The Girl Scouts' Good Turn
ewhere there
e the rai
kipped from place to place, adding the finishing tou
their old places-all except the seniors of the previous year, who had graduated-and now the sophomores were pre
e winter scene from fairyland. Cedar branches, decked with flakes of artificial snow, and great white snowbanks, completely hid the walls from view. Spread over the floor, except for
as if they feared that by some rude noise t
lue and silver of the scene. But, standing gracefully erect, with one satin-slippered foot extended in front of the other, and her head thrown back as she contemplated t
t of the effect," she said, putting her
y. "Isn't the room wonderful? I think it's the
ertainly can't help
ith the infinite wisdom of the soph
nk Frances Wright and Ethel Todd were nothing short of goddesses? I wonder whether these fre
over to give them the final directions. When she turned around again, Lily had vanished; but near her stood Ruth Henry, h
ed, the girls were good friends now, in spite of all that had
e it, Ruth. Yours
near-by, and beckoned M
he remarked. "We might as well re
from one place to another over the room, reviewing the effect, and her mind was drifting from what Rut
ice to an intimate tone. "Have you
presi
she is still president; but wh
arjorie, absently. "I neve
ening, you know. I think we ought to talk it over
lancing nervously towards the door. "Wh
replied Ruth, with annoyance.
t content herself to
Doris," she said, rising. "I wish it weren't ag
leasant voice, and the girls looked up to see
ete-a-tete, but do you know who ha
e. "But you needn't wor
rtainly am crazy to get acquainted with the freshmen. I know most of them by s
pick out the Girl Sc
Ruth," protested Marjorie
e girls hastened over to welcome them and to make them feel at home. They walked in
end. But perhaps some of the freshmen might resent this, and interpret her attitude as condescending. So she tried t
ting Lieutenant of the troop at camp, and who still held that office. It was Florence that introduced herself to Marjorie. Neither bol
the least to use the older girl's first name; "Edith told me all about
whom she admired so much had seen fit to mention her name at h
room-mate, Mildred Cavin"-she nodded toward an attractive girl a few
back to the time when she was in Florence's place: a freshman eager to make good among the upper cla
ou will work hard enough. You must receive a mark of over eighty per cent on your fir
ly hard to get on the hockey team?
ed them. Evelyn Hopkins, Ruth Henry's room-mate, who had missed making both the sorority
if you're not in right with Miss Phillips, the Gym teacher w
statement; she so much desired that her classmate
laughed derisively. "Scouts don't mean much in my yo
y stand for; she merely arched her brows and looked away indifferently. To her r
irely broken up, and everyone was acquainted. It was half-past ni
ocure the ice-cream for their guests, and while they we
far that has pep enough to organize a secret class meeting, or put up any kind of a fight against us sophomor
colates made that Edith Evans' sister makes
ano, you'd be disgusted with freshmen, too. She sort of keeps her mouth open, as if she weren't quite all
round the screen and looking towards th
the scar
s her
ed Ruth. Then, "But why
orry for anybody that is lonely. I th
Ruth. A sarcastic little gleam came into her eyes. "How about Fr
she had admitted the theft to Miss Phillips when she was later accused, she made no attempt at apology or explanation. The girl's ignorance, her wildness, her lack of advantages, had touched the pity of Marjorie and Frances, and some of the other softer-hearted Scouts; accordingly, the troop had voted to send Frieda to public
one than she really entertained. "Mrs. Brubaker wrote to Miss Phillips th
ove the heads of the crowd, made her way to the distant corner indicated by Ruth. She found the f
rie pleasantly, "may I
Marjorie's. She seemed pale and thin, and her eyes appeared unusu
uttered, rising an
inued the older girl. "At leas
he flushed painfully at the re
id Marjorie hastily, trying to cover her embarras
es
e, wondering why the girl, whoever she was,
the freshman; "but she do
d toward her as it might to a lost child. She chatted pleasantly all through the intermission;
res were getting ready for bed, Marjorie, who stil
, we can do one right here for the new girls, to keep
greed Lily, as sh
a different nature: how she might best succe
reason why I should fail. And I mean to do it, if I never
Modern
Romance
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Romance