Betty Wales & Co.: A story for girls - Edith K. Dunton - Book

Betty Wales & Co.: A story for girls

“WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE?”
A STORY FOR GIRLS
by
MARGARET WARDE
AUTHOR OF
BETTY WALES FRESHMAN BETTY WALES SOPHOMORE BETTY WALES JUNIOR BETTY WALES SENIOR BETTY WALES B.A.
ILLUSTRATED BY EVA M NAGEL
THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA MCMIX
COPYRIGHT 1909 BY THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
INTRODUCTION
Many of the girls who will read this book have already made the acquaintance of Betty Wales, and know all about her adventures at Harding College, from her rollicking freshman days to the time when she was a “grave and reverend senior”—and was always being mistaken for a freshman, nevertheless. Mary Brooks graduated from Harding a year before Betty, and she always considered that this gave her the privilege of patronizing her friends in 19—, Betty’s class. Madeline joined 19— in its sophomore year, and Babbie Hildreth (she and her friends Babe and Bob were known collectively as the three B’s) was another of the shining lights of that famous class. She and Madeline and Betty planned the tea-room, though only in fun, during a trip abroad that came as a grand finale to their college days. You can read all about that in “Betty Wales, B. A.,” which also tells about Mary Brooks’s “impromptu” wedding. But you will have to go back to “Betty Wales, Senior,” to find out how Mary’s “little friends” discovered that she was interested in Professor Hinsdale. There are a lot of other things that you will want to know about Betty and her friends—if you like them—in “Betty Wales, Freshman,” “Betty Wales, Sophomore,” and “Betty Wales, Junior.”
Margaret Warde.

Edith K. Dunton
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2022-07-18

Темы

Wales, Betty (Fictitious character) -- Juvenile fiction; Young women -- Social life and customs -- Juvenile fiction; Families -- Economic aspects -- Juvenile fiction; Women-owned business enterprises -- Juvenile fiction

Reload 🗙