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قراءة كتاب A Campfire Girl's First Council Fire The Camp Fire Girls In the Woods

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A Campfire Girl's First Council Fire
The Camp Fire Girls In the Woods

A Campfire Girl's First Council Fire The Camp Fire Girls In the Woods

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Transcriber's Note: This edition had a cover and title page entitled A Campfire Girl's First Council Fire. The title on the first page of the story and the remainder of the book, however, is The Camp Fire Girls In the Woods.

 

A Campfire Girl's
First Council Fire

By

JANE L. STEWART



Emblem



CAMPFIRE GIRLS SERIES
VOLUME I



THE
SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
AKRON, OHIO NEW YORK

Made in U. S. A.

COPYRIGHT, MCMXIV
BY
THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO.

THE CAMPFIRE GIRLS SERIES

Divider
A CAMPFIRE GIRL'S FIRST COUNCIL FIRE
A CAMPFIRE GIRL'S CHUM
A CAMPFIRE GIRL IN SUMMER CAMP
A CAMPFIRE GIRL'S ADVENTURE
A CAMPFIRE GIRL'S TEST OF FRIENDSHIP
A CAMPFIRE GIRL'S HAPPINESS

"We'll take you over to camp and you can have dinner with us.""We'll take you over to camp and you can have dinner with us."

CONTENTS

CHAPTER PAGE
I THE ESCAPE 11
II AN UNJUST ACCUSATION 27
III WO-HE-LO 48
IV AN UNEXPECTED FRIEND 57
V AN ALARM IN THE WOODS 73
VI A PIECE OF BAD LUCK 91
VII A FRIEND IN NEED 105
VIII THE SHELTER OF THE WOODS 121
IX A CLOSE SHAVE 139
X OUT OF THE WOODS 153
XI THE CALL OF THE FIRE 169
XII A NEW SUSPICION 187
XIII A TANGLED WEB 205
XIV THE TRUTH AT LAST 219
XV THE COUNCIL FIRE 235

The Camp Fire Girls
In the Woods


CHAPTER I

THE ESCAPE

"Now then, you, Bessie, quit your loafin' and get them dishes washed! An' then you can go out and chop me some wood for the kitchen fire!"

The voice was that of a slatternly woman of middle age, thin and complaining. She had come suddenly into the kitchen of the Hoover farmhouse and surprised Bessie King as the girl sat resting for a moment and reading.

Bessie jumped up alertly at the sound of the voice she knew so well, and started nervously toward the sink.

"Yes, ma'am," she said. "I was awful tired—an' I wanted to rest for a few minutes."

"Tired!" scolded the woman. "Land knows you ain't got nothin' to carry on so about! Ain't you got a good home? Don't we board you and give you a good bed to sleep in? Didn't Paw Hoover give you a nickel for yourself only last week?"

"Yes—an' you took it away from me soon's you found it out," Bessie flashed back. There were tears in her eyes, but she went at her dishes, and Mrs. Hoover, after a minute in which she glared at Bessie, turned and left the kitchen, muttering something about ingratitude as she went.

As she worked, Bessie wondered why it was that she must always do the work about the house when other girls were at school or free to play. But it had been that way for a long time, and she could think of no way of escaping to happier conditions. Mrs. Hoover was no relation to her at all. Bessie had a father and mother, but they had left her with Mrs. Hoover a long time before, and she could scarcely remember them, but she heard about them, her father especially, whenever she did something

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