The Corner House Girls Under Canvas / How they reached Pleasant Cove and what happened afterward
he boys who attended the upper grammar grades, and the High, of Milton, the boy who had been bro
hat was before he and the two older Corner House girls had
ted the old Corner House a good deal. When Agnes and her sister arrived at the party on this
st way, "Ruth and Agnes will be half an hour primping, upstairs.
said Neale, g
overy was made of the masons' shoes i
ated Agnes, when the laugh
" Trix said, carelessly. "Come on,
s walking shoes. But he saw Agnes
ie," he said. "If
n't mean to say you'd be foolish enough to go clear
his pocket and turned toward the door, with a shrug. "I guess I can get back in an hour, Ag.
ll" cried Trix. "
ng the trip for the slippers. "We can get
me this first dance," declared T
the moment. "It's my fault, I guess," he
Now! you sha'n't go off and leave me in the lu
dances. Wait till I
e shoes you have on,
at
posed Agnes, much distresse
last. "You Corner House girls are the most selfish
!" growled Neale,
bother
s, adding fuel to the flames. Neale did not feel any too pleasa
of your concern," he mut
g. The rift in the intimacy between her
less, with the mislaid slippers, he insisted, first of all, upon dancing with Ruth and Agnes. T
old Lucy Poole. "And I don't think really well-bre
or a long time. She had been upon her good behavior; but it did
girls, however, for it made their plans
fter graduation, and that Ruth had tentatively accepted. Therefore even Pearl Harrod-who wa
osing of the Milton High, several family parties were to leave for
ays had lived in that city, they had never expected to spend any part
shing port. There was a still cove, a beautiful river emptying into it, and outside, a st
first visit to the place with keen delight. Tess and Dot were talking about the expected trip a good d
e garret, however, and see her pack it away in the chests there. As she did this the h
, and shuddered. "But they do look so much like candy,
r moths had to live on 'way back in the Garden
ousekeeper, of nobody in particular. "Wh
the girl from the South would be able to pass in the necessary
t jest seems t' take th' puckerin' string all o
od," Ruth said. "But she re
ll her she kin let the housework go. We don't h
Ruth told him. "And she can scarcely do that and ke
n again. "Ain't thar sech a th
uth; likewise he was grateful because she sho
ange and a rest. And all us girls are going to Pleasant Cove this summer. Will
ee, Miss," he observed, scratching his head thoughtful
for a we
o much-that's what I did. Juniper was a sight more uppity than Rosa-otherw
astened to say: "Oh, you'll find her again,
t she'd oughter be home with her sister-and with me. Ye see, she
Wildwood?" asked Rut
' mules, an' the man sold bitters an' corn-salve. Th
ch up to 'em. If we had, I'd sure tuck a hand-holt of that medicine
e poison, too," finished Bob Wi
s curious as she could be about it; but she stuck to her subject until Bob Wildwood agreed to spare his re
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