Campfire Girls in the Allegheny Mountains

Stella M. Francis
Campfire Girls in the Allegheny
Mountains

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Mountains
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Title: Campfire Girls in the Allegheny Mountains or, A Christmas
Success against Odds
Author: Stella M. Francis
Release Date: February 21, 2005 [EBook #15133]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAMPFIRE
GIRLS IN THE MOUNTAINS ***

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[Illustration: CAMP-FIRE GIRLS In the ALLEGHANY
MOUNTAINS
or A CHRISTMAS SUCCESS AGAINST ODDS]
[Illustration: Campfire Girls in the Mountains]

Campfire Girls in the
Allegheny Mountains;
OR,
A Christmas Success Against Odds
By
STELLA M. FRANCIS
M.A. DONOHUE & CO.
CHICAGO NEW YORK

CAMPFIRE GIRLS' SERIES
=CAMPFIRE GIRLS IN THE ALLEGHENY MOUNTAINS; or, A
Christmas Success Against Odds.=
=CAMPFIRE GIRLS IN THE COUNTRY; or, The Secret Aunt
Hannah Forgot.=
=CAMPFIRE GIRLS' TRIP UP THE RIVER; or, Ethel Hollister's First
Lesson.=
=CAMPFIRE GIRLS' OUTING; or, Ethel Hollister's Second Summer
in Camp.=
=CAMPFIRE GIRLS' ON A HIKE; or, Lost in the Great North
Woods.=
=CAMPFIRE GIRLS AT TWIN LAKES; or, The Quest of a Summer
Vacation.=
1918
M.A. DONOHUE & COMPANY
MADE in U.S.A.

CONTENTS.

CHAPTER
I The Grand Council Fire
II The Boy Scouts' Invasion
III The Skull and Cross-Bones

IV Studying the Mystery
V Girls Courageous
VI The Punster Makes a Find
VII To the Rescue
VIII The Eavesdropper
IX Mr. Stanlock Surprised
X Mr. Stanlock Amused
XI A Man of Big Heart and Queer Notions
XII A Mysterious Disappearance
XIII "Find Her, or I'll Find Her Myself"
XIV Trapped
XV A Pile of Scrap Lumber
XVI Helen and the Strike Leader's Wife
XVII Helen Declares Herself
XVIII Helen in the Mountains
XIX The Subterranean Avenue
XX Twelve Girls in the Mountains
XXI Thirteen Girls in the Mountains
XXII A Sleighride Home

"Camp Fire Girls in the Allegheny Mountains"
OR
"A Christmas Success Against Odds"
By STELLA M. FRANCIS.
* * * * *

CHAPTER I.
THE GRAND COUNCIL FIRE.
"Wo-he-lo for aye, Wo-he-lo for aye, Wo-he-lo, Wo-he-lo, Wo-he-lo
for aye! Wo-he-lo for work, Wo-he-lo for health, Wo-he-lo, Wo-he-lo,
Wo-he-lo for love."
Two hundred and thirty-nine girl voices chanted the Wo-he-lo Cheer
with weird impressiveness. The scene alone would have been
impressive enough, but Camp Fire Girls are not satisfied with that kind
of "enough." Once their imagination is stimulated with the almost
limitless possibilities of the craft, they are not easily pleased with
anything but a finished product.
The occasion was the last Grand Council Fire of Hiawatha Institute for
Camp Fire Girls located in the Allegheny city of Westmoreland. The
classroom work had been rushed a day ahead, examinations were made
almost perfunctory, and for them also the clock had been turned
twenty-four hours forward. The curriculum was finished, and the day
just closed had been devoted to preparation for a Grand Council
wind-up for the fifteen Fires of the Institute, which would "break
ranks" on the following day and scatter in all directions for home and
the Christmas holidays.
And there was literal truth in this "break ranks" method of dismissing
school at the Institute. Since the United States entered the European
war on the side of the anti-frightfulness allies, Hiawatha had become
something of a military school. The girls actually drilled with guns, and
they would shoot those guns with all the grim fatality of so many boys.
Not that they expected to go to war and descend into the trenches and

fire hail-storms of steel-coated death-messengers at the enemy. Oh, no.
They might, but they were sensible enough not to let their imagination
carry them so far. But preparedness was in the air, and the girls voted to
a--a--girl (I almost said man, for they were as brave as men in many
respects) to take up military drill and tactics two hours a week as a part
of their curriculum.
Madame Cleaver, head of the Institute, did not start the military
movement rashly. She was carefully diplomatic in the conduct of her
school, for she must satisfy the critical tastes and ideas of a high-class
parentage clientele. But she also kept her fingers on the pulse of affairs
and knew pretty well how to strike a popular vein. Hence the
membership of her classes was always on the increase. Indeed, at the
beginning of this school year, she had to turn away something like forty
applicants, for want of room and accommodations.
Hiawatha Institute was founded as a Camp Fire Girls'
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