+Tommy and Margery by their arms, and fairly dragging them over, flung
+them into the tent. "Get the stuff! Never mind those two. They're too
+scared to bother. It's these that we've got to look out for," he
+directed.
+
+"Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Hoo-e-e-e-e-e! Help, help!" screamed Harriet.
+
+"Yell, Hazel!" gasped Harriet.
+
+"I--I can't! Oh, I can't!" wailed Hazel.
+
+Tommy found her voice at this juncture and raised it in a piercing
+scream. A moment later a blanket was twisted about her head and she was
+flung into a corner, clawing and kicking. Margery cowered at one side of
+the tent, too frightened to move.
+
+Just then a new note was sounded. From behind the tent rose a shrill cry
+in a voice unfamiliar to either the girls or to the thieving tramps, a
+voice that caused the tramps to release their prisoners and turn to face
+the owner of the voice prepared for trouble.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII--THE QUEEN TAKES A HAND
+
+
+A strange figure stepped into the light of the campfire. It was the
+figure of an old woman, bent with age. Her face was yellow and wrinkled,
+her eyes, black and piercing. She hobbled a few steps toward them, using
+a long stick as though for support.
+
+"Out with you, villains!" she screamed, brandishing the stick
+threateningly. "My curses be upon your vile heads! Rob, would you? You
+shall burn in the fire from the clouds," she hissed, pointing to the
+spokesman. "And you," pointing to another, "shall wither in the pit with
+the iron doors, where all evil doers shall come sooner or later. You
+shall perish as you deserve. Sybarina says it. So it shall be. Out with
+you!"
+
+"It's the Gipsy Queen," screamed Hazel.
+
+For a moment the tramps stood utterly dumbfounded. They realized that
+the old Gipsy was laying a curse upon them. More or less superstitious,
+they stood in considerable awe of Sybarina and her supposedly
+supernatural powers. The tramp who had pinioned Harriet's arms behind
+her back involuntarily relaxed his hold. Harriet made a dash for
+freedom. In an instant her captor was at her heels.
+
+"Don't pay any attention to that old lunatic," he shouted to his
+companions. "She can't hurt you. Get the stuff and be quick about it."
+
+But he had reckoned without his host. Raising her head, Sybarina sent a
+long shrill call echoing across the fields. Even in the excitement of
+the moment Harriet realized that it was a signal. A second later the
+call was answered.
+
+"Skip!" warned the leader of the tramps. "It's Gipsies. We'll have the
+whole lot to fight if we don't light out!"
+
+At this juncture five dark swarthy men came running across the fields.
+With one accord the tramps took to their heels. The Gipsies started in
+pursuit of them, but the tramps had a lead of several yards and fear
+lending wings to their feet, they soon outdistanced their pursuers who
+finally abandoned the chase and returned to where Sybarina stood,
+surrounded by the Meadow-Brook Girls and their guardian.
+
+Harriet sprang eagerly forward to thank their rescuers, but Sybarina
+waved her aside. Turning to the Gipsy men she spoke a few sharp words in
+the Romany tongue. The men nodded, talked among themselves for a moment
+then turned and strolled off in the direction whence they had come.
+
+"Oh, Sybarina!" cried Harriet disappointedly. "Why didn't you let me
+thank them for chasing those tramps away?"
+
+"I, their queen, have commended them. That is sufficient," returned
+Sybarina proudly. "They need no thanks for obeying my commands."
+
+"Then we must thank you doubly," smiled Harriet, holding out her hand to
+the old Gipsy. "What would we have done if you had not been near?"
+
+"It is well," replied Sybarina earnestly, taking Harriet's hand in both
+of hers. "But you must come with Sybarina. You must not stay here alone
+this night. The bad men will return again. But Sybarina's men will stay
+here and watch for them. You and your kind friends will go with Sybarina
+to her camp."
+
+"But how did you happen to find us?" questioned Miss Elting.
+
+"Sybarina has eyes. Did those eyes not see the patteran (trail of
+grass)? Did she not read the message of the patteran that all of her
+tribe know? Where did you learn to make the patteran that leads the
+Gipsy toward the land where the sun goes down?"
+
+"She means the grass that we dropped in the road," explained Harriet.
+
+The old woman nodded.
+
+"The patteran," she reiterated.
+
+"Why," laughed Harriet. "We did that so that our friend Jane McCarthy
+would know where we had gone."
+
+"Then there is Romany in your blood. None but the people of the Romany
+would think of such a thing. Where is the other princess?" questioned
+the queen, glancing about.
+
+"Miss McCarthy has gone to meet her father," Miss Elting informed the
+old woman. "But we have not thanked you enough for the great service
+that you have done us."
+
+"It is nothing. Did not the princess save Sybarina's miserable life? The
+debt is still unpaid. Many summers will come, and many summers will go,
+ere the debt is paid. Sybarina never will live to pay it. Her people
+will remember. The Romany has a long memory, princess. Come, pretty
+ladies, come to the camp of the Gipsy. It is not good that you should
+stay the night here. To-morrow night, yes, but not this night."
+
+"What do you say, girls?" questioned Miss Elting.
+
+"Spend a night in a Gipsy camp?" asked Harriet.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I think that would be fine."
+
+"But, Sybarina, what of our own camp? Will not the men return and rob
+us?"
+
+"I have told you. Sybarina's people will be on guard. You need have no
+fear. And when the princess with the fair hair returns, she shall be led
+to the Gipsy camp. Come."
+
+"Wait please, until we fix our camp and leave a message for Miss
+McCarthy," said Miss Elting.
+
+So excited were the Meadow-Brook Girls at the prospect of spending a
+night in a Gipsy camp that they almost forgot the thrilling experiences
+through which they had passed. There were few preparations to be made.
+Miss Elting pocketed her revolver, though she had no idea that she would
+need it. She knew that the old Gipsy woman might be trusted; that a
+Gipsy never forgets a favor--nor a wrong. Sybarina felt under deep
+obligations to them for what they had done for her. By inviting them to
+her camp she was conferring upon them the highest possible mark of her
+regard, as the guardian who knew something of the wandering tribes of
+Gipsies was well aware.
+
+The camp was some little distance from where the Meadow-Brook tent was
+pitched. A note for Jane was pinned to the tent flap on the same spot
+where she had pinned hers; then the party set out through the darkness.
+Not a man of the tribe was to be seen. The guardian asked no questions.
+She knew that Sybarina's word was law and that keen eyes were upon the
+Meadow-Brook camp, that no marauders would be permitted to enter there
+that night. Sybarina led the way as if it were a familiar path, calling
+out now and then to warn the travelers of a root or a stone that lay
+unseen in the path they were following. How she was aware of the
+presence of the obstacles the girls could not imagine.
+
+They came in sight of the dull glow of the Gipsy campfire after a
+quarter of an hour's walking. Then as they stepped into the circle of
+light, many inquiring eyes were fixed upon them. There were dark-eyed,
+olive-complexioned women of various ages, children clad in bright
+colors, some sitting under wagons eating bread and butter, others
+peering from the gaudily painted wagons, and still others lying asleep
+upon the ground just outside the circle. Horses might have been heard
+munching at the foliage out in the bushes, occasionally neighing or
+stamping. The fire crackled merrily. It was a bright but unfamiliar
+scene to the Meadow-Brook Girls.
+
+Tommy and Margery were a trifle apprehensive.
+
+"Where are we going to thleep?" questioned Tommy cautiously.
+
+"I don't know, dear," returned Miss Elting. "Sybarina will provide a
+place when the time comes. We have our own blankets. I think we may
+sleep out of doors if we wish to do so. But we have a long evening
+before us yet. It is your opportunity to learn something of the life and
+habits of the Gipsies."
+
+"Thay, Mith Elting do--do you think it thafe to thtay here?" questioned
+Tommy.
+
+"Perfectly so. Much more so than in our own camp this evening."
+
+Sybarina was brewing the tea with her own hands. Miss Elting stepped
+over to her.
+
+"May I assist you?" she asked.
+
+The Gipsy queen shook her head.
+
+"Sybarina will make the tea for her friends, her good friends, the
+pretty ladies. Sybarina will have other guests this evening."
+
+"Oh, will you?" questioned the guardian, in a surprised tone.
+
+"Yes. Pretty ladies will come to cross the Gipsy's palm with silver.
+Sybarina will read the future and the past for them. Sybarina will read
+your future too, but you and your friends need not cross her palm with
+silver. Sybarina is your friend."
+
+Harriet had been an interested listener to the brief dialogue. She drew
+a little closer.
+
+"I should like to learn to read the past and future, Sybarina. Will you
+teach me?" asked Harriet.
+
+The old woman fixed her piercing eyes upon the eager face before her.
+
+"The princess shall be taught to read the future this very night. The
+stars have said it."
+
+"I'm afraid I never could learn to read palms in one night," laughed
+Harriet.
+
+"The stars and the voices of the air will help you. Be not afraid. But
+you must be a Gipsy true."
+
+"How do you mean?"
+
+"You must be like other Gipsies."
+
+"Oh! You mean dress like them?"
+
+"Yes. After the tea you shall see."
+
+Tea was a most formal affair. Sybarina first took a sip from her own cup
+then passed the cup to the others, each girl taking a sip in turn, after
+which cups were served to each member of the party. By this time the
+other members of the tribe appeared to have lost interest in the
+visitors.
+
+"My girls would know something of your people, Sybarina," suggested Miss
+Elting after the formalities of the tea drinking had been finished and
+the girls had settled down to their own cups of tea.
+
+She regarded her teacup frowningly, as though she were seeking light in
+the amber fluid.
+
+"My daughters," said the old woman. "It takes many years to earn the
+confidence of a Romany. You have done so in a hour. All are Gorgios to
+the Gipsy."
+
+"What ith a Gorgio?" piped Tommy.
+
+"Any one not Romany is a Gorgio. Forever has the Gorgio hounded the
+Gipsy. The Gorgio thinks the Gipsy a thief, but the Gipsy is not a
+thief. The Gipsy has little history, my daughters, but the Gipsy dates
+back to antiquity, to the famed Kings of Egypt. He keeps his sacred
+tongue--the Romany. It is his secret language. Through it he can hold
+converse with the Romanys of the world. Ages and ages ago, the Romany
+was called a Jat. That was in far off India. Then came a bad king from
+Persia who stole ten thousand of them to make music for him. There they
+remained until nine hundred years after the Son of Man came, when they
+were taken captive again and held in bondage until at last they
+separated and journeyed to the far places of the world. To-day the Gipsy
+is the only free man who wanders the earth. He pays no tithes, he has no
+cares."
+
+"But you have a ruler, a head of all the Gipsies, have you not?"
+interjected Miss Elting.
+
+"There is the queen of all," answered the old woman softly. "She now is
+one hundred years old. She lives in Roumania. Each year are her commands
+received by all her peoples throughout the world. How, I cannot tell
+you. It is a secret of the Romanys. We love, we hate, but not as do the
+Gorgios. But see! The princess has returned. She seeks her friends."
+
+"You--you mean Miss McCarthy?" questioned Harriet.
+
+The Gipsy nodded gravely.
+
+"Good grathiouth," exclaimed Tommy. "Thhe'th got eyeth in the top of her
+head. How doeth thhe know that Jane hath come back?"
+
+"I read the message in the teacup," answered Sybarina. "It is time, fair
+daughter to begin, if you would read the secrets of the stars. Come with
+me and you shall be prepared."
+
+Harriet rose and followed the old woman to one of the gaudily painted
+wagons, without the slightest hesitancy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX--DELVING INTO THE MYSTERIES
+
+
+"Oh, good gracious! Where are they?" cried Crazy Jane, as she walked
+into the Gipsy camp.
+
+The girls glanced at each other wonderingly. Had not the Gipsy queen
+just told them that Jane had arrived at the Meadow-Brook camp? The
+mystery was too great for them to solve.
+
+"But darlin's, what does it mean? The Gipsy girl who came for me, said
+you were staying here for the night."
+
+"We have been invited to be the guests of the tribe for this night,
+Jane. Sybarina is the queen of these Gipsies, you know. She is the one
+we rescued from the burning barn."
+
+"Of course. Why are you here?"
+
+The guardian explained how they had been attacked by tramps and how the
+Gipsy woman and her companions had come to their rescue.
+
+Jane was amazed, then her face flushed with anger. She wanted to know if
+the Tramp Club had been seen. Miss Elting said they had not.
+
+"But where is my darlin' Harriet?" questioned Jane, gazing at her
+inquiringly.
+
+"She has gone with the queen into one of the wagons. You will see her
+soon."
+
+"Won't it be jolly, Jane, to spend a night in a Gipsy camp?" cried
+Hazel.
+
+"Well, that depends. I've heard the tribes weren't overly clean."
+
+"Sh-h-h!" warned Miss Elting. "You mustn't say such things here.
+Remember we are guests."
+
+"I'm not likely to forget it. Oh, look at that pretty Gipsy girl! What a
+beauty!" cried Jane delightedly.
+
+The Gipsy girl who had emerged from one of the wagons was indeed pretty.
+Her hands were demurely folded, her head lowered, and her eyes veiled by
+drooping lashes, as she moved slowly toward the group. She came to a
+halt directly in front of Crazy Jane.
+
+"Cross my palm with silver and I'll read your past and your future,"
+invited the pretty Gipsy girl.
+
+Crazy Jane leaned forward regarding the Gipsy girl with keen, searching
+eyes.
+
+"Indeed I will. Yes, darlin', you can read my future and my past. How
+much silver shall I cross your palm with?"
+
+"What you will, pretty lady."
+
+Jane placed a shining fifty cent piece on the open palm. Something about
+the palm appeared to interest her very much. Just at this juncture, the
+Gipsy girl chanced to look up. The eyes of the two girls met. Jane
+uttered a whoop and embraced the girl in a bearlike hug.
+
+"If it isn't my own darlin' Harriet," she cried. "But who would have
+thought it. Hurrah for Harriet, the Gipsy!"
+
+"Ah, daughter, she is the true Romany," interrupted Sybarina, suddenly
+appearing behind Harriet. "None but a true daughter of Romany could have
+said those words so well." The old woman's eyes gleamed with pride. Then
+she exclaimed: "I see strangers coming to the camp of the Gipsy! Would
+you have them see you, or would you watch them from the wagons?"
+
+"From the wagons," chorused the girls.
+
+"The Romany princess, she of the brown eyes, may wander at will. The
+strangers will not think her a Gorgio. She is a true Romany."
+
+"Thank you, Sybarina, I will go with my friends. Perhaps I may come out
+later," answered Harriet. She was dressed in Gipsy costume, and her
+face, already dark, had been slightly stained with herbs which the old
+woman had rubbed on both her face and hands.
+
+The young men and women from nearby farms began to stroll into the camp
+to have their fortunes told. With them came several keen-eyed farmers,
+leading horses which they had brought in for a chance at a trade. The
+Gipsy men quickly gathered about the animals, then began the incessant
+talk of the horse trader, the Gipsies being particularly shrewd in that
+line of business. In the meantime Sybarina and several other women of
+the tribe were reading the futures of the giggling country girls. It was
+all very interesting to the girls in the nearby wagon. They were peering
+out from the darkened interior, unseen. Never before had they
+experienced anything so romantic or so picturesque.
+
+Harriet finally wandered out into the field. She attracted attention
+only because of her slender figure and pretty face. She had no fear of
+being recognized, for no one there ever had seen her before.
+
+"Isn't she a typical Gipsy, though?" chuckled Jane, gazing admiringly at
+Harriet.
+
+"Unless one knew she were not, one couldn't tell the difference,"
+answered Miss Elting. "Just look at that girl for whom the queen is
+telling a fortune. See how eagerly she drinks in every word. Every word
+is true to her. She believes it all."
+
+"So does Sybarina," replied Hazel.
+
+"Yes, I think she does. Do you know, Jane, she told us when you arrived
+at the tent. I think it must have been at the moment when you reached
+there. I can't imagine how she knew."
+
+"Maybe she heard the car," suggested Margery.
+
+"No she didn't," declared Jane. "I drove into the camp without making a
+sound. I wanted to give you a surprise. I wonder how she knew I was
+near."
+
+Neither Jane nor any of her companions had thought of the big headlights
+on the car, the glint of which had flashed on the foliage of a tree near
+the gipsy camp just as Jane was swinging into the byway that led down to
+the Meadow-Brook camp. Perhaps the old gipsy's keen eyes had caught this
+flash and read it aright. But this the girls were never to know. Their
+attention, just now, was attracted by the sound of loud talking. Voices
+were heard approaching the camp.
+
+"I guess we are going to have quite a party this evening," said Harriet,
+stepping into the wagon. "Oh, this is simply great! What a pity we
+aren't all made up to look like Gipsies."
+
+"Look, girls!" exclaimed the guardian.
+
+They did look, with widening eyes.
+
+"My grathiouth, if it ithn't thothe Tramp boyth," breathed Tommy.
+
+"It certainly is the Tramp Club. There's Captain Baker and Sammy and
+Dill and Davy. Where could they have come from?" wondered Hazel.
+
+"Oh, let's go out and call to them," suggested Margery enthusiastically.
+
+"Wait," warned Harriet. "I have a plan that I think will work to
+perfection. If it does, we'll have some fun with the Tramp Club this
+evening."
+
+"What is it, darlin'?"
+
+Harriet whispered in Jane's ear. Crazy Jane uttered a loud laugh.
+
+"Sh-h-h!" warned the guardian. "You will betray our hiding place to
+those boys."
+
+"I must get word to Sybarina. I wish she would come over here," mused
+Harriet.
+
+As though in answer to her wish, Sybarina rose and hobbled toward the
+wagon. She halted at the step without looking up.
+
+"The friends of the pretty ladies are here. What do the pretty ladies
+wish to do?"
+
+"Oh, Sybarina! I want to read the future for that boy yonder on the
+right, the one with the reddish hair. May I? Please let me."
+
+"It shall be as the Romany girl wishes, but she must be grave, she must
+not make her real self known to the laughing boy."
+
+"No, no, no! I promise not to betray my identity. But what shall I say?
+I don't know what to say," begged Harriet.
+
+"The words will come unbidden to the lips of the Romany girl. Fear not.
+Come." There was a suspicion of a twinkle in the piercing black eyes as
+Sybarina stretched forth her hand to Harriet Burrell. Harriet's heart
+thumped violently as she stepped down from the wagon. "If I get a chance
+to read George Baker's palm I will make him stand as near to the wagon
+as possible, so you girls can hear what I say to him, but don't you dare
+make a sound."
+
+"Isn't she the clever darlin'?" chuckled Crazy Jane.
+
+"Harriet is a very resourceful girl," answered Hazel admiringly.
+
+"Yes; Harriet has added a good many honor beads to her string during
+this hike," replied the guardian. "I think, too, that she is going to
+pay those boys the debt that we owe them."
+
+"Listen!" commanded Jane. Sybarina was speaking.
+
+"Behold before you the Star of the East. Behold one who has come out of
+the East to read the future true. Cross her palm with silver and the
+Oracle will speak, revealing the past and foretelling the future."
+
+The Gipsy queen had not led Harriet into the bright light. Instead the
+girl, in the fainter light at the outer edge of the circle, stood with
+downcast eyes, hands folded before her.
+
+[Illustration: "Cross My Hand With Silver."]
+
+"Who shall be the first to hear the future and the past from the Star of
+the East?"
+
+"Say, fellows, now is the time to find out a few things," laughed
+Captain George Baker. "Here's where I consult the Star of the East.
+Here, young woman, read my palm. I don't know anything about this
+fortune-telling business, and I don't believe in it, but I'm willing to
+take a chance on it. How much does it cost to consult the stars?"
+
+"For a silver quarter I will reveal the past only. Cross my hand with a
+silver dollar and both the past and future shall be as an open book,"
+answered Harriet, speaking in a low tone, disguising her voice as much
+as possible.
+
+George uttered a low whistle.
+
+"A dollar! Whew! Isn't that pretty high?"
+
+"The stars are higher," was the curt reply of the Star of the East.
+
+There was an audible giggle from the interior of the nearby wagon.
+Harriet heard it, but Captain Baker was too much interested in the
+prospect of having his fortune told to give heed to the sound.
+
+"Isn't she the clever darlin'?" reiterated Crazy Jane, restraining
+herself from shouting only by a great effort of will.
+
+"All right. Here's your money. But, mind you, I'll expect a lot of
+information for a dollar."
+
+"The past and future are not measured by silver," retorted Harriet.
+"That which is past the Oracle has revealed to me. That which is to be,
+I alone can tell. I am but the mouthpiece of the Oracle, but the Oracle
+cannot lie."
+
+"I'm glad to be assured of hearing the truth, at any rate," replied
+George flippantly.
+
+"Be at rest. You shall hear the truth," promised the Star of the East
+dryly. Then taking George's hand in hers she gravely scrutinized the
+lines of his palm.
+
+"The lines of your hand tell me many things," she began.
+
+"Then be sure that you tell me all about them. I want my money's worth,"
+urged the captain.
+
+"The past and future shall be fully revealed to you," promised the
+supposed Gipsy. Captain George Baker of the Tramp Club then listened to
+a fortune that, though it did not wholly please, amazed him beyond
+measure.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX--GETTING EVEN WITH GEORGE
+
+
+"Your hand tells me that you travel not alone," continued Harriet.
+"Other youths are with you. Together you have journeyed for many days
+along the highway."
+
+"Well? That's nothing. Anybody could see that," jeered George.
+
+"If you would listen to the word of the Oracle, be silent. On your
+journey, maidens have crossed your path. They, too, are wayfarers along
+the trail. You have held out the hand of fellowship to them, but your
+friendship is false and your hearts are full of guile."
+
+"That's just where you're wrong," interrupted George. "Those girls are
+all right and we like them a lot. I'd like to know how you know so much
+about them."
+
+"The Gipsy knows many things," replied Harriet enigmatically. "Your hand
+reveals to her the grievous wrong you have done these trusting maidens."
+
+"Oh, that's not so," contradicted George.
+
+"None can deceive the Oracle," was the stern answer. "I see here a camp.
+The campfire burns brightly. About it sit the maidens. Look! Six youths
+approach. With them they bear a sack filled with the melons of the
+field. The maidens welcome them with smiles and pleasant words. They
+little know whence came these melons. They little know that before them
+lies the bitter fruit of lawless thievery."
+
+"Oh, that's putting it altogether too strong," expostulated George. "How
+can you tell anything about where those melons came from by the lines of
+my hand?"
+
+"To the Prophet of the Oracle all things are plain," replied the Star of
+the East. "In the early darkness of the night, ere the moon rose, the
+evildoers stole forth, and robbed the farmer of his melons."
+
+"This is becoming too personal," gasped George, mopping his forehead.
+
+"Word was brought to the farmer of this wicked deed and he hurried forth
+to catch the thieves," continued Harriet. "Long did he search for them.
+Then seeing the camp of the maidens he approached, and finding them
+innocently eating his melons, he poured forth the vials of his wrath
+upon their defenseless heads. He branded them as thieves and demanded
+settlement. They crossed the farmer's palm with much silver to pay for
+the stolen melons. They were too noble to betray the real thieves."
+
+Captain George shifted uneasily. "That's really too bad. I'm sorry they
+got into such a mess," he muttered. "I wonder what they think of us."
+
+"Their hearts are filled with shame and sorrow at the deceitfulness of
+those whom they supposed were their friends."
+
+"But--but the boys didn't intend to make trouble for the girls,"
+protested the captain. "They thought it would be great fun to forage for
+melons, and at the same time to give the girls a treat."
+
+The supposed gipsy shook her head slowly.
+
+"It makes no difference what they thought. The deed is done. There is
+only one way in which the wrong can be righted."
+
+"How can these boys square themselves with the girls?" questioned George
+eagerly.
+
+"I will consult the Oracle." The Gipsy girl stood with head bent as
+though in deep thought. Then she said solemnly: "If the wicked boys will
+go to those whom they have so cruelly wronged and ask pardon for their
+unmanly behavior perhaps forgiveness may be theirs."
+
+"I--I guess I'd better," returned George earnestly. At this juncture a
+smothered giggle from the darkened Gipsy wagon came near breaking up the
+seance. He glanced up suspiciously. Harriet's face was grave.
+
+"You have chosen wisely. Will you obey the command of the Oracle?"
+
+"Oh, ye--es. I'll apologize. I'll do it. It's wonderful. I never thought
+there was so much to fortune telling."
+
+"There is more to it than you dream," answered Harriet Burrell, and with
+much truth on her side. There was indeed more to it than Captain George
+Baker dreamed. In the Gipsy wagon four girls and their guardian were
+making desperate efforts to control their laughter that the sounds of
+their merriment might not be heard by the young man outside.
+
+"Can you answer any question I ask you?" queried George, after thinking
+deeply.
+
+"The Oracle knows all things, if it will but speak," answered the Gipsy
+girl, leaving an avenue of escape if he should ask her something that
+she was unable to answer.
+
+"Where are the girls now?"
+
+"They are near at hand. Would you see them?"
+
+"No, no. Not to-night," hastily interposed Captain Baker. "What I wish
+to know is where they are."
+
+"You would know if they have outwitted you in the race?"
+
+"Yes, yes. But how do you know what I am thinking about?"
+
+"The mouthpiece of the Oracle knows all things," crooned the fortune
+teller. "No, they have not yet won the race. You shall see them on the
+morrow."
+
+"Where? Tell me where?"
+
+"A short span of twelve miles hence there is a spring. The spring is
+known as Granite Spring."
+
+"Yes, yes? Will they be there?" he asked eagerly.
+
+"No, not there," replied the Gipsy. "But you will find them near at
+hand. Seek and you shall find, but go with humble spirit, else disaster
+may overtake you."
+
+"Thank you, I'll do as you say. This is wonderful. I want my friends to
+have their fortunes told by you. You are the right kind. I wonder if you
+can tell me just what these girls are going to do to get ahead of us in
+the race."
+
+"I will consult the Oracle once more," replied the fortune teller.
+
+It was fully two minutes before Harriet raised her head. George stood
+eagerly awaiting her answer.
+
+"The Oracle knows but will not say," replied Harriet coldly. "The Oracle
+is ever fair and just. It will not reveal the plans of the maidens to
+their enemies. The Star of the East is weary. She cannot read the palms
+of your friends. Your way lies yonder. Your companions await you."
+
+Captain George, very red of face, a sheepish expression in his eyes, got
+up hastily and walked over to his companions who were sitting on the
+ground awaiting him.
+
+"Come on, fellows. Let's get out of here. This place gives me the
+creeps."
+
+"You seemed mighty interested in what that Gipsy girl had to say. Did
+she tell you anything remarkable?" asked Dill laughingly.
+
+"Did she? I should say she did."
+
+"Then you did better than the rest of us. That other young Gipsy woman
+didn't tell me a single thing."
+
+"The old Gipsy woman gave it to me red hot!" exclaimed Sam. "She told me
+some things I'd just as soon not have heard. She said I was started on
+the road to thievery. Now what do you think of that?"
+
+"That's nothing," replied George. "The young one told me all about it."
+
+"About what?" questioned Davy.
+
+"That melon business."
+
+"You don't mean it?"
+
+"Yes, I do. She told me about the whole affair."
+
+"Well, what do you think of that?" wondered Fred.
+
+"I didn't think much of it."
+
+"How do you suppose she found out about it?"
+
+"Don't ask me," replied George gloomily. "She said that the Oracle told
+her."
+
+"You don't believe such nonsense as that, do you?" asked Davy.
+
+"I don't know what to think about it. Gipsies are queer folks. They're
+too mysterious to suit me. I've got all I want of them. They know too
+much," declared the captain. "Why, they can read one's thoughts."
+
+In the meantime, Harriet gleefully watched the departure of the boys
+from the camp. There was laughter in her eyes. She turned to the wagon
+where her companions were now giving expression to uncontrolled
+merriment. Few visitors remained in the camp, and these were some
+distance away.
+
+"Well, I think I have evened up matters with that young man," declared
+Harriet. "What do you say, girls?" she asked, thrusting a laughing face
+into the wagon.
+
+"Oh, Harriet!" gasped Miss Elting. "It was the funniest thing I ever
+heard. And he believed every word of it."
+
+"Why shouldn't he? It was the truth. By the way, Miss Elting--I have
+collected one dollar of that four dollars and eighty cents that you paid
+for the melons," said Harriet, extending a hand in the palm of which lay
+Captain Baker's silver dollar.
+
+"Oh, no, no," protested the guardian, drawing back. "I could not think
+of accepting the money."
+
+"Why not? I can collect the whole amount in a very short time at this
+rate," laughed Harriet.
+
+"Oh, darlin'! What a girl, what a girl!" laughed Crazy Jane.
+
+"No. You must not keep it. It does not rightfully belong to you."
+
+"Then if you refuse to accept the money I shall give it to Sybarina.
+She'll take it. Trust a Gipsy to take everything that is offered."
+
+Sybarina graciously accepted the money. Her eyes shone as she hobbled
+over to Harriet Burrell and exclaimed earnestly: "I said you were the
+true Romany. Now I know it. Did I not tell you the power to foretell
+both the past and future would come to you unbidden?"
+
+"Yes," laughed Harriet, "but I happened to know considerable about the
+Tramp Club's affairs particularly since they visited a certain melon
+patch. Is there any danger of those boys returning to-night?"
+
+Sybarina shook her head. "They have returned to their camp."
+
+"Where are they camping?"
+
+"On yonder hillside. Even now you can catch the glow of their campfire.
+But you shall see them again and you shall make them red of face for the
+trick which they played on you and your friends, my Romany girls. You
+would outwit them?"
+
+"We are trying to get home ahead of them."
+
+The old woman nodded.
+
+"The way shall be made clear to you. Sybarina will tell the Romany girl
+how to defeat her rivals, to show them that the Romany tribes know the
+secret bypaths as the birds know the trail to the sunny land when the
+frost is in the air. Come, child. Come, sit by the fire, while Sybarina
+tells you that which shall make the way clear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI--HARRIET PLANS TO OUTWIT THE TRAMP CLUB
+
+
+A long conversation was held between Harriet and the Gipsy queen, the
+latter drawing a map on the ground with a willow wand to show the girl
+the route that she was to travel after the Meadow-Brook Girls had gone
+on for another day.
+
+Harriet's eyes were sparkling. She thought she saw a way to outwit the
+Tramp Club. Harriet was chuckling gleefully when she joined her
+companions. She declined to tell them that night, however, just what the
+Gipsy had communicated to her.
+
+"Where shall we sleep to-night?" asked Miss Elting.
+
+"Sybarina says we may have the wagon to sleep in," answered Harriet.
+"Shall we use it?"
+
+"No. I think I prefer to sleep in the open," answered the guardian. "It
+is not a cool night. Suppose we roll up in our blankets and sleep by the
+campfire? What do you say, girls?"
+
+"I thay yeth," spoke up Tommy. "I'll put my feet againtht the fire; then
+I won't have cold feet any more."
+
+They were sound asleep in a few moments after turning in. Even the Gipsy
+dogs that had been barking most of the evening, and the crying babies,
+to whom none of the tribe had given the slightest heed, were now quietly
+asleep. Sybarina watched her guests roll up in their blankets and nodded
+approvingly.
+
+"The true Romany," she muttered. For a long time the old woman sat by
+the fire, sat until the embers fell together and the sticks began to
+blacken, when she rose and peered into each sleeping face of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls. Sybarina then hobbled to her own wagon and
+disappeared within.
+
+The Meadow-Brook Girls awakened next morning with the sun in their eyes.
+Miss Elting sat up and called softly to Harriet. The guardian and
+Harriet rubbed their eyes and blinked dazedly about them. There was
+something strange about their surroundings, but just what that
+strangeness was they for the moment did not know. All at once they
+discovered what had happened. They were absolutely alone, save for their
+sleeping companions.
+
+"Why, they've gone!" cried Harriet.
+
+"Gone and we never woke up," laughed Miss Elting. "How strange."
+
+"Who hath gone?" mumbled Tommy, sitting up.
+
+"The Gipsies," answered Harriet.
+
+"They must have left in a great hurry, for some reason," suggested the
+guardian. "I don't understand it. Nor do I understand how they managed
+to slip away so quietly."
+
+The wagon tracks were plainly outlined in the soft earth and the
+remnants of the campfire were there, but that was all. Yet it was not
+all. As Harriet sought to draw on her shoe she felt something hard in
+the toe. Groping in the shoe with her fingers she drew forth a tightly
+wrapped paper. Opening this she found a tiny brass triangle. On it were
+crudely cut several strange characters.
+
+"How curious," breathed Harriet. "But how did it get in my shoe?" she
+wondered.
+
+"Look on the wrapping paper," suggested Miss Elting.
+
+Harriet did so. As she looked the puzzled expression on her face gave
+place to a smile.
+
+"It is from Sybarina," she exclaimed. "This is what she writes: 'A charm
+for the Romany girl. No harm shall come to her who wears it. Happiness
+and prosperity shall be hers forever and always. It is the Gipsy good
+luck charm. Who knows but that, some day, you may wear it as a queen?
+Farewell until we meet again.'"
+
+"How strange!" murmured Harriet, holding up the trinket that her
+companions might see.
+
+"I wonder if it ith a charm againtht bullth?" piped Tommy.
+
+"I would suggest, girls, that we return to our own camp. It may not be
+there by this time."
+
+Upon reaching their own camp they were much relieved to find everything
+as it should be. Nothing had been disturbed. But, ere they had finished
+their breakfast, three farmers came striding in to know if anything had
+been seen of the Gipsies.
+
+"They left early this morning," answered Miss Elting. "Why?"
+
+"Wal, nothing only one of them traded off on me a ring-boned, spavined
+old hoss, which he said was sound. I'll catch them when they come this
+way again."
+
+"I think I understand why the Gipsies took such an early departure,"
+said Harriet after the men had gone. "But I do not believe Sybarina had
+anything to do with such dishonest dealing."
+
+The day's route was laid out after breakfast. The boys undoubtedly had
+gone on, for nothing was to be seen of their campfire. Miss Elting
+rather thought they would see no more of the Tramp Club after the
+fortune-telling that Harriet had given the chief the night before. But
+with the route that Sybarina had laid out for the girls, the guardian
+believed they could make some time and gain the advantage over the boys.
+
+Camp was hurriedly struck after breakfast. Their route that day lay
+across lots and their camping place was to be on the edge of a forest
+easily accessible to Jane with her motor car. Using government maps, as
+they were doing, they were able to locate every little rise of ground,
+every hollow and almost every clump of bushes along their way. These
+government maps Miss Elting had purchased at a comparatively small cost,
+as any one may do. They are very useful to one who is taking a tramp
+through the country, and the Meadow-Brook Girls found them so.
+
+Jane accompanied her companions out to the highway and followed along
+behind them in her car for the first mile. Then their ways parted, the
+tramping girls to climb a hill, Crazy Jane to follow the highway on to
+the point where she too was to leave the road and make camp for them.
+But there was always a long wait for Jane, so the girl occupied the time
+in driving to the nearest village to make a number of purchases at the
+stores.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII--A COMBIETTA CONCERT
+
+
+Her shopping done Jane lost no time in cranking up her car, hopped in
+and with a wave of her hand swung down the road and went honking through
+the village on the way to the place chosen for the Meadow-Brook Girls'
+camp for that night. Jane had avoided all questions about herself and
+her party, except to say that they were camping. The girl did not
+propose to leave a trail for the Tramp Club if she could avoid it. As
+the girls were nearing the end of their journey it behooved them to
+cloak their movements with secrecy if they hoped to outwit their young
+rivals and win the race, which they were determined to do.
+
+Jane had pitched the tent just within the edge of the woods and had
+started a small cook-fire when the welcome "hoo-e-e-e" of the
+Meadow-Brook Girls first reached her ears. She ran out into the open
+waving her apron and shouting a welcome.
+
+"There she is," cried Margery.
+
+"Dear old Jane!" exclaimed Hazel. "She has gotten everything ready for
+us and started a fire."
+
+"I propose three cheers for Jane McCarthy," cried Harriet. The cheers
+were given in the shrillest tones of the Meadow-Brook Girls. Jane bowed
+in exaggerated fashion at this ovation.
+
+"Have you seen the boys to-day, Jane?" was Harriet's first question.
+
+"Not a sign of them, the rascals," replied Jane.
+
+"I imagine that they are at Granite Spring, half a dozen miles back,"
+laughed Harriet.
+
+"What makes you think so?" asked Hazel.
+
+"Because, when I read Captain Baker's fortune, I told him that our next
+camping place was to be not far from that place. He will make straight
+for Granite Spring, you see if he doesn't."
+
+"Then I don't think we'll see the lads again this trip," concluded Jane.
+"But, girls, you've got to get busy if you hope to win this contest.
+Three more days of hiking will bring you to Meadow-Brook. If the boys
+once get ahead of you, you can't expect to catch up with them and win in
+that length of time."
+
+"We simply must win, Jane," returned Harriet determinedly.
+
+"Then you'd better begin to think about how you're going to do it,"
+advised Jane dryly.
+
+"Jane is right," agreed the guardian. "We must plan to-night. And I
+think we shall have to put in one big day's walk, perhaps more than
+that. I should first like to know where the boys are. Jane, will you
+make an effort to locate them to-morrow?"
+
+"Yes, indeed, Miss Elting."
+
+"When we have definite information on that point we ought to be able to
+map out a plan of campaign that will win the contest for us. I believe
+we have gotten ahead of them now and that we shall be able to keep our
+lead."
+
+"Of course we are going to win," reiterated Harriet Burrell.
+
+"If it is all settled that we are to win the race, I propose that we
+celebrate to-night," suggested Jane.
+
+"How?" asked Margery.
+
+"I've got a bag of fruit in the car. We'll make fruit lemonade, then
+we'll have a combietta concert."
+
+"What ith a combietta conthert?" interrupted Tommy curiously.
+
+"Wait and see," teased Jane.
+
+"Now, Jane, be good and tell us about this combietta affair?" coaxed
+Hazel. "What is it?"
+
+"An instrumental concert," giggled Jane. "I got the musical instruments
+when I was in town doing some shopping. Oh, don't worry, darlin's. You
+all know to play them. The first thing to do is to decide upon the tune.
+How about the 'Marching Through Georgia' for a starter?"
+
+Jane spread out six squares of thin white paper. She then produced the
+same number of small packages.
+
+"Oh, we'll wake the squirrels and the chipmunks and the weasles,"
+promised Jane, with a grin of anticipation.
+
+Tommy picked at the wrapping on the end of one of the small packages and
+uttered an exclamation of disappointment.
+
+"It ithn't a musical inthrument at all," she declared indignantly. "It
+ith nothing but a common old black comb."
+
+"That's just where you're wrong," answered Jane. "These combs are new. I
+bought them in the village store this very day. Listen, dears. This is
+the combietta. It makes music through its teeth, and plays any tune you
+call for."
+
+"Wonderful," laughed Miss Elting. "There is something very familiar
+about this marvelous musical instrument. Combietta, do you call it,
+Jane?"
+
+"Sure I do. But the name is my own invention. The music is as old as the
+combs themselves and I don't know how old they are."
+
+"I remember having made music with combs when I was a girl in short
+frocks," nodded the guardian. "Play, Jane, and show the girls how to
+make music."
+
+Crazy Jane folded one of the square slips of paper over the teeth of one
+of the combs, then placed the comb's teeth between her own.
+
+"Zu--zu--zu-zee-zee-zah," she breathed through paper and comb, which
+strange sounds were instantly interpreted by Jane's companions, as "Come
+Back to Erin."
+
+Each girl with a cry of delight, now snatched up a comb, wrapped it in
+the thin paper and joined enthusiastically in the chorus of "Come Back
+to Erin." Tommy Thompson, fully as delighted as her companions, leaned
+against a tree making hideous noises on her comb; Miss Elting, sitting
+on a stump, eyes fixed on the foliage far above her, was an enthusiastic
+performer in the combietta concert.
+
+"Now, 'Marching Through Georgia,'" she cried.
+
+"I can't play fast enough to play that," complained Buster.
+
+"Then play anything you like," answered Harriet, with a merry laugh.
+
+"Yes. Make a noise. You don't all have to play the same tune. This is a
+celebration," shouted Jane. "What we want is noise and lots of it to
+celebrate the victory we are going to win."
+
+And noise there was, a perfect pandemonium of sounds, principally
+inharmonious.
+
+A sudden, startling chorus of yells and a burst of music from the
+forest, brought the girls' concert to a sudden stop. Lights flashed from
+the bushes near at hand, whirling about them in giddy circles like great
+pinwheels. The Meadow-Brook Girls were surrounded by wildly yelling
+figures, strange flaring lights--and music.
+
+"Indianth!" screamed Tommy. "We'll all be thcalped. Oh, thave me!" Then
+the little lisping girl ran like a frightened deer, for the protection
+of the Meadow-Brook Girls' tent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII--THE HARMONICA SERENADE
+
+
+"Oh, what is it?" wailed Margery.
+
+No one was able to answer the question for the moment. It was a
+startling interruption. Even Harriet, though unafraid, could not make up
+her mind what was the meaning of the outbreak.
+
+Now she saw what the lights were. They were flaring torches made from
+cat-tails. Then all at once she recalled that the Tramp Club boys played
+harmonicas. She had heard them play once before.
+
+"Don't be afraid, girls. It is the boys," said Harriet in a relieved
+tone.
+
+"The boys?" questioned Miss Elting. Then her face lighted up
+understandingly. "Oh the rascals!" she exclaimed.
+
+The girls now that they knew no danger threatened them stood perfectly
+still, waiting for the concert to come to an end.
+
+"You may come in, boys, when you have finished your concert," called the
+guardian. "We have enjoyed the serenade very much."
+
+The music and shouting ceased abruptly. A moment later Captain Baker
+stepped into the camp. His face was flushed, but there was a certain
+sheepishness about him that made Harriet Burrell's eyes twinkle.
+
+"Why, Captain! We did not look for you this evening," greeted Miss
+Elting.
+
+"Thought you had given us the slip, did you?" grinned George. "You'll
+have to get up earlier in the morning, to do that."
+
+"Oh, won't you though!" chorused his companions trooping in after their
+captain.
+
+"But how did you find us?" questioned Harriet.
+
+"Easiest thing in the world. We followed Miss McCarthy's car tracks."
+
+"Where to?" twinkled Jane.
+
+"All over the country. You surely led us a fine chase. But we found you,
+just the same."
+
+Tommy now ventured from the tent.
+
+"Thay, you nearly thcared me to death," she chided. "What do you boyth
+want?"
+
+"Why, Tommy, they came to serenade us," reproved Miss Elting. "We
+enjoyed the music very much," she said, turning toward the boys. "If you
+will sit down and play another selection, we will serve refreshments
+afterwards. Jane! Will you get the things ready?"
+
+"Yes. But the boys don't deserve it. However, so long as we are going to
+win the race we can afford to treat them well," teased Jane.
+
+The captain smiled a superior smile.
+
+"We could have gone right on to the end of the route to-day without
+stopping, if we had wished to do so. But we didn't want to take an
+unfair advantage of you."
+
+"Oh, no. You boys never do take an unfair advantage, do you?" chuckled
+Crazy Jane. Miss Elting gave her a warning glance. The captain did not
+observe it.
+
+"Give them another tune, boys," George ordered.
+
+"First please extinguish those cat-tail torches," requested Harriet.
+"You will set the woods on fire, if you are not careful. Everything is
+so dry now that a fire would start very easily."
+
+The torches were ground out under foot, after which the Tramp Club
+played "Home Sweet Home" on the harmonicas. At a nod from the guardian
+the girls got out their combs and joined in the tune. The woodland
+inhabitants probably never had heard a concert like this. It sent the
+birds hopping from limb to limb in great alarm. Fortunately there were
+no neighbors near at hand, so only the inhabitants of the forest were
+disturbed.
+
+Jane that day had purchased a large chocolate cake at a baker shop in
+the village. She brought this out then disappeared into the tent,
+emerging a few minutes later with a pail of fruit lemonade, while Hazel,
+who had accompanied Jane, followed her, bearing cups and glasses. Miss
+Elting busied herself with cutting the cake and Harriet served the
+lemonade.
+
+"Well, boys, here's to the candy we're going to have when we get to our
+journey's end," teased Jane McCarthy, raising her glass of lemonade.
+
+"And here," returned the captain, raising his glass with a flourish, "is
+to those beautiful handkerchiefs that we're going to wear next to our
+hearts for years and years to come."
+
+"To the stars that hold our future," teased Harriet.
+
+The captain paused with the glass of lemonade in his hand. He glanced
+quickly at Harriet Burrell, but the innocent expression on her face told
+him nothing. Miss Elting saw that George had something on his mind. She
+suspected what it was. An amused smile played about the corners of the
+guardian's mouth. There was a smile in Harriet's eyes, too, as she
+caught and read the thought in the mind of Miss Elting.
+
+After the cake and lemonade had been disposed of, the party of young
+people chatted for the better part of an hour. Captain Baker, however,
+appeared uneasy. Twice he essayed to speak then checked himself
+abruptly.
+
+"It's coming now," whispered Harriet. "He's trying to think of a way to
+begin."
+
+Miss Elting nodded.
+
+"I have a confession to make," began the captain, in an embarrassed
+manner.
+
+"A confession!" exclaimed Harriet in a surprised tone.
+
+"Yes, I have. Oh, it isn't for myself alone, but for my friends as
+well," continued the captain doggedly. The other boys exhibited signs of
+uneasiness.
+
+"What about, Mr. Baker?" asked the guardian sweetly.
+
+"It is about those melons."
+
+"But, my dear boy, you need not apologize for them. They were simply
+delicious. I can't tell you how much we enjoyed them." Miss Elting was
+making it as hard for George as possible.
+
+"It--it isn't that. Oh, what's the use? I don't know how to say it. We
+hadn't any right to give you those melons, Miss Elting."
+
+"No right? Please explain yourself, Mr. Baker."
+
+"I'll tell you all about it. We took those melons from the farmer's
+field without leave. We didn't mean to play a mean trick on you, but we
+did. We didn't think the farmer would accuse you girls of stealing the
+melons. We're awfully sorry he made such a fuss about it and that you
+had to pay for them. Will you please let us return to you the money that
+you paid him. It was our treat, you know."
+
+"Hm-m-m! This is a serious matter," replied the guardian slowly. The
+girls sat with lowered heads so that the boys might not discover the
+laughter in their eyes. "I cannot accept the money for the melons. We
+had better consider the incident closed. It is very manly of you,
+however, to come and tell us about it. But what induced you to do so?"
+
+"I gueth hith conthcience troubled him," suggested Tommy wisely.
+
+"Yes, I think so. But there was something else," admitted the boy. "It
+wasn't wholly conscience. We didn't realize how very wrong it was
+until----"
+
+"Until the Oracle told you," nodded Tommy.
+
+"What!" exclaimed George. The eyes of the Tramp Club were fixed on
+Tommy. "What do you mean by that?"
+
+Harriet got up and with crossed hands before her, chin lowered, eyelids
+half veiling her eyes, moved demurely toward the captain.
+
+"Cross my palm with silver and the past and future shall be revealed to
+you," she mumbled.
+
+George Baker gazed at her, with suspicious, puzzled eyes. All at once he
+sprang up.
+
+"I know you now! I knew I had seen you before, but I couldn't place you.
+You were the Star of the East!"
+
+"Yes," admitted Harriet.
+
+"And thhe told your fortune," chuckled Tommy.
+
+Margery and Hazel giggled. Crazy Jane exclaimed derisively:
+
+"Oh, boys, boys! That's the time you got your desserts! We paid you back
+with interest!"
+
+"It was a mean trick," flared George. "We never would have thought it of
+you. It was the meanest trick I ever heard of. I'm sorry I made a fool
+of myself by coming here and apologizing to you."
+
+"Mr. Baker, don't lose your temper," begged Miss Elting, scarcely able
+to control her voice for laughter. "We have evened our score so let's
+shake hands and be friends."
+
+"No, thank you. I'm sorry to refuse, but you have made fools of us,"
+retorted George angrily.
+
+"Oh, no. That ith not pothible," piped Tommy.
+
+"Come on, fellows. We will get out of here before they make us angry,"
+urged Captain Baker, snatching up his hat and starting away.
+
+"Please wait," begged Miss Elting.
+
+George shook his head.
+
+"What about our compact?" called Harriet.
+
+"We're going on and win the race. We'll show you that you aren't such
+athletes as you think. At least you shan't make fools of us at that.
+Good night."
+
+Captain Baker and his friends strode angrily from the camp. They did not
+so much as look back. Perhaps the boys were really not so angry as they
+pretended to be.
+
+"It's too bad. I didn't think they would take it that way," cried
+Harriet. "I surely thought they would be able to take a joke. Well,
+what's done can't be undone. There's nothing more to be done except to
+go on and try to win the race."
+
+Jane had disappeared. Where she had gone the girls did not know. It was
+some time before she returned and when she did she was excited. Her hair
+was awry and her face flushed.
+
+"Jane, where have you been?" demanded the guardian.
+
+"I've been scouting. Girls, those miserable boys are planning to play
+another trick on you. They're going to start to-night and go on without
+stopping until they get home. What shall we do?"
+
+The girls gazed solemnly into each other's eyes.
+
+"That seems to settle it," spoke up Margery finally. "Well, let them
+have the race. Who cares?"
+
+"We all care," answered Harriet, springing to her feet. "We simply must
+win that race now. Everybody will laugh at us if we don't, and I just
+couldn't stand it to see those boys grinning triumphantly at us
+afterwards. I don't care so much about the others."
+
+"What would you suggest, Harriet?" inquired Miss Elting.
+
+"Suggest? Why, there is only one thing to suggest. Checkmate them at
+their own game. We'll start for Meadow-Brook this very night and we'll
+keep going until we get there. Are you with me, girls?"
+
+"Yes!" shouted the girls.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV--CONCLUSION
+
+
+"Not quite so fast, girls," warned Miss Elting.
+
+They turned toward her questioningly. Their eyes were sparkling, their
+faces flushed.
+
+"What would you suggest, Miss Elting?" asked Harriet.
+
+"Remember, that, if we take the route suggested by the Gipsy, we shall
+have to travel some of the roughest country in the state. Are you equal
+to the hike?"
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"We shall have to walk all night and a good part of the day to-morrow,
+and even then the boys may win the contest. Are you willing to try it?"
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"Then we will make our plans and get started. According to my
+calculations, it will be a twenty mile hike to Meadow-Brook by the way
+we propose to go. The boys will have a good ten miles further to travel
+if they go by way of the road. But having better going they will
+naturally travel much faster than we. Listen! We must travel light, with
+nothing in our packs except just sufficient food to carry us through.
+Jane, you will have to spend the night at the nearest farm house and
+come back for the tent and supplies in the morning. I hardly believe any
+one will disturb them over night. You must go at once or the people of
+the house will have retired. Go quietly."
+
+Ten minutes later Jane was on her way to the farm house in her car,
+undetected by the members of the Tramp Club.
+
+"Now we will get ready at once. Let us be certain that none of the boys
+are watching. I would suggest that you girls lie down for an hour or so,
+while Harriet and myself get the packs together."
+
+Hazel obediently led the way into the tent, Margery and Tommy following.
+
+"I can't thleep. I'm too exthited," protested Tommy. She and her
+companions did sleep however. They were allowed to rest for two hours.
+When they awakened Harriet informed them that the Tramp Club already had
+started. Half an hour later the girls themselves had taken the trail to
+Meadow-Brook.
+
+The Pathfinders made straight for a blue range of mountains that stood
+out dark and forbidding in the bright moonlight. The girls were full of
+enthusiasm, and would have walked much faster had not their guardian
+insisted on their saving their strength for the more difficult traveling
+after they reached the hills.
+
+It was three o'clock in the morning when finally they dropped down a
+sharp incline into the gloomy depths of a rocky canyon. A trickling
+stream flowed through the canyon and the walls stood high on either
+side, rising sheer for a hundred feet.
+
+"You will have to wade, girls. But I think we are all sufficiently
+hardened so that we shall not suffer more than temporary discomfort from
+getting our feet wet," said the guardian, with an encouraging smile.
+
+The girls plunged into the brook without hesitation. The water was only
+ankle deep, but the stones on the bottom of the creek were moss-covered
+and slippery. Still, they made good progress, really traveling faster
+than before they had entered the canyon.
+
+At daylight Miss Elting called a halt. She had chosen a place where a
+dry shelf of rock offered a resting place. The girls threw themselves
+down flat on their backs. There was no wood with which to build a fire,
+but Miss Elting produced a small alcohol stove from her pack and made
+coffee. This with biscuits they had brought proved very refreshing. The
+guardian did not permit them to remain on the shelf of rock for a long
+time, fearing that their muscles might become stiffened. Then the
+journey was taken up again. So full of enthusiasm and determination were
+the Meadow-Brook Girls that not one of them offered a word of complaint;
+but when at two o'clock that afternoon, they emerged from the canyon
+into the open country, Tommy and Margery were limping a little.
+
+Beyond in the haze of a distant valley lay Meadow-Brook. The girls eager
+to get to their journey's end pushed on again. After half an hour's
+walking, Miss Elting called a halt. She shaded her eyes and gazed off to
+the west. A thin brown line was crawling slowly along the road.
+
+"It's the boys!" cried Harriet.
+
+"They're going to win," groaned Margery.
+
+"They are not. We must run for it."
+
+"Yes," agreed Miss Elting. "But don't get excited. Keep your lips
+tightly closed. Breathe through your nostrils and keep your shoulders
+well back. Don't keep yourselves rigid, but just trudge along with every
+muscle relaxed. They don't see us. Ready! Go!"
+
+The girls crossed the field at a trot. It was a good two miles to the
+village. They ran slowly, but steadily. At the end of a mile the
+guardian again ordered a halt, directing the girls to lie down in the
+field flat on their backs. A few moments later they were up and off
+again. They saw the boys a long distance to the rear, still trudging
+doggedly along. And half an hour later the girls stepped from the field
+out into the road. They heard the chug of a motor car. It swept on and
+overtook them. It was Jane. She was howling like a wild Indian.
+
+"They're coming! They're coming. Run for it!" she yelled.
+
+By this time the boys had discovered the girls. They, too, began to run.
+The race was on in earnest. Never had those girls run and stumbled and
+lurched along as they did that afternoon. The boys gained slowly. The
+girls were nearing home. Jane was leading the procession, standing up in
+her car, steering as she stood, setting the pace for the Meadow-Brook
+Girls. She was shouting and yelling to keep up their courage, but it was
+an almost killing pace that she was making for them.
+
+The girls staggered over the line that marked the village limits.
+
+"Home!" cried Miss Elting.
+
+"We've won!" screamed Jane almost beside herself with joy.
+
+The girls walked unsteadily to one side of the road and sat down
+gasping. They had won the race, but by a slender margin. The boys were
+still forging ahead, running at top speed. They had thrown away their
+packs and were racing into the village in light order. Five minutes
+later a crowd of weary, humiliated boys came hurrying up to where the
+girls sat. They were much more fatigued than were their opponents,
+besides which, they were chagrined beyond words.
+
+"Did we win?" jeered Jane triumphantly.
+
+"Yes. You won," admitted Captain Baker sourly. "I take off my hat to
+you." He suited the action to the word. "You beat us at our own game. I
+don't know how you did it, but you did and that's all there is about it,
+and we aren't going to whine. We'll take our medicine. We're going to
+stay in town the rest of the day, and we'll see you later on. Good-bye
+until to-night."
+
+The girls' weariness left them almost magically. They hopped into Jane's
+car and were swiftly whirled home. Later in the afternoon a box of
+marshmallows for each of the girls was delivered to Miss Elting. But the
+fun was not yet ended.
+
+That night the Tramp Club and the Meadow-Brook Girls were the guests of
+Tommy Thompson's father and mother at dinner. Tommy's parents, as well
+as the parents of the other girls, were delighted with the splendid
+physical condition of their daughters. Before each girl's plate at the
+table that stretched the length of the big dining room, was a box of
+marshmallows, before each boy's plate a handkerchief.
+
+The marshmallow boxes were tied with pink ribbon, the color chosen by
+the Meadow-Brook Girls for their organization.
+
+"On Hallowe'en," declared Dill Dodd solemnly, "you shall hear from the
+tramps again, and the message will have a bearing on the question of
+melons."
+
+Nor did Baker's Tramp Club forget. Surely enough, on Hallowe'en Harriet
+received for herself and her friends two great, ripe, luscious
+watermelons with a most cordially worded note from the boys.
+
+"We must see to it that the Tramp Club never do anything like this
+again," said Miss Elting, as she and the Meadow-Brook Girls cut up and
+enjoyed the watermelons. "At this season of the year fruit of this kind
+comes only from hot houses and is very expensive. The boys, to show
+their contrition, have mortgaged their pocket money, I fear."
+
+Soon after their return the Meadow-Brook Girls entered upon the duties
+and pleasures of the new school year. We may be assured also that at the
+proper time, Miss Elting would see to it that the beads which the girls
+had won by their deeds of daring and other achievements during their
+recent trip, would be awarded. But we shall hear from them again.
+
+They had ahead of them many happy days of outdoor life and adventure, as
+will be learned in the next volume of this series, which is published
+under the title, "The Meadow-Brook Girls Afloat; Or, The Stormy Cruise
+of the Red Rover."
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+ HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY'S CATALOGUE OF
+ The Best and Least Expensive
+ Books for Real Boys and Girls
+
+Really good and new stories for boys and girls are not plentiful. Many
+stories, too, are so highly improbable as to bring a grin of derision to
+the young reader's face before he has gone far. The name of ALTEMUS is a
+distinctive brand on the cover of a book, always ensuring the buyer of
+having a book that is up-to-date and fine throughout. No buyer of an
+ALTEMUS book is ever disappointed.
+
+Many are the claims made as to the inexpensiveness of books. Go into any
+bookstore and ask for an Altemus book. Compare the price charged you for
+Altemus books with the price demanded for other juvenile books. You will
+at once discover that a given outlay of money will buy more of the
+ALTEMUS books than of those published by other houses.
+
+ Every dealer in books carries the ALTEMUS books.
+
+ Sold by all booksellers or sent postpaid on receipt of price
+
+ Henry Altemus Company
+ 507-513 Cherry Street, Philadelphia
+
+
+ The Motor Boat Club Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The keynote of these books is manliness. The stories are wonderfully
+entertaining, and they are at the same time sound and wholesome. No boy
+will willingly lay down an unfinished book in this series.
+
+ 1 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB OF THE KENNEBEC; Or,
+ The Secret of Smugglers' Island.
+ 2 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB AT NANTUCKET; Or,
+ The Mystery of the Dunstan Heir.
+ 3 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB OFF LONG ISLAND; Or,
+ A Daring Marine Game at Racing Speed.
+ 4 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB AND THE WIRELESS; Or,
+ The Dot, Dash and Dare Cruise.
+ 5 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB IN FLORIDA; Or,
+ Laying the Ghost of Alligator Swamp.
+ 6 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB AT THE GOLDEN GATE; Or,
+ A Thrilling Capture in the Great Fog.
+ 7 THE MOTOR BOAT CLUB ON THE GREAT LAKES; Or,
+ The Flying Dutchman of the Big Fresh Water.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Range and Grange Hustlers
+
+ By FRANK GEE PATCHIN
+
+Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life on great
+ranches in the West? Any bright boy will "devour" the books of this
+series, once he has made a start with the first volume.
+
+ 1 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS ON THE RANCH; Or,
+ The Boy Shepherds of the Great Divide.
+ 2 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS' GREATEST ROUND-UP; Or,
+ Pitting Their Wits Against a Packers' Combine.
+ 3 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS ON THE PLAINS; Or,
+ Following the Steam Plows Across the Prairie.
+ 4 THE RANGE AND GRANGE HUSTLERS AT CHICAGO; Or,
+ The Conspiracy of the Wheat Pit.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Submarine Boys Series
+
+ By VICTOR G. DURHAM
+
+These splendid books for boys and girls deal with life aboard submarine
+torpedo boats, and with the adventures of the young crew, and possess,
+in addition to the author's surpassing knack of storytelling, a great
+educational value for all young readers.
+
+ 1 THE SUBMARINE BOYS ON DUTY; Or,
+ Life on a Diving Torpedo Boat.
+ 2 THE SUBMARINE BOYS' TRIAL TRIP; Or,
+ "Making Good" as Young Experts.
+ 3 THE SUBMARINE BOYS AND THE MIDDIES; Or,
+ The Prize Detail at Annapolis.
+ 4 THE SUBMARINE BOYS AND THE SPIES; Or,
+ Dodging the Sharks of the Deep.
+ 5 THE SUBMARINE BOYS' LIGHTNING CRUISE; Or,
+ The Young Kings of the Deep.
+ 6 THE SUBMARINE BOYS FOR THE FLAG; Or,
+ Deeding Their Lives to Uncle Sam.
+ 7 THE SUBMARINE BOYS AND THE SMUGGLERS; Or,
+ Breaking Up the New Jersey Customs Frauds.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Square Dollar Boys Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The reading boy will be a voter within a few years; these books are
+bound to make him think, and when he casts his vote he will do it more
+intelligently for having read these volumes.
+
+ 1 THE SQUARE DOLLAR BOYS WAKE UP; Or,
+ Fighting the Trolley Franchise Steal.
+ 2 THE SQUARE DOLLAR BOYS SMASH THE RING; Or,
+ In the Lists Against the Crooked Land Deal.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Ben Lightbody Series
+
+ By WALTER BENHAM
+
+ 1 BEN LIGHTBODY, SPECIAL; Or,
+ Seizing His First Chance to Make Good.
+ 2 BEN LIGHTBODY'S BIGGEST PUZZLE; Or,
+ Running the Double Ghost to Earth.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Pony Rider Boys Series
+
+ By FRANK GEE PATCHIN
+
+These tales may be aptly described as those of a new Cooper. In every
+sense they belong to the best class of books for boys and girls.
+
+ 1 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE ROCKIES; Or,
+ The Secret of the Lost Claim.
+ 2 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN TEXAS; Or,
+ The Veiled Riddle of the Plains.
+ 3 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN MONTANA; Or,
+ The Mystery of the Old Custer Trail.
+ 4 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE OZARKS; Or,
+ The Secret of Ruby Mountain.
+ 5 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE ALKALI; Or,
+ Finding a Key to the Desert Maze.
+ 6 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN NEW MEXICO; Or,
+ The End of the Silver Trail.
+ 7 THE PONY RIDER BOYS IN THE GRAND CANYON; Or,
+ The Mystery of Bright Angel Gulch.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Boys of Steel Series
+
+ By JAMES R. MEARS
+
+The author has made of these volumes a series of romances with scenes
+laid in the iron and steel world. Each book presents a vivid picture of
+some phase of this great industry. The information given is exact and
+truthful; above all, each story is full of adventure and fascination.
+
+ 1 THE IRON BOYS IN THE MINES; Or,
+ Starting at the Bottom of the Shaft.
+ 2 THE IRON BOYS AS FOREMEN; Or,
+ Heading the Diamond Drill Shift.
+ 3 THE IRON BOYS ON THE ORE BOATS; Or,
+ Roughing It on the Great Lakes.
+ 4 THE IRON BOYS IN THE STEEL MILLS; Or,
+ Beginning Anew in the Cinder Pits.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ West Point Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The principal characters in these narratives are manly, young Americans
+whose doings will inspire all boy readers.
+
+ 1 DICK PRESCOTT'S FIRST YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Two Chums in the Cadet Gray.
+ 2 DICK PRESCOTT'S SECOND YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Finding the Glory of the Soldier's Life.
+ 3 DICK PRESCOTT'S THIRD YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Standing Firm for Flag and Honor.
+ 4 DICK PRESCOTT'S FOURTH YEAR AT WEST POINT; Or,
+ Ready to Drop the Gray for Shoulder Straps.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Annapolis Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The Spirit of the new Navy is delightfully and truthfully depicted in
+these volumes.
+
+ 1 DAVE DARRIN'S FIRST YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Two Plebe Midshipmen at the U. S. Naval Academy.
+ 2 DAVE DARRIN'S SECOND YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Two Midshipmen as Naval Academy "Youngsters."
+ 3 DAVE DARRIN'S THIRD YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Leaders of the Second Class Midshipmen.
+ 4 DAVE DARRIN'S FOURTH YEAR AT ANNAPOLIS; Or,
+ Headed for Graduation and the Big Cruise.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Young Engineers Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+The heroes of these stories are known to readers of the High School Boys
+Series. In this new series Tom Reade and Harry Hazelton prove worthy of
+all the traditions of Dick & Co.
+
+ 1 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN COLORADO; Or,
+ At Railroad Building in Earnest.
+ 2 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN ARIZONA; Or,
+ Laying Tracks on the "Man-Killer" Quicksand.
+ 3 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN NEVADA; Or,
+ Seeking Fortune on the Turn of a Pick.
+ 4 THE YOUNG ENGINEERS IN MEXICO; Or,
+ Fighting the Mine Swindlers.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Boys of the Army Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+These books breathe the life and spirit of the United States Army of
+to-day, and the life, just as it is, is described by a master pen.
+
+ 1 UNCLE SAM'S BOYS IN THE RANKS; Or,
+ Two Recruits in the United States Army.
+ 2 UNCLE SAM'S BOYS ON FIELD DUTY; Or,
+ Winning Corporal's Chevrons.
+ 3 UNCLE SAM'S BOYS AS SERGEANTS; Or,
+ Handling Their First Real Commands.
+ 4 UNCLE SAM'S BOYS IN THE PHILIPPINES; Or,
+ Following the Flag Against the Moros.
+
+ (Other volumes to follow rapidly.)
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Battleship Boys Series
+
+ By FRANK GEE PATCHIN
+
+These stories throb with the life of young Americans on to-day's huge
+drab Dreadnaughts.
+
+ 1 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS AT SEA; Or,
+ Two Apprentices in Uncle Sam's Navy.
+ 2 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS FIRST STEP UPWARD; Or,
+ Winning Their Grades as Petty Officers.
+ 3 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS IN FOREIGN SERVICE; Or,
+ Earning New Ratings in European Seas.
+ 4 THE BATTLESHIP BOYS IN THE TROPICS; Or,
+ Upholding the American Flag in a Honduras Revolution.
+
+(Other volumes to follow rapidly.)
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Meadow-Brook Girls Series
+
+ By JANET ALDRIDGE
+
+Real live stories pulsing with the vibrant atmosphere of outdoor life.
+
+ 1 THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS UNDER CANVAS; Or,
+ Fun and Frolic in the Summer Camp.
+ 2 THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY; Or,
+ The Young Pathfinders on a Summer Hike.
+ 3 THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS AFLOAT; Or,
+ The Stormy Cruise of the Red Rover.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ High School Boys Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+In this series of bright, crisp books a new note has been struck.
+
+Boys of every age under sixty will be interested in these fascinating
+volumes.
+
+ 1 THE HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMEN; Or,
+ Dick & Co.'s First Year Pranks and Sports.
+ 2 THE HIGH SCHOOL PITCHER; Or,
+ Dick & Co. on the Gridley Diamond.
+ 3 THE HIGH SCHOOL LEFT END; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Grilling on the Football Gridiron.
+ 4 THE HIGH SCHOOL CAPTAIN OF THE TEAM; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Leading the Athletic Vanguard.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ Grammar School Boys Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+This series of stories, based on the actual doings of grammar school
+boys, comes near to the heart of the average American boy.
+
+ 1 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS OF GRIDLEY; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Start Things Moving.
+ 2 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS SNOWBOUND; Or,
+ Dick & Co. at Winter Sports.
+ 3 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS IN THE WOODS; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Trail Fun and Knowledge.
+ 4 THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BOYS IN SUMMER ATHLETICS; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Make Their Fame Secure.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ High School Boys' Vacation Series
+
+ By H. IRVING HANCOCK
+
+"Give us more Dick Prescott books!"
+
+This has been the burden of the cry from young readers of the country
+over. Almost numberless letters have been received by the publishers,
+making this eager demand; for Dick Prescott, Dave Darrin, Tom Reade, and
+the other members of Dick & Co. are the most popular high school boys in
+the land. Boys will alternately thrill and chuckle when reading these
+splendid narratives.
+
+ 1 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS' CANOE CLUB; Or,
+ Dick & Co.'s Rivals on Lake Pleasant.
+ 2 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS IN SUMMER CAMP; Or,
+ The Dick Prescott Six Training for the Gridley Eleven.
+ 3 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS' FISHING TRIP; Or,
+ Dick & Co. in the Wilderness.
+ 4 THE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS' TRAINING HIKE; Or,
+ Dick & Co. Making Themselves "Hard as Nails."
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Circus Boys Series
+
+ By EDGAR B. P. DARLINGTON
+
+Mr. Darlington's books breathe forth every phase of an intensely
+interesting and exciting life.
+
+ 1 THE CIRCUS BOYS ON THE FLYING RINGS; Or,
+ Making the Start in the Sawdust Life.
+ 2 THE CIRCUS BOYS ACROSS THE CONTINENT; Or,
+ Winning New Laurels on the Tanbark.
+ 3 THE CIRCUS BOYS IN DIXIE LAND; Or,
+ Winning the Plaudits of the Sunny South.
+ 4 THE CIRCUS BOYS ON THE MISSISSIPPI; Or,
+ Afloat with the Big Show on the Big River.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The High School Girls Series
+
+ By JESSIE GRAHAM FLOWER, A. M.
+
+These breezy stories of the American High School Girl take the reader
+fairly by storm.
+
+ 1 GRACE HARLOWE'S PLEBE YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ The Merry Doings of the Oakdale Freshman Girls.
+ 2 GRACE HARLOWE'S SOPHOMORE YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ The Record of the Girl Chums in Work and Athletics.
+ 3 GRACE HARLOWE'S JUNIOR YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ Fast Friends in the Sororities.
+ 4 GRACE HARLOWE'S SENIOR YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL; Or,
+ The Parting of the Ways.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+ The Automobile Girls Series
+
+ By LAURA DENT CRANE
+
+No girl's library--no family book-case can be considered at all complete
+unless it contains these sparkling twentieth-century books.
+
+ 1 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS AT NEWPORT; Or,
+ Watching the Summer Parade.
+ 2 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS IN THE BERKSHIRES; Or,
+ The Ghost of Lost Man's Trail.
+ 3 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS ALONG THE HUDSON; Or,
+ Fighting Fire in Sleepy Hollow.
+ 4 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS AT CHICAGO; Or,
+ Winning Out Against Heavy Odds.
+ 5 THE AUTOMOBILE GIRLS AT PALM BEACH; Or,
+ Proving Their Mettle Under Southern Skies.
+
+ Cloth, Illustrated--Price, per Volume, 50c.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country, by
+Janet Aldridge
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS ACROSS COUNTRY ***
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