Nan Sherwood at Rose Ranch

Annie Roe Carr
Nan Sherwood at Rose Ranch

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Title: Nan Sherwood at Rose Ranch
Author: Annie Roe Carr
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NAN SHERWOOD AT ROSE RANCH
OR
THE OLD MEXICAN'S TREASURE
BY
ANNIE ROE CARR

CONTENTS
I. SCHOOL REOPENS
II. INTRODUCTIONS
III. "CURFEW SHALL NOT RING TO-NIGHT"
IV. WALKING THE PLANK
V. RHODA IS UNPOPULAR

VI. THE MEXICAN GIRL
VII. DOWN THE SLOPE
VIII. AFTERNOON TEA
IX. NOT ALWAYS "BUTTERFINGERS"
X. THE TREASURE OF ROSE RANCH
XI. JUANITA
XII. ROSE RANCH AT LAST
XIII. OPEN SPACES
XIV. THE POOR LITTLE CALF
XV. A TROPHY FOR ROOM EIGHT
XVI. EXPECTATIONS
XVII. THE ROUND-UP
XVIII. THE OUTLAW
XIX. A RAID
XX. THE ANTELOPE HUNT; AND MORE
XXI. IN THE OLD BEAR DEN
XXII. AFTER THE TEMPEST
XXIII. THE LETTER FROM JUANITA
XXIV. UNCERTAINTIES
XXV. THE STAMPEDE

XXVI. WHO ARE THEY?
XXVII. THE FUNNEL
XXVIII. A PRISONER
XXIX. A TAMED OUTLAW
XXX. TREASURE-TROVE
CHAPTER I
SCHOOL REOPENS
"And of course," drawled Laura Polk, she of the irrepressible spirits
and what Mrs. Cupp called "flamboyant" hair, "she will come riding up
to the Hall on her trusty pinto pony (whatever kind of pony that is),
with a gun at her belt and swinging a lariat. She will yell for Dr. Beulah
to come forth, and the minute the darling appears this Rude Rhoda
from the Rolling Prairie will proceed to rope our dear preceptress and
bear her off captive to her lair--"
"My--goodness--gracious--Agnes!" exclaimed Amelia Boggs, more
frequently addressed as 'Procrastination Boggs', "you are getting your
metaphors dreadfully mixed. It is a four-legged beast of prey that bears
its victim away to its 'lair.'"
"How do you know Rollicking Rhoda from Crimson Gulch hasn't four
legs?" demanded the red-haired girl earnestly. "You know very well
from what we see in the movies that there are more wonders in the
'Wild and Woolly West' than are dreamed of in your philosophy,
Horatio-Amelia."
"One thing I say," said a very much overdressed girl who had evidently
just arrived, for she had not removed her furs and coat, and was
warming herself before the open fire in the beautiful reception hall
where this conversation was going on, "I think Lakeview Hall is getting
to be dreadfully common, when all sorts and conditions of girls are

allowed to come here."
"Oh, I guess this Rhododendron-girl from Dead Man's Den has money
enough to suit even you, Linda," Laura Polk said carelessly.
"Money isn't everything, I hope," said the girl in furs, tossing her head.
"Hear! Hear!" exclaimed Laura, and some of the other girls laughed.
"Linda's had a change of heart."
"Dear me!" sniffed Linda Riggs, "how smart you are, Polk. Just as
though I was not used to anything but money--"
"True. You are. But you have never talked about much of anything else
before this particular occasion," said the red-haired girl. "What has
happened to you, Linda mine, since you separated from us all at the
beginning of the winter holidays?"
Linda merely sniffed again and turned to speak to her particular chum,
Cora Courtney.
"You should have been with me in Chicago, Cora--at my cousin, Pearl
Graves', house. I tried to get Pearl--she's just about our age--to come to
Lakeview Hall; but she goes to a private school right in her
neighborhood--oh! a very select place. No girl like this wild Western
person Polk is talking about, would be received there. No, indeed!"
"Hi, Linda!" broke in the irrepressible red-haired girl, "why didn't you
try to
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