EVERYGIRL’S SERIES
Grouped in the Everygirl’s Series are five volumes selected for excellence. Shirley Watkins, Caroline E. Jacobs, Ruthe Wheeler and Blanche Elizabeth Wade contribute stories that are both fascinatingly real and touched with romance. Every girl who dips into one of these stories will find herself enthralled to the end.
The S.W.F. Club Caroline E. Jacobs Jane Lends a Hand Shirley Watkins Nancy of Paradise College Shirley Watkins Georgina Finds Herself Shirley Watkins Helen in the Editors Chair Ruthe Wheeler
PEGGY STEWART SERIES
By GABRIELLE E. JACKSON
Peggy Stewart at Home Peggy Stewart at School
Peggy, Polly, Rosalie, Marjorie, Natalie, Isabel, Stella and Juno—girls all of high spirits make this Peggy Stewart series one of entrancing interest. Their friendship, formed in a fashionable eastern school, they spend happy years crowded with gay social affairs. The background for these delightful stories is furnished by Annapolis with its naval academy and an aristocratic southern estate.
THE PEGGY STEWART SERIES
By GABRIELLE E. JACKSON
Against the colorful background of Annapolis and a picturesque southern estate, Gabrielle E. Jackson paints the human and lovely story of a human and lovely girl. Real girls will revel in this wholesome tale and its enchanting telling.
Peggy Stewart at Home Peggy Stewart at School
The Motor Girls Series
By MARGARET PENROSE
A dashing, fun-loving girl is Cora Kimball and she is surrounded in her gypsy-like adventures with a group of young people that fairly sparkle. Girls who follow their adventurous steps will find a continuing delight in their doings. In the series will be found some absorbing mysteries that will keep the reader guessing so that the element of suspense is added to make the perusal thoroughly enjoyable.
The Motor Girls On Tour At Lookout Beach Through New England On Cedar Lake On the Coast On Crystal Bay On Waters Blue At Camp Surprise In the Mountains
Helen In the Editor’s Chair
By RUTHE S. WHEELER
“Helen in the Editor’s Chair” strikes a new note in stories for girls. Its heroine, Helen Blair, is typical of the strong, self-reliant girl of today. When her father suffers a breakdown and is forced to go to a drier climate to recuperate, Helen and her brother take charge of their father’s paper, the Rolfe Herald. They are faced with the problem of keeping the paper running profitably and the adventures they encounter in their year on the Herald will keep you tingling with excitement from the first page to the last.