Vandercook Margaret. The Camp Fire Girls Amid the Snows
CHAPTER I. The Winter Manitou
CHAPTER II “Sunrise Cabin”
CHAPTER III “A Rose of the World”
CHAPTER IV “The Reason o’ It”
CHAPTER V. Mollie’s Suggestion
CHAPTER VI. A Black Sheep
CHAPTER VII. Turning the Tables
CHAPTER VIII. Possibilities
CHAPTER IX. Christmas Eve at the Cabin
CHAPTER X. Esther’s Old Home
CHAPTER XI. Gifts
CHAPTER XII. The Camp Fire Play
CHAPTER XIII. An Indian Love Song
CHAPTER XIV. Mollie’s Confidant
CHAPTER XV. A Boomerang
CHAPTER XVI. The Apology
CHAPTER XVII. General News
CHAPTER XVIII. Donna and Her Don
CHAPTER XIX. Memories
CHAPTER XX. The Explanation
CHAPTER XXI. Misfortune
CHAPTER XXII. Saying Farewell to the Cabin
CHAPTER XXIII. Future Plans
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“Ach, gnädige Fräuleins, it ist not possible.”
“No, I know it isn’t,” Betty returned with her most demure expression, although there were little sparks of light at the back of her gray-blue eyes. She rose stiffly from the ground with Esther’s assistance and stood leaning on her arm, while both girls without trying to hide their astonishment surveyed a middle aged, shabbily dressed German with his violin case under one arm and his violin under the other.
.....
For if ever Betty Ashton had proved her right to her friend Polly’s definition of her as a “Fairy Princess,” it was when through her desire and largely through her money, Sunrise cabin rose on the very ground covered by the white tents of the Sunrise Camp Fire girls only the summer before.
The cabin was built of pine logs from the woods at the foot of Sunrise Hill and the entire front of forty-five feet formed a single great room. The end nearer the kitchen the girls used as their dining room, while the rest of the room was music room, study, reception and every other kind of a room. And, except for the piano which Betty had brought from her own blue room at home and a few chairs, every other article of furniture and almost every ornament had been made by the Sunrise Camp Fire girls themselves.