The Meadow-Brook Girls by the Sea Or The Loss of The Lonesome Bar
    The Sea Lay Sparkling in the Sunlight.

    Akron, Ohio

    New York

   Made in U.S.A.

   Copyright MCMXIV

    By

   THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY

   "I think we are ready to start, girls." Miss Elting folded the road map that she had been studying and placed it in a pocket of her long dust coat. There was a half-smile on her face, a merry twinkle in her eyes.

   "Which way do I drive?" questioned Jane McCarthy.

   "Straight ahead out of the village," answered Miss Elting, the guardian of the party of young girls who were embarking on their summer's vacation under somewhat unusual circumstances.

   "It's the first time I ever started for a place without knowing what the place was, or where I was going," declared Jane McCarthy, otherwise known as "Crazy Jane."

   "Won't you pleathe tell uth where we are going?" lisped Grace Thompson.

   Miss Elting shook her head, with decision.

   "Do my father and mother know where we are going?" persisted Grace.

   "Of course they know, Tommy. The parents of each of you know, and I know, and so shall you after you reach your destination. Have you everything in the car, Jane?"

   "Everything but myself," nodded Jane. The latter's automobile, well loaded with camping equipment, stood awaiting its passengers. The latter were Miss Elting, Jane McCarthy, Harriet Burrell, Grace Thompson, Hazel Holland and Margery Brown, the party being otherwise known as "The Meadow-Brook Girls." "Get in, girls. We'll shake the dust of Meadow-Brook from our tires before you can count twenty," continued Jane. "If Crazy Jane were to drive through the town slowly folks surely would think something startling had happened to her. Is there anything you wish to do before we leave, Miss Elting?"


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