BIBLIOGRAPHY

In this list of books, Column I gives the price upon receipt of which the book named will be sent post-paid. Column II gives the price upon receipt of which the book named will be sent post-paid together with The Storytellers’ Magazine for one year. Remittances may safely be made by Money or Express Order or by draft on New York. All communications should be sent to The Storytellers’ Magazine, 27 West 23d Street, New York, giving the name of the book wanted; the date at which the subscription to The Storytellers’ Magazine should begin, and the name and full post-office address of the sender.

I. Story Telling
Column IColumn II
Price at which Book
will be sent
post-paid
Price of Book
and The
Storytellers’
Magazine for
one year
Book and Storytellers’
Magazine Combined
Bryant, Sara Cone.—How to Tell Stories to Children$1.00$1.65
Stories to Tell Children.1.001.65
Houghton, Louise.—Telling Bible Stories1.251.85
Keyes.—Stories and Story-Telling.1.251.85
Lyman, Edna.—Story-Telling: What toTell and How to Tell It0.751.55
Partridge, E. N. & G. P.—Story-Tellingin School and Home.1.251.75
Wyche, R. T.—Some Great Stories andHow to Tell Them.1.001.55
II. Bible Stories
Bunyan.—Pilgrim’s Progress.1.001.65
Chisholm.—Stories from The Old Testament.0.501.30
Church.—Story of the Last Days of Jerusalem.1.251.85
Hodges.—Saints and Heroes.1.351.95
Kelman.—Stories from the Life of Christ.0.501.30
Pendleton.—In Assyrian Tents.0.751.55
Shepard.—Young Folks Josephus.1.251.85
Siviter.—Nehe, Story of Nehemiah.1.502.10
Tolstoi.—Where Love Is—There is God Also.0.351.25
III. Epics, Romances and Classic Tales
Arnold.—Sohrab and Rustem.0.251.15
Baldwin.—Story of Roland.1.502.10
Baldwin.—Story of Siegfried.1.502.10
Carpenter.—Hellenic Tales.0.601.45
Church.—Odyssey for Boys and Girls.1.502.10
Church.—Stories of Charlemagne.1.752.25
Church.—Stories of Homer.1.251.85
Crawford.—Tr. the Kalevala, the NationalEpic of Finland.3.003.50
Darton.—Tales of the Canterbury Pilgrims.1.502.10
Darton.—Wonder-book of Old Romance.1.502.10
Davidson.—A Knight Errant—Story ofAmadis of Gaul.1.752.25
Havell.—Stories from Don Quixote.1.502.10
Higginson.—Tales of the EnchantedIslands of the Atlantic1.502.10
Holbrook.—Northland Heroes.0.351.25
Hull.—The Boy’s Cuchulain-Irish HeroLegends.1.502.10
Irving.—Tales from the Alhambra.0.601.40
Lang, A.—Book of Romance.1.602.15
Lang, Andrew.—”Tales of Troy andGreece.”1.001.65
Lang, L. B.—Red Book of Heroes.1.602.15
Lanier.—The Boy’s King Arthur.2.002.45
Mabie.—Heroes Every Child ShouldKnow.0.501.30
Macleod.—Book of King Arthur, etc.(Inexpensive edition.)1.001.65
Macleod.—Book of King Arthur and HisNoble Knights.1.502.10
Macleod.—Stories from the Faerie Queene1.502.10
McSpadden.—Stories from Wagner.0.501.30
McSpadden.—Stories from Chaucer.0.501.30
Marshall.—Stories of Beowulf.0.501.30
Marshall.—Stories of Childe Roland.0.501.30
Marshall.—Story of William Tell.0.501.30
Morris.—Story of Sigurd the Volsung.2.002.45
Palmer.—Tr. Odyssey of Homer.1.001.65
Pyle.—Story of King Arthur and his Knights.2.002.45
Pyle.—Story of Launcelot and his Companions.2.002.45
Pyle.—Some Merry Adventures of RobinHood. (Condensed)0.501.30
Pyle.—Merry Adventures of Robin Hood3.003.30
Ragozin.—Frithj and Roland.1.251.85
Ragozin.—Siegfried and Beowulf.1.251.85
Royde-Smith.—Una and the Red Cross Knight.2.502.85
Tegner.—Frithiof’s Saga.1.251.85
Tinker.—Beowulf. Tr. by Tinker.1.001.65
Wilmot-Buxton.—Stories of Persian Heroes.1.502.10
Wilson.—The Story of the Cid.1.251.85
IV. Fables, Myths, Heroes and Folk Lore
Æsop’s Fables.—Ed. by Joseph Jacobs.1.502.10
Andersen.—Wonder Stories.1.001.65
Austin.—The Basket Woman—Ute Indian Tales.1.502.10
Baldwin.—Story of the Golden Age.1.502.10
Baldwin.—Wonder-book of Horses.0.751.60
Blumenthal.—Folk Tales from the Russians0.601.45
Bradish.—Old Norse Stories.0.451.28
Brown.—In the Days of Giants.1.101.85
Bryce.—Fables from Afar.0.451.28
Short Stories for Little Folks.0.351.20
Bryce.—That’s Why Stories.0.451.28
Dasent.—Popular Tales from the Norse.2.502.85
Griffis.—The Fire-Fly’s Lovers, JapaneseFolk Tales.1.001.65
Grimm.—Household Stories. Tr. by Crane.1.001.70
Hawthorne.—Wonderbook and Tanglewood Tales.1.001.70
Harris.—Uncle Remus and His Friends.1.502.10
Harris.—Uncle Remus, His Songs and Sayings.2.002.45
Kingsley.—Heroes of Greek Fairy Tales.1.001.65
Kupfer.—Legends of Greece and Rome.0.751.60
Lagerlöf.—Swedish Folk Tales.1.502.10
Lang, Andrew.—True Story Book.2.002.45
Mabie.—Norse Stories Retold from The Eddas.1.251.75
Peabody.—Old Greek Folk Stories.0.251.15
Ramaswami, Raju.—Indian Fables.1.502.10
Roulet-Nixon.—Japanese Folk Storiesand Fairy Tales.0.401.25
Scudder.—Children’s Book.2.502.85
Storr.—Half-a-Hundred Hero Tales.1.351.95
Wiggin & Smith.—Tales of Laughter.1.351.95
Wiggin & Smith.—Tales of Wonder.1.501.95
Zitkala-sa.—Old Indian Legends.0.601.40
V. Fairy Tales—Old and New
Andersen.—Fairy Tales. Tr. by Mrs. Lucas.2.502.85
Andersen.—Fairy Tales. Vol. I.0.401.25
Vol. II.0.401.25
Andersen.—Stories and Tales.0.301.20
Asbjornsen.—Fairy Tales from the FarNorth (Burt).1.001.65
Baldwin.—Fairy Stories and Fables.0.351.25
Bain.—Russian Fairy Tales.0.001.65
Bain.—Cossack Fairy Tales and Folk Tales.0.001.65
Cary.—Fairy Legends of the French Provinces.0.601.45
Chisholm.—In Fairy Land.3.003.30
Compton.—American Indian Fairy Tales.1.502.10
Craik.—The Fairy Book.0.501.30
Dole.—Russian Fairy Book.2.002.45
Grimm.—Fairy Tales. Tr. by Mrs. Lucas.Ill. by Arthur Rackham.1.502.10
Jacobs.—Celtic Fairy Tales.1.001.65
Jacobs.—More Celtic Fairy Tales.1.251.85
Jacobs.—English Fairy Tales.1.001.65
Jacobs.—More English Fairy Tales.1.251.85
Jacobs.—Indian Fairy Tales.1.001.65
Lang, Andrew.—Blue True Story Book.2.002.45
Lang, Andrew.—Crimson Fairy Book.1.602.15
Macdonnell.—Italian Fairy Book.1.351.90
Ozaki.—Japanese Fairy Book.1.502.10
Rhys.—Fairy Gold.0.701.55
Williston.—Japanese Fairy Tales.0.751.55
VI. History, Biography, Travel and Adventure
Abbott.—Daniel Boone.1.251.85
Christopher Carson, Known as Kit Carson.1.251.85
Abbott.—David Crockett.1.251.85
Ambrosi.—When I was a Girl in Italy.0.751.55
Barnes.—Yankee Ships and Yankee Sailors.0.501.30
Bolton.—Lives of Poor Boys Who Became Famous.1.502.10
Boyesen.—Boyhood in Norway.1.251.85
Brooks.—Story of Marco Polo.1.502.10
Brooks.—True Story of Christopher Columbus.1.502.10
Butterworth.—Zigzag Journeys aroundthe World. Per vol.1.502.10
Carpenter.—Asia.0.601.45
Carpenter.—South America.0.601.45
Church.—Stories of the East from Herodotus.1.251.85
Custer (Mrs).—Boy General. Story of the Life of Major-General George A. Custer.0.501.40
Dana.—Two Years Before the Mast (University).1.001.65
Du Chaillu.—Country of the Dwarfs.1.251.85
Lost in the Jungle.1.251.85
My Apingi Kingdom.1.251.85
Stories of the Gorilla Country.1.251.85
Wild Life Under The Equator.1.251.85
Dutton.—Little Stories of Germany.0.401.25
Garland.—Boy Life on the Prairie.1.502.10
Gibson.—In Eastern Wonder-Lands.1.502.10
Golding.—Story of David Livingston.0.501.30
Hawthorne.—Biographical Stories.0.251.15
Jenks.—Boy’s Book of Explorations.2.002.45
Johnston and Spencer.—Ireland’s Story1.402.05
Kingsley.—Westward Ho!0.601.45
Knox.—Boy Travellers in Great Britainand Ireland.2.002.45
Mabie.—Heroines Every Child Should Know.0.501.30
McManus.—Our Little Hindu Cousin.0.601.40
Macgregor.—Story of France.2.502.85
Parkman.—Oregon Trail.0.401.25
Roosevelt and Lodge.—Hero Tales from American History.1.502.10
Roosevelt.—Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail.2.502.85
Schwatka.—Children of the Cold.1.251.85
Starr.—American Indians.0.451.30
Tappan.—Story of the Greek People.1.502.00
Story of the Roman People.1.502.00
Van Bergen.—Story of Russia.0.651.50
White.—The Magic Forest.0.501.30
Younge.—Book of Golden Deeds.1.001.55

STORIES FOR CHILDREN

TWO LITTLE RUNAWAYS (Just Published)
Adapted and revised by Melvin Hix and Walter L. Hervey. Illustrated. 95 pp. 30 cents.

Snappy and Spitfire are a dog and a cat who become dissatisfied with their surroundings and decide to run away. Their various adventures make an amusing and interesting book for children. It was designed particularly to be used at that important stage when children are ready to begin the independent practice of the most delightful of all arts, the art of finding stories in books. The simplicity of plot and general content are admirably suited to the needs and abilities of six-year-old readers.

INDIAN SKETCHES
By Cornelia Steketee Hulst. Illustrated. 120 pages. 60 cents.