The Girl Scout Pioneers, by
Lillian C Garis
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Title: The Girl Scout Pioneers or Winning the First B. C.
Author: Lillian C Garis
Release Date: March, 2004 [EBook #5263] [Yes, we are more than one
year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on June 19, 2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL
SCOUT PIONEERS ***
Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading
Team
The Girl Scout Pioneers
or
Winning the First B. C.
By Lillian C. Garis
Author of "The Girl Scouts at Bellair," "The Girl Scouts at Sea Crest,"
etc.
Illustrated
CONTENTS
I. GIRLS AND GIRLS
II. WOODLAND THRILLS
III. A NOBLE DEED UNDONE
IV. PATHS DIVIDING
V. A FRIENDLY ENEMY
VI. A NOVEL JAIL
VII. TENDERFOOT ADVENTURES
VIII. CLUE TO THE MISSING
IX. TRIBUTE OP EOSES
X. TELLING SECRETS
XI. THE TANGLED WEB
XII. TESSIE
XIII. BROKEN FAITH
XIV. WOODLAND MAGIC
XV. VENTURE TROOP
XVI. MORE MYSTERIES
XVII. JACQUELINE
XVIII. DAISIES AND DANGEES
XIX. THE FLYING SQUADRON
XX. CLEO'S EXPERIMENT
XXI. FORGING AHEAD
XXII. THE WHIRLING MAY-POLE
XXIII. RAINBOW'S END
CHAPTER I
GIRLS AND GIRLS
It was much like a scene in a movie play. The shabby dark room
lighted by a single oil lamp if any light could make its way through the
badly smoked glass that served as a chimney, the broken chair, and the
table piled high with what appeared to be rags, but which might have
been intended for wearing apparel, the torn window curtain hanging so
disconsolately from the broken cord it had one time proudly swung
from, and the indescribable bed!
Like some sentinel watching the calamitous surroundings, a girl stood
in the midst of this squalor, her bright golden hair and her pretty fair
face, with its azure blue eyes, marking a pathetic contrast to all the
sordid, dark detail of the ill-kept room. She took from the side pocket
of her plaid skirt a bit of crumpled paper, and placing it directly under
the lamp, followed its written lines. Having finished the reading, she
carefully folded the worn slip again, and returned it to her pocket. Then
she threw back her pretty head, and any frequenter of the screen world
would have known instantly that the girl had decided--and further, that
her decision required courage, and perhaps defiance.
With determination marking every move, she crossed to the tumbled
bed, and stooping, dragged from beneath it a bag, the sort called
"telescope," and used rarely now, even by the traveling salesman, who
at one time found the sliding trunk so useful. It would "telescope," and
being thus adjustable, lent its proportions to any sized burden imposed
upon it. Into this the girl tossed a few articles selected from the
rummage on the table, a pair of shoes gathered from more debris in a
corner, and on top a sweater and skirt, taken from a peg on the door.
All together this composed rather a pretentious assortment for the
telescope.
But the girl did not jam down the cover in that "movie" way common
to runaways, rather she paused, glanced furtively about the gloomy
place, and finally taking a candle from a very high shelf, lighted the
taper, evidently for some delicate task in the way of gathering up her
very personal belongings.
In a remote corner of the room an upturned orange box served as sort of
stand. The front was covered and festooned with a curtain, dexterously
made of a bright skirt, hung over the sides, and draped from a knot at
the top. The knot was drawn from the waist band of the skirt, and tied
with the original string into a grotesque rosette. All over the box top
were such articles as a girl might deem necessary in making a civilized
toilette, except at the knot--where the
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