THE JANE ANDREWS BOOKS 
The Seven Little Sisters Who Live on the Round Ball That 
Floats in the Air. Cloth. 12 1 pages. With new full-page illus- 
trations. For introduction, 50 cents. 
Each and All ; The Seven Little Sisters Prove Their Sister** 
hood. Cloth. 162 pages. With new full-page illustrations. For 
introduction, 50 cents. 
The Stories Mother Nature Told Her Children. Cloth. 161 
pages. With new full-page illustrations. For introduction, 50 cents. 
Ten Boys Who Lived on the Road from Long \go to Now. 
Cloth. 243 pages. With new full-page illustrations. For intro- 
duction, 50 cents. 
The Stories of My Four Friends. Edited by Margaret Andrews 
Allen. Cloth. 100 pages. Fully illustrated. For introduction, 
40 cents. 
Geographical Plays. Cloth. 140 pages. For introduction, 50 cents. 
The “ Seven Little Sisters ” represents the seven races. The book shows how 
people live in the various parts of the world, what their manners and customs are, 
what the products of each section are and how they are interchanged. • 
“ Each and All ” continues the story of “ Seven Little Sisters,” and tells more 
of the peculiarities of the various races, especially in relation to childhood. 
Dame Nature unfolds in “Stories Mother Nature Told” some of her most 
precious secrets. She tells about the amber, about the dragon-fly and its wonder- 
ful history, about water-lilies, how the Indian corn grows, what queer pranks 
the Frost Giants indulge in, about coral, and starfish, and coal mines, and many 
other things in which children take delight. 
In “ Ten Boys ” the history of the world is summarized in the stories of 
Kabln the Aryan boy, Darius the Persian boy, Cleon the Greek boy, Horatius the 
Roman boy, Wulf the Saxon boy, Gilbert the knight’s page, Roger the English 
boy, Fuller the Puritan boy, Dawson the Yankee boy, and Frank Wilson the 
boy of 1885. 
The “Four Friends” are the four seasons personified. They weave into 
stories the wonderful workings of nature. Any child who has enjoyed “ How the 
Indian Corn Grows,” or “ A Peep into One of God’s Storehouses,” in “ Stories 
Mother Nature Told Her Children,” will be glad to read of “Some Frost 
Flowers,” “The North Wind’s Birth Gift to the Earth’s Youngest Child,” 
which Winter tells, or the spring story of “ What Was Heard Under the Ground 
One April Day.” 
GINN & COMPANY, Publishers, 
Boston. New York. Chicago. San Francisco. 
Atlanta. Dallas. Columbus. London. 
