FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   173   174   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197  
>>  
ing the world war has done active work over seas in the "Y." True stories of her experiences with the doughboys have appeared in _The North American_, and in _The Outlook_. John G. 68, 1. Barrack-Room Ballads. Poems by Rudyard Kipling with the atmosphere of the far East. 69, 1. Pennsylvania State Police. See sketch of Katherine Mayo. 2. I. W. W. Industrial Workers of the World, a revolutionary labor organization. The members have given much trouble by their extreme views, such as eternal war against their employers. They believe that they should organize as a class and take possession of the earth, abolishing the wage system. 70, 1. Blue ribbon. A sign of distinction; a blue ribbon worn by a horse at a horse show denotes that he has won the first prize. 2. Atlantis. A mythical island of vast extent mentioned by Plato and other ancient writers and placed by them in the distant unknown West. 72, 1. Two by twelves. A plank two inches thick by twelve inches wide. * * * * * MYRA KELLY (Page 77) Myra Kelly, who later became Mrs. Allan Macnaughton, was born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1876 and died in England in 1910. She lived almost all of her short life, however, in New York City. Here she was educated in the public schools and at Teachers College, Columbia University. She was an American teacher and author. She taught in the New York public schools from 1899 to 1901 and at Teachers College in 1902 and 1903. She first became known by her stories of children in the primary schools of New York City. She wrote chiefly of the children of the East Side, with whom she had had first-hand experience, while teaching in the public schools. Her stories give the Yiddish dialect inimitably and they show a fine, wise tolerance as well as a shrewd knowledge of child character. Mrs. Macnaughton's published volumes include _Little Citizens_, _Wards of Liberty_, _Rosnah_, _Little Aliens_, _New Faces_, and _Her Little Young Ladyship_. The story "Friends," presented in this collection, is taken from _Little Aliens_. _Little Aliens_ contains nine stories, of which the settings are all in the homes of the children. Most of the stories in her first volume, _Little Citizens_, have their settings in the schools. The stories reveal a rich humor, an underlying pathos, a deep understanding of child nature, and a full grasp of the conditions with which all aliens, big or little, must contend
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   173   174   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197  
>>  



Top keywords:
stories
 

Little

 

schools

 

public

 

Aliens

 
children
 

ribbon

 
Citizens
 

settings

 
College

Teachers
 

Macnaughton

 

inches

 

American

 
experience
 
primary
 

chiefly

 

tolerance

 

inimitably

 
dialect

Yiddish
 

teaching

 

educated

 

appeared

 
doughboys
 

Outlook

 
experiences
 

Columbia

 

shrewd

 

taught


University

 
teacher
 
author
 
active
 
underlying
 
pathos
 

reveal

 
volume
 

understanding

 
contend

aliens

 

nature

 
conditions
 
Liberty
 

Rosnah

 

include

 
volumes
 

character

 

published

 

collection