The remaining two days passed without further adventure, and on Sunday evening they were back again at Miss Allen's.
"I wonder whether the fortune teller was mistaken, after all?" thought Marjorie.
CHAPTER XIV
THE CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
Two weeks had passed by, and the swimming team had been chosen during that time. Four more girls, in addition to Alice Endicott, who was now a Scout, were eligible for Pansy troop and were to be admitted that evening. Three of them were freshmen: Dorothy Whitcomb, Gladys Staley, and Mildred Cavin. And the fourth girl was Evelyn Hopkins.
Miss Phillips called the meeting to order, and then hastened through the opening ceremony and necessary routine.
"There is much to do and to talk about," she said, after the preliminary matters had been settled, "that I feel as if I can't talk fast enough. But I think we shall consider the regular Scout business first.
"First of all, I wish to welcome the new girls with the sincere hope that they will soon pass their Tenderfoot test and be registered as regular members of Pansy Troop. If they all do, we shall then have twenty-four girls, or three patrols.