The Moving Picture Girls at 
Rocky Ranch, by 
 
Laura Lee Hope 
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Title: The Moving Picture Girls at Rocky Ranch Or, Great Days 
Among the Cowboys 
Author: Laura Lee Hope 
 
Release Date: January 12, 2007 [eBook #20349] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
MOVING PICTURE GIRLS AT ROCKY RANCH*** 
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THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS AT ROCKY RANCH 
Or 
Great Days Among the Cowboys 
by 
LAURA LEE HOPE 
Author of "The Moving Picture Girls," "The Moving Picture Girls 
Under the Palms," "The Outdoor Girls Series," "The Bobbsey Twins 
Series," Etc. 
Illustrated 
 
The Goldsmith Publishing Co. Cleveland Made in U. S. A. 
Copyright, 1914, by Grosset & Dunlap 
Press of The Commercial Bookbinding Co. Cleveland 
 
[Illustration: "WE ARE HEMMED IN BY THE PRAIRIE FIRE!" 
Moving Picture Girls at Rocky Ranch.--Page 192.] 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER PAGE
I THE SPY 1 
II WESTERN PLANS 13 
III A DARING FEAT 23 
IV A CLOUD OF SMOKE 32 
V A MIX-UP 42 
VI THE AUTO SMASH 49 
VII OFF FOR THE WEST 56 
VIII THE OIL WELL 66 
IX THE RIVALS 72 
X THE CYCLONE 78 
XI AT ROCKY RANCH 90 
XII SUSPICIONS 96 
XIII AT THE BRANDING 109 
XIV A WARNING 117 
XV THE INDIAN RITES 125 
XVI PRISONERS 134 
XVII THE RESCUE 143 
XVIII A RUSH OF STEERS 156 
XIX TOO MUCH REALISM 163 
XX IN THE OPEN 168
XXI THE BURNING GRASS 178 
XXII HEMMED IN 186 
XXIII THE ESCAPE 193 
XXIV A DISCLOSURE 201 
XXV THE ROUND-UP 208 
 
THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS AT ROCKY RANCH 
CHAPTER I 
THE SPY 
"Well, Ruth, aren't you almost ready?" 
"Just a moment, Alice. I can't seem to get my collar fastened in the 
back. I wish I'd used the old-fashioned hooks and eyes instead of those 
new snaps." 
"Oh, I think those snaps are just adorable!" 
"Oh, Alice DeVere! Using such an extreme expression!" 
"What expression, Ruth?" 
"'Adorable!' You sometimes accuse me of using slang, and there you 
go----" 
"'Adorable' isn't slang," retorted Alice. 
"Oh, isn't it though? Since when?" 
"There you go yourself! You're as bad as I am." 
"Well, it must be associating with you, then," sighed Ruth.
"No, Ruth, it's this moving picture business. It just makes you use 
words that mean something, and not those that are merely sign-posts. 
I'm glad to see that you are getting--sensible. But never mind about that. 
Are you ready to go to the studio? I'm sure we'll be late." 
"Oh, please help me with this collar. I wish I'd made this waist with the 
new low-cut effect. Not too low, of course," Ruth added hastily, as she 
caught a surprised glance from her sister. 
Two girls were in a room about which were strewn many articles of 
feminine adornment. Yet it was not an untidy apartment. True, dresser 
drawers did yawn and disclose their contents, and closet doors gaped at 
one, showing a collection of shoes and skirts. But then the occupants of 
the room might have been forgiven, for they were in haste to keep an 
appointment. 
"There, Ruth," finally exclaimed the younger of the two girls--yet she 
was not so much younger--not more than two years. "I think your collar 
is perfectly sweet." 
"It's good of you to say so. You know I got it at that little French shop 
around the corner, but sewed some of that Mexican drawn lace on to 
make it a bit higher. Now I'm sorry I did, for I had to put in those snap 
fasteners instead of hooks. And if you don't get them to fit exactly they 
come loose. It's like when the film doesn't come right on the screen, 
and the piano player sounds a discord to call the operator's attention to 
it." 
"You've hit it, sister mine." 
"Oh, Alice! There you go again. 'Hit it!'" 
"You'd say 'hit it' at a baseball game," Alice retorted. 
"Oh, yes, I suppose so. But we're not at one," objected the older girl, as 
she finished buttoning her gloves, and took up her parasol, which she 
shook out, to make sure that it would open easily when needed.
"There, I think I'm ready," announced Alice, as she slipped on a light 
jacket, for, though it was spring, the two rivers of New York sent rather 
chilling breezes across    
    
		
	
	
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