* BRER RABBIT AND THE LITTLE TAR BABY.
* BROTHER RABBIT AND THE LITTLE GIRL.
* BROTHER RABBIT TAKES A WALK.
* BROTHER RABBIT TAKES SOME EXERCISE.
* CUTTA CORD-LA (similar to Wolf and Seven Kids).
* How BROTHER RABBIT BROKE UP A PARTY.
* How BROTHER RABBIT FRIGHTENS HIS NEIGHBORS.
* How M ROOSTER LOST HIS DINNER (read).
* IN SOME LADY'S GARDEN.
* M BENJAMIN RAM (Brother Rabbit's Riddle).
* THE MOON IN THE MILL-POND (pourquois).
* WHY BROTHER BEAK HAS NO TAIL (pourquois).
* WHY M DOG RUNS AFTER BROTHER RABBIT.
* WHY GUINEA FOWLS ARE SPECKLED (pourquois).

Uncle Remus Tales, by Harris, in Uncle Remus and the Little
Boy
:

* BROTHER BILLY GOAT'S DINNER.
BROTHER FOX SMELLS SMOKE.
* BROTHER RABBIT AND BROTHER TIGER.
* BROTHER RABBIT AND BROTHER LION (similar to The Dog and His
Shadow
).
* BROTHER MUD-TURTLE'S TRICKERY.
* BROTHER RABBIT'S MONEY MINT.
1 BROTHER WOLF SAYS GRACE.
1 THE FIRE TEST (Use with Three Pigs).
FUN AT THE FERRY.
* HEYO, HOUSE.
THE LITTLE RABBITS.
MRS. PARTRIDGE HAS A FIT.
WHY BROTHER FOX'S LEGS ARE BLACK.
* WHY THE HAWK CATCHES CHICKENS.

Tale, by Harris, in Little Mr. Thimblefinger:

* WHY BILLY-GOAT'S TAIL IS SHORT.

Miscellaneous Tales:

* THE ADVENTURES OF LITTLE FIELD MOUSE, Stories to Tell,
Bryant.
* BETA AND THE LAME GIANT, Miss Harrison, In Storyland.
* BILLY BOBTAIL, Jane Hoxie, Kindergarten Stories; Child-Lore
Dramatic Reader
, Scribners.
* BLUNDER AND THE WISHING GATE, Louise Chollet, in Child Life
in Prose
, Whittier.
* THE BOY AND THE GOAT, OR THE GOAT IN THE TURNIP FIELD
(Norwegian), Primer, Free and Treadwell; Child-Lore
Dramatic Reader
, Scribners.
* THE CAP THAT MOTHER MADE OR ANDER'S NEW CAP (Swedish),
Swedish Fairy Tales, McClurg; For the Story-Teller,
Bailey.
1 THE CAT AND THE PARROT OR THE GREEDY CAT, HOW to Tell
Stories
, Bryant; Tales of Laughter, Wiggin and Smith.
1 THE CAT THAT WAITED, Classics in Dramatic Form, vol. I,
Stevenson.
* THE CAT, THE COCK, AND THE FOX, Tales of Laughter, Wiggin
and Smith.
1 CLYTIE, Nature Myths, Flora Cooke.
1 THE COCK, THE MOUSE, AND THE LITTLE RED HEN, Félicité
Lefèvre, Jacobs.
* THE COUNTRY MOUSE AND THE CITY MOUSE, Æsop's Fables, Joseph
Jacobs.
* DAME WIGGINS AND HER CATS, Mrs. Sharp, in Six Nursery
Classics
, Heath.
* THE DISCONTENTED PENDULUM, Jane Taylor, in In the Child's
World
, Poulsson.
* THE DOLL WHO WAS SISTER TO A PRINCESS, THE TOY STORIES,
Carolyn Bailey, Kindergarten Review, Dec., 1914.
* DRAKESBILL, The Story-Teller's Book, O'Grady and Throop;
The Fairy Ring, Wiggin and Smith; Firelight Stories,
Bailey.
* THE ELEPHANT'S CHILD, Just-So Stories, Kipling.
1 THE FIRST CHRISTMAS TREE, A Little Book of Profitable
Tales
, Eugene Field.
1 THE FIVE LITTLE PIGS, Katherine Pyle, in Wide Awake Second
Reader
, Little.
* THE FOOLISH TIMID RABBIT, Jataka Tales Retold, Babbit.
THE GOLDEN COCK, That's Why Stories, Bryce.
1 GOLDEN ROD AND ASTER, Nature Myths, Cooke.
THE GRAIN OF CORN (Old Woman and Her Pig), Tales of the
Punjab
, Steel.
1 GREENCAP, Ruth Hays, in St. Nicholas, June, 1915.
1 HANS AND THE FOUR BIG GIANTS, Miss Harrison, In Storyland.
1 THE HEN THAT HATCHED DUCKS, Harriet Beecher Stowe, in Child
Life in Prose
, Whittier.
* THE HOP-ABOUT-MAN, Agnes Herbertson, in The Story-Teller's
Book
, O'Grady and Throop; in Little Folks' Magazine.
* THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT, Six Nursery Classics, D.C.
Heath.
1 HOW BROTHER RABBIT FOOLED THE WHALE, Stories to Tell,
Bryant.
* HOW THE CAMEL GOT HIS HUMP, Just-So Stories, Kipling.
1 HOW THE CHIPMUNK GOT THE STRIPES ON ITS BACK, Nature Myths,
Cooke.
* HOW DOUBLE DARLING'S OLD SHOES BECAME LADY SLIPPERS, Candace
Wheeler, in St. Nicholas, March, 1887; vol. 14, pp.
342-47.
* HOW FIRE WAS BROUGHT TO THE INDIANS, The Book of Nature
Myths
, Holbrook.
* HOW SUN, MOON, AND WEST WIND WENT OUT TO DINNER, Old Deccan
Days
, Frère.
1 THE JACKAL AND THE ALLIGATOR, Stories to Tell, Bryant.
1 THE JACKALS AND THE LION, Stories to Tell, Bryant.
1 KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS, Nature Myths, Cooke.
* THE LAMBIKIN, Tales of the Punjab, Steel; Indian Tales,
Jacobs.
* LITTLE JACK ROLLAROUND, Stories to Tell, Bryant.
* THE LITTLE RABBIT WHO WANTED RED WINGS, For the
Story-Teller
, Bailey.
* THE LITTLE RED HEN, Stories to Tell, Bryant.
* THE LITTLE RED HIN (Irish dialect verse), Stories to Tell,
Bryant.
* THE LITTLE ROOSTER, Robert Southey, in Boston Collection of
Kindergarten Stories
, Hammett & Co.
* LITTLE SPIDER'S FIRST WEB, Primer, Free and Treadwell.
* LITTLE TOP-KNOT (Swedish), First Reader, Free and
Treadwell.
* LITTLE TUPPEN, Fairy Stories and Fables, Baldwin; Primer,
Free and Treadwell.
* LUDWIG AND MARLEEN, Jane Hoxie, in Kindergarten Review,
vol. xi, no. 5.
* MEDIO POLLITO, THE LITTLE HALF-CHICK (Spanish), The Green
Fairy Book
, Lang.
* MEZUMI, THE BEAUTIFUL, OR THE RAT PRINCESS (Japanese),
Birch-Tree Fairy Book, Johnson; Tales of Laughter,
Wiggin and Smith.
1 M ELEPHANT AND M FROG, Firelight Stories, Bailey.
1 THE MOON'S SILVER CLOAK, Classics in Dramatic Form,
Stevenson, vol. i.
1 THE MOUSE AND THE SAUSAGE, Stories and Story-Telling,
Angela Keyes.
* OEYVIND AND MARIT, from The Happy Boy, Björnstjerne
Björnson, in The Story-Teller's Book, O'Grady and
Throop; in Child-Life in Prose, Whittier.
* PETER RABBIT, Peter Rabbit, Beatrix Potter.
1 THE PIGS AND THE GIANT, Pyle, in Child-Lore Dramatic
Reader
, Scribners.
* THE QUICK-RUNNING SQUASH, Short Stories for Short People,
Aspinwall.
1 THE RED-HEADED WOODPECKER, Nature Myths, Cooke.
* THE RICH GOOSE, Leora Robinson, in The Outlook.
* THE ROBIN'S CHRISTMAS SONG, Birch-Tree Fairy Book,
Johnson.
* (WEE) ROBIN'S YULE SONG. Tales of Laughter, Wiggin and
Smith.
* THE SHEEP AND THE PIG (Scandinavian), For the Children's
Hour
, Bailey.
* THE SPARROW AND THE CROW, Tales of the Punjab, Steel;
Birch-Tree Fairy Book, Johnson.
* THE STRAW OX, Cossack Fairy Tales, Bain.
* STORY OF THE MORNING-GLORY SEED, M. Eytinge, Boston
Kindergarten Stories
.
1 THE TALE OF A BLACK CAT, Oak-Tree Fairy Book, Johnson.
1 TOMMY AND THE WISHING-STONE, a series, by T. Burgess, in St.
Nicholas
, 1915.
1 TRAVELS OF A FOX, Oak-Tree Fairy Book, Johnson.
1 THE TURTLE WHO COULDN'T STOP TALKING, Jataka Tales Retold,
Babbit.
* THE UNHAPPY PINE TREE, Classic Stories, McMurry.
1 What Bunch And Joker Saw In The Moon, Wide Awake
Chatterbox
, about 1887.
1 The White Cat, Fairy Tales, D'Aulnoy; Fairy Tales, Vol.
II, Lansing.
* Why The Evergreen Trees Never Lose Their Leaves, The Book
Of Nature Myths
, Holbrook.
* Why The Juniper Has Berries, The Book Of Nature Myths,
Holbrook.

* Why The Morning Glory Climbs, How to Tell Stories, Bryant.

1 The Wish Bird, Classics In Dramatic Form, Vol. II, Stevenson.

II. Bibliography Of Fairy Tales