126. Storm Songs. Same author. These volumes contain poems revealing a strong character and a finely trained mind. Miss Strong has written many other verses and many essays, among them On the Eve of Home Rule and Psychology and Prayer. She has been director of Child Welfare exhibits in American cities and in Dublin, Ireland. At present, 1915-1916, she is exhibit expert connected with the Children's Bureau, U. S. Department of Labor.

127. Songs o' the Sound. Alice Harriman.

128. Songs of the Olympics. Same author.

129. Told in the Garden. (1902.) Alice Lockhart Hughes. Lyrics by Mrs. Hughes have been set to music by Mrs. H. H. A. Beach, Sans Souci and de Koven.

130. Voice of April Land. Ella Higginson.

131. When the Birds Go North Again. Same author. This contains the Four-Leaf Clover, her best known poem, which has been set to music by several composers and sung the country over.

UNCLASSIFIED PROSE

132. Among Student Friends. (1914.) Martha E. Libby.

133. Alaskaland, A Curious Contradiction. (1914.) Mrs. Isabel Ambler Gilman. Now a practicing lawyer in Alaska. A collection of prose and poetry some of which had appeared in Northwest Journal of Education, Westerner, Post-Intelligencer, Alaska-Yukon Magazine and Alaska papers.

134. By Order of the Prophet, A Tale of Utah. (1902.) Alfred Hylas Henry.