Ruth Fielding on Cliff Island; Or, The Old Hunter's Treasure Box
oars were perfectly safe before any of the teachers arrived. With them came R
s the moment she could get ashore. "If she hadn't known how to fling a la
he ranch, who knows what to do when folks ar
rn girl so meanly about the dunce cap had been in the boat, and they asked Ann to
ent back to play with the little ones. Meanwhile she showed Ruth where Jerry
erry's rough hand. "I was afraid I wouldn't be able t
t I ain't got no call to expect it. Mr. Potter was pretty
n't got to tr
ay hopin' I'd hit it at Lumberton. But they're disch
work in the woods than anyw
un, and I'm a good camp cook. I can't get a guide's license, but I
ng right where you've always lived-a
d, flushing deeply. "I wouldn't work for
f my chums has invited me to go to Cliff Island for the Christmas hol
s!" ejacul
mmented. "Now, you wouldn't refuse
is that t
through Belle, to hire you.
te!" excla
ng there ourselves. I think it would just be jolly to have y
m," agreed Jerry.
earnestly. "I am not quite sure that I can go myself, yet. But I'll know for sure in a few days. And I'll see if Belle won't ask
Uncle Pete, the landslide at the west end of the island buried his tr
here caves on
cle Pete wasn't plumb crazy, he had his money
my talking with 'a strange young man' so long," laughed Ru
will. And tha
t of funds? Yo
y, smiling. "Thanks to that nice black-eye
s, because she knew how to fling a rope," cried Ruth, looking
siastically. "They ought to be proud
d Ruth. "I am so glad. Now, I must run.
up the children's swing and at first had paid little attention to the enthusiasm of the
e'd all be in the water, sure enough, if you hadn't got that ro
r. Flinging that rope didn't make any
d taken a prominent part in the dunce cap trick. "You make me awfully ashamed of
she was not naturally a bad-tempered girl. She was just d
er of friendliness, made her feel more awkward than ev
her start. Somebody beside the "primes" gave her "the glad hand and the smil
em" once that she could do something the ordinary eastern girl could not do and Ann
sed as the term advanced. Her lessons,
mped hand-writing which assured her that Uncle Jabez would make no objecti
ece, if the sperit so moves him," wrote Aunt Alvirah, in her old-fashioned
tation for the frolic, Ruth diffidently put forward h
"He has worked for my uncle, and Uncle Jabez prais
ghed Belle. "You're an odd girl, Ruth. You're
be," interposed Mercy, in her sharp way.
few days' work near the school, that he could go back to Cliff Island and present himself to Mr. Tingley's f