The Moving Picture Girls 
Snowbound, by Laura 
 
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by Laura Lee Hope 
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Title: The Moving Picture Girls Snowbound Or, The Proof on the Film 
Author: Laura Lee Hope 
 
Release Date: January 12, 2007 [eBook #20347] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
MOVING PICTURE GIRLS SNOWBOUND*** 
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THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS SNOWBOUND 
Or 
The Proof on the Film 
by 
LAURA LEE HOPE 
Author of "The Moving Picture Girls," "The Moving Picture Girls at 
Oak Farm," "The Outdoor Girls Series," "The Bobbsey Twins Series," 
Etc. 
Illustrated 
 
The World Syndicate Publishing Co. Cleveland New York Made in 
U.S.A. Copyright, 1914, by Grosset & Dunlap 
Press of The Commercial Bookbinding Co. Cleveland 
 
[Illustration: THE MOVING PICTURE RACE WAS ON. 
The Moving Girls Snowbound.--Page 113.] 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER PAGE
I TROUBLE 1 
II AN UNPLEASANT VISITOR 10 
III RUSS TO THE RESCUE 20 
IV A FUNNY FILM 27 
V A QUEER ACCIDENT 36 
VI NEW PLANS 46 
VII OFF TO THE WOODS 56 
VIII A BREAKDOWN 63 
IX THE BLIZZARD 73 
X AT ELK LODGE 79 
XI THROUGH THE ICE 89 
XII THE CURIOUS DEER 99 
XIII THE COASTING RACE 106 
XIV ON SNOWSHOES 114 
XV A TIMELY SHOT 124 
XVI IN THE ICE CAVE 132 
XVII THE RESCUE 139 
XVIII SNOWBOUND 148 
XIX ON SHORT RATIONS 158 
XX THE THAW 166
XXI IN THE STORM 174 
XXII THE THREE MEN 181 
XXIII THE PLAN OF RUSS 191 
XXIV THE PROOF ON THE FILM 199 
XXV THE MOVING PICTURE 207 
 
THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS SNOWBOUND 
CHAPTER I 
TROUBLE 
"Daddy is late; isn't he, Ruth?" asked Alice DeVere of her sister, as she 
looked up from her sewing. 
"A little," answered the girl addressed, a tall, fair maid, with deep blue 
eyes, in the depths of which hidden meaning seemed to lie, awaiting 
discovery by someone. 
"A little!" exclaimed Alice, who was rather plump, and whose dark 
brown hair and eyes were in pleasing contrast to her sister's fairness. 
"Why, he's more than an hour late, and he's seldom that! He promised 
to be back from the moving picture studio at four, and now it's after 
five." 
"I know, dear, but you remember he said he had many things to talk 
over with Mr. Pertell, and perhaps it has taken him longer than he 
anticipated. 
"Besides you know there are some new plans to be considered," went 
on Ruth. "Mr. Pertell wants to get some different kinds of moving 
pictures--snow scenes, I believe--and perhaps he has kept daddy to talk 
about them. But why are you so impatient? Are you afraid something
has happened to him?" 
"Gracious, no! What put that idea into your head?" 
"Well, I didn't know whether you had noticed it or not, but poor daddy 
hasn't been quite himself since we came back from Oak Farm. I am 
afraid something is bothering him--or worrying him." 
"Perhaps it is his voice, though it has seemed better of late." 
"I think not," said Ruth, slowly, as she bent her head in a listening 
attitude, for a step was coming along the hallway in the Fenmore 
Apartment, where the DeVere girls and their father had their rather 
limited quarters. 
"That isn't he," said Ruth, with a little sigh of disappointment. "I 
thought at first it was. No, I don't mean that it was his voice, Alice. 
That really seems better since he so suddenly became hoarse, and had 
to take up moving picture work instead of the legitimate drama he loves 
so much. It is some other trouble, Alice." 
"I hadn't noticed it, I confess. But I suppose you'll say that I'm so 
flighty I never notice anything." 
"I never called you flighty, dear. You are of a lively disposition, that's 
all." 
"And you are a wee bit too much the other way, sister mine!" And then, 
to take any sting out of the words, Alice rose from her chair with a 
bound, crossed the room in a rush, and flung her arms about her sister, 
embracing her heartily and kissing her. 
"Oh, Alice!" protested the other. "You are crushing me!" 
"I'm a regular bear, I suppose. Hark, is that daddy?" 
They both listened, but the footsteps died away as before. 
"Why    
    
		
	
	
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