"If you wish to join our Camp Fire club this afternoon," she invited
coaxingly, "you are simply to repeat the lines Esther has just recited
for us. Then Miss McMurtry says you may each receive a woodgatherers'
ring. Afterwards, when we have acquired sufficient honors in the seven
crafts, 'Health Craft, Home Craft, Nature Lore, Camp Craft, Business and
Patriotism'," (Betty repeated the list slowly as though not quite
certain of herself), "why then we may attain next to the rank of Fire-
Makers and wear their bracelets. The highest honor of all, which I for
one shall probably never attain, is to become a Torch Bearer and receive
the Torch Bearer's pin. It is all right for me to give the girls the
rings, isn't it, Miss McMurtry, after they have repeated the law to
you?" Betty asked, "since you have been appointed official guardian by
the headquarters in New York? Later on I suppose the girls will tell us
when they will wish to come into camp."
Miss McMurtry laughed. Never until this afternoon had she had any
liking for Betty Ashton. They were such utterly different types of
woman and girl! Yet, now Betty's habit of expecting to have her own
way, which her teacher so disliked, was assuredly making their Camp Fire
plans go ahead with a rush.
Pages:
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68