4 GIRLS' SCHOOL AND ADVENTURE SERIES 2/6 net. 



Marie Louise Parker 



THE GIRLS OF ST. HILDA'S. Coming back from the Easter holi- 

 days, the girls found that their much loved and admired Captain was on 

 her way to Canada for good. This causes great excitement as an election 

 for a new captain has been decided. The result, however, is not satisfactory 

 to all, but the new captain has many staunch pals and in the end wins 

 through. 



DIANA AND PAM CHUMS. When Diana Templeton realised her 

 heart's desire and went to school, she found Pam Weybridge just tht- 

 chum she had been hoping to find. They were a gay-hearted pair of insep- 

 arables, and girls will much enjoy reading about the doings of themselves 

 and their 'many friends. 



A. E. Seymour 



A SCHOOLGIRL'S SECRET. This is a story of a girl who paid for 

 her own schooling by writing short stories. She had promised not to reveal 

 her secret, and had to endure a good deal from the curiosity of the girls 

 and the suspicion and measures of some of them. But she had some good 

 staunch friends who stuck to her through thick and thin. 



BOYS' BOOKS, 2/6 net. 



R. M. Ballantyne 



THE YOUNG FUR TRADERS. When he was a boy, sixteen years 

 of age, Robert Michael Ballantyne was employed as a clerk by the Hudson 

 Bay Fur Company. He went into Canada, to Rupert's Land, the name 

 given on the formation of the Hudson Bay Company, in the year 162.0, 

 by Prince Rupert. 



THE CORAL ISLAND. One of the finest boys' stories ever writtenj 

 The thrilling and joyous adventures of the castaways, Ralph, Jack, and 

 Peterkin on their romantic desert island will never be forgotten. No boy's 

 reading is complete before he has discovered Ballantyne's wonderful yarn. 



MARTIN RATTLER. Many of the adventures in this story befall the 

 hero in the romantic forests of Brazil ; but before these experiences there 

 come a sea voyage, an encounter with pirates, a wreck, and other thrilling 

 incidents. It has always been a favourite book with boys. 



R L. Bellamy 



THE ADVENTURES OF SCOUT GREY. Scout Grey was a scout 

 of the first water. He was more than a scout, he was also a clever amateur 

 detective ; and his pluck and ingenuity in unmasking " wrong "uns," to 

 say nothing of breathless adventures, will delight all boys, whether they 

 are scouts or not. 



SCOUT GREY : DETECTIVE. There is a baffling mystery about 

 beautiful old Barnett Farm that nobody can unravel, and is the cause 

 of a whole party of holiday guests having to leave precipitately. But 

 Scout Grey is not easily scared, and stays on to solve the mystery once 

 and for all. 



