z 1037 .H32 fc'( PLEASE HANDLE WITH CARE University of Connecticut Libraries 3 ^1S3 Om^MSBS B GAytORD RG BOYS' AND GIRLS' BOOKS IN THE Hartford Public Library 1895. SECOND EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED. HARTFORD, CONN. Press of The Case, Lockwood & Brainard Company. 1895. Zo tbe 2)ear /iftemors OF A BOY WHO LOVED MANY OF THESE BOOKS AND TO THE BOYS AND GIRLS IN THE SCHOOLS OF HARTFORD, 1895. A TALK WITH BOYS AI^D GIRLS. This list of books is divided into subjects, and every author's name in each subject is followed by the names of his or her books, in alphabetical order, except where they are in series, when they are arranged as they should be read. Thus, Henty's books are not connected, and The Lion of St. Mark comes after Jack Archer, but Ellis's " Ned " books, in The Boy Pioneer Series, are before '' Hunters of the Ozark," in the Deerfoot Series. You will find all the historical stories not only under their authors, but in History, under the countries and periods to which they belong. By right of Conquest illustrates American his- tory in the sixteenth century, Standish of Standish Massachusetts in the seventeenth, and Peter and Polly, the Revolution. It is best to read between Monday and Friday, except in vacation, books connected with your school work, and keep your other read- ing for Saturday and Sunday. When you are studying a country in Geography, read stories about the people who live in that country, like Hans Blinker in Holland and Heidi in Germany. You will find under Travel a list of such stories. Many lives of great and famous men and women will help you in studying history, and these lives are arranged with historical stories. You will enjoy one story a week much more than half a dozen. Always try to find a friend in every story that you read. I mean somebody whom you would like to know if he or she lived near you. Notice what books your favorite characters like, and ask for them here. Do not be afraid of reading a book more than once. You can never find the best in a book until you have read it half a dozen times. In vacation, read something besides story-books. If you care for birds, or insects, or canoeing, come and see what we can give you about them. There are books on every subject in the world 6 that a boy or a girl likes, such as pigeons, poultry, gardening, needle- work, Hallowe'en and Christmas games, tennis, and football. Vacation, too, is a good time to make the acquaintance of books written for older readers, but just as interesting for you. I have given you a few of their names at the end of several divisions, and have taken care that they shall not be too old or dry. Some of you may be afraid that books in this list are not old enough, but many of them, especially those illustrating history, are fit for High School pupils. Some of the stories are from our novel-list. If you are seeking for selections to read or recite from memory at school, come and. look at our books. There are a great many good poems besides those in the " Hundred Choice Selections," and some of them are in pretty illustrated editions on your shelves of poetry. If you are trying to find a little play to act, we can help you. If you are in doubt about costumes for the play, we have scrap- books that will show you Just what people have worn from an- cient Egyptian times down to our own. Sometimes, instead of new books, read the books that your fathers and mothers, and even grandfathers and grandmothers read when they were growing up. A hundred years ago_chiU''""^^ dren had little besides Berquin's Children's Friend, Day's Jc- /f Sanford and Merton, and Madame de Genlis's stories. ^'^Tiater they read Mrs. Barbauld and Dr. Aikin's Evenings at Home, Miss Bdgeworth's Harry and Lucy, Frank and Rosamond, and Ann and Jane Taylor's Classic Tales. The children who were bea;innino; to read between 1850 and 1860 had Hawthorne's Won-ZL^/.-i*^ fjr.tt. I \P^ der Book and "^anglewood Tales, Hans Andersen,^ Grace Green- wood, Mayne Reid, the Aimwell Stories, Franconia Stories, and Rollo Books, and Tom Brown's School Days at Rugby, fj-t tj4,s~'0> ^Of, Z ^«— -^^AJittleJa ter came i ^lice in Wonderland, Little Women.-^Mrs. /^.»<7-Whitney's Leshe Goldthwaite, and Aldrich's Story of a Bad Boy.c?//-^ If you have never read these books, begin at the end of the list ; you will find a great deal of enjoyment in many of them. Remember that a wise man, who loves books, tells you : " 1. Never handle a book with soiled or moist hands. 2. Never turn down the leaf of a book. 3. Never leave' a book open. 4. Never stuff letters or leave a paper-cutter or pencil between the leaves of a book. 5. Never leave a book lopwise on a shelf. 6. Never cut the leaves of a book vAih anything but a paper-cutter or a dull case-knife." The mark * means that a book is more interesting to a boy than a girl, and f to a girl than a boy. Books marked c are writ- ten for children under eight or ten, but there are many others which they will enjoy. Books marked R. are some of my own special favorites. HOW TO USE THE REFERENCE-ROOM. There are three Young Folks' Cyclopsedias on the shelf next the Encyclopa dJa Britaunica; the Cyclopaedia of Common Things, of Persons and Places, and of Sports and Games. If you find the articles in these Encyclopaedias too short, try Appleto n!s New Amer ican Cyclopa edia^ and especially the annual volumes that keep it up to date. There is an index, too, that will help you find in- formation under headings where you would not think of looking for it. Appleto n's Cyclopaedia of American Biographv gives you the lives of men and women who have lived or are living in this country. If you are working at pi'ize questions, use Brewer's Reader's Handbook, Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, and Historic Note- book, Frey's Sobriquets and Nicknames, Welsh's Handbook of Literary Curiosities, Chambers's "Rook of Days , and the bound volumes of American Notes and Queries. If you do not find in them what you are looking for, try Notes and Queries in the Watkinson Library, which has a separate bound index for every series. Much of the best information on all subjects is in magazines, and you will find close to the large door several volumes of Poole's Index , that we will show you how to use if you do not understand it. In the drawer next the W-Z one of the card catalogue is an index to Harper's Young People, St. Nicholas, Wide Awake, and Amateur Work, and we have one set of St. Nicholas that you are always sure of finding in, for it is kept for reference. There is an index to Harper 's Magazine on the shelf with Poole, and volumes 1 to 49 are in the reference-room. If you are trying to find a subject for debate, look in Matson's References for Literary Workers. Reclus's Earth and its Inhab- itants, and our large^ atlases will help you in your geography lessons. 8 HOW TO USE THE READING-ROOM. You will see hanging up by the magazines a typewritten index to whatever has appeared in them in the last few months. Besides the illustrated periodicals and the magazines for young readers^ you will find the following interesting: Gardening, Hens, etc., New England Homestead . Housekeeping, Fancy-work, Entertainments, etc. Good Housekeeping. Ladies' Home Journal. Far and Near, Butterick's Delineator. Harper' s Bazar . Decorator and Furnisher. Inventions, Electricity, etc., Scientific American . Electrical World, Electrical Engineer. American Machinist. Iron Age. Kindness to Animals, Journal of Zoophily. Out of Door Sports, Outing . Forest and Stream. Photography, American Amateur Photographer. Photographic Times. Postage Stamps, American Philatelist. CLASS O — MAGAZINES. J. 0. H. 2. Harpers' Young P eople , v. 2-15. J. 0. O. 1. OuR_ Young Folks, v. 1-9. J. 0. S. 1. St. Nicholas, V. 1-21. J. 0. Sw. 1. Swiss Cross, v. 1-4. J. 0. W. 17. Wide Awake, v. 17-37. CLASS lO — BIOGRAPHY AND HISTORY. COLLECTIVE BIOGRAPHY. Bolton, Sarah K. J. 10.1 Famous English statesmen. Contents: Sir Robert Peel; Lord Palmerston; Lord Shaftesbury; John Bright; William Edward Forster; Lord Beaconsfield ; Henry Fawcett; William Ewart Gladstone. 9 J. 10.2 How success is won. Contents: Peter Cooper; John B. Gough; John Greenleaf Whit- tier; John Wanamaker; Henry M. Stanley; Johns Hopkin.s; William M. Hunt ; Elias Howe, Jr. ; Alexander H. Stephens ; Thomas A. Edison; William T. G. Morton; John H. Vincent. Chambers, William. J. 10.3 Stories of remarkable persons. Contents: The Herschels; Mary Somerville; Taylor, the water poet; William and Dorothy Wordsworth; Story of Old Bob; Glen- cairn; The Astors; Kob Graham; Camille Desmoulins; The Fair- bairns; The BanflEshire naturalist; Sir Walter Scott and his dogs; Window Willie; Jack Scott and Bessy Surtees; Horace Greeley; Sarah Martin; Ferdinand de Lesseps; Alexander T. Stewart; James David Forbes; The Jubilee Singers; James Annesley; Miss Stirling Graham; Borlum. GgxLDREN's story-book of good and great men. ibZ^r J. 10.5 Craik, George L. 3'j(r.f'~'yi. 10.7 Pursuit of knowledge iinder difficulties. Edgar, John G. J. 10.9 Footprints of famous men. Contents: Washington ; Burke ; Necker ; Pitt ; Lord Erskine ; Lord CoUingwood; Lord Teignmouth; Dean Milner; David Hume; Southey; Moore; Sir Joshua Reynolds; Sir Francis Chantrey; Sir Christopher Wren; Dr. William Hunter; Black; Brindley; VVatt; Adam Smith. Farmer, Lydia H. ^?/7(ff, 3 J- 10.13 Boy's book of famous rulers. Contents: Agamemnon; Cyrus the Great; Alexander the Great; Julius Caesar; Charlemagne; Alfred the Great; Richard Coeur de Lion; Robert Bruce; Ferdinand V. of Spain; Gustavus Adolphus; Louis XIV; Peter the Great; Frederick the Great; Napoleon I. Hewlett, H. G. J. 10.14 Heroes of Europe. Contents: Charles Martel; Pepin-le-bref; Charlemagne; Hildebrant The Cid; Godfrey de Bouillon; St. Bernard; Frederick Barbarossa Frederick the Second of Germany; St. Louis; Rudolph of Hapsburg William Tell; James and Philip van Artevelde; Cosmo dei Medici Francesco Sforza; Christopher Columbus; Niccolo Machiavelli; The Chevalier Bayard; Martin Luther; Hernando Cortez; Gustavus Vasa; Ignatius Loyola; William the First of Orange; Henry the Fourth of France; Wallenstein; Cardinal Richelieu; Conde the Great. Men who have risen. ///. ^J J. 10.11 Contents : George Stephenson ; The Rothschilds ; The Peels ; Wil- son ; West ; Astor ; Hutton ; Sir John Franklin ; Oberlin ; Burritt ; Wilhelm ; Hugh Miller ; LinniEus ; Smeaton ; Rittenhouse. 10 Pahton, James. V. /. X^^ f/ J- 10-15 Captains of industry, 2 v. ^ Contents : V. 1. David Maydole; Ichabod Washburn ; Elihu Burritt ; V>Z, //^V, ■^''Michael Reynolds ; Major Robert Pike ; George Graham ; John Har- rison ; Peter Faneuil ; Chauncey Jerome ; Captain Pierre Laclede Liguest ; Israel Putnam ; George Flower ; Edward Coles ; Peter H. Burnett ; Gerrit Smith ; Peter Force ; John Bromfield ; Frederick Tudor ; Myron Holley ; The founders of Lowell ; Robert Owen ; John Smedley ; Richard Cobden ; Henry Bessemer ; John Bright ; Thomas Edward ; Robert Dick ; John Duncan ; James Lackington ; Horace Greeley's start ; James Gordon Bennett ; Three John Wal- ters ; George Hope ; Sir Henry Cole ; Charles Summers ; William B. Astor ; Peter Cooper ; Paris-Duverney ; Sir Rowland Hill ; Marie- Antoine Care me ; Wonderful Walker ; Sir Christopher Wren ; Sir John Rennie ; Sir Moses Montefiore ; Marquis of Worcester ; An old dry-goods merchant's recollections. V. 2. Christopher Ludwick ; Edward Winslow ; Sir William Phips ; David Rittenhouse ; Count Rumford ; General Seth Pomroy ; Captain Meriwether Lewis ; Elea- zar Wheelock ; Joel Barlow ; Nathaniel Bowditch ; George B. Emer- son ; Joseph Lancaster ; Andrew Jackson ; George Guess ; William Murdock ; Ezra Cornell ; James Nasmyth ; Gabriel Daniel Fahren- heit ; Jean Baptiste Andre Godin ; Jean Le Claire ; Marguerite Bou- cicault ; Michel Brezin ; Louis Joliet ; Bartholomew Thimonnier ; George Peabody ; Abbott Lawrence ; Amos A. Lawrence ; John Met- calf ; Thomas Brassey ; Thomas Telford ; Junius Smith. Plutarch. *} ff, Y J. 10.18 Boys' and girls' Plutarch. ' Contents : Theseus ; Romulus ; Lycurgus ; Solon ; Themistocles ; Camillus ; Pericles ; Demosthenes ; Cicero ; Alcibiades ; Coriolanus ; Aristides ; Cimon ; Pompey ; Archimedes ; Cleopatra ; Agesilaus ; Timoleon ; Caius Fabricius ; Quintus Fabius Maximus ; Sylla ; Lu- cullus ; Sertorius ; Cato ; Alexander ; Caesar. J. 10.17 Qui- young folks' Plutarch. Contents : Theseus ; Lycurgus ; Romulus ; Numa Pompilius ; So- lon ; Publicola ; Caius Marcius Coriolanus ; Themistocles ; Aristides ; Cimon ; Pericles ; Nicias ; Alcibiades ; Lysander ; Camillus ; Arta- xerxes ; Agesilaus ; Dion ; Phocion ; Pelopidas ; Timoleon ; Demos- thenes ; Alexander ; Eumenes ; Demetrius ; Pyrrhus ; Aratus ; Agis ; Cleomenes ; Fabius ; Marcellus ; Philopcemen ; Flaminius ; Marcus Cato ; ^milius Paulus ; Tiberius Gracchus ; Caius Gracchus ; Caius Marius ; Sylla ; Crassus ; LucuUus ; Pompey ; Cicero ; Caesar ; Cato the younger ; Marcus Brutus ; Antony ; Sertorius ; Galba ; Otho. Russell, William. f(^H-' ^i J- 10.20 Extraordinary men ; their boyhood and early life. Contents: Michael Angelo ; Martin Luther; Shakspere ; Oliver Cromwell ; MoliSre ; Pascal ; Marlborough ; Peter the Great ; Frank- lin ; Mirabeau ; Mozart; Romilly ; Nelson; Burns; Lawrence; Wilkie ; Napoleon ; Byron ; Wellington ; Peel ; Louis Philippe ; Channing ; Cobbett ; Sheridan ; Richter. Smiles, Samuel. I IT If) "^* 10-22 Brief biographies. Contents : James Watt ; Robert Stephenson; Thomas Arnold; Hugh Miller ; Richard Cobden ; Bulwer ; Francis Jeffrey ; Ebenezer Elliott; George Borrow ; John James Audubon ; William Macgillivray ; Lord / ^ /i 11 John Russell ; Benjamiu Disraeli ; William Ewart Gladstone ; Nathan- iel Hawthorne ; Thomas Carlyle ; John Sterling ; Leigh Hunt ; Hart- ley Coleridge; Dr. Kitto; Edgar Allan Poe; Theodore Hook; Andrew Combe; Robert Browning; Edwin Chadwick; Robert Nicoll; Samuel Bamford ; John Clare ; Gerald Massey ; Elizabeth Barrett Browning ; Frances Brown; Margaret Fuller; Harriet Martineau; Mrs. Chisholm. YoNGE, Charlotte M. ^. 10.26 Book of worthies. Contents : Joshua ; David ; Hector ; Aristides ; Nehemiah ; Xeno- phon ; Epaminondas ; Alexander ; Marcus Curius Dentatus ; Cleo- menes ; Scipio Africanus ; Judas Maccabaeus ; Julius Caesar. WOMEN. Adams, W. H. Davenport. J. 10.28 Celebrated women travelers of the nineteenth century. Contents: Countess Dora d' Istria ; Princess Belgiojoso ; Madame Hommaire de Hell ; Leonie d' Aunet ; Frederika Bremer ; Alexina Tinne; Ida Pfeiffer; Madame de Bourboulon; Lady Hester Stanhope; Lady Brassey; Lady Morgan; Mrs. TroUope; Harriet Martineau; Isa- bella Bird; Lady Florence Dixie; Miss Gordon Cumming; Florence and Rosamond Hill; Lady Barker; " Magyarland." Bolton, Sarah K. ^J^l f^- 10-29 Famous types of womanhood. Contents: Queen Louise of Prussia; Madame Recamier ; Susanna Wesley ; Harriet Martineau ; Jenny Liud ; Dorothea Lynde Dix ; Ann, Sarah, and Emily Judson ; Amelia Blandford Edwards. //>2»'7 J. 10.30 Lives of girls who became famous. R. Contents: Harriet Beecher Stowe ; Helen Hunt Jackson; Lucretia Mott; Mary A. Livermore; Margaret Fuller Ossoli; Maria Mitchell; Louisa M. Alcott; Mary Lyon; Harriet G. Hosmer; Madame de Stael; Rosa Bonheur; Elizabeth Barrett Browning; George Eliot; Elizabeth Fry; Elizabeth Thompson Butler; Florence Nightingale; Lady Bras- sey; Baroness Burdett-Coutts; Jean Ingelow. J. 10.31 Successful women. Contents: Juliet Corson; Mary Louise Booth; Frances E. Willard; Mrs. G. R. Alden (Pansy); Mary Virginia Terhune (Marion Harland); Margaret; Ella Grant Campbell; Rachel Littler Bodley; Candace Wheeler; Clara Barton; Alice E. Freeman. Brooks, Elbrihge S. J. 10.32 Historic girls. R. Contents : Zenobia of Palmyra ; Helena of Britain ; Pulcheria of Constantinople; Clotilda of Burgundy; Woo of Hwang-Ho; Edith of Scotland; Jaqueline of Holland; Catarina of Venice; Theresa of Avila; Elizabeth of Tudor; Christina of Sweden; Ma-ta-oka (Poca- hontas) of Powhatan. Farmer, Lydia Hoyt. ^OC'^ J. 10.34 Girls' book of famous queens. Contents: Semiramis; Dido; Cleopatra; Zenobia; Matilda of Flan- ders; Margaret of Anjou; Catharine of Aragon; Elizabeth; Mary, Queen of Scots; Catherine de Medici; Anne; Maria Theresa; Cath- erine II of Russia; Marie Antoinette; Josephine; Eugenie; Victoria. 12 Russell, William. J. 10.36 Extraordinary women. Contents: The maid of Orleans; Mrs. Fry; Josephine; Madame Roland; Christina of Sweden; Elizabeth Woodville; Mrs. Hutchin- son; Queen Elizabeth; Madame de Sevigne; Isabella of Castile; Anne Boleyn; Lady Jane Grey; Mary, Queen of Scots; Lady Mary Wortley Montagu; Marie Antoinette; Mrs. Siddons; Madame de StaSl; Char- lotte Corday; Madame Recamier; Margaret Fuller; Lady Hester Stan- hope; Madame de Genlis; Catherine II of Russia; Mrs. Opie; Maria Theresa. Sherwood, M. E. W. J. 10.38 Royal girls and royal courts. Contents: The Queen of Italy; The Empress Elizabeth of Austria; " Carmen Sylva," Queen of Roumania; The " Lilies of France " ; The royal girls of Denmark; Russian royal girls; Royal girls of England; Those royal girls at Sandringham; Some royal girls of Germany; Two royal widows. Women of worth. J. 10.40 Contents : Mary Washington ; Martha Washington ; Charlotte Bronte ; Elizabeth Fry ; Sarah Martin ; Margaret Mercer ; Sarah Boardman Judson; Lady Russell; Lucy Hutchinson; Isabel the Cath- olic; Elizabeth Rowe; Maria Theresa; Madame Oberlin; AnnaLetitia Barbauld; Rebecca Motte; Madame Necker; Caroline Herschel; Han- nah More; Ann Flaxman; Mrs. Wordsworth; Harriet Newell; Sarah Lanman Smith; Lady Warwick; Lady Mackintosh. ART AND ARTISTS. Fallet, C. J. 10.45 Princes of art. Jameson, Anna. -2/-?, G J- 10.47 Memoirs of the early Italian painters. Tytler, Sarah. (?l^(fi J. 10.49 Modern painters. 6/J'- ^ J. 10.50 Old masters. Vasari, Giorgio. 3^3,^- fJ J. 10.52 Stories of the Italian artists. 6?¥. t' -^ Mrs. Jameson's Sacred and legendary art, 755J234S, Legends of the (^■y,/^ monastic orders, 755J234Le, Legends of the Madonna, 755 J234L, ^^^^.J 63''^5^/f./-' J. /<)/4.>V J. J. df^ fl J. J. J. -yj^/^ J. >^J^. /^ J. J. ^^^ io J. J. >5-^/. r J. J. ^^^. y J. xo^< 0.135 Frank Buckland (naturalist). G. B. Bompas. 0.137 Julius CiBsar. (Jacob Abbott). 0.138 G-M Julius Ca3sar. W. W. Fowler. R. 0.139 Knightly soldier (Henry W. Camp) H. C. 'rumbull. R. 0.141 Christopher Carson. J. S. C. Abbott. 0.145 Student's Cicero. S. Munk. 0.143 Charles I. Jacob Abbott. 0.144 Charles II. Jacob Abbott. 0.146 Henry Clay. 0.148-149 Cleopatra. Jacob Abbott. 0.151 Gaspard de Coligny. Walter Besant. 0.153 Columbus and Vespucius. 0.154-155 Christopher Columbus. J. S. C. Abbott. 0.156 Story of Columbus. S. H. Bradford. 0.156a Story of Columbus. E. E. Seelye. 0.157 Hernando Cortez. J. S. C. Abbott. 0.158 Cortes and Pizarro. W. Dalton, 0.160 David Crockett. J. S. C. Abbott. 0.162 Cyrus the Great. Jacob Abbott. 0.164 John Davis (English navigator). C. R. Markham. 0.166 Sir Francis Drake. G. M. Towle. 0.168-169 Darius. Jacob Abbott. 0.171-172 Young Humphry Davy. Horace Mayhew. 174 Robert Dick (Scotch geologist and botanist). Sam- uel Smiles. R. 0.176 Edward, the Black Prince. Louise Creighton. 0.178 Thomas Edward (Scotch naturalist). Samuel Smiles. R. 0.180 Queen Elizabeth. Jacob Abbott. 0.182-183 Miner boy and his monitor (John Ericsson). . C. Headley. 0.185 Admiral Farragut. P. C. Headley. Colored cadet at West Point. H. S. Flipper. Benjamin Franklin. J. S. C. Abbott. Priutef boy (Benjamin Franklin). W. M. Thayer. Sir John Franklin (Arctic explorer). A. H. J. J. J. J. ^^f.// J. 0.187 0.189 0.191 0.193 Beesly. 0.195 0.197 0.198 0.199 0.200 0.201 0.205 0.206 0.207 0.209 Frederick the Great. C. B, Brackenbury. Souvenirs of my time. Jessie Benton Fremont. Barbara Fritchie. C. H. Dall. Robert Fulton. T. W. Knox. Vasco da Gama. G. M. Towle. Goethe and Mendelssohn. R. Tanner boy (U. S. Grant). C. W. Denison. Ulysses S. Grant. W^ O. Stoddard. Grey Hawk (Indian chief). J. Macaulsy. Genghis Khan. Jacob Abbott. 17 fni J. ^//. rj. /^^.7 J, J J. fdZS'.f ^ J, J'f^. J" J. J. J. J. J. 7Jr. ^ J. J. J. J. J. /^^^. /^ J, J. x//^fG J, fr,/Gj J J 10.211 bell. 10.212 10.215 10.217 10.214 10.219 10.220 10.221 Robin Hood and Captain Kidd. W. W. Camp- R. R. Merry adventures of Robin Hood. Howard Pyle. Hannibal. Jacob Abbott. Haroun Alraschid. E. H. Palmer. New England boyhood. Edward Everett Hale. Henry IV of France. J. t?. C. Abbott. History of Hortense. J. S. C. Abbott. Story of the life of Alexander von Humboldt (physical geographer and traveler). 10.213 Washington Irving. D. J. Hill. 10.223 Joan of Arc. Janet Tuckey. 10,225 John Paul Jones. J.S. C. Abbott. 10.226-227 Paul Jones. A. S. Mackenzie. 10.229-230 Empress Josephine. J. S. C. Abbott. 10 231 Judas Maccabseus. C. R. Conder. 10.232 Captain William Kidd. J. S. C. Abbott. 10.232^ Life of La Payette. L. H. Parmer. 10.233 New England girlhood (Lucy Larcom's story of her own life). R. 10.234 La Salle. J. S. C. Abbott. When I was a boy in China. Yan Phou Lee. Abraham Lincoln. N. Brooks. R. Abraham Lincoln. C. C. Coffin. Abraham Lincoln. C. G. Leland. Louis XI Y. J. S. C. Abbott. Louis Philippe. J. S. C. Abbott. Boyhood of Martin Luther. H. Mayhew. Martin Luther. J. H. Treadwell. Gen. Nathaniel Lyon. A. Woodward. Magellan. G. M. Towle. Margaret of Anjou. Jacob Abbott. Marte Antoinette. J. S C. Abbott. Marie Antoinette. Sarah Tytler. Gen. Francis Marion. C. B. Hartley. Mary Queen of Scots. Jacob Abbott. Patriot boy (Gen. D. M. Mitchel). P. C. Headley. Simon de Montfort. L. Creighton. Hero of Cowpens (Gen. Morgan). R. McConkey. Montezuma. E. Eggleston a7id E. E. Seelye. Napoleon and his marshals. J. T. Headley. Napoleon. W. O'G. Morris. R. Lord Nelson. W. C. Russell. R. Lord Nelson. R. Southey. 10.269-270. Nero. Jacob Abbott. 10.271 Mungo Park. 10.272 Theodore Parker. P. E. Cooke. 10.273 Pericles. E. Abbott. 10.235 10.236 ]0.236e 10.237 10.239 10.241 10.243 10.245 10.247 10.251 10.249 10.253 10.255 10.257 10.259 10.260 10.262 10.261 10.2611 10.263 10.264fZ 10.265 10.267 18 ^03. f M L>3. Z> J. J. :?^j, /^. ///4. 6 J. ^^^' / J. ///- ^ / J. J. ZZlz.f'Z. 3fS. O. J. J. J. J. J. /asf. Cf J. >^^J*. 6 J. ^^03. Vs. 10.274 Peter the Great. Jacob Abbott. , 10.276-277 King Philip. J. S. C. Abbott. 10.279 Pizarro. G. M. Towle. , 10.281 Pocahontas. E. Eggleston and E. E. Seelye. 10.283 Marco Polo. G. M. Towle. , 10.285 Israel Putnam. G. C. Hill. ,10.287 Pyrrhus. Jacob Abbott. 10.288 Raleigh. L. Creighton. 10.289 Raleigh. G. M. Towle. 10.291 Red Eagle. G. C. Eggleston. 10.293 Richard I. Jacob Abbott. 10.295 Richard II. Jacob Abbott. 10.297 Richard III. Jacob Abbott. 10.298 When I was your age. Laura E. Richards. 10.301 Madame Roland. J. S, C. Abbott. l-O.SOS Romulus, Jacob Abbott. 10.305 Fighting Phil (Gen. Sheridan). P. C. Headley. 10.307 Japanese boy. S. Shigemi. R. 10.308 Sir Philip Sidney. H. R. Fox Bourne. R. 10.309 Sir Philip Sidney. S. M! Davis. 10.311 Captain John Smith. J. Ashton. 10.313 Ferdinand de Soto. J. S. C. Abbott. 10.315 Miles Standish. J. S. C. Abbott. 10.317 Peter Stuyvesant. J. S. C. Abbott. 10.319 Prince Charlie (Charles Edward Stuart). M. Johnes. 10.321 Tecumseh. E. Eggleston and'E>. E. Seelye. 10.322 Theodoric the Goth. Hodgkin. 10.323 Camilla Urso. C. Barnard. 10.328 Victor Emmanuel. E. Dicey 10.330 Queen Victoria. Grace Greenwood. 10.331 George Washington. Edward Everett Hale. R. 10.332 Farmer boy (George Washington). M. Heady. 10.333 Washington and his generals. P. C. Headley. 10.335 George Washington. Horace E. Scudder. R. 10.337 Duke of Wellington. Rosamond Waite. 10.341 Sir Richard Whittington. Walter Resant and James Rice. R. 10.343 William the Conqueror. Jacob Abbott. 10.346 Xerxes. Jacob Abbott. HISTORY. (PREHISTORIC TIMES. R. Clodd, Edward. ^^'1 J. 10.351 Childhood of the world. Keary, C. F. f^G,3 J. 10.353-354 Dawn of history. R. Novels. Berthet's Prehistoric world ; Helps's Realmah. 'fl^.fZ/ 19 GENERAL HISTORY. Archer, Thomas. ^. 10.356 Decisive events in history. Creasy, Sir E. S. ^^/.// J. 10.355 Decisive battles of the world. Eqglestok, George Gary. Z.f(^^ J. 10.358 Strange stories from history. GiLMAN, Arthur. J. 10.360A Magna Charta stories. i-f^/.t'^ i. 10.360 Seven historic ages. Lang, Andrew, ed. IbffLWz. 10.360L True story book. R. Lieber, Francis. J. 10.361 Great events. ROBSON, W. J. 10.357 Great sieges of history. YoNGE, Charlotte M. fOf^ r^. 10.362 Book of golden deeds. R. J. 10.364-365 Landmarks of history. Stories. Andrews's Ten boys who lived upon the road from long- //^^^tA^_^ ago to now; Brooks's Heroic happenings. z^^3. / ANCIENT HISTORY. Herodotus. :iat/0 J. 10.367 Boys' and girls' Herodotus. 7f ,.>y J. 10.369 Stories of the east, told from Herodotus. A .J. C'huvch .. EGYPT. Clement, Clara Erskine. J. 10.373 Egypt. Rawlinson, G. ^/3. ibZ. 10.371 Story of ancient Egypt. Biography and story. Abbott's Cleooatra; Henty's Cat of Bubastes./^ 3f.^/ CARTHAGE. Church, A. J. ^^'ff J. 10.375 Story of Carthage. ^_^^ H^S'^tla Bioqraphy and story. Abbott's Hannibal; Henty's Young Cartha-y^/J*. /^y ginian; Dodge's B^nnibal, 920H195D. GREECE. Church, A. J. 2Zl4JZJi. 10.375 Pictures from Greek life and story. YoNGE, Charlotte M. ^H^' ^ J. 10.377 Young folks' history of Greece. Goldsmith, Oliver. ^f/./ 7 J. 10.378 History of Greece. 20 y , Harrison, James A. ^'^'^ J. 10.379 Story of Greece. Mahaffy, J. P. Zfd-fJ J. 10.380 Story of Alexander's empire. Harrison, Church, and Mahaffy are best for reference in study. Gold- <^f 7 '/ — smith is old-fashioned, and Miss Yonge writes for children of ten or twelve. Guhl and Koner's Life of the Greeks and Romans, 938G935, Mahaffv's Old Greek life, 938M27501, Cox's General history of Greece, //jf,6-T_aaa£iaaM,_andyGreek statesmen, 938C836L, and Dodge's Alexander il^.«l>//?.'"920H25L, are all good books to consult. yi^.6> Biography and stories. Abbott's Alexander, Evelyn Abbott's Pericles, Mrs. Child's Philolhea,-, Church's Callias, Three Greek fyj?,ZJL*y/^,J Dodge's Caesar, 920C115D.^// J. 10.442 Young folks' history of London. Thompson, A. B. J. 10.444 Victoria history of England. YoNQE, Charlotte M. Ui-f.O-y j_ 10.454 Cameos from English history, 3 v. ^f'J,f^> J- 10.446 Young folks' history of England. 1/0,3 23 ENGLAND, TO 1300. Church, A. J. ffST'Mz J 10.448 Story of early Britain. R. Freeman, E. A. /^^- 7 J. 10.450 Old English history. R. Edgar, J G. J. 10.458 Danes, Saxons, and Normans. Biography and stones. Abbott's Alfreiand William the Conqueror ; ^^/■/' ^ J^/. ^Hushes's Alfred; Abbott's RichaT-ft-^lfi Church's Count of the Saxon //^^- '^ ' shore- Henty's Dragon and the raven'and Wulf the Saxon; Crake's ///V/T BrianJMtZjCount^jiuddoek's Maid Marian and Robin Hoo^JPyle's- ^^ /fc^/^(^^^bnn!ood7^Gfiniars Forest outlaws; Scott's Ivanhoe and Betrothed ; IZ-)<- Yonge's Constable's tower. ^lUlO-^^ IZ.^r ENGLAND, 14th CENTURY. -JA/-- DuNSTER, H. P. True stories of the times^ofjlichard II. Biography and stories. Abbott's Richard 11^ Besant and Rice's fl^Zf- ^ » Whittington; Creigh ton's Edward the Black Prince; Edgar's Cressy and Poictiers; Gilliat's John Standish; Green's In the days of chiv- llsiS'.lS /(fC/J /s^_a]Tyi^Pj]s'» Men of iron; E L. S.'s Border lances; Yonge's Lances .2^5'-^ 6 ^"ofLinwood and Prince and the page. kZ^Zf ENGLAND, 15th CENTURY. ff(f5:/0BEL.T and spur. J. 10.464 Edgar, J. G. fl(fj>^0 J. 10.462 Wars of the Roses. TiLLOTSON, J. J. 10.466 Stories of the wars. A6^.J> Biography and stories. 15th century. Abbott's Margaret of kxi]ou^ SJ> ^^^■^ 3U.ii "^nd Richa rd III: Yonge'a^ Caged lion; Church's Chantry priest of "^ Barnet; Corner's Shepherd lord; Stevenson's Black arr^ow^onge's _ il^^i ^ /I0i1.2/Gv\s\y Grisell; Cowper's Captain of the Wight; Coryell's Diccon the '/ 16th century. Abbott's Queen Elizabeth and M^ry^Queen of Scots; ^5^^^' -2 J Bourne's Sir Philip Sidney; Davis's Sir Philip Sidn%;;'Mark Twain's y^^j /. If-t^l^ -Prince and the pauper; Yonge's Armourer's prenti£eS-and.Jlnknown:^xi^,y« • to history; Henty's Under Drake's flag; Kingston's Antony Way- ". / •»^r3T. ZJ Pigeon pie and UndeE ,the storm; Manning's Mary Pow^elU^d^Cheirj^rrTTTV "''• lOU.il - — and Violet; Peard's Scapegrace DiqkiJEIenty'a 0ranj;fe_3nd_^gieeiL4--^^^^^ y fCZ/.Zff^onge's Reputed changeling; Blackmore's Lorna Doonet--Doyle;8_ y /6i7.^oMicah Clarke; Besant's For faith and freedom; Henty's When Lon- '^<- / don burned; Marshall's Kensington Palace. ' 18th century. Henty's Cornet of horse; Johnes's Prince Charlie; Henty's Bonnie Prince Charlie; Stevenson's White cockades; Hentys 24 With Clive in India and Held fast for England ; Besaut's Dorothy Forster. ,^^ itiz.z/ 19th century. Henty's Young buglers and One of the 28th ; Waite's //■Pt.^ 7 Duke of Wellington; Russell's Nelson; Southey's Nels'(SB;^*'Henty'B Through the fray; Lippincott's Queen Victoria; Henty's Jack Archer, For name and fame, Chapter of adventures. Dash for Khartoum, and / l>(f, Z.C Through the Sikh war. / ^^4 Z' SCOTLAND. Kaufman, Rosalie. J. 10.475 Queens of Scotland, 2 v. Mackintosh, J. /fS^Stl3 J. 10.478 Story of Scotland. Scott, Sir Walter. J. 10.471 Tales of a grandfather, y J, ^--^^^ Biography and stories. Several books mentioned under England, 16th century and 18th century. IJ^lh century, Henty's In freedom's '6^^,/^ /(f^Fi "i ^ cause; 15th centur i /. Miss Y ong ;e's Tjv o penniless princesses; ISth /l./l.fll gg»far.v. Ty t ier's D ianmnd ros e. Stevenson'^ Kidnapped and David/^^J^itf /7^^^^7_JBalfour, Crockett^ Raiders, and Martineau's Billow and the rock. '~ ^cott^noYels in the novel-list.^ "the best books in the world," as a "boy once told me, and his poems, with whatever you can find about his life, his home, and his pets, will teach you more of Scotland than any history can tell you. We have a beautiful book with colored plates of the historical relics which are in Scott's home; Abbotsford, 920Sco84Sc. IRELAND. Lawless, Hon. Emily. J. 10.481 Story of Ireland. TowLE, G. M. J. 10.482 Young people's history of Ireland. /CHtt ^6 <2Vo?i7r^Lawless's With Essex in Ireland and Maelcho. You will find some of ihe old Irish legends in Fairy Tales. FRANCE. Bbook, Sarah. Zf^'Z^ J. 10.488 French history for children. Callcott, Lady. Zf^'// C.J. 10.490. Little Arthur's history of Prance. Marshall, Emma. J. 10.492 History of France. Morris, C, comjnler. ZZh-^^S^ J. 10.493 Historical tales. YoNQE, Charlotte M. riU'H J. 10.494 Young folks' history of France. Masson, Gustave. //iTr.^' J. 10.496 Story of mediaeval France. R. Xoio Biography and stories. 10th century, Yonge's Little duke: lith century, Hale's In His name; 14th century, Stockton's Story of Viteau; 26 15tli century, Tuckey's Joan of Arc; 16th century, Kindersley's Chev- lOf'f'l^ alier Bayard. Frith's Under Bayard's banner, Bcsant's^ojigny, Mi ss fO ^p-^ ^JS, 7-¥onge'8 Chaplet of pearls, Henty's St. Bartholomew's eve. and We y- Tf lff-JJ //jy, 2; ■ / man's House of the wolf; 17th century, Abbott's Henry 1^ and Louis ^6^-f^ ?/fy/ v XIV. Miss Yonge's / -Stray pearls, Weyman's Gentleman of France /^^^-y / /fc/i!*i»-and Under the red robe. B\ench Remlution, Abbo tt' s Ma d ame Rolan d ^ L,3- V ^a'?. lyand Marie Antoinette; Tytler's Marie Antoinette; Martiniau's \^€asS^^fj2Si^llt'7'f'^ and the prince; Henty's in the reign of terror- x. Ro berts's Sxdonie's iL^/fff/ dowry; Napoleon, Headley's Napoleon and his~marshals, Mon;is^£>2^'^|J'^-^ ^^■^•^jLNapoleon, Abbott!8j,osephine. Horten^_and Joseph Bonapartei^Miss JiJ^.^^C ^■^■ZC^ -Gouge's Kenneth. Xa^e?'i9S~.on. 10.513 City in the sea. (Venice.) ^.^j^r A.fi Biography and stories. Dicey's Victor Emmanuel/ Farquharson's dy/- Casella; Henty's Lion of St. Mark, /^jj-,// WlEL, A. ^ //J'6. 5^J. 10 513W Venice. lOf^'^J 26 SWITZERLAND. Hug, L. //i'r.f¥ J. 10.511 story of Switzerland. Mackenzie, H. D. S. J. 10.512 Switzerland. SPAIN AND PORTUGAL. Hale, Edward Everett and Susan. ZtO..^ J. 10.515 Story of Spain. Markham, Richard, editor. J. 10.517-518 Chronicle of the Cid. R. Lane-Poole, Stanley. CU3'f^ J. 10.519 Story of the Moors in Spain. Watts, H. E. f/Sip.'Xy J. 10.520 Christian recovery of Spain. Yonge, Charlotte M. ^i^-i^ J. 10.521 Story of the Christians and Moors of Spain. Stephens, H. M. /f^f'tS^ J. 10.523 Story of Portugal. ^g.zO'^' ^^ // Stories. Cervantes's Don Quixote/ Aguilar's Vale of cedars; Coop- j/-^ y-er's Mercedes of Castile; Heoty's With Peterborough in Spain and ^//^Young buglers. Lockhart's Spanish ballads are good poems to learn to speak at school. ^-^V, ^& RUSSIA. Dole, N. H. ZH'3 J. 10.525 Young folks' history of Russia. MORFILL, W. F. //^^•ff J. 10.527 Story of Russia. Biography. Abbott's Peter the Great. ^S'f.Zj OTHER COUNTRIES. Vambery, a. XJS-fO J. 10.529 Story of Hungary. Bradley, H. /fS'S'/ J. 10.531 Story of the Goths. Oilman, Arthur. ^I3'I2^ J. 10.533 Story of the Saracens. Biography. Palmer's Haroua Alraschid. R.. f^'^vib Lane-Poole, Stanley. //eO'/^ J. 10.535 Story of the Barbary corsairs. Feudge, Fannie Roper. J. 10.537 India. - 27 BOYESEX, H.JALMAU HjORTH. -2/J. y J. 10.539 Story of Norway. R. / Stories. Baring-Gould's Grettir the outlaw; Du Ghaillu's Ivar the Lane-Foole, Stanley. //rr;i^J. 10.541 story of Turkey. Hawks, Francis L. J. 10.545 Lost Greenland. JAPAN. Griffis, W. E. Z^J*^^. 10.547 Japan. Murray, D. //j%. / J- 10.548 Story of Japan. AUSTRALASIA. Tregarthen, G. t/Sf.Z> J. 10.549 Story of Australasia. AFRICA. Theal, G. M. //St.3 J. 10.549S Story of South Africa. UNITED STATES, General. Barnes, Mary Sheldon. J. 10.551 Studies in American history. Eggleston, Edward. J. 10.553-554 History of the United States. J. 10.555 Household history of the United States. R. GiLMAN, Arthur. //6^'^-f./^— 9m5C9fi5:QL^Mr8. Custer's Boots and saddles, 917.8C965B, Following W ^^^, f EARLY DISCOVERIES. Hale, Susan. //iTT 6 J. 10.594 Story of Mexico. Higginson, T. W. ^I^'fi J. 10,600 Young folks' book of American explorers. /Ober, Frederick A. /f^-l/ J. 10.596 Young folks' history of Mexico. /^0%ff Biography and stories : Ballantyne's Norsemen in the West; Abbott's Jf^// Columbus; Seelye's Columbus; Columbus and Vespucius; Coryell's Zt^'M ^olc V5t./7 Markham's John Davis and Sea fathers; Henty's By right of con- quest; Munroe's Flamingo feather and White conquerors. ibdO- Zy(j COLONIES. Coffin, Charles Carleton. J. 10.602-603 Old times in the colonies. Sanford, E. B. J. 10.G07 History of Connecticut. 29 Hale, Edward Evehett. i'^ej^-ZZ.j 10.608 Story of Massachusetts. Drake, Samuel Adams. -^/^•-^^ J. 10.612 Around the hub. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, ^'^'^ J. 10.614-615 True stories. R. Moore, Nina. Xlif-^ J. 10.644 Pilgrims and puritans. Scudder, Horace E. ^f^'l J. 10.61Y Boston town. R. Todd, Charles Bukr. J. 10.619 Story of the city of New York. DuNLAP, William. J. 10.621 History of New York, 2 v. Hawks, Francis L. J. 10.609 Uncle Philip's conversations ; Massachusetts, 2 v. J. 10.623 Uncle Philip's conversations ; New York, 2 v. /7A// /^-^ J. 10.626 Uncle Philip's conversations; New Hampshire, 2 v./j>/. ^a- ^/ J. 10.629 Uncle Philip's conversations; Virginia, 2 v. /J/-fO Cooke, John Esten. J. 10.631 Stories of the Old Dominion. Cahoone, Sarah S. J. 10.633 Sketches of Newport. Markham, Richard. ^-tj;i.¥ J. 10.635 King Philip's war. Drake, Samuel Adams. nif^ f^ j^ 10.605 Making of New England States. 2ZJ/-14 J. 10.637 Making of the Ohio valley states. ^^AzsT'i. 10.638 Making of the great west. J. 10.639, Taking of Louisburg. Johnson, Rossiter. J. 10.641 Old French war. . McLeod, Grace Duncan. /bdff.y J. 10.643 Stories of the land of Evangeline Biography and stories: Abbott's Miles Standish, Peter Stuyvesant,//"^-^'^. • ^Sl^.ZtK\v\g Philip, La Salle, and Captain Kid^* lisliton's Captaia John ffJt,. (p Smith; Markham's Colonial days; Sedgwick's Hope Lesl ie; M c- 'o^,l^-l/ Knight's Captain Jack the scout; Austin's Standish of Standish; /^/^, ;>5-^ .3/^./'^-€ooper's Wept of the Wish-ton- Wish and Leather-stocking tales ;;2j-./-^ri.,^^^ lUf, ZO Catherwood'8 Romance of DoUard, Story of ToctxJ^ady^ofFort Str'_/6/^. Z-3 /t'/^.-^./'-Joluii^and^Chase of St. Castin; Gordpj^'^ Englishnien's Haven ; y^^''. /^ /i,H>./0^oyWs Refugees; Parker's Trail of the SW/Otd^Butterworth's Boys of /(,^3'/ (p /6J'7. '^--ilreenwayCQurtjJBynnerVBegum's daughter; Seton's Romance of ^ /> the Charter Oak; Champney's ^reat-grandmother's girls Jn New S.Z^'t y France; Abbott's Benjamin FrarimT^^'Thayer's Printer b6^;''Henty's /^/J./iT-With Wolfe in Canada; Earle's Diary of Anna Green 'Winslow,,^/^^./ 920W695 (a Boston schoolgirl of 1770). 80 REVOLUTION. Abbott, W. J. XlC' J J. 10.645 Blue Jackets of '76. R. GpFFiN, Charles Carleton. Af-SJ- Cj J. 10.645A Boys of 76 FisKE, John. ZZf^.f J. 10.646 War of Independence. Drake, Samuel Adams. J. 10.648 Burgoyne's invasion of 1777. GiLMORE, J. R. /fCff'/i J. 10.650 Rear-guard of the revolution. /iGf.f^ J. 10.651 Advance-guard of western civilization. fld'T^ft J. 10.652 John Sevier. Watson, H. C. c. J. 10.653 Boston tea party. mii-2^ Biography and stories: Abbott's John Paul Jones; Mackenzie's fIgfS. Zf Jo ha_Paul_J one3; Sea y^ell's Paul Jones; Sargent's Andre; Lossing's //ij^/^jF-lwo spieslfSnclre and Hale); Hill's Arnold; Hill's Putnam; Hartley's Marlon; McConkey's Hero of Cowpens (Morgan); Heady's Farmer S'jf- ll "^oj (Washington); Hale's George Washington; Scudder's George Washington; Headley's Washington and his generals; Cooper's "StS-Cp Lionel Lincoln; Henty's True to the old flag; Brush's Paul and jr/f.25U(jPersiai.vDouglas's Peter and Polly; Harte's Thankful Blossom ;J(5^».i/ SZiZ'i^ Sedgwick's Linwoods; Morrison's True stories of American wars; 35^-'/ Cooper's Spy; Butterworth's Patriot schoolmaster; Stoddard's Guert/^j'.^^ / Ten Eyck (both on Natban Hale); Stoddard's On the old frontier; Rousselet's Ralph the drummer boy. i(g02-l''1 REVOLUTION TO CIVIL WAR. Todd, Charles Burr. J. 10.654 Story of the city of Washington. /OFFiN, Charles Carleton. ,— J. 10.655 Building the nation. Abbott, W. J. ^^3.3 J. 10.657 Blue jackets of 1812. R. Soley, J. R. Ik;. 6'^' J. 10.664 Sailor boys of 1812. Johnson. Rossiter. J. 10.659 War of 1812. Ladd, H. O. J. 10.662 War with Mexico. iiP iL Biography and stories : Abbott's Daniel Boone and Dg^vid Crockett ;-2/«r.2-^ Bogart's Daniel Boone; Abbott's Christopher Caf^r^ Eggleston's ^y^/:^ 3ol.l(j> —Big brother series; Butterworth's In the boyhood of Lincolar''Syn^ id/jf^'Zoner'a Zachary Phips; Seawell's Decatur and Somers, L\U]e lOh: Zf^ I IfC/T- /- \ Jarvis anci ^Iidshipman Paulding; Hale's Man without a country and/^ '^/"^ 3JJ. 5'-Philip Nolan's friends; Henty's Captain Bayley's heir;^JlXii£rQe|s^y4/^,2.c> /Uz.^f Golden days of '49; Stowe's Uncle Tom's cabin-K Banks's IBright days in the old plantation time; Pendleton's King To^ and the runaways; Qu.r '^^^' 31 Harris's On the plantation; Mrs. Fremont's Souvenirs of my time ;-^<7'^'' 7 HZl-'^ Bowne's Girl's life eighty years ago, 920B693; Roche's Story of the / filibusters, 973.6K585. ZZ/JJ. / CIVIL WAR. Abbott, W. J. /13.^ J. 10.666B Battlefields and camp-fires of the war for the /Jj*. ^ ' Union. R. ^ 2-2/*-^' 7 J. 10.667 Battlefields and victory. R. ^^^jLi. 10.668 Blue jackets of '61. R. Champlin, John D. JilA^.and Three scouts ;~ Coffin's ^.3 Winning his way; Famous adventures and escapes, 973.7F215; 2-x:/'6- ' Gerrish and Hutchinson's Blue and th^ gray, 973.p'G322; Goss's -^t,//? Recollections of a private, 973.7G695; Hague's Blockaded family, 973.7H12. ,3,,^ ^^^^ UNITED STATES — LAWS AND POLITICS. A^ON, Edward. f'VC'f J. 10.690 Among the law-makers. R. 32 , ^ ^ROOKS, Elbridge S. IfpOO.Jr^ J ] 0.693 Century book for young Americans. Dole, Charles P. J, 10.691 American citizen. NoRDHOFF, Charles. 2^/' // J. 10.692 Politics for young Americans. R. CLASS 20 -RELIGION. Abbott, J. S. C. J. 20.1 Schoolboy. Alcott. a. B. J. 20.2 Conversations on the gospels, 2 v. Brace, Charles Loring. J. 20.5 Short sermons to newsboys. BuNYAN, John. ZUS'^^3 J. 20.6 Pilgrim's progress. R. Church, A. J. ^ifff.^"^ J. 20.7 Stories from the Bible, 2 v. R. Clodd, Edward. ZU>^^ J. 20.10 Childhood of religions. R. Crofts, J. J. 20.12 Flowers with roots. Fletcher, A. J. 20.14-15 Lectures. Gatty, Mrs. Alfred. J. 20.17 Parables from nature, 2 v. R, ~V: X. tUOJ.lJ Written by the mother of Mrs. Ewing. Gallaudet, Thomas H. J. 20.20 Youth's book on natural theology. J. 20.21 Child's book on repentance. J. 20.23 Scripture biography. Adam to Jacob. J. 20.24 " " Joseph. J. 20.26-27 " " Moses. J. 20.25 " " Joshua. J. 20,241 '< '• Josiah. J. 20.22 " " David. J. 20.28 " " Ruth. Greenwood, F. W. P. J. 20.30 Sermons to children. Havergal, Frances Ridley. J. 20 32 Little pillows. Hawks, Francis L. J. 20.58 Uncle Philip's conversations on the evidences of Christianity. 33 HOOKEK, H. J. 20.34 Child's book on the Sabbath. KlJUMMACHER, F. Ziffff.tUS. 20.36 Parables. Layman. J. 20.38 Jesus the carpenter. Lives of the apostles. lOf.ZS J. 20.40 McCosH, James, onrf others. *J. 20.43 PhilUps Exeter lectures. Lectures to the boys of Phillips Exeter Academy, by distinguished preachers, including Phillips Brooks and Edward Everett Hale. Mortimer, Mrs. J. 20.45 Peep of day. J. 20 46 Precept upon precept. Newton, R. J 20.48 Best things. NoRDHOFF, Charles. J. 20.50 God and the future life. Principles of church history. J. 20.52 Sanford, Mrs. D. P. J. 20.53 Sunday evening hour. Sunday evenings, 3 v. J. 20.54 Warner, Susan. J. 20.60 Word, 2 v. CLASS 30 — LIFE, EDUCATIOIf, AND MANNERS. ^SOP. f^f-fi J. 30.1 Fables. AiKiN, John. J. 30.3 Juvenile budget opened. Aldis, M. S. J. 30.5 Great giant Arithmos. Barbauld, Anna Letitia. J. 30.7 Things by their right names. 5^/ fi Chester, E. 7^.// 'fj. 30.9 Chats with girls on self-culture. R. J^7*;l^fJ. 30.10 Girls and women. R. Cox, S. J. 30.11 Friendly counsel for girls. 34 Dare, Shirley. tJ. 30.32 Behaving. Gow, A. M. J. 30.1'2G Primer of politeness. Hale, Edward Everett. ^f-/J J. 30.13 How to do it. R. ffC^Z3 *J. 30.14 What career? Hall, John. *J. 30.18 Familiar talks to boys. Hamlen, G. ft^f"i^ J. 30.20 Chats. R. Ha WES, Joel. J. 30.19 Character everything to the young, Hopkins, S. R. J. 30.22 Young prince of commerce. Jackson, Helen. i(,^^.3 J. 30.24 Bits of talk for young folks. June, Jenny. •j-J. 30.12 Thrown on her own resources. KiRKLAND, E. S. J. 30.26 Speech and manners. R. JSTesbit, M. L, ^^"5/ J. 30.28 Grammar-land. PiLPAY. J. 20.30 Fables. RusKiN, John. J. 30.34 Letters and advice to young girls. R. Ryder, A. H. ^7^,^6 J 30 35 Go right on, girls. Zt^^f J. 30.35 i Hold up your heads, girls. SlGOURNEY, LyDIA HuNTLEY. J. 30.36 Olive leaves. Taylor, Jane. fS'ii'l^ J. 30.38 Contributions of Q. Q. Tytler, Sarah. J. 30.39 Papers for thoughtful girls. R. White, Sallie Joy. l "^ Each and all (sequel). Stories of voyages and shipioreeks : Ballantyne's 'iA./LtZ-^ed. Eric and Shifting winds, Bowman's Esperanza; Collingwood's Congo rovers, Log of the Flying-fish, and Rover's secret; Cupples's ?/^./3 C^npplps Hnwp. and Deserted sliip; DePoe's Robinson Crus oe: Fenn's^ y^j — In the king's name; Frazar's Perseverance Island; Frith 's Cruise of .yjf/j^ jthe W aspiJIall's Drifting round the world; Harley's Young Crusoe; J'^/iZ/ ' Heldmann's Mutiny on board the Leander; Ker's Into unknown seas; / fT' J Kingston's Cruise of the Frolic, From powder-monkey to admiral,^^.'^ j'^. /^-Hurricane Hurry, James Braithwaite, Missing ship, Peter the whaler, ' j_^3. j t Peter Trf™^^ Rniind the wor ld^i]|lt water, and Two supercargoes; Knox's Young Nimrods around tKe world; Macy's There she blows;5/4!A? /^J/'/^ Marryat's Little savage and Masterman Rea dj : Moore^JJ Great »^//./R^ ^^, <5'I_Qrion_ll;J5eid's Ocean waifs; Shippen's Thirty years at^££a^tables[sj//. 5~ Cruise of the Snowbird, From pole to pole, and Jungle, peak and /f./^ .. plai n; Swisg, Family Robinson and Willis the pilgt_(sequel) ; Miss , /(>/^./J~-Yonge's Modern Telemachus.zr. A y^^-"/ ^ zKu ' '^ J-2-?a-> Sea-Novels : Cooper's Pilot; Red Rover, Water-witch, Wing-and-24~^ jSr^f^ t wing. T wo admirals; Marryat's and Clark Russell's novels; Steven- ' IttZtZ'."/ — ^^gonl yTreasure Island anc^ Wrecker: Melville's Moby Dick.^^;^..?* / ^/ 7. y "^ Wther Interesting Voyages and Travels : Stevens's Around the world S/v-^'f-on a bicycle, 910.4St45A; Verne's Exploration of the world, 3 v., M^.f, /^t^'^^I^^QlO 9 V59: Davis's Rulers of the Mediterranean, 910.4D29R; Pyle's f)gff(k^ — Buccaneers and marooners of America, 910.4P995/; Voyages of Fer- '^ ' dinand Mendez Pinto, 910.4P655V. ItZfi.VJ EUROPE. Alcott, Louisa M. ^tt^ J. 40.38 Shawl-straps. ffi^AGE, Caroline A. J. 40 44 Helen on her travels. Parley, Peter. J. 40.46 Balloon travels. Wanderer. J. 40.47. Greenwood, Grace. J. 40.49 Stories and sights. Mortimer, Mrs. J. 40.51 Near home. Old Merry's Travels. J. 40.53. Sewell, E. M. 1r^>\3 J. 40.55 Journal of a summer tour. Stockton, Frank R. ^}0, l3 J. 40.57 Personally conducted. R. Stories. Butterworth's Zigzag journeys in Eiiirope ; Knox' s Bo^ . , .^''"^ —travellers in northern Europe ; Scudder's Mr, Bodley abroad fTay^"^*' B%*f. 9 lor's Boys of other countries. 0^7, / Other Travels. Guild's Over the oceah;^914G9450; Marion Harland's ^fS.lt Loiterings in pleasant places, 914T37; Stoddard's Red-letter days 37 abroad, 914St65; Taylor's Views afoot, 914T215V; Trafton's American girl abroad, 914T675A. -f^.j" Taylor. E. GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. J. 40.73 England and its peaj^e. Stories. Abbott's Rollo iu Londo'a; Ballantyne's Deep down, Post uM /^ haste, and Fighting the flames ; Black's Four MacNicols'flButter- Z/fJiy.y~^or\A\'?, Zigzag journeys in the British Isles ; Coolidge's Guernsey!^. O lily ; Davies's Swan and her crew ; Fenn's Metihardoc ; Henty's Facing death; Knox's Boy travellers in Great Britain and Ireland; ^//^^ ^ /liie^f-2 French's Our boys in Ireland; Leighton's Pilots of Pomona; Scudder's j^.^^ English Bodley family. ^^ibf^zfi Other Travels. Walford's Pleasant idays in pleasant places, 914.2 UC^* /L_HLl45j/Balch's Glimpses of old English homes. 914.2B195; Davies's Norfolk broads and rivers, 914.26D28; Macquoid's About Yorkshire, ////; ^L^ 914.27M245; Mulock's Unknown country (Irdand), 914.15C84; Grant's Old and new Edinburgh, 914.144G765. \ ^^^ y FRANCE. Stories. Abbott's Rollo m Paris; De Witt's Marie Derville ; Hale's UZh 7 Family flight; Jones's Only a girl; Shaw's Hector. >^-^/// j>|fij/ — Travel. Blackburn's Breton folk, 914.41B565; Macquoid's Through 4h^k- ^ Normandy, 914. 42M245; Hamerton's Saone, 914.443H175; Dix's Mid- j/Y/f-eummer drive through the Pyrenees, 914.47D645; Stevenson's Trav- ^/A/:?^ ' els with a donkey, 914.4St45T, and Inland voyage, 914.4St45I. JJS^.Xf SWITZERLAND. ,,^ t Stories. Abbott's Rollo in Geneva and Rollo in Switzerland; Fenn's Crystal hunters. J^'i^ Travel. Whymper's Scrambles among the Alp^y\914.94W625S ; ^^ Rideing's Alpenstock, 914.94R435A; Tyndall's Hours of exercise iny/i^ GERMANY. Stories. Abbott's Rollo on the Rhine; Champney's Three Vassar 5-Z>2- /'^ _ girls on the Rhine, and ThreeVassar girls in the Tyrol; Spyri's Gritli's I(i37'f^ ff^f^^ *~x Mldren.t<7/7«'^»-J'-and the exile system, 91r).7K36S ; Brassey's Sunshine and storm in >Hi3'^9 the East, 914.96B735; Harrison's Greek vignettes, 914.95H24. ASIA, Miller, Olive Tiiorne. 3-5 1" 7 J. 40.107 Little people of Asia. Ay'rton, M. C. J. 40.111 Child-life in Japan. R. ^Bramhall, Mae St. John. k^ffj.r J. 40.112 Wee ones of Japan. Eddy, D. C. J. 40. 116 Walter's tour in the Ea^t. Stories, etc. Arabia. Fenn's Yussuf the guide. Central Asia. Kerr's Lost city. China. Dallon's War tiger, French's Our boys in 3^.f 89 China, Yan Phou Lee's When I was a boy in China. India. French's Our boys in India; Henty's In times of peril; Knox's Boy travellersAi3*''t/?.// y Travel. Taylor's Travels in Arabia, 915.3T21; Burnaby's Ride \o4^f0'// Khiva, 915 8B93; Mrs. Gray's Fourteen months in Canton, 915.1G79;j2j?./. ^ ;2.^^ -J tracks in Japan, 915.2B545. and Journeys in Persia and Kurdistan, a <7^ 2f /A> UNITED STATES. Bishop, Nathaniel H. 2-^/i .Z^ J. 40.146 Four months in a sneak -box. Ellet, E. F. J. 40.148 Rambles about the country. 40 Irving, "Washington. ^■^* 7 J. 40.150 Astoria. ^-y. 7 J. 40.151 Bonneville's adventure.^. HowELLs, William Dean. /C'll/.ZS J. 40.152-153 Boy's town. R. Warner, Charles Dudley. ■ 3f^-lO J. 40.159 Being a boy. R. ' • British America and Canada. Stories. Ballautyne's Away in the wilderness and Dog Crusoe; Butterworth's Zigzag journeys in /l/lt.lfi il/Z'^ Acad_ia;_iiranJt!s>J^ack in the bush; Marryat's Settlers in Canada;/^.^.? '"-~^___-- — --^ry-^Keid's Young voyageurs; Stearns's Wrecked on Labra dor; Stephens's 3 ZA- -L -Left on Labrador; Verne's Fur country. yZ/'S ^ZU Xy VJ-^-/^ Travel. Benjamin's Cruise of the Alice May, 917.1B43; Cumber- ' ' land's Queen's highway, 917.1C91; Robinson's Great fur land,^?. :C ^/! ^3 917.12R 56iJ>\^arner's Baddeck. 917.16W24B; Pike's Barren grounds ?/x-j.y^f JNlorthern Canada, 917.1P635; Ralph's On Canada's frontier, 917.1R135.-j^^i-.^.6 Stones. United States. Butterworth's Zigzag journeys in the occident;'{^;i/*^ 5'6S~^ iIiaroonej:s--an^Marooner8' Island; Ober's Knockabout club in the / Everglades. South Carolina. Eggleston's Wreck of the Red Bird. /(pf^S* JJl^New Onlean&^-..JM^. Jamison's Lady Jane and Toinette's Philip. West and Rocky Mountains. Ballautyne's Wild man of the west; ^HH- H. Brooks'a^ Boy emigrants and Boy settlers; Coolidge's Clov er and In^^^//^ /{fO^i^ -the High Valley; Fenn's Silver Canon; Henty's Redskin and cowboy and In the heart of the Rockies; IngersoU's Silver caves; Jackson's . -^3- /-Nelly's silver mine; Kingston's In the Rocky Mountains; Lummis's New Mexico David; Munroe's Campmates and Raftmates; Reid's y-(t -Boy hunters; Stables's Our home in the silver west. Pacific Coast. Butterworth's Log house on the Columbia; Henty's Captain Baylyy'8/i//..2^ /t/2.-2.^VhdriyMunroe's Golden days of '49; Longhead's Abandoned claim. /4^4fX'3u-, /(,ff^-2^~~r3JMska. Munroe's Fur-seal's tooth; Kipling's White seal (in Jungle/^,^/; /^ book). fG*ij(^r. J^^ 41 ///^. ilieighton's Life at Pu^ot Sound, 917.9L535; Pinck's Pacific coast ^e^/-? . -2.--^ scenic tour, 917.9F493; Karr's Shores and Alps of Alaska, 917.98K145; *fXf' f/ ////.^^ Wood man's Picturesque Alaska, 917.98W856; Collis's Woman's trip __, to Alaska, 917.98C69; Whymper's Travel and adventure in Alaska, i^f%fi^^ 917.9«\V625T. . -/UZ.^ Mexico. Stories. Baxter's Cruise of a land-yacht/ Baylor's Juan/^.^/-^-^ Vincent's In and out of Central America, 917.28V74; Sanborn's Winter in Central America, 917.28Sa25.;^^^ Ji'^ SOUTH AMERICA. /(pS7- 3 Stories. Aaron's Butterfly hunters in the Caribbees; Champney's ^^-3. J Three Vassar girls in South America; Dixie's Young Castaways; ^ >/^/. /•V ^enty's Out on the Pampas; Kingston's In New Grana d^a; Knox's _ ^ ^(.a i^/-^/^ Boy travellers in South America; Reid's Afloat in the forest and y. ^-Forest exiles; Stephens's Knockabout club in the tropics; Verne's ■^•<^ Giant raft. • / Travel. Bishop's Thousand miles' walk across South America, ^C'»t(fi „,,— 918B54; Curtis's Capitals of Spanish America, 918C94; Vincent's ///^i, ^ J • Around and about South America, 918V74; Smith's Brazil, 918.1Sni52;^-'.^. •> Andrews's Brazil, 918. lAm25; Coan's Adventures in Patagonia, 918.2C635; Whymper's Travels amongst the great Andes of theJlt^f^. 2.> equator, 918.6W625; Waterton's Wanderings in South America,^ -5-^^ 918.8W315; Hudson's Naturalist in La Plata, 918.2H865N.y^^/ ^^ OCEANICA. HigiGINSON, S. J, XZ C>/9r J. 40.163 Java, the pearl of the East. NoRDHOFF, Charles. J. 40.165 Stories of the island world. Stories. Ballantyne's Gascoyne; Butterworth's Zigzag journeys in .it <5''^^' ' Australia; Henty's Final reckoning and Maori and settler; Knox's X/^f /* —Boy travellers in Australasia; Perelaer's Ran away from the Dutch. Tratiel. Woodford's Naturalist among the head-hunters, 919.11 W855; !L^^^.f Forbes's Naturalist's Wanderings in the Eastern archipelago, ff/^, ^S 919.11W745; Ballou's Under the Southern Cross- 919.4B215; Lum- holtz's Among cannibals, 919.4L97. J ^/; /,2^ ^ZOt^y^Xy ARCTIC REGIONS. HiLDEBRANDT, C. J. 40.167 Winter in Spitzbergen. ScHWATKA, Frederick. J. 40.169 Children of the cold. B..f(f/(,,Z^ Stories, etc. Baring-Gould's Grettir the outlaw (Iceland); Stephen's ^y^'f' 42 „'^ Off to the geysers; Ballantyne's Red Rooney; Beesly's Sir John /^/«'^. -{J_ JPranklia; HalTs, Adrift in the ice-fields; Hayes's Cast away in the cold; Kingston's Arctic adventures; Knox's Voyage of the Vivian ;t«,^yj"" Stables's stories. orp f~9- i-Z.^ tJt.l <,r^„*^ Travel. Kane's Arctic explorations, ''919.8K132A; Gilder's J^hfJ Schwatka's search, 919.8G385; DeLong's Voyage of the Jeanette, ^,/r/X919 8D385V; Danenhower's Narrative of the Jeanette, 919.8D195; X/i/^'^Grreeley's Three years of Arctic service, 919. 8G815T; Nansen's First ..X-5 crossing of Greenland, 919.8N155F, and Eskimo life, 919 8N155E; ZOS^Z.^ 9 Mrs. Peary's My Arctic journey, 919.8P315. '^^<7S^Ji. . fO CLASS 50 — SCIENCE. If you wish to read more advanced books on Science and Useful Arts, you will find Ihem in the Bulletin of the Library, January-October, 1893. ASTRONOMY. Ball. Sir Robert Stawell. J. 50.2 Star land. Champlin, John D. J. 50.4 Young folks' astronomy. GiBERNE, Agnes. ■./ J. 50.3 Starry skies. J. 5 0.3 A Sim, moon, and stars. R. Goddard, Juj.ia. c. J. 50.5 Boy and the constellations. Lyle. M. E. S. J. 50.6 What are the stars? MooRE, A., and Nichols, L D. ^l*Z-IZ^ c. J. 50.8 Overhead. Pratt, Mara. c. J. 50.9 Storyland of stars. Proctor, R. A. (pfi.Z^ J. 50.10 Easy star lessons. J. 50.11 Lessons in elementary astronomy. Serviss's Astronomy with an opera glass, 523.5Se65; Langley's New astronomy (523L265), and Ball's Story of the heavens, 523B21S, are all interesting. O ^3. (^ CHEMISTRY, PHYSICS, AND ELECTRICITY. Abbott, Jacob. 6^. t J. 50.16 Force. 6^-'^ J. 50 17 Heat. Iji.fS' i. 50.18 Light. D'Anvkrs, N. J. 50.1 Science ladders. Faraday, Michael. J. 50.20 Chemical history of a candle. U. J. 50.21 Various forces of matter. Guthrie, F. J. 50.23 First book of knowledge. Hooker, Worthington. ^^^/.^ J. 50.25 Child's book of nature. Hopkins, G. M. J{cJ.^ J. 50.26 Experimental science. R. Marcet, J. i^ 31, A. ^ J- -10.27 Conversations on chymistry. An old-fashioned book that your grandfathers and grandmothers used to read. Meadowcroft, W. H. J. 50.29 A. B. C. of electricity. R. MUNRO, J. J. 50.30M Romance of electricity. Naeier, Charles O. G. ^M(/' ^ J. 50.31 Tommy Try and what he did in science. Pepper, J. H. J. 50.33 Boy's playbook of science. J. 50.34 Chemistry, electricity, light. Lists of other books on electricity will be given to all who ask for them. WOODHULL, J. F. J. 50.38 Simple experiments for the schoolroom. THE EARTH. Andrews. Jane. /tJ;?x^y c. J. 50.41 Stories Mother Nature told. R. Ansted, D. T. J. 50.43 In search of minerals. Barnard, Charles. ZiZJJ^ J. 50.44 Talks about the soil. XC2J-f3 J. 50.44A Talks about the weather. Buckley, Arabella B. y^3^2 j_ 50.45 Fairy-land of science. ffO^jy J. 50.46 Through magic glasses. Champlin, John D. J. 50.48 Child's catechism of common things. Gate, Selina. ff(^9 J. 50.68 Ethics of the dust. R. Shaler, Nathaniel Southgate. J. 50.70 First book in geology. Stwin, Adam. J. 50.66 Eyes right. Welsh, J. J. K. J. 50.72 Familiar lessons in mineralogy and geology. WincAell, a. J. 50.74 Geological excursions. PLANTS AND TREES. Apgar, a. C. ZW-Zy J. 50.77 Trees of the northern United States. R. Barnard, Charles. 2OZS./6 J. 50.77B Talks about our useful plants. Bass, M. Florence. J. 50.98N Nature stories for young readers. Dana, Mrs. W. S. //()/• -27 J. 50.77R According to season. IJ J. 50.78 How to know the wild flowers. R. Dyson, Mrs. J. 50.79 Stories of the trees. Goodale, George L. J. 50.81 Concerning a few common plants. Gray, Asa. OiZf J, 50.83 How plants behave. (pi. 1 1 J. 50.84 How plants grow. Hardinge, E. M. 2(p^f-f J. 50.84 With the wild flowers. //^J.Z3 45 Harris, Amanda B. J. 50 86 Wild flowers. Herrick, Sophie Bledsoe. J. 50.88 Chapters on plant-life. Hyde, A. M. ^^^'/J J. 50.90 Work, play, and profit in my garden. Pindar, Susan. J. 50 93 Legends of the flowers. Pratt, Mara. c. J. 50.94 Fairy-land of flowers. 43 J. f-/^ Emerson's Trees and shrubs of Massachusetts, 581.974Em35T, in two large volumes, will help you when you see a tree that you do not know, and Eaton's Ferns of North America in the Watkinson Library has colored illustrations of all the ferns that grow in Connecticut. //^J''9- Hervey's Sea mosses, 589.3H446, will teach you the names of all that you find on our coast. ZOOLOGY. Agassiz, Elizabeth C. ltPt'3) J. 50.96 First lesson in natural history. Anderson-Maskell, a. E. J. 50.98 Four feet, wings and fins. Brightwen, E. J. 50.99M More about wild nature. R. J. 50.99N Wild nature won by kindness. R. BiGLAND, J. N. J. 50,99 Natural history of animals. Buckley, Arabella B. 74//^/' J. 50.100 Life and her children. Cooper, Sarah. //^3'^Z^ J- 50.104 Animal life. Damon, W. E. y^ZrJ2^ J. 50.10Q Ocean wonders. Harris, Amanda B. J. 50.108 Dooryard folks. Holder, Charles F. /b'fc-6 J. 50.109 Along the Florida reef. ffffY.r J. 50.110 Living lights. /tt^S"^ ^- 50.111 Marvels of animal life. Hooker, Worthington. J. 50.113 Natural history. Housman, H. //^Tl/L J. 50.115 Story of our museum. Hyatt, Alpheus. J. 50.117 Common hydroids. J. 50.118 Commercial and other sponges. 46 Ingersoli., Ernest. M-i^-/9 J. 50.120 Country cousins. R. nf^'f J. 50.121 Friends worth knowing. R. McKendrick, J. G. J. 50.123 Life in motion. M ANTON, W. P. J. 50.125 Taxidermy without a teacher. Miller, Olive Thorne. c. J. 50.127 Little folks in feathers and fur. 'iU.^i- c. J. 50.128 Queer pets at Marcy's. f/ff(f.30 i. 50. 129 Our home pets. R. Morley, M. W. J. 50.130 Song of life. R. Morse, Edward S. J. 50.132 First book of zoology. Rennie, James. yjZtS^ J. 50.134 Natural history of quadrupeds. Stevenson, Sarah Hackett. l^lir*U J. 50.136 Boys and girls in biology. Stowe, Harriet Beecher. /IfflZ^y^ ^•^- 50,138 Queer little people. Taylor, J. E. J. 50.140 Playtime naturalist. J. 50.142 Notes on collecting and preserving natural his- tory objects. Tenney, Sanborn. J. 50.144 Manual of zoology. . „ ^ i ^y, ./ Read also lives of AuduDon, Robert Dick, and Thomas Edwnird, in this list, and the life of Agassiz by his wife, 920Agl5A..2^J'.^-/^ Housman and Taylor's books on collections are English. The best American ones on the subject are Batty's Practical taxidermy, 579.4B31, "aynard's Naturalist's guide, 579M455, Manton's Insects, and Tax- ._ermy without a teacher; Hornaday's Taxidermy, 579.4H78i and ^-t*?- /^Gibson's Camp life in the woods, 799G355. Abbott's Hollo's miifeeumj'2<^./^ and Jak's Riverside museum have many good ideas on beginnere' col- lections. lU3.rz. (^^^^^ INSECTS. Ballard, Julia P. J. 50.149 Among the moths and butterflies. K. y-^/f. /^J- 50.151 Insect lives. The first is an enlarged and improved edition of the second. Bamford, Mary E. H^Tf^'f J- 50.153 Up and down the brooks. Cmndeze, E. J. 50.154 Curious adventures of a field cricket. >.'.// Ma / / ide 47 CoNANT, Helen S. ^f'// J. 50.155 Butterfly hunters. Harris, T. W. ^7'^ J. 50.157 Insects injurious to vegetation. Hyatt, Alpheus, and Arms, J. M. J. 50.159 Insecta. McCooK, H. C. 11(^^.3 J. 50.160 Tenants of an old farm. R. Manton, W. p. J. 50.161 Insects, how to catch and how to prepare thetu for the cabinet. Maynard, C. J. J. 50.162 Manual of North American butterflies. Noel, Maurice. c. J. 50.163 Buz, the life and adventures of a honeybee. /0/lc. /3 Saunders, W. Hff^f J. 50.165 Insects injurious to fruits. Scudder, Samuel H. J. 50.166 Brief guide to the common butterflies. R. J. 5 0.1 66 L Life of a butterfly. R. Treat, Mary. f/0S'''/ J. 50.167 Injurious insects of the farm and garden. ^ J. 50.168 Chapters on ants. t/* ^ Harris's Insects injurious to vegetation is excellent so far as it goes, but has the old scientitic names instead of the new ones, which you flO^f will find in Saunders's Insects injurious to fruit. Packard's Guide to -^ j'j'./-2^ the study of insects, 595.7P122G, Emenon's Spiders, 595.4Em34, 7' -^ c. J. 80.6 Outdoors at Long Look. ?Ui~ S — Abbott, Jacob. c. Franconia stories. R. JZf- Z^3. 80.17 Malleville. 3^f. ^ J. 80.23 Wallace. J^/' ^ J. 80.19 MaryErskine. :?;e/ J "J. 80.18 MaryBell. JJZf. G J. 80.14 Beechnut. J.^/. 7 J. 80.20 Rodolphus. 7.e/^. /^J. 80.16 Ellen Linn. ?^/' ^ J- 80.22 Stuyvesant. J:ir.i'0 J. 80.15 Caroline. 3Z^- ff ^- ^^-^^ Agnes. c. J. 80.24 Hadiper's story books, 12 v. Contents: V. 1. Bruno ; Willie and the mortgage ; The strait gate. A /-^ /'Zf V. 2. The littl^ouvre ; Frank; Emma.A/*V. 3."Virginia'f"Timboo /. //^ and Joliba ; Timboo and Fanny. V. 4. The Harper establishment ; /, j> //•^Franklin; The studio./.^V. 5. Ancient history/^ English history;/,//^ /■ 6 American history. V. 6. John Tru^f ^Ifred^'^'The museum/.^jV. 7. /. /^he engineer ; Rambles among the Alps ; Three gold dollars^-yV. 8. /./7 The Gibraltar gallery ; Thealcov^'f Dialogues/z/V. 9. Thegreataim; /•/xrAunt Margaret ; Vernon;:',/V". 10. Carl and Jocko ; Lapstone; Orkney. /.iSi^' A S^ V. 11. Judge Justin ; Minigo ; Jasper. V. 12. Congo ; Viola ; Little/ 2 y Paul. l-^O z,0 f.y /// ' ' c. Jonas books. 3^3. /^? J. 80.36 Caleb in the country. J. 80.37 Caleb in town. J. 80.38 Jonas a judge. J. 80.39 Jonas on a farm in summer. Jjj. C^ J. 80.40 Jonas on a farm in winter, / J. 80.41 Jonas's stories. 54 c. Juno stories. , -^2' I f J. 80.43 Juno and Georgie. 43-/^ J. 80.45 Mary Osborne. H3-^0 J. 80.44 Juno on a journey. ^i^Zl J. 80.43 Hubert. c.fLucy books, R. 3'^') J J. 80.50 Lucy's conversations. jr^.^V J. 80.51 Lucy's stories, jrt'/f J. 80.47 Lucy at study. '}Stl(/3. 80.46 Lucy at play. 5i~^'/^ J. 80.48 Lucy among the mountains. 3r^ //'J. 80.49 Lucy on the seashore. c. Rollo books. 3Z.^-I J. 80.52 Rollo learning to talk; Rollo learning to read. ^-^^^ -2^ ?;?^. "^J. 80.53 Rollo at work; Rollo at play. 3J^^. A/ 3^^-^ J. 80.54 Rollo at school ; Rollo's vacation.,?^^ ^ jZ^f-"/ J. 80.55 Rollo's experiments; Rollo's museum. 5^^. /^ 3/!jf'^^- 80.56 Rollo's travels; Rollo's correspondence. 5^/^,/^ J. 80.57 Rollo's philosophy; fire, water. j;i^,/^; ^^, // J. 80.58 Rollo's philosophy ; &\v, s^j.jjia, /Z; Jsa,/-u Rollo in Europe. S/^. f J. 80.61 Rollo on the Atlantic. S/^.^ J. 80.64 Rollo in London. 3)^- J. 80.68 Rollo in Scotland. 3fcf. 2J J. 80.66 Rollo in Paris. ]ia. J_ J. 80.69 Rollo in Switzerland. })Cj. S J. 80.70 Rollo on the Rhine. 5/f, f J. 80.65 Rollo in Naples. J/^, 10 J. 80.67 Rollo in Rome. j/f, / J. 80.62 Rollo in Geneva. jl^/r J. 80.63 Rollo in Holland. Adams, C. J. 80.74 Boys at home. Adams, H. C. / /C'^'^'^Z J. 80.77 *Sclioolboy honour. (English boarding school.) Adams, W. H. D. ** i{.»ll-fl J. 80.78 Page, squire, and knight. (Crusades.) AiMWELL, Walter. '*■ Aimwell stories, 6 v. R. 3^- iJ J. 80.89 Oscar, or the boy who had his own way. J. 80.84 Clinton, or boy-life in the country. _J. 80.85 Ella, or turning over a new leaf. J-Vi-. Jib J. 80.90 Whistler, or the manly boy. J. 80.88 Marcus, or the boy-tamer. J. 80.87 Jessie, or trying to be somebody. J. 80.86 Jerry, or the sailor boy ashore. Alcott, Lousa M. Aunt Jo's scrap-bag. (5 v., short stories.) 3^ll- f J. 80.91 Cupid and Chow-chow. /^^•'^ J. 80.92 Jimmy's cruise in the Pinafore. ^^1- 'P S. 80.93 My boys. ^^^•' J. 80.94 My girls. ^^■Zff J. 80.95 Old-fashioned Thanksgiving. / 55 ?l^ J. 80.96 Eight cousins, //ijyvy^. 80.97 Garland for girls. (Short stories.) ///^-^j^J. 80.98 Hospital sketches. (With short stories.) ^3.2;2^J. 80.99 JackandJill. /6/'2-^y J. 80.100 Jo's boys. (Sequel to Little men.) R. 3 /J'/:^/ J. 80.101 X Little men. (Sequel to Little women.) R. ^7^7'. i'r^J. 80.102 Little women. R. - Lulu's library, 3 v. ,1 J/l J. 80.103 Christmas dream and other stories. ,^i J. 80.104 Frost king and other fairy tales. /6'/j.^/ J. 80.105 Recollections of my childhood, etc. 3'Z.y/l J. 80.106 Morning glories and other stories. liLr^iS. 80.107 Old-fashioned girl. J^^. fJ J. 80.108 Rose in bloom. (Sequel to Eight cousins.) j'r/.^r'j. 80.109 Silver pitchers. (Short stories.) fltfy^O J. 80.110 Spinning-wheel stories. ^- ^-^ J. 80. 1 11 Under the lilacs. Alden, W. L. ^'i-a-J J. 80.113 Cruise of the Canoe Club. R. ^/-l-iy J. 80.115 Cruise of the Ghost. ^^ y J. 80.117 Moral pirates. J. 80.119 New Robinson Crusoe. Aldrich, Thomas Bailey. J//. /"'^ J. 80.122 Story of a bad boy. R. Amicis, Edmondo de. tb3(,. / J 80.127 Cuore. (Italian schoolboy life.) Allan, E. P. f J. 80.125 One little maid. (Girls' boarding school.) Andrews, Jane. ^Z/1 C.J. 80.129 Each and all. (Sequel to Seven little sisters.) R. f J. 80.130 Only a year. ^Z'fS C.J. 80.131 Seven little sisters who live on the round ball that floats in the air. R. l(ffl''i,l2J Z. 80.133 Ten boys who lived upon the road from long ago to now. R. Andrews, Jessie A. J. 80.135 Eteocles. (Early Christians at Antioch.) Armstrong, A. E. J. 80.136 Three bright girls. Austin, Stella. J. 80.140 Kenneth's children. Baker, Sir Samuel. syL.I-J *J. 80.151 Cast up by the sea. J. 80.154 True tales for my grandsons. Ballantyxe, R. M. J. 80.156 Away in the wilderness. (British America.) J. 80.158 Deep down. (Cornwall.) J. 80.159 Chasing the sun. (Norway.) J. 80.160 Dog Crusoe. J. 80.162 Erling the bold. (Iceland, about 800.) J. 80.163 Fast in the ice. J. 80.164 Fighting the flames. (London firemen.) J. 80.165 Fighting the whales. J. 80.166 Floating light of the Goodwin Sands. J. 80.167 Freaks on the fells, etc. J. 80.169 Gascoyne, the sandal-wood trader. (Pacific Is- lands.) 3ZZ.I0 J. 80.170 Gorilla hunters. (Africa.) ■^j-0'"l J- 80.171 Norsemen in the west. (Discovery of America, / about 1000.) J. 80.172 Post haste. (London post-office.) J^^./^ J. 80.173 Red Eric. (Sea tale.) J. 80.174 Red Rooney. (Esquimaux.) J. 80.176 Shifting winds. (Sea tale.) J. 80.178 Wild man of the west. (Rocky Mountains.) J. 80.178Y. Young fur traders. (British America.) Banks, M. R. J. 80.179 Bright days in the old plantation time. (South before the war.) Bakbauld, Anna Letitta. J. 80.180 Tales, poems, and essays. Baring-Gould, Sabine. J. 80.180|- Grettir the outlaw. (Early Iceland.) R. Barker, Lady. J. 80.181 Sybil's book. Barkley, H. C. ^3.-^^ J. 80.183 My boyhood. Barrows, W. *J. 80.188 Twelve nights in the hunter's camp. Bates, Katharine Lee. J. 80.191 Rose and Thorn. I ^ jj Baxter, Sylvester. /fcr^.^ J. 80.192 Cruise of a land-yacht. (Mexico.) Baylor, Frances Courtenay. lUl'i J, 80.193 Juan and Juanita. (Texas and Mexico.) R. Bethell, Augusta. fj. 80.199 Millicent and her cousins. There is a good Christmas play in this book. Biart, Lucien. ^3-7^ J. 80.199C Adventures of a young naturalist. J. 80.200 Involuntary voyage. Black, William. J. 80.202 Adventures in Thule. ''z >.//,? J. 80.203 Four Mac Nicols. (Scotch coast.) R. . Blake, E. Vinton. ^IcfZ. -i 3 J 80.207 Dalzells of Daisydown. Bowman, Anne. J. 80.208 Esperanza. (Desert island.) Bowman, F. J. J. 80.210 Island home. ' BOYESEN, HjALMAR HjORTH. llffSL-lJ J. 80.212 Modern Vikings. (Stories of Norway.) ' J. 80.2r2N Norseland tales. Bradley, Mary E. J. 80.213 Douglass Farm. J. 80.215 Wrong confessed is half redressed. Brooks, Elbridge S. je^^./A^j. 80.223 Chivalric days. 'Z^^S, / J. 80.225 Heroic happenings. Brooks, Noah. ?^^- V J. 80.221 Boy emigrants. R. J. 80.222 Boy settlers. (Sequel.) R. ^.5. ^ *J. 80.224 Fairport nine. *J. 80.22G Our baseball club. ■fBRowN, Helen Dawes. /io/f./^ J. 80.228 Two college girls. (Vassar College.) R. Brush, Mary E. J. 80.229. Paul and Persis. (American revolution ; Mo- hawk Valley.) Burnett, Frances Hodgson. ^^■-^L J. 80.233 Little Lord Fauntleroy. R. ll,3/'Zl> |x 80.235 Little Saint Elizabeth. /(^3/- 6 |j. 80.237. Sara Crewe. Butler, W. F. J. 80.238 Red Cloud, the solitary Sioux. BUTTERWORTH, HeZEKIAH. J. 80.239 Log schoolhouse on the Columbia. (Oregon and Washington.) f(,ffS./(9 J. 80.238B-C Boys of Greenway Court. (Boyhood of Washington.) -e//-^- -V J. 80.238D In the boyhood of Lincoln. J. 80.239P Patriot schoolmaster. (Nathan Hale.) onnff ^^' ^^-2^0 Zigzag journeys in Acadia. ' '^J. 80.241 Zigzag journeys in Australia. ZffZJ, J J. 80.242 Zigzag journeys in the British Isles. 30,^ J. 80.243 Zigzag journeys in classic lands. 58 ■?6'/ J. 80.244 Zigzag journeys in Europe. y^lS-fJ J. 80.245 Zigzag journeys in the Levant. 302.. 7 J. 80.246 Zigzag journeys in northern lands. ^fO'^'f Z. 80.247 Zigzag journeys in the Occident. '){a>l3 J. 80.248 Zigzag journeys in the Orient. ^i- ^(f J. 80.249 Zigzag journeys in the Sunny South. J. 80.249H Zigzag journeys in the White City. J. 80.249M Zigzag journeys on the Mediterranean. Bynnee, Edwin Lasseter. J. 80.250 Chase of the Meteor and other stories. Kp^^'ZO J. 80.250Z Zachary Phips. (Burr's treason, war of 1812, Seminole war, etc.) Cahun, Louis. ■^/^-S ■ J. 80.251 Adventures of Captain Mago. (Ancient Phoe- nicians.) '}SM'lf J. 80.253 Blue banner. (Crusades.) Cameron, Verney Lovett. J. 80.256 Adventures of Herbert Massey. (Africa.) J. 80.257 Harry Kaymond. Caroll, M. 3ZI. 7 |j. 80.262 How Marjory helped. ' Catherwood, Mary Hartwell. /^f/^/ J. 80.265 Chase of St. Castin. (Short stories of French Canada.) J. 80.266 Dogberry bunch. J. 80.268 Old caravan days. ibo^-tO tJ- 80.270 Rocky Fork. R. Champney, Elizabeth W. y^S. b J. 80.271 All around a palette. (Short stories.) 1XZ<^ J- 80.272 Great grandmother's girls in New France. (Tn- / dian massacre in Deerfield.) J. 80.273 Howling Wolf and his trick pony. 'IJZ.lS J. 80.275 Three Vassar girls abroad. Zzt'f'^- J- 80.276 Three Vassar girls in England. ///5^.//^ J. 80.277 Three Vassar girls in Italy. 2^2.^. 5' S. 80.278 Three Vassar girls in South America. J. 80.279 Three Vassar girls in the Tyrol. 222.'^ J. 88.280 Three Vassar girls on the Rhine. fj. 80.281 Witch Winnie. (Boarding-school.) J. 80.2811 Witch Winnie in Paris. J. 80.282B Witch Winnie's studio. J. 80.28 IF Witch Winnie at Shinnecock. f J. 80.282 Witch W^innie's mystery. Witch Winnie at Versailles has not been published. 69 CpANEY, George L. R. j2/.r *J. 80.283 F. Grant & Co. yS^- ^ *J. 80.284 Tom. (Sequel.) Charles, Elizabeth. J. 80.287^ Cripple of Antiocli. J. 80.28r4 Two vocations. f(^c6>-/jfj. 80.287 Winifred Bertram. Charleswokth, Maria Lodisa. J. 80.288 Ministering children. J. 80.288| Sequel to Ministering children. Cheney, Ednah D. 3Zh CJ jj, 80.289 Child of the tide. X^'V' (i JJ- S0-'^90 Sally Williams, the mountain girl. Child, Lydia Maria. df2.l J. 80.315 Uncle, Peep, and I. J. 80,316 Yarns of an old mariner. Cobb, J. F. J. 80.325 Martin the skipper. J. 80.327 Watchers on the Longships. CoBDEN, Paul. J. 80.330 Going on a mission. J. 80.331 Good luck. J. 80.332 Take a peep. J. 80.333 Turning wheel. J. 80.334 Who will win? Coffin, Charles Carleton. ^.^ . J. 80.335 Winning his way. (United States; civil war.) 60 COLLINGWOOD, HaERY. J. 80.336 Congo rovers. J. 80.338 Log of the Flying-Fish. J. 80.339 Missing merchantman. J. 80.341 Pirate Island. J. 80.343 Rover's secret. CoMiNS, Lizzie B. 3bb.l5^ |J. 80.344 Marion Berkley. (Boarding-school.) Cooke, JogN Esten. /LZH-,^ J. 80.345 My lady Pokahontas. (Virginia, 1609.) R. CooKE, Rose Terry. IUIp.ZZ^ J. 80.346 No. CooLiDGE, Susan. R. /^^^•/^ J. 80.346M Barberry bush. (Short stories.) f J. 80.348 Cross Patch. (Short stories.) ^yj./^' fJ, 80.350 Eyebright. 3(, fJ- 80.352 Guernsey lily. /^/^^^;j^/'f J. 80.354 Just sixteen. (Short stories.) jKaty books. 3^hf3~ J. 80.364 What Katydid. S'if.^. i J. 80.365 What Katy did at school. (Boarding-school.) ? V- Ip J- 80.362 Curly Locks (short story in Nine little goslings). II IU,IS — J- 80.366 What Katy did next. II Ti'.lf ' J- 80 347 Clover. lOo^^-l^ J. 80.353 In the High Valley. fO'ilfi- K fJ. 80.356 Little country girl. ?^A'-? f J. 80.358 Mischief's Thanksgiving. (Short stories.) IS^I'H f J. 80.360 New Year's bargain. (Short stories.) 3J/. 6 |j. 80.362 Nine little goslings. (Short stories.) J. 80.362N Not quite eighteen. (Short stories.) ^0,2^ZJ f J. 80.363 Round dozen. (Short stories.) CooLiDGE, Susan, and others. H^Jf J. 80.367 Christmas day and all the year. (Short stories.) Cooper, James Fenimore. Leather-stocking tales. R. 2S-^ J. 80.368 Deerslayer. ZS'- I J. 80.370 Pathfinder. 2S'- i J- 80.369 Last of the Mohicans. 2. J". 3 J. 80.371 Pioneers. 25-. '^ J. 80.372 Prairie. Corner, Julia. J. 80.374 Shepherd lord and other stories. (English his- tory.) Coryell, John R. J. 80.374D Diccon the bold. (Cabot's voyages.) If^O^'S' J. 80.375 Diego Pinzon. (Voyage of Columbus.) Cowper, F. J. 80.377C Captain of the Wight. (Wars of the Roses.) 61 Cox, Maria McIntosh. Ib^if'fJ J 80.378 Raymond Kershaw. R. Craddock, Charles Egbert. lUJ'iT' J. 80.380 Down the ravine. IC>3Z.IJ J. 80.381 Story of Keedon Bluffs. Cbaik, Georgiana M. .l(*^'f^ f J. 80.382 Cousin from India. 3-V. / f J. 80.384 Miss Moore. Crake, A. D. J. 80.386 Brian Fitz-Count. (England, 12th century.) Crompton, Frances E. J. 80.386M Master Bartlemy. Crowninshield, M. B. ^•^'^'^ J. 80.387 All among the lighthouses. (Maine coast.) Cupples, George. *J. 80.390 Cupples Howe, mariner, 3/^./3 *J. 80.391 Deserted ship. Dall, Caroline H. Z'j^-J J. 80.401 Patty Gray's journey. (Boston to Baltimore.) J. 80.402 From Baltimore to Washington. J. 80.403 On the way. D ALTON, W. '^^^' I J. 80.408 Tiger prince. (Abyssinia.) Dana, Mary S. B. *J. 80.410 Forecastle Tom. *J. 80.411 Young sailor. Darling, Mary Greenleaf. J. 80.412 Battles at home. J. 80.413 In the world. (Sequel.) Davies, G. Christopher. *J. 80.415 Peter Penniless. *J. 80.416 Swan and her crew. *J. 80.417 Wildcat Tower. Davis, Rebecca Harding. J. 80.417A Kent Hampden. Davis, Richard Harding. liffOH^lZ. * J. 80.418 Stories for boys. Day, Thomas. J/.//' J 80.419 Sandford and Merton. ^^u /c-^^Y of my life at Eton. (English school-life.) ^^^''^ J. 80.420. Deane, Mary B. f J. 80.422 Three little maids. DeFoe, Daniel. -f. 15' J. 80.425 Robinson Crusoe. 62 De Mille, James. Young Dodge Club series. J. 80.436 Among the brigands. (Italy.) J. 80.437 Seven hills. (Rome.) 337. h J. 80.438 Winged lion. (Venice.) De Witt, M. Guizot. S3. II J. 80.440 French country family. f J. 80.441 Marie Derville. SOi'-H J. 80.442 Motherless. Diaz, Abby Morton. hM- I c. J. 80.444 Jimmyjohns. Has some simple plays and dialogues, ^-y^' t J- 80.446 Lucy Maria. (Sequel to William Henry and his friends.) 3Zf-f^'^ J. 80.447 WilHam Henry letters. (Boys' boarding-school.) R. J-^/"'/J J- 80 448 William Henry and his friends. (Sequel.) R. Dixie, Lady Florence. J. 80.451 Young castaways. (Patagonia.) Dodge, Mary Mapes. C.J. 80.459 Baby world. JJ~f.// J. 80.455 Donald and Dorothy. 5*^3.^ J. 80.457 Hans Brinker. (Holland.) R. DouDNEY, Sarah. fj. 80.460 Under false colours. Douglas, Amanda M. jKathie stories. J. 80.466 Kathie's three wishes. J. 80.463 Kathie's aunt Ruth. J. 80.465 Kathie's summer at Cedarwood. J. 80.464 Kathie's soldiers. J. 80.461 In th« ranks. J. 80.463 Kathie's harvest days. fUC.lZy J. 80.467 Larry. 313.3 fj. 80.468 Old woman who lived in a shoe. J4f ^ fJ. 80.470 Seven daughters. Douglas, Marian. 3^f.2^ J. 80.474 Peter and Polly. (American revolution.) R. Drayson, a. W. ^t^,-f3 *J. 80.475 Gentleman cadet. (English military school.) J. 80.476 White chief of the Caffres. Drummond, Henry. J. 80.476A Baxter's second innings. Drysdale, W. J. 80.476J Mystery of Abel Forefinger. /^^^. 3/DuChaillu, Paul B. J. 80.476M Ivar the Viking. (Norway.) 63 Eastman, Julia A. J. 80.477 Romneys of Ridgemont. 3Ci-^0 J 80.478 Short-comings and long-goings. J. 80.479 Striking for the right. Eastwood, Frances. J. 80.480 Marcella. (Early Christians.) Eaton, Frances. j-J. 80.482 Queer little princess. Edgar, J. G. J. 80.487 Cressy and Poictiers. (England, Edward III.) Edgeworth, Maria. c J. 80.493 Frank. J. 80.494 Sequel to Frank. R. c. J. 80.495 Harry and Lucy. J. 80.496 Harry and Lucy concluded. c. J. 80.497 Harry and Lucy; Frank. PT.H J. 80.499 Moral tales. R. 3Si.3l J. 80.500 Parent's assistant. I^>3 J. 80.501 Popular tales. fj. 80.502 Rosamond. R. Eggleston, Edward. ^^' ^^ J. 80.506 Hoosier schoolboy. R. J. 80.509 Schoolmaster's stories. Eggleston, George Gary. R. Big Brother Series. (War of 1812.) ^-37^, J. 80.514 Captain Sam. l.<;f'(^ J. 80.513 Bigbrollier. Jr-V'V J. 80.517 Signal boys. J. 80.519 Wreck of the Red Bird. (South Carolina coast.) Eiloart, Mrs. J. 80.520 Boy with an idea. Ellis, Edward S. Boy Pioneer Series. J. 80.541 Ned in the block-house. J. 80.544 Ned in the woods. J. 80.546 Ned on the river. Deerfoot Series. J. 80.533 Hunters of the Ozark. J. 80.525 Camp in the mountains. J. 80.536 Last war trail. Log Cabin Series. J. 80.538 Lost trail. J. 80.5~i Camp-fire and wigwam. J. 80.529 Footpriats in the forest. J. 80.537 Lost in Samoa. J. 80.554 Tad. 64 Wyoming Series. J. 80.558 Wyoming. J. 80.552 Storm Mountain. J. 80.522 Cabin in the clearing. Elwell, E. H. J/y. /^ J. 80..566 Boys of Thirty-five. R. _ Everett, William. 30G.li) ' *J. 80.581 Changing base. '^0(!,j(i> *j. 80.583 Double play. K,iO.^'~f *J. 80.587 Thine, not mine. EwiNG, Juliana Horatia. R. J. 80.588 Brownies and other stories. /li'iO-C J. 80.589 Daddy Darwin's dovecot. UCr.Z^^ f J. 80.590 Flatiron for a farthing. JX"-^' <3 J. 80.591 Great emergency and other tales. ?Zf^ J. 80.745 Bear-worshipers of Yezo. ZJil.ff J. 80.746 Wonderful city of Tokio. XZf, P' ^- 80.747 Young vVmericans in Japan. Griffis, William Elliot. /(i>/6>.3f J 80.749 Honda the Samurai. (Japan.) Guernsey, Lucy Ellen. fJ. 80.750 Irish Amy. Hale, Edward Everett. R. /le^OJ^ J. 80.760 East and west. (Ohio, about 1800.) Ht%t>l5~ J. 80.761 Pour and five. 20*i'i~j J. 80.763 In His name. (Waldenses, France, 12th century.) IbzCfO J. 80.764 Man without a country. Hale, Edward Everett, and Susan. 2ZI-1 J. 80.765 Family flight. (France, Germany, etc.) fffif^ff J. 80.766 Family flight around home. (United States.) Hi'i'lO J. 80.767 Family flight over Egypt and Syria. 67 HiH-iJ J. 80.768 Family flight through Mexico. >ll^i/(f J. 80.769 E'amily flight through Spain. Hale, Lucretia P. R. Ibl^Jb J. 80.773 Last of the Peterkins. Hi'Zt} J. 80.775 Peterkin papers. Hall, C. W. l(pO^,Z3 J. 80.779 Adrift in the ice-fields. 2ls>.l^^' J. 80.781 Drifting round the world. Hall, L. A. J. 80.782 Which was the bravest ? Hall, Mrs. S. C. J. 80.783 Union Jack. Hamerton, Philip Gilbert. 3ZZ.f *J. 80.785 Harry Blount. Hamilton, Gail. R. 7^I^I2 C.J. 80.789 Little-folk life. J. 80.791 Red-letter days. Harley, a. J. Z^S.'.-J J. 80.792 Young Crusoe. Ha^rris, Joel Chandler. \[i(f"lO J. 80.846 Captain Bayley's heir. (California, 1849.) fb3<^<-^f J. 80.851 Cat of Bubastes. (Ancient Egypt.) J. 80.855 Chapter of adventure. (Siege of Alexandria.) /Qfff- r Z. 80.856 Condemned as a nihilist. (Russia.) J. 80.857 Cornet of horse. (Marlborough's wars.) Out of 'print, Nov. 18'J4; ordered. /Uc/^(f^ J. 80.860 Dash for Khartoum. (Gordon in Egypt.) J. 80.863 Dragon and the raven. (England; King Alfred.) J. 80.869 Facing death. (Mining.) J. 80.873 Final reckoning. (Australia.) J. 80.877 For name and fame. (Afghan war.) J. 80.881 For the Temple. (Fall of Jerusalem.) lUo^^. / J. 80.890 Held fast for England. (Siege of Gibraltar.) /6'^'7-/6' J. 80.897 In freedom's cause. (Bruce and Wallace, 1300.) /6^f' //J. 80.901 In the reign of terror. (French revolution.) J. 80.900 In the heart of the Rockies. J. 80.905 In times of peril. (Indian rebellion, 1857.) J. 80.871 Jack Archer, or Fall of Sebastopol. (Crimea.) /^^^..g/ J. 80.914 Jacobite exile. (Charles XII of Sweden.) /L,3f-fl J. 80.919 Lion of St. Mark. (Venice, 15th century.) J. 80.921 Lion of the north. (Thirty years' war.) J. 80.925 Maori and settler. (New Zealand.) llfilZ.Zt J. 80 934 One of the 28th. (Battle of Waterloo.) J. 80.938 Orange and green. (Ireland, 16§8.) Xl-h>H J. 80.942 Out on the Pampas. (South America.) J. 80.948 Redskin and cowboy. (Western plains.) J. 80.953 St. George for England. (Edward III.) J. 80.959 Sturdy and strong. J.- 80.963 Tales of daring and danger. J. 80.968 Through the fray. (Luddite riots, about 1830.) J. 80.972 True to the old flag. (English side of American revolution.) /^j7. ^^j, 80.976 Under Drake's flag. (Voyages, 16th century.) J. 80.980 When London burned. (1666.) y^JA/^ J. 80.982 With Clive in India. (18th century.) J. 80.986 With Lee in Virginia. (Civil war, 1861-65.) J. 80.995 W^ulf the Saxon. (Norman conquest.) /<^/J'/<)"^. 80.992 With Wolfe in Canada. (1759.) J. 80.996 Yarns on the beach. hl'f^ J. 80.1001 Young buglers. (Peninsular war; Spain, 1807.) /^/^^ c. J. 80.1067 Mammy Tittleback and her family. "^^- f J. 80.1068 Nelly's silver mine. (Colorado.) " Jak." Birchwood Series. R. 1013.1/ J. 80.1071 Fitch Club. ms.q -J. 80.1069 Birchwood. /C/3-l2-y J. 80.1077 Riverside Museum. l03S'-i J. 80.1075 Professor Johnny. /(.^S-.l^ J. 80.1073 Giant dwarf. llflhZ'4- J. 80.1079 Rolf and his friends. lOd^.ZJ J. 80.1081 Scotch caps. Jamison, C. V. R. /(p 03.30 J. 80.1086 Lady Jane. (New Orleans.) J. 80.1087 Toinette's Philip. Janvier, Thomas A. I i'i^.XO *J. 80.1090 Aztec treasure-house. (Mexico.) R. Jewett, Sarah Orne. R. fUl3.Z^ fj. 80.1095 Bettv Leicester. ^J-^ C.J. 80.1100 Play-days. /l,/f fJ- 80.1104 White heron, and other stories. Johnson, E. C.J. 80.1111 Judge's pets. Johnson, Rossiter. R. J. 80.1113 End of a rainbow, .fi /. ^ — J. 80. 1 1 1 5 Phseton Rogers. Jones, C. A. fJ. 80.1120 Only a girl. (Brittany.) Keary, Annie. 3'^y. I* fJ. 80.1125 York and Lancaster rose. R. Keene, S. F. J. 80.1128 Lyle MacDonald. (Maine woods.) Kellogg, Elijah. Elm Island Series. S/J. 2^' J. 80.1158 Lion Ben of Elm Island. f/7. .7 J. 80.1142 Charlie Bell. ?lil^ti J. 80.1132 Ark of Elm Island. i»yj". 4 ^- 80.1136 Boy farmers of Elm Island. 3(,{,V, J. 80.1188 Young shipbuilders of Elm Island. 31*jS J. 80.1154 Hardscrabble of Elm Island. 71 Forest Glen Series. y^J^-^2_/J. 80.1168 Sowed by the wind. )l,3t,' :} J. 80.1184 Wolf Run. )lfjtf H- J. 80.1138 Brought to the front. )l 3(f S J. 80.1162 Mission of Black Eifle. )ll(,. ^ J. 80.1150 ForestGlen. IU3^'7'^- *^^-^l^^ Burying the hatchet. Good Old Times Series. //!^J^. ^4^ J. 80.1153 Good old times. ) (,f^i t Oi. 80.1174 Strong arm and a mother's blessing. iLjU- /^ J- 80.1178 Unseen hand. ) U3 If- '^^^- 80.1160 Live Oak boys. Pleasant Cove Series. S^f'J J. 80.1134 Arthur Brown. J7f. J. 80.1186 Young deliverers. 2zf' -2—^ J. 80.1146 Cruise of the Casco. 70/. a J. 80.1144 Child of the Island Glen. 77/7. V J. 80.1156 John Godsoe's legacy. dz\ 5~~ J- 80.1148 Fisher boys of Pleasant Cove. Whispering Pine Series. J 80.1172 Stout heart. J. 80.1170 Spark of genius. J. 80.1166 Sophomores of Radcliffe. J. 80.1180 Whispering Pine. J. 80.1176 Turning of the tide. J. 80.1182 Winning his spurs. Ker, David. f^^-f *J. 80.1193 Into unknown seas. (Sea story.) '7'?'i'-J'' *J. 80.1195 Lost city. (Central Asia.) King, Charles. /(p^./6 J. 80.1200 Cadet da3-s. (Life at West Point.) R. Kingston, William H. G. ^ *J. 80.1205 Adventures in Africa. 5*.^ *J. 80.1206 Antony Way mouth. (English voyagers in 16th century.) *J. 80.1208 Arctic adventures. fr.^ *J. 80.1210 Cruise of the Frolic. *J. 80.1212 Dick Cheveley. ^^./f *J. 80.1214 From powder-monkey to admiral. ^^'7 *J. 80.1216 Hendricks the hunter. (Zululand.) .?^'/f *J. 80.1218 Hurricane Hurry. (Time of American revolu- tion.) >^/. /^ *J. 80.1220 In New Granada. S'i-fy *J. 80.1222 In the eastern seas. (Celebes Islands.) *J. 80.1224 In the Rocky Mountains. *J. 80.1226 James Braithwaite. *J. 80.1228 Little Ben Hadden. (Coral islands.) *J. 80.1230 Mark Seaworth. *J. 80.1232 Missing ship. 72 *J. *J. *J. 3^1 2. 1 *J. 80.1234 80.1236 80.1238 80.1240 Knox, Zi^<^ J. •2.Z0. 13 J, Thomas W 80.1261 80.1263 80.1265 80.1264 80.1267 80.1269 80.1270 80.1272 ilOO(>.za, 80.1278 J'^''^ J. 80.1275 ^^'M-J. 80.1277 ^lf-3 J. 80.1279 ZZ0IO J. 80.1281 At/'*/;2- J. 80.1283 /Iffi^f.lff J. 80.1285 /l^03iq_Z. 80.1287 %ZUt~i. 80.1289 ZZ^"> *J. 80.1292 Si^Cj.f *J. 80.1294 Lakeman, Mary. fj. 80.1300 fj. 80.1302 Lamb, Ruth. J. 80.1309 Peter the whaler. Peter Trawl. Round the world. Salt water. Boy travellers in Africa. Boy travellers in Australasia. Boy travellers in Ceylon and India. Boy travellers in central Europe. Boy travellers on the Congo. Boy travellers in Egypt. Boy travellers in Great Britain and Ireland. Boy travellers in Japan. Boy travellers in the Levant, Boy travellers in Mexico. Boy travellers in northern Europe. Boy travellers in the Russian empire. Boy travellers in Siam and Java. Boy travellers in South America. Boy travellers in southern Europe. John Boyd's adventures. (Sea story.) Voyage of the Vivian. (Arctic regions.) Young Nimrods around the world. Young Nimrods in North America. Pretty Lucy Merwyn. Ruth Eliot's dream. La Motte Fouque, F. H. C. ^f-0.i2j J. 80.1311 Thiodolf the Icelander. R. Captain Christie's granddaughter. (Constantinople, 10th Social evenings. African Crusoes. Australian wanderers. century.) Lee, Mary E. fY/6 J. 80.1313 Lee, Mrs. J. 80.1315 J. 80.1316 Leighton, Robert. R. J. 80.13160 Olaf the glorious. (Norway.) /i>o^.ZO J. 80.1317 Pilots of Pomona. (Orkney Islands.) IC>I7S''I0 J. 80.1319 Thirsty sword. (Scotland, 13th century.) J. 80.131 9 W Wreck of the Golden Fleece. Lewis, Angelo J. J. 80.1320 Conjurer Dick. 73 LiLLiE, Lucy C. I^'^-'I f J. 80.1324 Colonel's money, fj. 80.1324^ Esther's fortune. |j. 80.1325 For Honor's sake. (Sequel to Squire's daugh- ter.) l^^-lJ fj. 80.1327 Household of Glen Holly, /^//■.r" fJ- 80.1329 Jo's opportunity. R. i<^'i.Z- ' fJ. 80.1333 Mildred's bargain and other stories. J. 80.1334 My mother's enemy. lOjfij.j-^ fJ. 80.1335 Nan. fJ. 80.1337 Phil and the baby. icjtf.-i f J. 80.1339 Rolf House. (Sequel to Nan.) ' jj. 80.1340 Squire's daughter. Little Rosy's travels. ^ C.J. 80.1343. *jOUGhead, Flora Haines. /6^4,^^^ J. 80.1344 Abandoned claim. (California.) R. Low, C R. J. 80.1346 Tales of naval adventure. Lowell, Robert T. S. 3^^// *J- 80.1350 Antony Brade. (American boys' boarding- school.) LuMMis, Charles F. J. 80.1357 New Mexico David and other stories. Lyall, Edna. /^/^. xr" c. J. 80.1363 Their happiest Christmas. MacDoxald, George. ,^^^-^ J. 80.1367 Gutta-percha Willie. 3lH'f^ J. 80.1370 Ranald Bannerman's boyhood. / l^fi^' ) J. 80.1372 Rough shaking. Machar, Agnes Maule. /6^«r,/^ J 80.1372M Marjorie's Canadian winter. McIntosh, Maria W. J. 80.1373 Conquest and self -conquest. J. 80.1373P Praise and principle. J. 80.1374 Cousins. Mackarness, M. a. 133.3 ir' J. 80.1376 Trap to catch a sunbeam. J. 80.1377 When we were young, and other stories. Macy, W. H. 3o'hi3 J. 80.1387 There she blows. (Whaling.) Malot, Hector. lUtO. y,, J. 80.1389 Roland Kalbris. 74 Manning, Mary Anne. R. 'i.^0 J. 80.1390 Cherry and Violet. (Plague of London, 1666.) J. 80.1392 Colloquies of Edward Osborne. (London, 16th century.) S'JS^ J. 80.1393 Paire gospeller. (Anne Askew; England, 16th century.) 3^2 3 J. 80.1394 Household of Sir Thomas More. (England, 16th century.) fjy-f J. 80. 1 395 Maiden and married life of Mary Powell. (Wife of John Milton, 17th century.) Markham, Richard. R. J. 80.1398 Aboard the Mavis. J. 80.1399 Around the Yule log. J. 80.1400 On the edge of winter. These three volumes, full of stories from American history, are bound together under the title Colonial days, J. 80.1401. Marryat, Frederick. Jl^Sf.fO J. 80.1403 Children of the New Forest. (England, Charles I.) lUii^'C J. 80.1404 Little savage. /(/)/ /•l'^ i. 80.1405 Masterman Ready. (Desert island.) J. 80.1406 Mission. (Africa.) /yi(e.^3 J. 80.1407 Settlers in Canada. Marshall, Emma. fj. 80.1409 Born in the purple. Jip0q.ir\i. 80.1409C Close of St. Christopher's. 3y.//^tJ. 80.1409E Edith Prescot. fJ. 80.1409J Joanna's inheritance. fJ. 80.1409N New relations. fJ. 80.1410 Those three. Martineau, Harriet. J. 80.1411 Billow and the rock. (Scotland, 1740.) J. 80.1412 Crofton boys. (English boarding-school.) R. /6^^ 7/2^ J. 80.1413 Feats on the fiord. (Norway.) R. Illustrations of political economy. J. 80.1414 Berkeley the banker, 3 v. J. 80.1416 Charmed sea. 333. ;l^ J. 80 1417 Demerara. J. 80.1418 Ella of Garveloch. J. 80.1419 For each and for all. J. 80.1420 French wines and politics. J. 80.1421 Homes abroad. 333. (e J. 80.1422 Ireland. J. 80.1423 Life in the wilds. J. 80.1424 Messrs. Vanderput and Snoek. J. 80.1425 Weal and woe in Garveloch. /lif'lJl J. 80.1426 Peasant and the prince. (French revolution.) Matthews, Brander. J. 80.1437 ' Tom Paulding. R. 75 Mathews, Joanna A. J. 80.1429 Bessie Harrington's venture. J. 80.1430 Jack Granger's cousin. Mathews, Margaret Harriet. fj. 80.1433 Dr. Gilbert's daughters. May, E. J. J. 80.1438 Bertram Noel. *J. 80.1439 Louis's school-days, or Dashwood Priory. *J. 80.1440 Mortimer's college life. English boys' boarding-school stories. May, Sophie. f Quinnebasset Series. fh^^J^Z. 80.1446 In old Quinnebasset. j'7'?- '' ' J. 80.1445 Doctor's daughter. J^^"'^ J. 80.1448 Our Helen. yi^-'IZ. 80.1444 Asbury twins. 7 i'V. y J. 80. 1449 Quinnebasset girls. i7.''3j. 80.1447 Janet, a poor heiress. Mayhew, Horace. J. 80.1453 Peasant-boy philosopher. Meade, Lucy T. fJ. 80.1456 Beresford prize. (English girls' boarding- school.) J. 80.1457M Betty. (English girls' boarding-school.) fJ. 80.1457 Children of Wilton Chase. J. 80.1458 Daddy's boy. fJ. 80.1461 Palace beautiful. fJ. 80.1462 Polly. ■fj". 80.1463 Sweet girl graduate. (Girls' college.) Miller, Emily Huntington. J. 80.1466 What Tommy did. Miller, Thomas. J. 80.1470 No Man's Land and other stories. Mitchell, E. H. J. 80.1474 Her majesty's bear. (England, 16th century.) Molesworth, Mary Louisa. fJ. 80.1479 Boys and L /6/6.;i 6 jj. 80.1482 Children of the Castle. ^f^i'l3'\j, 80.1486 Christmas child, /^//./^f J. 80.1487 Christmas posy. (Short stories.) ^3- ^\j. 80.1490 Grandmother dear ; Two little waifs. R. C.J. 80.1492 Hermy. c. J. 80.1494 Hoodie. fJ. 80,1495 Imogen. J. 80.1496 Leona. fJ. 80.1497 Lettice. (Older girls.) 76 /li>:)J./J C.J. 80.1499 Little Miss Peggy. f J. 80.1498 Little Mother Bunch. /(,ff^'^^ fj. 80.1503 Mary. f J. 80.1503M My new home, f J. 80.1504 Neighbours. (Older girls.) f J. 80.1504C Next-door house. fJ. 80.1505 Nurse Heatherdale's story, f J. 8 0. 1 5 6 Old pincushion. fJ. 80.1507 Olivia. //J'J7-/ J. 80.1646 Left behind. J. 80.1647 Little Joe. /ff.^ J. 80.1649 Mr. Stubbs's brother. (Sequel to Toby Tyler.) /^f'^V - J. 80.1651 Raising the Pearl. (Florida.) /^f.^ J. 80.1653 Silent Pete. ^.^/ J. 80.1655 Tim and Tip. if^,Zy J. 80.1657 Toby Tyler. (Circus-life.) OUIDA. I(c(/^,r~ J. 80.1659 Bimbi. (Short stories of foreign life.) Page, Thomas Nelson. R. /(pPS-^^ J. 80.1662 Among the camps. (Short stories of the civil war.) linSl-l^- J. 80.1663 Two little confederates. (South in war-time.) Paull, Mrs. H. B. J. 80.1666 Greatest is charity. Peard, Frances Mary. /^j6.-?r" J. 80.1670 Locked desk. iG^'J.J J, 80.1671 Scapegrace Dick. (England, war with the ' Dutch, 1666.) Pearson, C. H. J. 80.1677 Cabin on the prairie. Peattie, Ella W. J. 80.1686 With scrip and staff. (Children's crusade, 13th century.) PmDLETON, Louis. /IfSJzr J. 80.1690 King Tom and. the runaways. (South before the war.) Perelaer, M. T. H. *J. 80.1696 Ran away from the Dutch. (Borneo.) Perry, G. N. J. 80.1697 Uncle Peter's trust. Perry, Nora. R. Z^'^'^' f 7, f J. 80.1699 Another flock of girls. (Short stories.) t aPi> fj. 80.1704 Flock of girls. (Short stories.) /&^/^,^^v|j 80 1706 Hope Benham. (Boarding-school.) / (offS^.IS^ •]• J, 80.1710 Rosebud garden of girls. (Short stories.) /LiZfIb ' t J. 80.1711 Youngest Miss Lorton. Phelps, Elizabeth Stuart {now Mrs. Ward). lioois.iO J. 80.1720 Donald Marcy. (College life.) 79 f Gypsy series. R. jV^jV^ J. 80.1721 Gypsy Breynton. SJ16^- 'I J. b0.1722 Gypsy's Cousin Joy. 3ji,y-' ^ J- 80.1869 Bodleys on wheels. 30, -^"J- 80.1867 Bodleys afoot. 7^. J* J. 80.1873 Mr. Bodley abroad. SC,^^. 80.1868 Bodley grandchildren in Holland. j"^. -i U>3. 80.1872 English Bodley family. 3yL P- J. 80.1874 Viking Bodleys. J. 80.1877 Seven little people. J. 80.1878 Stories from my attic. Seawell, Molly Elliot. R. J. 80.1881 Decatur and Somers, Z&JS'.Z^, 80.1883 Little Jarvis. /0/^f/ J. 80.1884 Midshipman Paulding. /g^J'-.a/ J. 80.1885 Paul Jones. Stories of United States navy. J. 80.1886 Through thick and thin. Sedgwick, Catherine M. •^|'^f~^^ J. 80.1887 Hope Leslie, 2 V. (Massachusetts, 17th century.) T^. - /j> j^ 80.1889 Linwoods, 2 V. (American revolution.) J. 80.1891 Live and let live. ja-fy J. 80.1892 Love token for children. J. 80.1893 Stories for young persons. Segur, Madame de. * 330, P_, J. 80.1898 Inn of the guardian angel. Shaw, Flora L. R. ^3.r' J. 80.1904 Castle Blair. ^"^'ff J. 80.1906 Hector. (French child-life.) ^3.J^3 J. 80.1910 Phyllis Browne. f(e(Hs^J J. 80.1912 Sea-change. Sherwood, M. E. W. /C' 3/^-^.3 fJ. 80.1916 Sweet-brier. 6 82 SlJERWOOD, M. M. 336'. 3f J. 80.1919 Social tales. Mrs. Sherwood's stories for children, Little Henry and his bearer, Lucy and her dhaye, etc., are in her collected works in the author- list of novels. Shillaber, Benjamin P. ^^/^ =*J. 80.1922 Cruises with Captain Bob. ^/-^'^^ *J. 80.1923 Double-runner club. •^J. ^ *J. 80.1924 Ike Partington and his friends. Sidney, Margaret. JfoSJ'Z^i, 80.1932 Adirondack cabin. 'h'h'j^'^- 80.1936 Five little Peppers. I(p0 .^i ^j^ 80.1938 Five little Peppers grown up. /&jL^f J. 80.1939 Five little Peppers midway. Sleight, M. B. J. 80.1942 Knights of Sandy Hollow. J. 80.1942A Prairie days. Smedley, Menella Bute. J. 80.1943 Use of sunshine. Smith, Mary P. Wells. R. ifff^.G J. 80.1950 Browns. 'i3f'y J. 80.1955 Jolly good times. ih^'tS^Z. 80.1956 Jolly good times at Hackmatack. j'^j'/^J. 80.1957 Jolly good times at school. /(oOf.Z^Z. 80.1959 Jolly good times to-day. HaOfo.f i. 80.1958 More good times at Hackmatack. J(pl3.2.r'i, 80.1961 Their canoe trip. Spofford, Harriet Prescott. fj. 80.1905 Hester Stanley at St. Mark's. (Girls' boarding- school.) J. 80.1906 Lost jewel. Spyri, Johanna. /6J7-/^^J. 80.1968 Gritli's children, /^/^r^c. J. 80.1969 Heidi. R. lUip-'-J c. J. 80.1973 Red-letter days. iLiH'il J. 80.1975 Ri^co and Wisefi. /t>35~-^ J. 80.1977 Veronica. Stories of German country life. Stables, Gordon. *J. 80.1981 Cruise of the Snowbird. *J. 80.1984 From pole to pole. *J. 80.1987 Jungle, peak, and plain. *J. 80.1988 On special service. *J. 80.1989 Our home in the silver west. lU/h^j- *J. 80.1990 Stanley Grahame. J. 80.1990T To Greenland and the pole. 83 J. 80.1991 "Westward with Columbus. *J. 80.1992 "Wild adventures round the pole. Stanley, Henry M. J. 80.1994 My Kalulu. (Africa.) Stearns, Winfrid A. J. 80.1997 Wrecked on Labrador. Stein, A. c. J. 80.2001 Little Anna Stephens, C A. Camping out Series. Z^^- / J. 80.2006 Camping out. JJL 0. -2_^. 80.2010 Left on Labrador. 3Z0. -^ J. 80.2015 Off to the geysers. j>j^, 'V J. 80.2012 Lynx-hunting. J>JA 7 J. 80.2008 Fox-hunting. ?-=i«5'. /O J. 80.2017 On the Amazons. Knockabout Club Series. 3Ln 'J. 80.2021 Knockabout Club in the woods. 3U^ V J. 80.2019 Knockabout Club alongshore. J. 80.2020 Knockabout Club in the tropics. See Ober, Frederick A., for continuation. $2Z' 3 J. 80.2025 Young moose-hunters. (Maine.) Stevenson, Edward Iren^us. /(^Jr./J J. 80.2028 White cockades. (England, 1745.) Stevenson, Robert Louis. R. /tfJ^ "1 J. 80.2029 Black arrow. (England, wars of the Roses.) /G/I'ff^ J. 80.2030 Kidnapped. (Scotland, 1745.) For sequel, see David Balfour in novel list. / (^fS'. ^Cf lUZ. 7 J. 80.2031 Treasure Island. (Pirates.) Stockton, Frank R. R. /^/^^- 7 J. 80.2033 Clocks of Rondaine. -y/'// J. 80.2034 Jolly fellowship. (Florida.) /0/Z,5 J. 80.2037 Story of Viteau. (France, 14th century.) y^3.3 J. 80.2039 Tales out of school. ^A J. 80.2042 What might have been expected. Stoddard, W. 0. R. , ^^•^ J. 80.2046 Among the lakes. /^^/T <:» J. 80.2048 Battle of New York. (Draft riots, 1863.) J. 80.2053 Chris the model maker. J. 80.2050 Chuck Purdy. /^/^. .?. V J. 80.2054 Crowded out o' Crofield. h^^-fH J. 80.2059 Dab Kinzer. J. 80.2065 Gid Granger. l(o03.;iOZ. 80.2066 Guert Ten Eyck. (Revolution and Nathan Hale.) /Uf^J J. 80.2068 Little Smoke. (Indians.) '('^^•^7 5.80.2012 On the old frontier. (Indians.) >^^,/i~J. 80.2075 Quartet. (Sequel to Dab Kinzer.) 84 J. 80.2077 Red Beauty. (Indians.) J. 80.2079 Red mustang. (Indians.) •V^-/^J. 80.2085 Saltillo boys. /^^.^-^ J. 80.2090 Talking leaves. (Indians.) y<^//-^J. 80.2094 Two arrows. (Indians.) J. 80.2096 White cave. /^/J/ J. 80.2100 Winter fun. Stolz, Madame de. J. 80.2104 House on wheels. Stowe, Harriet Beecher. 33/- 3 J. 80.2109 Betty's bright idea. ^^>^ c. J. 80.2111 Dog's mission. 2J^-I0y c. J. 80.2113 Little Pussy Willow, Jbf-r J. 80.2114 Uncle Tom's cabin. Stretton, Hesba. J. 80.21 17H Alone in London. J. 80.2118 Max Kromer. (Strasburg, Franco-Prussian war.) J. 80.2120 Nelly's dark days. Straight on. f^C'Z.i^ J. 80.2122. Swett, Sophie. R. /^/^•-^yj. 80.2127 Captain Polly. )lffO^,?^(ffZ. 80.2128 Flying Hill Farm. J. 80.2130 Mate of the Mary Ann, 1^1. 1^ Swiss family Robinson, (Desert island.) / J. 80.2132. Tabor, Eliza. J. 80.2135 Nine years old. f J. 80.2136 When I was a little girl. Talbot, Charles R. J. 80.2142 Honor Bright. J. 80.2145 Midshipman at large. Taylor, Ann and Jane. J. 80.2157 Classic tales. 337 J? Taylor, Bayard. J. 80.2159 Boys of other countries. (Europe.) R. _Thanet, Octave, /QoZ.i) J. 80.2164 We all. (Arkansas.) R. Thomas, M. M. I(d13.?^ J. 80.2169 Captain Phil. (United States; civil war.) R. Thurston, Louise M. Charley Roberts Series. 3l'i> // J. 80.2178 How Charley Roberts became a man. ?/J. f^^. 80.2179 How Eva Roberts gained her education, 3('1'i:> J. 80.2180 Home in the west. 31'jJ'^Z. 80.2181 Children of Amity Court. J. 80.2209 3s^. r' J. 80.2211 /. 0> J. 80.2212 3^' /) J- 80.2216 /u/y-^y J. ss--^/^ J. 80.2219 80.2223 86 Tim. J. 80.2183. ToNNA, Charlotte Elizabeth. J. 80.2187 Judaea capta. (Destruction of Jerusalem.) Trafton, Adeline. J, 80.2205 Dorothy's experience. (Working-girls' club.) Trimmer, Mrs. 3ZJ. J, 80.2126 History of the robins. Trowbridge, John. /^^^ tf^i. 80.2206 Electrical boy. R. J. 8 0.220 6T Three boys on an electrical boat. Trowbridge, John Townsend. /(ffl^, ^y J. 80.2207 Adventures of David Vane and David Crane. Biding his time. Bound in honor. Drummer boy. Father Brighthopes. His one fault. His own master. Jack Hazard Series. S'Z.U. V J . 80.2225 Jack Hazard and his fortunes. }^ U 6 J. 80.2213 Chance for himself. 3^fi, 6 J. 80.2210 Doing his best. 3^/./.2_I^Z. 80.2253 Satin-wood box. J. 80.2255 Scarlet tanager and other bipeds. i+l,^:i^. 80.2257 Silver medal /^j/. /^ J. 80.2259 Start in life. * 3L-Zy3. 80.2263 Tinkham brothers' tide-mill. 'J. 80.2265 Toby Trafford. ^^•6 J. 30.2270 Young Joe and other boys. True, John Preston. J. 80.2280 Their club and ours. % 86 Twain, Mark. J. 80.2298 Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. 'J30.2yS. 80.2300 Adventures of Tom Sawyer. 'V^--'^ J. 80.2303 Prince and pauper. (England, Henry VIII.) R. J. 80.2305 Tom Sawyer abroad. Tytler, Sarah. R. f J. 80.2308 Diamond rose. (Scotland, 171 5.) f J. 80.23 1 1 Girl neighbours, f J. 80.2313 Houseful of girls, f J. 80.2316 Vashti Savage. Under the holly. J. 80.2320. Yandegkift, Margaret. f^ff' ^ J. 80.2325 Doris and Theodora. (West Indies.) C.J. 80.2331 Little helpers. R. 3S^.fS^ J. 80.2334 Queen's body-guard. /(,//.i J. 80.2336 Rose Raymond's wards. ' J. 80.2341 Ways and means. (Sequel to Rose Raymond's wards.) Verne, Jules. t^.lf i. 80.2345 Adventures in the land of the behemoth. (Af- rica.) yf,3^. 80.2347 Around the world in eighty days. >^//J J. 80.2349 Begum's fortune. (India.) ^ J. 80.2351 Caesar Cascabel. ^/^. 7 J. 80.2355 Dick Sands. J. 80.2357 Doctor Ox, jyl.^i. 80.2359 Five weeks in a balloon, /f/^. /J. 80.2361 Floating city. ^//yj. 80.2363 From the earth to the moon. 7//^ J. 80.2365 Fur country. Wo-^Z. 80.2368 Giant raft, 2 v. V. 1. — Eight hundred leagues on the Amazon; V. 2. — Crypto- gram, J. 80.2372 Godfrey Morgan. J. 80.2377 Hector Servadac. ^iZ^Xyi. 80.2381 In search of the castaways. U )H' ^ J. 80.2383 Journey to the center of the earth, J. 80.2387 Meridiana. >V/^"^J. 80.2388 Michael Strogoff. /JOZ.-^Z. 8(^.2389 Mistress Branican. U/^>y Z, 80.2390 Mysterious island. -^^'^ J. 80.2395 Steam house. 2 v. (India ; rebellion of 1857.) ■^■V V. 1. — Demon of Cawnpore; V. 2. — Tigers and traitors. 'h^^-iC^Z. 80.2402 Tribulations of a Chinaman in China. if.lzA. 80.2404 Twenty thousand leagues under the sea. 87 l(piz.^ J. 80.2406 Underground city, -^z^. S^i, 80.2409 Voyages and adventures of Captain Hatteras. ^^^' 0> J. 80.2413 Wreck of tlie Chancellor. [Also] Martin Paz. Walford, L. B. /(r/f//^. 80.2416 Sage of sixteen. (English girls' boarding-school.) Walker, Kathekine K. C. J. 80.2417 Zoe's story. Ward, Herbert D. /If 00. -^ J. 80 2417 W Captain of the Kittiewink. /Ci3C.z(/>i. 80.2418 New senior at Andover. (American boys' boarding-school.) Webb, Mrs. J. 80.2428 Blind Ursula and other stories. " Webfoot." 31 f^- y J. 80.2430 Fore and aft. Webster, Leigh. J. 80.2431 Another girl's experience. Weeks. Helen C. c. J. 80.2433 Ainslee stories. c. J. 80.2434 Four, and what they did. Wells, H. C. S^^^. * *J. 80.2440 City boys in the woods. Wentworth, Walter. J. 80.2444 Drifting Island. (Sequel to Kibboo Ganey.) J. 80.2449 Kibboo Ganey. (Africa.) White, Eliza Orne. /^/^JL.-l^ C.J. 80.2453 When Molly was six. R. Whitney, Adeline D. T. R. J^, ( (/> J 80.2455 Boys at Chequasset. (Bird's eggs.) /O, 'j f J. 80.2458 Faith Gartney's girlhood. (1) ?^y.2.3 \ ^- 80.2461 Homespun yarns. Contents: When I was a little girl; My mother put it on; But- tered crusts; The soap bubble question; How the middies setup shop; The little savages of Beetle Rock; Girl-noblesse; Sally Gib- son's spunk (boarding school story); How Bel caught the " burglar"; Trying on bonnets; Zerub Throop's experiment. •7'''^ 'f-f J. 80.2463 Other girls. (5) J-^/-. //| J 80.2466 Real folks. (4) >'^-' f J. 80.2468 Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's life. (2) j'^^w6'J. 80.2471 We girls. (3) These books, though not strictly a series, should be read in the order marked. Sights and insights, a novel, continues them. WiGGiN, Kate Douglas. /i>//. 2-^^ J. 80.2476 Birds' Christmas Carol. fl,n,^S J. 80.2482 Story of Patsy. 88 I (o(^(i>.z^Z . 80.2479 Polly Oliver's problem. (Sequel to Summer in a canon.) lL>iH^iZfjZ. 80.2485 Summer in a canon. Z^-^./^- 80.2490 Timothy's quest. WiGGiN, Kate Douglas and Smith, Nora A. c. J. 80.2496 Story hour. WiLKiNS, Mary E. R. /(i>0^^ 3 J, 80.2498 Pot of gold. /boS'-'^ J. 80.2500 Young Lucretia and other stories. j•.^3. aJWiLLTS the pilot. (Sequel to Swiss family Robinson.) J. 80.2502. WiNTKROP, Sophy. J. 80.2504 Faith and Patience. WoLLEY, C. C. Phillips. J. 80.2507 Snap. Wright, E. J. 80.2510 Freshman and senior. (American college for boys and girls.) " Yam." J. 80.2522 Wikkey. YoNGE, Charlotte M. R. /(oZS.f J. 80.2528 Armourer's prentices. (England, Henry VIII.) Beechcroft Series : 363.3,0 z. 80.2532 Beechcroft. l\eZO-l Z. 80.2604 Two sides of the shield. /(!,3.H.zp. 80.2534 Beechcroft at Ilockstone. J. 80.2536 Ben Sylvester's word. ^i6.a J. 80.2539 Caged lion. (James I of Scotland.) J. 80.2541 Castle builders. Some of the characters afterwards appear in Pillars of the house. WY J. 80.2543 Chaplet of pearls. (France. Massacre of St- / Bartholomew, 1572.) J. 80.2545 Constable's tower. (England, King John.) J. 80.2545C Cook and the captain. (Romans in Gaul.) 3'^^'3f J. 80.2546 Countess Kate. Countess Kate appears grown-up in Pillars of the house. lUS'Zil J. 80.2547 Cunning woman's grandson. (Hannah More and Cheddar.) Daisy Chain Series. Z-^JSr-fffi S. 80.2550 Daisy chain. ;2.4.'7 J. 80.2598 Trial. J^. 7 - /^ J. 80.2581 Pillars of the house, 2 v. Some of the characters in all these books appear in Beechcroft at Rockstone. ^M-'J.lloS, 80.2553 Dove in the eagle's nest. 'f.fZ/J. 80.2555 Friarswood post-oflBce. 89 /^//.-t/j. 80.2546G Grisly Grisell. (Wars of the Roses.) 'i'V.^/f' J. 80.2559 Kenneth. (Napoleon in Russia.) Xf-^ 0> J. 80.25G2 Lances of Lynwood, (Kngland, Edward in.) -lOiO J. 80.2564 Little duke. (Normandy, 10th century.) c. J. 80.2566 Little Lucy's wonderfiU globe. /^//, yj^ J. 80.2571 Modern Telemachus. (Shipwrecked French travelers on African coast, 18th century.) /(p/S- 7 J- 8 0.2^5 7 3 Nuttie's father. /^j/i 'l-3 J. 80.2575 Our new mistress. Zlf->H J- 80.2577 P'sandQ's. /(/3S'- ^■^-^J- 80.2579 Pigeon pie. (England, civil war, 17th century.) Ifjt.Sbl^. 80.2584 Prince and the page. (England, 14th century.) /(fiXhZ^ ^- 80.2588 Reputed changeling. (England, James II.) J. 80.2589 Scenes and characters (Same as Beechcroft.) J. 80.2590 Sea spleenwort and other stories. J. 80.2592 Six cushions. )(p/0.j2^. 80.2594 Slaves of Sabinus. (Rome, early Christians.) J. 80.2595 Stokesley secret. 3^y. /J. 80.2596 Stray pearls. (England and Prance, 17th cen- tury.) Sequel to Chaplet of pearls. l{fi(^^,-3 J. 80.2597 Treasures in the marshes. J. 80.2600 Two guardians. /bzfj J. 80.2602 Two penniless princesses. (Scotland and France, ' 15th century.) fC^G./j^ 80.2607 Under the storm. (England, civil war, Charles I.) -^^•/^ J. 80.2610 Unknown to history. (Mary Queen of Scots.) 90 BOAKDING-SCHOOL AND COLLEGE STORIES. _^ BOYS. Ji'^. /i Day of my life at Eton. (English.) 2Z^< /-^'Diaz. William Henry letters. (American.) R. j;;^/: )3 Diaz. William Henry and his friends. (American.) R. /-(-O- 13 Drayson. Gentleman cadet. (English.) 41.10 Farrar. Eric. (English.) / ^ Ji". / '^^rant. Jack Hall. (American.) I'f.Z ^ Holland. Arthur Bonnicastle. (Novel.) /^J. y Howard. Donald's school days. (American.) fi /^^Hughes. Tom Bi'own's school ' days at Rugby. (English.) R. j'M. // Lowell. Antony Brade. (American.) /^^f:/^ King. Cadet days. (West Point.) R. Martineau. Crofton boys. (English.) R. May. Louis's school days. (English.) May. Mortimer's college life. (English.) Morley. School days at Mt. Pleasant. (American.) /(fOLlO Phelps. Donald Marcy. (American.) Recollections of Eton. (English.) Aftf. 1^ Stoddard. Dab Kinzer. R. (American.) ^/7, /y Stoddard. Quartet. " R. / 1- 3 ^'-2^ Ward. New senior at An- dover. (American.) Wright. Freshman and senior. (American.) GIRLS. Allan. One little maid. (American.) Brown. Two college girls. R.^'^^/.yJ' (American.) Burnett. Sarah Crewe. /^J/ ^ (English.) Champney. Witch Winnie. (American.) Champney. Witch Winnie's mystery. (American.) Coolidge. What Katy did 2XJ^/D',y School. (American.) R. J Comins. Marion Berkley. 3t,t)^ (American.) Ewing. Six to sixteen. 3 /H-. 6 (English.) Gray. Cedars. (American.) Harris. Louie's last term. (American.) Haven. Out of debt, out of danger. (American.) Last days at Apswich. (Novel, English.) Meade. Beresford prize. (English.) Meade. Betty. (English.) Meade. Sweet girl graduate. (English.) Oliphant. Agnes Hopetoun's j^^j, / schools and holidays. (English.) Perry. Hope Benham. (American.) R./p^"^-^/ Phelps. Brave girl. R. (Wide Awake, v. 18 and 19.) Phelps. Gypsy at the Goldenjl^j.^ Crescent. (American.) R. / Spofford. Hester Stanley at St. Mark's. (American.) Walford. Sage of sixteen. >/ ^/ '• //^ W^hitney. Sally Gibson's spunk. j7.^';^^j (In Homespun yarns.) 91 CLASS 90.— POETRY, MYTHOLOGY, AND FAIRY TALES. POETRY. Alexander, C. F., compiler. J. 90.3 Sunday book of poetry. Aytoun, W. E. J^''^ J. 90.5 Lays of the Scottish cavaliers. R. BisBEE, M. D., compiler. J. 90.8 Songs of the Pilgrims. Stories of the early settlement of this country. Book of nursery rhymes. c. J. 90.7. Breed, "W. P., compiler. c. J. 90.9 Home songs for home-birds. BuLFiNCH, Thomas. . J. 90.12 Poetry of the age of fable. Gary, Alice and Ph(ebe. r^ /J? c. J. 90.13 Ballads for little folk. CoATES, Henry T., compiler. ^Z^- / c. J. 90.14 Children's book of poetry. Dodge, Mary Mapes. >^^/, ^ c. J. 80.16 Rhymes and jingles. c. J. 90.1 6 W When life is young. Douglas, Marian. c. J, 90.17 Picture poems for young folks. Drake, Joseph Rodman. yi,^,l7^ J. 90.19 Culprit fay. R. English, Thomas Dunn. ^^3.6 J. 90.23 Boy's book of battle lyrics. Festival poems. J. 90.26 Poems for Christmas and Easter. Field. Eugene. lf^% /- J. 90.27 With trump and drum. Garrison, Wendell P., compiler. J. 90.28 Good-night poetry. R. GooDALE, Elaine, and Dora Read. J. 90.33 Apple-blossoms. J. 90.35 In Berkshire with the wild flowers. Guild, Caroline S., compiler. jGif.^6 c. J. 90.39 Hymns for mothers and children, 2 v. R. Henley, W. E., comjnler. J. 90.42 Lyra heroica. R. Has new selections for boys to speak. 92 HowiTT, Mary. J. 90.44 Ballads. J. 90.45 Poems. Lamb, Charles and Mary. c. J. 90.47 Poetry for children. Lanier, Sidney, editor. yyftfS J. 90.49 Boy's Percy. R. ' Old English ballads. Lear, Edward. R. J. 90.51 Nonsense books. ^9/;^xVJ. 90.52 Nonsense songs, botany and alphabets. Lee, Florence P. J. 90.53 Sunshine in life. (Poems for Kings' Daughters.) Le Row, Caroline B., compiler. J. 90.54 Practical recitations. LocKHART, John Gibson. M2'J,ZU J. 90.55 Ancient Spanish ballads. R. Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. 7r/. ^ J. 90.62 Courtship of Miles Standish. ^kZ').)2^ j_ 90.63 Evangeline. "irl'f J. 90.64 Song of Hiawatha. Lowell, Anna C, compiler. R. J. 90.56 Gleanings from the poets. J. 90.57 Posies for children. Macaulay, Thomas Babington. y/^.J/ J. 90.59 Lays of ancient Rome. R. McCabe, "W. Gordon, compiler. J. 90.61 Ballads of battle and bravery. Nursery rhymes, tales and jingles. ^Zr.fZ^c.J. 90.65. Our children's songs. R. C.J. 90.67. Patmore, Coventry, compiler. J. 90.70 Children's garland. Preston, Margaret J. 7 7^' 7 J. 90.74 Colonial ballads. - Rands, W. B. ^)l,L^/ C.J. 90.77 Lilliput levee. R. Robertson, E. S., compiler. J. 90.79 Children of the poets. RossETTi, Christina G. C.J. 90.80 Sing-song. Scott, Sir Walter. R. llpOtfC J. 90.81 Lady of the lake. y? jiffi. /j 90.82 Lay of the last minstrel, yt)fi- <^ J- 90.83 Marmion, Shakspeare, William. R. y^-i- V J. 90.85 As you like it. ^SS- V J. 90.86 Merchant of Venice. 7xJ"' ^yj. 90.87 Midsummer night's dream. ysy,3 J. 90.88 Much ado about nothing. ysS\y^. 90.89 Tempest. ysS'.S"^- 90.90 Twelfth night. SiLSBEE, Mrs., editor. c.^. 90.92 Willie Winkle's nursery songs. Stevenson, Robert Louis. ^-^^.^3 C.J. 90.94 Child's garden of verses. R. Tennyson, Alfred. ^J J. 90.95 Idyls of the king. R. Thaxter, Celia. y/^Y J- 90.96 Poems for children. R. Whittier, J. G., compiler. ^'X./J J. 90.98 Child life. MYTHOLOGY. GENERAL. Bulfinch, Thomas. ''7^' ^ J. 90.101 Age of fable. BcNCE, John Thackray. J. 90.102 Fairy tales, their origin and meaning. Church, A. J. /^/e Zl^- 90.103 Heroes and kings. Contents : The story of the ship Argo ; The meeting of Glaucus and Diomed; The embassy to Achilles; The battle of the gods; The funeral games of Patroclus ; The visit of Ulysses to the dead ; The triumph of Ulysses; The story of Periander; The story of Poly crates. GREECE AND ROME. Cox, G. W. /^JT// J. 90.105 Tales of ancient Greece. Guerber, H. a. J. 90.103G Mythology. Witt, C. J. 90.104 Classic mythology. Hawthorne, Nathaniel. R. Z^. ^^c.i. 90.108 Tanglewood tales. /^^/. ;2, -/c. J. 90.109 Wonder-book. KiNGSLEY, Charles. 3^-/. (^ J. 90.112 Heroes. 94 Smith, J. Moyr. J. 90.114 Prince of Argolis. Church, A. J. I^S^,\ZJ J. 90.115 Stories from Homer. Stewart, Aubrey. IH'2^ C.J. 90.117 Tale of Troy. B., C. M. J. 90.122 Tales from the Odyssey, Baldwin, James. R. /ZffC.ZO J. 90.120 Story of the golden age. Lamb, Charles. IfhiO J. 90.125 Adventures of Ulysses. Church, A. J. Ill' 2^ J. 90.128 Stories from the Greek tragedians. I^I-IO J. 90.132 Stories from Virgil. Cooper, V. K. J. 90.135 Tales from Euripides. NORTHERN EUROPE. Wagner, W., and MacDowall, M. W. J. 90.138 Asgard and the gods. J. 90.142 Epics and romances of the middle ages. Keaey, Annie and Eliza. /^^7///c. J. 90.140 Heroes of Asgard. R. GiBB, J. J. 90.144 Gudrun and other stories. ConienU: Gudrun; Hilda; Wild Hagen; Beowulf; The death of Roland; Walter and Hildegund. Baldwin, James. ^(fffZ.fO J. 90.146 Story of Siegfried. R. FORESTIER, AUBER. f^S'-fO J. 90.148 Echoes from mist land. The story of the Nibelungenlied. Hands, Lydia. J. 90.149 Golden thread from an ancient loom. From the Nibelungenlied. CHARLEMAGNE AND HIS KNIGHTS, ETC. ^Bulpinch, Thomas. f w-' / J. 90.151 Legends of Charlemagne. R. Baldwin, James. M'^ J. 90.153 Story of Roland. R. /// 95 Holloway-Callthkop, H. C. //^. 90.155 Paladin and Saracen. Tales from Ariosto. h-^'1 J. 90.156 KING ARTHUR AND THE ROUND TABLE. BuLFiNCH, Thomas. /ylf-^ S. 90.159 Age of chivalry. R. Lanier, Sidney. f^^-^ J. 90.161 Boy's King Arthur. R. fjS.^ J. 90.163 Boy's Mabinogion. R. FAIRY TALES. STORIES OF ALL COUNTRIES. Audubon, H. B., compiler. J. 90.165 Famous fairy tales. Book of nursery tales. C.J. 90.166. J. 90.167 Child's own book and treasury of fairy stories. Day, S. p., editor. J/^.y J. 90.166B Rare romance of Reynard the Fox. c. Fairy tale books. R. J. 90.171C Cinderella. J. 90.171H History of Jack the giant-killer. J. 90.171HW History of Whittington. J. 90.171L Little Red Riding-Hood. J. 90.171P Prince Darling. J. 90.171PO Princess on the glass hill. J. 90.171S Sleeping beauty in the wood. Keightley, Thomas. Zt^j^J-^. 90.168 Fairy mythology. Lang, Andrew, R. /C'^S:Z3 c. J. 90. 1 69 Blue fairy book. /^af'-Zf c. J. 90.169A Green fairy book. lUt>5'.^'^~c. J. 90.173 Red fairy book. Ilotf^.n c. J. 90.174 Yellow fairy book. Mulock-Craik, Dinah M. R. c. J. 90.176 Fairy book. IZJ, ^ c- J- 90.177 Is it true ? ScuDDER, Horace E. dtfi.l^ c. J. 90.180 Children's book. R. Pabke, Marie E. and Deane, Margery. J. 90.178 Wonder-world stories. Treasury of fairy stories, c. J. 90.182. 96 Treasury of fairy tales for little folks. c. J. 90.181. Valentine, Mrs. J. 90.182V Old, old fairy tales. R. ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, AND IRELAND. Jacobs, J. it^/lf^ Z^ J. 90.183 English fairy tales. )lof'2.lf J. 90.184 Celtic fairy tales. J. 90.184C More Celtic fairy tales. /yiZZ. J. 90.183M More English fairy tales. CURTIN, JOSIAH. J. 90.186 Myths and folk-lore of Ireland. Kingston, W. H. G. J. 90.185 Seven champions of Christendom. Lover, Samuel. TOO'f-^ J. 90.188 Legends and stories of Ireland. Yeats, W. B. /^ffy.fP J. 10.191 Irish folk and fairy tales. FRANCE. Carey, M. /L?3J- If J. 90.194 Fairy legends of the French provinces. Souvestre, Emile. J. 90.197 Legends of Brittany. NORWAY AND SWEDEN. . „ Asbjornsen, P. C. lUO/L-lO J. 90.200 Folk and fairy tales. Dasent, G. W. J, 90.203 Topular tales from the Norse. Mabie, Hamilton W. J. 90.204 Norse stories. Smith, J. Moyr. J. 90.206 Tales of old Thule. Thorpe, Benjamin. J. 90.208 Yule-tide stories. GERMANY. j^., , — Grimm, Jacob and Ludwig. "^"^ c. J. 90.208G German household stories. R. Lauder, T. J. 90.214 Legends and tales of the Hartz mountains, Pyle, Howard. J. 90.216 Wonder-clock. R. 97 IN. Irving, Washington. ;?///"'/ ^ J- 90.218 Alhambra. R. Caballero, Fernan. J. 90.220 Spanish fairy tales. MiDDLEMORE, M. T. H. J. 90.221 Spanish legendary tales. MONTEIRO, M. tZ$Z,^ J. 90.222 Legends of the Basque people. ITALY. Busk, Rachel H. f^^.J J. 90.225 Roman legends. Lee, Vernon. J. 90.227 Tuscan fairy tales. RUSSIA. Ralston, W. R. S. J. 90.230 Russian folk-tales. ROUMANIA. Kremnitz, M. ! L>iHJ3i. 90.232 Roumanian fairy tales. ARABIA. Arabian nights. 5*. jt, / J. 90.293 Life and adventures. * J. 90.294 Travels. Two different translations of the same book. FAIRY TALES BY MODERN AUTHORS. Andersen, Hans Christian. R. ~j/ ^^/j^/ aJ^- ^'^ J. 90:297 Fairy tales. yJ-^A^^^r^Mr^^^. ZLS.lf J. 90.300 Sand-hills of Jutland. / J. 90.301D Shoes of fortune. TV^H^'Cl^/ ^-/rtU^, J. 90.302B Storyteller. /JT^^^^ /^^^^r7JJ. 90.302D Ugly duck. J. 90.303 What the moon saw. Atkinson, J. C. J. 90.306 Last of the giant-killers. BoRG, Selma, and Brown, Marie A. 1^3. /^ J. 90.309 Northern lights. Brentano, Clemens. /^// ifi J. 90.312 Fairy tales. Carroll, Lewis. J^if.^^c. J. 90.316 Alice's adventures in wonderland. R. Kt^tff'fi J. 90.320 Sylvie and Bruno. ■^^^/i/Vj. 90.321 Sylvie and Bruno concluded. J^y.r^c. J. 9.323 Through the looking-glass. R. Carryl, Charles. R. J. 90.327 Admiral's caravan. dtfJt.t4f c. J. 90.328 Davy and the goblin. Coleridge, Sara. 3^'H'f^ J. 90.332 Phantasmion. Collier, Margaret. J. 90.334 Prince Peerless. CopKRAN, Alice. f(fif3jf J. 90.338 Down the snow-stairs. Daldorne, Evan. J. 90.342 Wooing of the water-witch. Egqleston, Edward. l^'^tS c. J. 90.349 Queer stories. Elisabeth, queen of Roumania. J. 90.352 Pilgrim sorrow. 100 — Eytinge, Margaret. 30.Z!> J, 90.355 Ball of the vegetables and other stories. 5*-'^!' f Famous fairy tales. J. 90.356. Favorite fairy tales. J. 90.357. Fuller, M. L. J. 90.358 In poppy-land. Greenwood, Jessy. J. 90.359 Moon maiden and other stories, Harrison, Constance Gary. t'ii>tUir~ C.J. 90.363 Bric4-brac stories. /^7/,^ c. J. 90.367 Old-fashioned fairy book. R. Hauff, Wilhelm. J. 90.370 Little Mook. Hays, Mrs. W. J. J. 90.374 Adventuresof Prince Lazybones, and other stories. J. 90.378 Princess Idleways. Housman, Lawrence. J. 90.385 Farm in fairyland. Ingelow, Jean. J^/. 7 J. 90.388 Mopsa the fairy. R. Jefferies, Richard. J^.l^ J. 90.392 Wood magic. JoKAi, Maurus, and others. J. 90.400 Golden fairy book. Kavanagh, Bridget and Julia. J. 90.401 Pearl fountain. Keary, Eliza. J. 90.403 Magic valley. Kingsley, Charles. Ul.Zy J. 90.407 Water-babies. Knatchbull-Hugessen, E. H. J. 90.411 Puss-cat mew. J. 90.415 Whispers from fairyland. fL02/yljA Bedollierre, E. de. c. J. 90.419 Story of a cat. Laboulaye, Edouard de. /^// -^^ J. 90.422 Last fairy tales. La Motte Fouque, baron de. R. J. 90.425 Magic ring. J. 90.426 Sintram. ^//"•V J. 90.427 Undine; [also] Sintram. J77. y J. 90.428 Undine; [also] Two captains. 101 Lathrop, George Parsons. J. 90.431 Behind time. Lee, Vernon. J. 90.434 Prince of the hundred soups. Leland, Charles Godfrey. J. 90.437 Johnnykin and the goblins. LiPPMANN, Julie M. J. 90.439 Jock o'dreams. MaoDonald, G. R. S^i' r J. 90.443 At the back of the north wind. J. 90.446 Dealings witli the fairies. ?S^'S~-J. 90.U1 Double story. ^^'^/ J. 90.452 Princess and Curdie. (2) ySLS"* a^J. 90.453 Princess and the goblin. (1) Malet, Lucas. J. 90.457 Little Peter. Mayhew, a., and others. J. 90.461 Magic of kindness and other stories. MOLESWORTH, MaRY LoUISA. /b/0',^&j 90.469 Children of the castle. /^/J». J'gj 90.471 Christmas-tree land. ^H,Z^i. 90.474 Cuckoo clock. J. 90.476 Enchanted garden, /i'/^''/ J. 90.478 Four Winds Farm. h.Ztt?~^- 90.484 Tapestry room. MoRLEY, Henry. J. 90.487 Chicken Market and other stories. Mulock-Craik, Dinah M. R. J. 90.488 Adventures of a brownie. J'/Z-y/J. 90.489 Alice Learmont. ? <,/.^^c. J. 90.491 Little lame prince. Ortoli, F. • - » J. 90.489 Evening tales. **** Prentiss, Elizabeth. ^^(p- ifi J. 90.501 Nidworth and his three magic wands. J. 90.505 Urbane and his friends. Putnam, Eleanor (Mrs. Arlo Bates) and Bates, Arlo. J. 90.508 Prince Vance. . Richards, Laura E. /UU,7 C.J. 90.513 Joyous story of Toto. JirfiyjJ^ c. J. 90.517 Toto's merry winter. (Sequel.) > ^ ,.^ Rdskin, John. djO^^ J. 90.520 King of the Golden River. R. Scudder, Horace E, J. 90.523 Dream children. 102 Stockton, Frank R. '.^7. J- 90.532 Bee-man of Orn. J. 90.536 J. 90.541 Stoker, Bram. J. 90.545 Tabor, Eliza. c. J. 90.550. Floating prince. Ting-a-ling, Under the sunset. Pansie's flour-bin. Thackeray, William Makepeace. 3fff.^ J. 90.553 Rose and the ring. R. Wesselhoeft, Lily. J. 90.559 Fairy folk of Blue Hill. c. c. J. c. J. c. J. J. 90.560 Flipwing, the spy. R. 90.563 Old Rough, the miser. 90.564 Sparrow, the tramp. 90.567 Winds, the woods, and the wanderer. R. Wilde, Oscar. ^^J^7 J. 90.569 Wister, a. L., 90.571 90.575 Happy prince. translator. Enchanting and enchanted. Seaside and fireside fairies. Wright, Henrietta C. /iJfi-ZS c- J. 90.580 Princess Liliwinkins. Many books in class 90 marked c are interesting to older boys and girls, and others that are unmarked may be read or told to younger children. STORIES RELATING TO UNITED STATES HISTORY RECOMMENDED BY THE HARTFORD COUNTY TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION. /^*4r Henty. Munroe. /^/^.2r" Austin. ^^'. r~ Cooper. /(fitd'ir Henty. /(pOS.Zt Sea well. 55-r.-2/^Harte. Henty. '3S2- J Hale. /(^^^. '^^Bynner. /fr^fe/§eawell. ^'e. ycu^t W Eggleston. Under Drake's flag. Flamingo feather. Standish of standish. Last of Mohicans. With Wolfe in Canada. Paul Jones. Thankful Blossom. True to the old flag. Philip Nolan's friends. Man without a country. Zachary Phips. Decatur and Somers. Little Jarvis. Bie: Brother series. 16th century. 17th century, 18th century. Revolution, 1800-1820. 103 ZMt^ Butterworth. /^r./^age. 5'^/'i/6towe. Aif. -sEggleston. Henty. »f7. y VTro wbridge. In the boyhood of Lincoln. 1820-1860 In ole Virginia. " " Uncle Tom's cabin. " " Hoosier schoolboy. " " Jed. 1861-65 Tom Clifton. " " With Lee in Virginia. " •' Cudjo's cave. " " Battle of New York. " " Ramona. Treatment of Indians. SCHOOL. DUPLICATES AND NUMBER OF COPIES OF EACH. Arabian nights Burroughs. Birds and bees, and Sharp eyes. Cooper. Last of the Mohicans. De Foe. Robinson Crusoe. Francillon. Gods and heroes. Franklin. Autobiography. Hawthorne. Wonder-book. Irving. Alhambra. Kingsley. Water-babies. Lamb. Adventures of Ulysses. Martineau. Peasant and the prince. Ruskin. King of the Golden River. Scott. Lady of the lake. Tales of chivalry. Shakespeare. Merchant of Venice. Stowe. Uncle Tom's cabin. Fiske. Civil government in the United States. History of the United States. Gray. How plants grow. Lamb. Tales from Shakspeare. Newell. Outlines of lessons in botany. Ricks. Natural history object lessons. 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 6 12 6 6 6 6 i]s:dex. Pagb Adventures, Shipwrecks, etc., . . . . . 35, 98 Amusements, .... 50 Arts, Fine and Useful, 49 Biography, .... 8 Boarding-school and College Stories, 90 Fairy Tales, .... 95 History, .... 18 Life, Education, and Manners, 33 Magazines, .... 8 Mythology, .... 93 Poetry, ..... 91 Religion, .... 32 School Duplicates, . 103 Science, .... 42 Stories from Famous Authors, 98 Stories op Home and School Life, Travel and Adventure, 53 Travel, .... 35 University of Connecticut Libraries